Origins Store   UK & Ireland   England   Yorkshire
Search:    Author:    ISBN: 

A Guide to Archival Accessions at the Borthwick Institute 1981-1996
Author:  complied by Alexandrina Buchanan
Published:  1997
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

One of a series of guides to archive collections at the Borthwick Insitute for Archives.   pp 179   ISBN 0-903857-74-X

Price:  £10.00





A Guide to the Archives of the Company of Merchant Adventurers of York
Author:  D M Smith
Published:  1990
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

One of a series of guides to archive collections at the Borthwick Institute for Archives, University of York.   pp. 202.   ISBN 0-903857-56-1

Price:  £10.00





A Guide to the Archives of the Company of Merchant Taylors in the City of York
Author:  complied by David M Smith
Published:  1994
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

One of a series of guides to archive collections at the Borthwick Insitute for Archives.   pp 29   ISBN 0-903857-70-7

Price:  £2.00





A History of the County of York East Riding, Volume II
Author:  K.J. Allison
Published:  1974
Medium: Book         Publisher:  Boydell & Brewer Ltd

York East Riding II This volume contains the history of the 30 parishes that formed the wapentake of Dickering. The area lies largely upon the chalk hills of the Yorkshire Wolds, which here meet the sea in the impressive cliffsaround Flamborough Head, but the wapentake also extended into the Vale of Pickering and the Plain of Holderness. There is thus a variety of landscape and agricultural history to describe. Much of the rolling wold land was occupied by open fields and sheep- walks until inclosure in the later 18th and earlier 19th centuries opened the way to improvement; on the lower ground much early inclosure took place, too. A dozen villages in the wapentake were depopulated in the Middle Ages. Most of the settlements are relatively small, but they include the one-time market town of Kilham and the seaside resorts of Bridlington and Filey. In the Middle Ages the 'old town' of Bridlington, with its priory and market-place, and the fishing village beside the harbour were quite separate, but with the growth of the resort of 'Bridlington Quay' from the late 18th century onwards they have been absorbed into a wide-spreading town. Bridlington has also had an interesting coastal and oversea trade and still supports a fishing fleet. The resort of 'New Filey' was established later, laid out near the old fishing village from c.1840 onwards, and its physical growth and commercial development have been more restrained than those of Bridlington. Fishing also forms part of the story of Flamborough. The wapentake contains a wide variety of ecclesiastical and domestic architecture, butthere are two outstanding buildings: the great priory church at Bridlington, which survived the Dissolution with the loss of its chancel and tower, and the early-17th-century red-brick mansion of Burton Agnes Hall, replacing an old manor-house but retaining its 12th-century undercroft.   hardback   ISBN 978-0-197-22738-1

Price:  £75.00





A History of the County of York East Riding, Volume III
Author:  K.J. Allison
Published:  1976
Medium: Book         Publisher:  Boydell & Brewer Ltd

The volume covers a large area in the Vale of York, lying to the south and east of the city. It is concerned with the history of the twelve parishes in Ouse and Derwent wapentake and of eight parishes in the western half of the Wilton Beacon division of Harthill wapentake. Ouse and Derwent wapentake is largely bounded by those two rivers, and the Wilton Beacon division lies immediately east of the river Derwent. The land is low-lying and relatively flat. Its dominant physical features are the two large rivers and two ridges of glacial moraine which traverse the vale. The mor-aines provided early routes across the marshy land and the sites for several villages. Other settlements stand by the Ouse and the Derwent at places where meanders take the rivers close to the firm valley sides. The terrain was once well wooded, and the way in which the wood-land was cleared resulted in a landscape characterized by small open fields and large tracts of early inclosures and common grazing. Particularly in the north-east part of the area the number of large country houses reflects the proximity of York and the interest of its citizens in landed estates; the houses include Escrick Hall, Moreby Hall, and Heslington Hall, in recent years the centre of the University of York. There has been some suburban development, notably in Gate Fulford. Most of the villages consist of brick houses built in the 18th century and later. The most considerable ecclesiastical building is the church of Hemingbrough, made collegiate in 1427 by the prior of Durham. Of many bridges mentioned in the volume that at Stamford Bridge is notable for its part in the battle in which King Harold defeated the Danes before marching to his death at Hastings.   hardback   ISBN 978-0-197-22744-2

