Л. Ф. Зальцман

«Английская промышленность Средневековья»

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Robert le Bellyetere, care of bells of Exeter Cathedral, 104-5.

Robert of Corfe, worker in Purbeck marble, 85.

Robertes, Henry, Serjeant, quarell guns provided by, 109.

Rochester stone sent to, from Beer in Devon, 78.

Rochester Castle, list of stone for, in 1367, 79-80.

Rochester Priory: bell recast in twelfth century, 96;

perquisites of under brewers, 192.

Roger of Faringdon, maker of shrine at Beverley, 93-4.

Rogers, Thorold, on effect of Statute of Labourers, 202.

Romans in Britain: coal used by, 1-2;

добыча железа, 20–21;

lead mines, 38-9;

pottery manufacture, 114-15.

Roofing: slates worked for, 81-2;

tiles manufactured for, 119.

Ropley family, glassmakers, 129.

Royley, Richard and Gabriel, alabaster-workers, 89.

Rye, hops imported, 194.

Saddlers, 233-35.

St. Albans Abbey: consecration of bells, 101;

metal workers among monks, 93.

St. Austell, Cornwall, Saxon remains discovered in tin grounds, 63.

St. Bees, grant of iron-mine to monks, 22.

St. Briavels: forge at castle for construction of war materials, 24;

Mine Law Courts, 35-6;

payment to Constable for loads of coal, 5.

St. Clere, statement respecting gold in Devon and Cornwall, in 1545, 61.

St. George's Chapel, Windsor: alabaster reredos, 87;

glass supplied from Chiddingfold, 128.

St. Laurence, Reading, dedication of bell, 101.

St. Mary-at-Hill, London, bells recast, in 1510, 100.

St. Paul's Cathedral, contract for paving, 85.

St. Peter of Canterbury, Abbey of, grant to, of land at Liminge, in 689, 22.

St. Peter's Abbey at Gloucester, candlestick in South Kensington Museum, 92.

St. Stephen's Chapel, Westminster: glass from Chiddingfold, 128;

marble for columns, 85;

stained glass, process employed, 131-2;

stone sent from Beer in Devon, 78.

Salisbury, clothmaking industry, 158.

Sandwich, export of chalk, 91.

Sawtry Abbey, quarry in Barnack and disputes over, 77.

Saxons: few traces of iron-works in Britain, 21-2;

tin worked in Cornwall, 63.

Sconeburgh, Gerard, beer brewer, case of theft against, 194.

Sea coal: origin of term, 2-3;

references to use of, 4-5.

Sea Coal Lane, London, mention, in 1228, 4.

Seaford, brewing trade, 191.

Поиск, система. См. Инспекция товаров.

Selebourne, Hants, stone quarries, 79.

Sester, in brewing trade, 187-8.

Severn, customs on sea coal brought down, 5.

Seyntleger, Thomas, case against beer brewers, 194.

Shalford tileries, 124.

Shamelling, meaning of term, 65.

Замшевая кожа. См. Шамуа.

Sheffield in Fletching, Sussex, iron-mills, 33, 36-7.

Shelve, Shropshire, lead mine of Roman period, 38.

Shene Chapel, stone from Eastbourne for, 79.

Sheppey Castle, guns for, 107.

Shepton Mallet, pottery manufacture by Romans, 115.

Семья Шортер. См. Шортер.

Shippen, Yorks, coal-mining, 6.

Shode, meaning of term, 64.

Shoemaking: districts assigned to, in London, 217;

gild of journeymen connected with craft, 235;

regulation of trade, 180-3, 227;

work allowed on Sunday, 213-14.

Shoreham, brewing at, 187.

Shorter or Sherterre family, glassmakers, 129.

Shoyswell, hundred, brewing trade, 187.

Shrewsbury: brewing regulations, 195;

cloth trade, 152;

leather trade, 172.

Shropshire: coal workings, 5-6;

lead-mining, 38-9.

