594 ■^' ^' ^ 3^2. • 



(* bayro'), with a fupertunic and capuce lined with their own fluff; 

 1 blue mantle lined with grife (' grifeo') with a fupertunic of the fame 

 colour lined with its own fluff; i garment lined with fquirrel (' calabre'), 

 with a tunic lined with blanket, and a capuce lined ; i garment without 

 fleeves, lined with vair, with a tunic lined with lamb-fkin ; a fur of vair 

 for a fupertunic ; a cap and a pair of gloves lined with grife, and a pair 

 of beaver gloves ; a tunic of mixt colour lined with blanket; 2 round 

 mantles, one mixt, and one black ; 2 garments of Norfolk cloth, one 

 lined with black cloth, and one with green ; and a caffock of another 

 form ; 4 ftrait tunics of blanket ; i entire blue robe lined with fine 

 linen ; i garment of bloody colour lined with fine linen ; i violet capuce 

 lined with fcarlet *; 10 elns of blue, with hand-towels and other linen 

 cloths ; a tabard f with a fupertunic and capuce of the fame fluff, lined 

 with blue linen ; i blood-coloured capuce lined with black; i fcarlet 

 capuce lined, and i blood-coloured one unlined ; and 30 books belonging 

 to the colledor. — He had alfo licence to fhip at Southampton a parcel 

 of images of faints, with many veffels of pewter, knives, &c. which 

 feem, as well as the books, to have been his own traveling equipage. 

 In the year 1388 a fimilar licence was given for fhipping a bed of cloth 

 of gold on a red ground, with gold foliage worked on a white ground 

 (' fredo') with covering, &c. and curtains of red tartarine if, and fome 

 other articles of furniture §. Such exemptions from cuflom in favour 

 of foreign ecclefiaftical dignitaries occur pretty often. [^Foedera, V. vii, 



PP- 356, .357» 577. 59°-] 



06lober — It was now enabled, that Englifh merchants, being in foreign 



ports, and not finding any fufBcient Englifh veffels there, might fhip 



their goods onboard foreign veflels. [Stat. I, 6 Ric. II, c. 8.] 



Aliens were permitted to bring fifh and all other kinds of viduals into 

 any city or town, and to cut them and fell them in any manner they 

 thought proper. [Stat, i, 6 Ric. II, c. 10.] 



Landlords, or hofls, in London, Yarmouth, Scarburgh, Winchelfea, 

 Rye, and other coaft towns, were ordered to defift from their noxious 

 pradlice of foreflalling herring or other fifli, or provifions of any kind, 

 on pretence of any cuflom or charter, all fuch being hereby abrogated : 

 and they were upon no account to hinder fifhermen or vidualers, natives 

 or foreigners in friendfliip with the king, from felling their wares, as 

 they might think proper. The fifhmongers of London were prohibited 



* There feems to be no doubt, that fcarlet their armour, having their armorial bearings re- 

 cloths were now dyed and comjiktcly finiflied in prcfcntcd on it in embroidery. It Is (till worn by 

 England : and we find eight cloths, fcarlet, black, the heralds on folemn occafions. 

 and rufTct, (Englifh maniifaftiire undoubtedly) J Quere, if the party-coloured (Inff, now called 

 llioiight wortiiy of being fent as prcfents to the tartan, with red the predominant colour ? 

 great lords of France in the year I 383. \_Fccdcra, § This liil of articles, which throws light upon 

 V. vii, *. 415.] It is alfo worthy of obfervation, the codumc, as well as the manufafturcs, of the 

 that In(h cloth makes fome figure in this enumei- age, will be very acceptable to fome readers, and 

 ation. will prove tedious to others. The later have ouly 



■|- The tabard was a drefs worn by knights over ^o Ikip over it. » 