Price:  £60.00





A History of the County of York East Riding, Volume IV
Author:  K.J. Allison
Published:  1979
Medium: Book         Publisher:  Boydell & Brewer Ltd

The volume covers a large area at the southern end of the Yorkshire Welds, lying west of the city of Hull and the town of Beverley. It is concerned with the history of fourteen parishes which comprise the greater part of the Hunsley Beacon division of Harthill wapentake. Though the rolling chalk hills of the wolds dominate the area, several of the parishes extend into the low- lying ground of the Hull valley to the east and the Vale of York to the west. InSouth Cave parish the reclamation of Broomfleet Island from the river Humber adds further variety to the agricultural history of the area. There are several deserted medieval villages. Much of the countryside described here is still wholly rural in character, but some of the settlements lying on the eastern slopes of the welds, like Cherry Burton and Skidby, have become commuter villages for the near-by towns. The large medieval vil-lage of Cottingham became a popular place of residence for Hull merchants in the late 18th century, and much of the parish has since been absorbed within the city; the village now houses many of the students of the University of Hull. Notable country houses described in the volume include Dalton Hall and Houghton Hall, and the churches include an outstanding Norman building at Newbald. Many of the villages consist of brick houses of the 18th century and later, but 17th-centurytimber-framed houses survive at South Dalton and Cot-tingham. In other villages, however, much use is made of the local Jurassic limestone which outcrops below the wolds escarp-ment. At Leconfield there survives the moated site ofa seat of the Percy family, earls of Northumberland, and it was from Rowley that the rector emigrated in the 17th century to found a town of the same name in Massachusetts.   hardback   ISBN 978-0-197-22752-7

Price:  £60.00





A History of the County of York East Riding, Volume V: Holderness: Southern Part
Author:  K.J. Allison
Published:  1984
Medium: Book         Publisher:  Boydell & Brewer Ltd

The volume tells the stories of eighteen parishes in the southern part of Holderness wapentake, the wedge of Yorkshire between the North Sea and the Humber. The low--lying landscape has changed repeatedly during the historical period, with lands along the north bank of the Humber being washed away or growing, lesser watercourses silting up, new drains being made, the steady erosion of the cliff along the sea coast, and the cyclical breaching, destruction,and redeposit of the long spit of land at Spurn Head. The church of Kilnsea and several small settlements have gone with the receding cliff. Sunk Island, which forms part of the Crown Estate, is a parish consisting entirely of newground thrown up by the Humber. In the Middle Ages the land comprised the liberty of Holderness, with a centre at Burstwick manor house, and belonged to the counts of Aumale before passing to the Crown. The counts' extensive privileges in Holderness included the right to exclude the royal sheriff. Within the parish of Preston a medieval borough was established by the count at Hedon, but access for ships from the Humber was difficult and the town later decayed; it is noteworthy for its magnificent church, dubbed 'the king of Holderness'. Another borough and port established by the count was Ravenser Odd, at Spurn head, but that was later destroyed by the sea. There was a haven alsoat Patrington, a large village distinguished by its fine 14th-century church, 'the queen of Holderness'. In the part of the area near Hull, Thorngumbald, in Paull parish, and Keyingham have grown into large dormitory villages. Withernsea, in Hollym and Owthorne parishes, was developed from the 1850s as a seaside resort used mainly by residents of Hull. Other places of which the volume contains accounts are Easington, Halsham, Holmpton, Ottringham, Skeffling, Welwick, and Winestead.   hardback   ISBN 978-0-197-22760-2

Price:  £60.00





A History of the County of York East Riding, Volume VI: The Borough and Liberties of Beverley
Author:  K.J. Allison
Published:  1989
Medium: Book         Publisher:  Boydell & Brewer Ltd

Beverley stood high among the provincial towns of medieval England, with the great minster church and the college of St. John. Linked with the port of Hull and the Humber by a canalized beck and the navigable river Hull, it had athriving trade in cloth and wool. Around the town lay large common pastures which are still a prominent feature of the landscape, and beyond the borough half a dozen townships were within the liberties of Beverley. The decline oftrade in the 15th century and the suppression of the college in 1548 reduced the town's prosperity, and its role in the 16th and 17th centuries was little more than that of a market town. The 16th century, however, brought freedomfrom the lordship of the archbishop and eventually full self-government with the granting of a charter of incorporation in 1573. From the late 17th century Beverley became the administrative and social centre of the East Riding. A wealth of Georgian buildings still bears witness to its renewed prosperity. Industry expanded and diversified in the 19th century, and ironworks, mills, tanneries, and shipyards provided employment. Beverley was designated asthe county town of the East Riding in 1892, and it became the administrative centre of the county of Humberside created in 1974 and of the district later known as the East Yorkshire Borough of Beverley, albeit with the loss to thetown of its ancient borough status. Industrial decline in the later 20th century was partly balanced by development as a residential area and as a centre for tourism. Meanwhile the appearance of Beverley was being transformed: anouter bypass and inner relief roads changed old patterns, and the building of new houses went on in and around the town.   hardback   ISBN 978-0-197-22776-3