Silchester, refining of silver at, 54.

Silver: process of refining from lead, 53-5;

production from Devon mines, 56-7;

weight and value, 55-6.

Silversmiths' work, 94-5.

Skipton, pottery kilns, 116.

Slates, working of, 81-2.

Sluys, export of coal to, 18.

Small arms, early instance of use, 109.

Smith, William, bell-founder, 100.

Smithfield, tileries, 124.

Snailbeach, Shropshire, lead mine of Roman period, 38.

Solinus, third century, reference to Roman use of coal at Bath, probable, 1.

Somerset: clothmaking industry, 161;

coal-mining, 6-7;

effect of the Statute of Labourers, 202;

lead-mining, 40, 57, 58-9.

Southampton, import of woad, 144.

Southwark, gun-founding, 110.

Spain, leather trade, 178-9.

Speryng, Godfrey, beer brewer, 194.

Spring of Lavenham, clothiers, 159.

Spurriers, night work prohibited, 215.

Staffordshire: coal-mining, 7;

price of iron, 31.

Stahlschmidt, Mr., on bell-founders, 96, 102.

Staindrop, alabaster tomb at, 88.

Stained glass: glazier brought from Flanders, in 1449, 130-1;

process employed in England, 131-2.

Stainton, Forest of Dean, coal-working, 5.

Stainton-in-Furness, iron-works at end of Stone Age, 20.

Stamford, clothmaking industry, 134, 136, 138.

Stamfords, English cloth, 138.

Stannaries, account of, 64-74.

Stansfield, bell cast for, 97, 105-6.

Stapleton, stone quarries, 77, 80, 83.

Stephen of St. Iago, purchase of cannon from, 112.

Stevenes, John, of Bristol, gun-founder, 110.

Stithe or choke damp, 8.

Stone-balls or shot for artillery, 80-1, 109.

Stone masons, mutual assistance regulations, 237.

Stone-quarrying, 76-83.

Stow, in mining, meaning of term, 44.

Stratton-on-Fosse, coal-mining, 6-7.

Strelley, Nicholas, legal action respecting coal mine, 12-13.

Stretton, near Alnwick, forge, 4.

Strikes, labour, in Middle Ages, 235-6.

Sudbury, clothmaking industry, 140.

Suffolk, clothmaking industry, 157, 166-8.

Sumptuary law of 1363, restrictions as to cloth, 169.

Sunday, rules against working on, 212-14.

Surrey: chalk-quarrying, 91;

clothmaking industry, 167;

glassmaking industry, 127-9;

stone quarries, 77.

Sussex: beer-brewing, 194;

chalk-quarrying, 91;

cider industry, 197-8;

clothmaking industry, 167;

glassmaking in, 128-9;

gun-founding, 111, 113;

iron industry, 24, 26, 28-9, 31, 36-7;

stone quarries and slates from, 79-80, 82.

Sutton, Robert, alabaster-worker, 88.

Tadcaster, stone quarries, 77, 81, 83.

Tailors, fraternity of yeomen tailors formed, 233-4;

gild court, 236.

Tanning of leather, processes employed, 171-7.

Tan turves, term explained, 54, 173.

Tarrant Keynston, nunnery, effigy of Queen of Scots in Purbeck marble, 85.

Tavistock, tin sent to, for coinage duty, 69.

Tawing of leather, process employed, 171.

Teazles, use of, in cloth making, 156.

Temple Church, London, Purbeck marble effigies, 84.

Thevesdale, stone quarries, 77.

Thomas de Alemaigne, skill in mining, 59-60.

Thomasson, Walter, gun-founder, 111.

Thorp, Robert de, warden of the Devon mines, 47.

Threle, William, cider made by, 1385, 198.

Thrillesden (Trillesden), lease of coal mine, 15.

Thrums, term explained, 152.

Tideman de Lippe, purchase of English cloth, 139.