Price:  £60.00





A History of the County of York East Riding, Volume VII: Holderness Wapentake, Middle and North Divisions
Author:  G.H.R. Kent
Published:  2002
Medium: Book         Publisher:  Boydell & Brewer Ltd

  hardback   ISBN 978-0-197-22797-8

Price:  £90.00





A History of Yorkshire: The City of York
Author:  P.M. Tillott
Published:  1961
Medium: Book         Publisher:  Boydell & Brewer Ltd

THE HISTORY of the City of York, originally published in 1961, runs from Roman times to 1959. It is divided into two parts. The first half contains a series of six narrative chapters arranged chronologically, beginning with York before the Norman Conquest and ending with modern York. Among the authors of these chapters are A. G. Dickens and Edward Miller. The second half contains thirty-one shorter chapters on particular institutions and aspects of the city, including the antiquities of York, the minster and its precincts, the parish churches, chapels, schools, public services, medieval guilds and mills, the prisons, and the castles. The plan of the volume is designed at once to give the reader a comprehensive picture of the development of the city, with its fluctuating importance as an administrative, economic, and social centre, and to enable him to follow in detail themes which may not have been dominant throughout the city's history but have had none the less a continuing and substantial significance.   hardback   ISBN 978-0-712-91029-3

Price:  £75.00





A Place Index to the Visitation Court Books of the Archbishops of York. York Diocese 1567-1786
Author:  compiled by Peter Evans
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

One of a series of Indexes of Maps and Places at the Borthwick Institute for Archives.     ISBN 0-903857-96-0

Price:  £7.50





A.F. Leach as a Historian of Yorkshire Education
Author:  W E Tate
Published:  1963
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

This is one of an on-going series of publications from the Borthwick Insitute for Archives, intended to provide insights into new research concerning the history of Yorkshire and the North of England.   pp 40   ISBN 0-900701-21-8

Price:  £4.00





An Index to the Archbishop of York's Marriage Bonds and Allegations 1690-1714
Author:  compiled by P W G Chilman
Published:  2001
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

  pp 448   ISBN 0-903857-82-0

Price:  £26.00





An Index to the Archbishop of York's Marriage Bonds and Allegations 1715-1734
Author:  compiled by P W G Chilman
Published:  1999
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

  pp 518, in 2 vols.   ISBN 0-903857-91-X

Price:  £30.00





An Index to the Archbishop of Yorks Marriage Bonds and Allegations 1660-1689
Author:  compiled by P W G Chilman
Published:  2003
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

  pp 342   ISBN 1-904497-04-7

Price:  £26.00





Archbishop Drummond's Visitation Returns 1764: I Yorkshire Parishes A-G
Author:  ed. C Annesley & P Hoskin
Published:  1997
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

One of the Borthwick Texts & Studies series. These volumes explore the Borthwick Institute's rich sources for the history of Yorkshire and the north of England.   pp.215.   ISBN 0-903857-61-8

Price:  £11.50





Archbishop Drummond's Visitation Returns 1764: II Yorkshire Parishes H-R
Author:  ed. C Annesley & P Hoskin
Published:  1998
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

One of the Borthwick Texts & Studies series. These volumes explore the Borthwick Institute's rich sources for the history of Yorkshire and the north of England.   pp.220.   ISBN 0-903857-63-4

Price:  £14.50





Archbishop Drummond's Visitation Returns 1764: III Yorkshire Parishes S-Y
Author:  ed. C Annesley & P Hoskin
Published:  2001
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

One of the Borthwick Texts & Studies series. These volumes explore the Borthwick Institute's rich sources for the history of Yorkshire and the north of England.     ISBN 0-903857-98-7

Price:  £15.00





Archbishop Grindal's Visitation of the Diocese of York 1575
Author:  W J Sheils
Published:  1977
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

One of the Borthwick Texts & Studies series. These volumes explore the Borthwick Institute's rich sources for the history of Yorkshire and the north of England.   pp.110   ISBN 0-903857-16-2

Price:  £5.00





Archbishop Thomas of Bayeux and the Norman Cathedral at York
Author:  Christopher Norton
Published:  2001
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

This is one of an on-going series of publications from the Borthwick Insitute for Archives, intended to provide insights into new research concerning the history of Yorkshire and the North of England.   pp 38   ISBN 0-903857-85-5

Price:  £4.00





Archbishop Thomsons Visitation Returns for the Diocese of York,1865
Author:  Edward Royle & Ruth M Larsen
Published:  01/11/2006
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

An edition of the returns for Archbishop Thomsons first visitation of the diocese of York. In these returns we get a chance to see the Anglican church in the early morning of its response to the huge social changes of the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Includes information for each parish about, amongst other things, the clergy, the numbers of services and who attended them, alterations made to the fabric of the church, and the provision of education for parish children and adults. Includes an introduction explaining the process of visitation and an exploration of what these returns can tell us about parish. This is one of the Borthwick Texts & Studies series, which explore the Borthwick Institute's rich sources for the history of Yorkshire and the north of England.   pp 571 Hard-back.pp. lxvii+   ISBN 978-1-904497-17-2

Price:  £55.00





Beverley Minster Fasti
Author:  Richard T.W. McDermid
Published:  2000
Medium: Book         Publisher:  Boydell & Brewer Ltd

Biographical notes on the provosts, prebendaries, officers and vicars in the Church of Beverley prior to the Dissolution: individual careers, preferment at Beverley, employment and family connections and other preferments and dignities, from contemporary records. To a greater degree than perhaps any other comparable institution Beverley preserved within its constitution clear traces of its Anglo-Saxon origin.   hardback   ISBN 978-0-902-12263-5

Price:  £24.00





Birmingham, Bristol, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, Sheffield 1825/6 Pigot's Directory
Published:  1825
Medium: CD         Publisher:  Archive CD Books

An unusual Pigot's classified trade directory, that covers 6 major manufacturing towns in England.    

Price:  £9.79





Bolton Priory Rentals and Ministers' Accounts, 1473-1539
Author:  Ian Kershaw
Published:  2000
Medium: Book         Publisher:  Boydell & Brewer Ltd

Rental, 1473 (Chatsworth MS 69E): Rental drawn up by the canons of Bolton in 1473; Inventory, 1539 (PRO SC/6/Hen VIII, 7452): Inventory taken at Bolton on the day of the dissolution of the house, 28 January 1539; Ministers'Accounts, 1538-39 (PRO SC/6/Hen VIII, 4542): A rental of the priory's estate in the year of its suppression, 1538-39.   hardback   ISBN 978-0-902-12203-1

Price:  £24.00





Bolton Priory: its patrons and benefactors 1120-1293
Author:  K Legg
Published:  2004
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

This is one of an on-going series of publications from the Borthwick Insitute for Archives, intended to provide insights into new research concerning the history of Yorkshire and the North of England.   pp 31   ISBN 1-904497-13-6

Price:  £4.00





Bradford Poor Law Union
Author:  Paul Carter
Published:  2004
Medium: Book         Publisher:  Boydell & Brewer Ltd

The passage of the 1834 Poor Law Amendment Act created an immense archive of letters, reports and memos from the responsible bodies. The papers form part of the huge Ministry of Health archive held at the National Archives at Kew,where the lack of an effective index or list of contents hinders access to this key resource. Thus Paul Carter's transcription of the Bradford Poor Law Union correspondence is the first regional collection to have been fully transcribed, and from it can be seen the wealth of social and historical detail contained in the papers. The Bradford material contains the raw data for this highly detailed investigation into the changes from the 'old' to the 'new' poor law system in one of the fastest growing urban centres in England. Chapters cover local and national relief provision, and the full remit of poor law concerns from individual pauper cases and workhouse provision to alarm in relation to the growth of radical working class ideas and the anti-Poor Law riots in the town. Transcriptions of the surviving assizes court material are also included. Dr PAUL CARTER works at the National Archives. He previously lectured on modern British history at Birkbeck College London.   hardback   ISBN 978-1-903-56440-0