Tiles: floor tiles, process of manufacture, 126-7;

manufacture of, 119-27;

price fixed, 119, 210;

regulations for control of industry, 216, 222.

Tilman de Cologne, farm of Alston lead mines, 60.

Лесоматериалы. См. Древесина.

Tindale, Scottish king's liberty of, 41.

Tin-mining: antiquity claimed for, 62-3;

economic condition of smaller tin-workers, 69-70;

free miner's privileges, 70-3;

methods of working, 64-9;

stamping dues, 68-9.

Tithes to the Church, of cider and apples in Sussex, 198;

lead-miners, payment of, 47-9.

Toftes, coal mines, 16.

Tolsester, term explained, 187.

Torel, William, metal-work of, 95.

Torksey, brewing-trade regulations, 188.

Лондонский Тауэр: литье пушек, 110;

regulations for wages of workmen employed in building operations, 214.

Trademarks, use of, ordered, 216.

Trades, segregation of, in towns, 217-18.

Truro: nomination of members for stannary parliament, 72;

tin sent to, for coinage duty, 69.

Tudeley forge, Tonbridge: iron-works, 28;

wages of workers, 33;

weight of the bloom, 31.

Tuning of bells, methods employed, 99-100.

Tunnoc, Richard, bell-founder and memorial window, 103-4.

Turn-hearth furnace, 53.

Tutbury, alabaster dug at, in early times, 86.

Twist, Gilbert, alabaster-worker, 89.

Tynemouth, coal-mining, 6.

Ulnager, official, 160.

Upchurch, Roman British pottery, 114.

Utynam, John, brought from Flanders to make glass, 130-1.

Van Anne, Arnold, mining grant to, 60-1.

Van Orel, Henry, mining grant to, 60-1.

Van Riswyk, Dederic, mining grant to, 61.

Веллакотт, К. Х., признательность за помощь, ix.

Venetian travellers: on English grapes, 199;

report on rich metal-work in England, 94-5.

Vesses or set cloths, manufacture of, 168.

Викторианская история графств, источник информации, viii–ix.

Vines, cultivation in England, 198-9.

Vipont, Robert de, trial of thieves in his manor court, 41-2.

Vlenk, Matthew de, gunmaker, 111.

Wages: coal-miners, 10-11, 16;

iron-workers and miners, 32-5;

lead-miners, 48-9, 53;

legislation and gild regulations, 202, 210-12, 214, 228;

saddlers' success in raising, 234, 235;

shoemakers, 182;

stone-quarriers, 82-3;

tin-workers, 70.

Wakefield, mineral rights, local customs, 11.

Wales, coal export, in 1592, 18.

Walker, Humphrey, gun-founder, 113.

Walking, process in fulling cloth, 153.

Walsingham, Prior, bells cast at Ely for, 103.

Walter of Odyngton, a monk of Evesham, system for tuning bells, 99.

Waltham, Purbeck marble for Eleanor cross, 85.

Warde, William, dyer, trade dispute at Coventry, 146-7.

Warwick Castle, foreign stained glass ordered for chapel, 131.

Warwickshire, coal-mining, 6, 9.

Water-power, use of, in iron-working, 27, 30;

in lead mines, 52.

Watts, Richard, poem on weaving processes, 142.

Wax chandlers, regulation of charges, 209.

Weald of Sussex and Kent: centre of ordnance manufacture, after 1543, 113;

iron industry, 24, 26, 28-9.

Weardale: iron industry, 27, 31;

lead mines, 39.

Weaving industry: gild of alien weavers in London, 225;

processes employed, 149-52;

regulations for control of, 228, 235-7;

religious character of ordinances of gilds, 207;

restriction of output, 227;

use of trademarks ordered, 216.

Weights and Measures: ale standard measures, 188;

barrel of beer and ale respectively, 195;

chalder or chaldron, 17-18;

cloth regulations, 136, 138, 150, 160-3;

coal for, variety of, 14;

lead for, variety of, 56.