Price:  £40.00





Calendar of the Register of Richard Scrope Archbishop of York 1398-1405 Part 1
Author:  R Swanson
Published:  1981
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

One of the Borthwick Texts & Studies series. These volumes explore the Borthwick Institute's rich sources for the history of Yorkshire and the north of England.   pp.147   ISBN 0-903857-14-6

Price:  £5.50





Calendar of the Register of Richard Scrope Archbishop of York, 1398-1405, Part 2
Author:  R Swanson
Published:  1985
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

One of the Borthwick Texts & Studies series. These volumes explore the Borthwick Institute's rich sources for the history of Yorkshire and the north of England.   pp.160   ISBN 0-903857-24-3

Price:  £5.75





Calendar of the Register of Robert Waldby Archbishop of York 1397
Author:  D M Smith
Published:  1974
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

One of the Borthwick Texts & Studies series. These volumes explore the Borthwick Institute's rich sources for the history of Yorkshire and the north of England.   pp.73   ISBN 0-903857-04-9

Price:  £3.00





Catholic Childhoods: Catholic Elementary Education in York,1850-1914
Author:  Suzanne Roberts
Published:  2001
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

This is one of an on-going series of publications from the Borthwick Insitute for Archives, intended to provide insights into new research concerning the history of Yorkshire and the North of England.   pp 40  

Price:  £4.00





Charity Schools and the Defence of Anglicanism: James Talbot Rector of Spofforth 1700-08
Author:  R W Unwin
Published:  1984
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

This is one of an on-going series of publications from the Borthwick Insitute for Archives, intended to provide insights into new research concerning the history of Yorkshire and the North of England.   pp 37   ISBN 0-900701-59-5

Price:  £4.00





Charters of the Vicars Choral of York Minster I
Author:  Nigel J. Tringham
Published:  2000
Medium: Book         Publisher:  Boydell & Brewer Ltd

The archives of the vicars choral of York Minster includes the largest collection of original medieval charters for the city. This edition gives the text for 581 charters dating from the later twelfth century to 1546, illustrating the city's economy by revealing the occupations of residents and the parts of the city where they operated, and, in the introductions, revealing significant changes in the vicars' policy on acquisitions during the middle ages.   hardback   ISBN 978-0-902-12264-2

Price:  £35.00





Charters of the Vicars Choral of York Minster II
Author:  Nigel J. Tringham
Published:  2002
Medium: Book         Publisher:  Boydell & Brewer Ltd

This second volume of documents from the extensive medieval archive of the vicars choral of York Minster provides an edition of charters from the earlier 13th century onwards relating to the vicars' property in Yorkshire (the first volume having concentrated on their property in the city of York), together with texts describing the process by which four parish churches (one of them in Hampshire) were appropriated to the vicars in the 14th and 15th centuries. The latter documents are especially detailed, and include grants of advowson, archiepiscopal confirmations consequent on inquiries (with witnesses testifying on the vicars' poverty in 1332 following the disruption caused by Scottish invasions and in 1351 after the Black Death), descriptions of the manner in which the churches were physically handed over, and ordinations of vicarages. Drawing also on the vicars' financial accounts, the introduction to the volume sets the acquisition of both city and Yorkshire property in the context of the vicars' fluctuating economic fortune, which reflected on general changes in urban prosperity and more specifically impinged on the vicars' ability to maintain a common life. The charters relate to the Vicars' property in Yorkshire, and to their holdings of appropriated churches (including the church of Nether Wallop in Hampshire). The editor's introduction examines the reasons for the Vicars' acquisitions, and places them in their economic context.
NIGEL TRINGHAM is lecturer in history, University of Keele.   hardback   ISBN 978-0-902-12292-5

Price:  £40.00





Chartism in the North Riding of Yorkshire and south Durham, 1838-1848
Author:  R P Hastings
Published:  01/03/2004
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

This is one of an on-going series of publications from the Borthwick Insitute for Archives, intended to provide insights into new research concerning the history of Yorkshire and the North of England.     ISBN 1-904497-09-8

Price:  £4.00





Christopher Wyvill and Reform 1790- 1820
Author:  J R Dinwiddy
Published:  1971
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

This is one of an on-going series of publications from the Borthwick Insitute for Archives, intended to provide insights into new research concerning the history of Yorkshire and the North of England.   pp 32   ISBN 0-900701-06-4

Price:  £4.00





Church Fabric in the York Diocese 1613-1899: The records of the Archbishop's faculty jurisdiction Handlist
Author:  compiled by Peter Evans
Published:  1995
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

One of a series of guides to archive collections at the Borthwick Institute for Archives, University of York.   pp.168.   ISBN 0-903857-59-6

Price:  £11.50





Clergy Training in Victorian York: The Schola Archiepiscopiat Bishopthorpe,1892-1898
Author:  Douglas Emmott
Published:  2002
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

This is one of an on-going series of publications from the Borthwick Insitute for Archives, intended to provide insights into new research concerning the history of Yorkshire and the North of England.   pp 43   ISBN 0-903857-33-2

Price:  £4.00





Company of Merchant Taylors in the City of York: Register of Admissions 1560-1835
Author:  complied by David M Smith
Published:  1996
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

One of a series of guides to archive collections at the Borthwick Insitute for Archives.   pp 110   ISBN 0-903857-71-5

Price:  £5.00





Complete History of the County of York. 1831.
Published:  1831
Medium: CD         Publisher:  Archive CD Books

The illustrated history of York, particularly focussing on Sheffield. It also has a historical and topographical survey of the West riding.    

Price:  £12.13





Confiscation and Restoration: The Archbishopric Estates and the Civil War
Author:  I J Gentles & W J Sheils
Published:  1981
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

This is one of an on-going series of publications from the Borthwick Insitute for Archives, intended to provide insights into new research concerning the history of Yorkshire and the North of England.   pp 53   ISBN 0-900701-53-6

Price:  £4.00





Constable of Everingham Estate Correspondence 1726-43
Author:  Peter Roebuck
Published:  2000
Medium: Book         Publisher:  Boydell & Brewer Ltd

Letters between Marmaduke Constable of Everingham Hall, a leading member of the Catholic landed gentry in Yorkshire, and Dom John Bede Potts, Sir Marmaduke's chaplain, and from 1726 supervisor of the estate and of his business affairs: a graphic picture of circumstances on a medium-sized estate in the early 18th century.   hardback   ISBN 978-0-902-12230-7

Price:  £24.00





Cosy Co-operation under Strain:Industrial Relations in the Yorkshire Woollen Industry 1919-1930
Author:  Christopher Wrigley
Published:  1987
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York

This is one of an on-going series of publications from the Borthwick Insitute for Archives, intended to provide insights into new research concerning the history of Yorkshire and the North of England.   pp 33   ISBN 0-903857-30-8

Price:  £4.00





Court Rolls of the Manor of Acomb: I
Author:  Harold Richardson
Published:  2000
Medium: Book         Publisher:  Boydell & Brewer Ltd

Court rolls and other documents from the manor of Acomb (now within the boundaries of the city of York), 1550-1760.   hardback   ISBN 978-0-902-12202-4

Price:  £24.00





Court Rolls of the Manor of Acomb: II
Author:  Harold Richardson
Published:  2000
Medium: Book         Publisher:  Boydell & Brewer Ltd

Supplementary material to volume I, based on subsequently discovered records, and further entries down to 1846.   hardback   ISBN 978-0-902-12229-1

Price:  £24.00





Customs Accounts of Hull 1453-1490
Author:  Wendy R. Childs
Published:  2000
Medium: Book         Publisher:  Boydell & Brewer Ltd

  hardback   ISBN 978-0-902-12294-9

Price:  £24.00





Early Tudor Craven
Author:  R.W. Hoyle
Published:  2000
Medium: Book         Publisher:  Boydell & Brewer Ltd

Surviving early Tudor assessments and lay subsidy returns for the West Riding wapentakes of Staincliffe and Ewcross, broadly the area of the Yorkshire Dales. The material sheds new light on the resistance to taxation in this area at the time, and the subterfuges to which subsidy commissioners were driven in making their returns to the Exchequer.   hardback   ISBN 978-0-902-12299-4

Price:  £24.00





East and North Ridings of Yorkshire 1840 History, Gazetteer & Directory, William White
Author:  William White
Published:  1840
Medium: CD         Publisher:  Archive CD Books

One of the very comprehensive White's directories.    

Price:  £15.11





Ecclesiastical Cause Papers at York I: Dean and Chapter's Court 1350-1843
Author:  KM Longley
Published:  1980
Medium: Book         Publisher:  University of York