Weld, use of, for dying wool, 144, 147.

Wellington, forest of, wood consumed by limekilns, 90.

Westminster, regulations for wages of workmen employed in building, 214.

Westminster Abbey: bell cast for, by Edward Fitz Odo, 102;

inlaid tiles in chapter-house, 127;

stone used for, 79.

Westmoreland, Earl of, alabaster tomb at Staindrop, 88.

Westmoreland, lead-mining, 60-1.

Whickham, coal mine, 11, 16-17.

Whitchurch, Dorset, bells cast for and dispute over, 100.

Whitechurch, Hants, Roman iron-works, 21.

Whittington, Richard, 229.

Whyt, Thomas, lease of tilery, 125.

Wight, Isle of: clothmaking industry, 167-8;

question of identification with the Ictis of Diodorus Siculus, 62-3;

stone quarries, 79.

Willarby, George, report on lead mines, 60.

William of Corfe, worker in Purbeck marble, 85.

William, the founder, 102, 108.

William of Malmesbury, on manufacture of wine in England, 198.

William de Plessetis, property in Sea Coal Lane, 4.

William de Wrotham, warden of the stannaries, 1198, 72.

Willoughby, Sir John, legal action against Nicholas Strelley, 12-13.

Wiltshire, limestone quarries, 78-9.

Wimbish family, bell-founders, 102.

Winchcombe, John, clothier of Newbury, 158, 167.

Winchelsea: beer and cider imported, 193, 197;

hops imported, 194.

Winchester: clothmaking industry, 133, 136, 138, 150, 151, 158;

iron sent to, from Forest of Dean, 23;

stone for royal palace, 78-9.

Wine, manufacture in England, 198-9.

Wingerworth, accident at, in 1313, 7.

Winlaton, coal mines, 11, 17.

Wirksworth, lead mines, 39.

Wisborough, cider industry, 198.

Woad, use of, for dying wool, 144-8.

Wodeward, William, gun-founder, 102, 108.

Wolsingham, Durham, water-power used in lead mines, 52.

Women: employment discouraged, 154, 228;

exempted from certain trade restrictions, 218;

iron-workers' wages, 32-3;

lead mines employment, 51;

spinning a staple employment, 148-9;

stone quarrywork, payment for, 82-3.

Wood, Thomas, builder of Goldsmiths' Row, 95.

Wood: consumption by iron works, 36-7;

lead-miners' privileges in Cumberland, 46.

Woodstock, iron sent to, from Forest of Dean, 23.

Wookey, smelting of ore at, 58.

Wool, processes of dealing with, for clothmaking, 141-9.

Worcester: brewing-trade regulations, 189;

clothmaking industry, 134, 168;

tile industry regulations, 120, 222.

Worcester Cathedral, tomb of King John in marble, 84.

Worsted, village, clothmaking industry, 139, 161.

Worsteds, manufacture and frauds practised, 161-2, 164-5, 205.

Worth, Sussex, wood burnt at iron-mills, 36-7.

Wren, Christopher, use of Portland stone, 79.

Wroxeter, discovery at, of Roman use of coal, 1.

Wye, Kent: cider industry, 197;

tile manufacture and processes employed, 121-3.

Wylwringword, John de, gold found in Devon by, 61.

Yarmouth: clothmaking industry, 165;

herring fishery, struggle over monopoly, 203.

York: alabaster industry, 89;

bell-founding industry, 103.

York Minster: bell-maker's window, 103-4;

bells cast for, in 1371, 103;

English glass bought for, 130;

Plaster of Paris for, 89-90;

stained glass for, from abroad, 131;

stone for, 77.

Yorkshire: Cistercian ware found in, 118;

clothmaking industry, 147, 158, 167;

coal-mining, 6.

Zoetmann, Cornelius, grave at Playden, 194.

Отпечатано Т. и А. Констебл, печатниками Его Величества в Эдинбургском университетском издательстве

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