![]() We are also giving service of printing the hard-to-find books which are not listed in our store. Our dedicated team is trying to bring these rare books back to the shelves. This is an important book for the readers who want to know more about our old treasure. We hope that you understand these issues in these old treasure. We give our best to give you the best book but in some cases we have to adjust few pages which are blur or missing or black spots. As these are old books, we processed each page manually on computer and make them readable. If this title is a multivolume set, this is a single volume, Black & white printing on high quality natural shade paper with sewing binding for longer life, professionally processed without changing its contents. He was the son of William Sainthill and Marie Pinsent. Reviews arent verified, but Google checks. Original edition was published in and this unique edition is Reprinted in 2015 with the help of original edition. Richard Sainthill was born in 1586 at Hennock, Devon, England. Printed (for private distribution only) by Nichols and son, 1853 - Archaeology 0 Reviews. We have multiple options in color of leather Red, Green, Blue, Black and with Black labels. An Original Leather is being used for binding this book with Golden Leaf Printing and designing on Spine, front and Back of the book with edge gilding. 329.500 A Unique Leather Bound book for elite readers/collectors of old rare books. VIII, xx Devon Monastic Lands (Devon and Cornw. Date of birth estimated from first reference. In the autumn of 1566, however, he became insane, and he seems to have remained so afflicted until his death on 19 Nov. between the copy-holders and the Queen’s highness’, and succeeded insofar as he retained the office. 5Īfter Sainthill had secured for himself the deputy stewardship of the duchy of Cornwall’s manor of Bradninch, his right to the office was disputed by John Haydon, who had been deputy steward there under Bedford and who had retained rent rolls, court rolls and other muniments Sainthill brought actions against Haydon in both Chancery and Star Chamber, complaining that his precursor was causing ‘much contention. Although this was to be his last experience of Parliament, he did not lose all connexion with it: in 1557 he and Richard Calmady stood surety for John Evelegh, when Evelegh was fined for quitting the Parliament of November 1554 prematurely without leave. Richard Sainthill (1787-1870) was a distinguished Irish antiquarian and numismatist and Maclises most important early patron. Sainthill did not reappear there until the spring of 1554, when he was returned for another Cornish constituency, his fellow being Humphrey Cavell, a member of the 1st Earl of Bedford’s circle. By the time of the next Parliament, in March 1553, both Seymour and his elder brother, the Duke of Somerset, had disappeared and it was not the moment for a former client of their family to be helped to obtain a seat in the Commons. he wrote to the admiral from Hamworthy, Dorset, about a vessel driven ashore on the Isle of Wight, he professed himself ‘your friend assured’. He had no personal link with Grampound and he probably owed his return there to Admiral Seymour: on the previous 11 May he had visited Seymour House on admiralty business and when on 17 Sept. In 1547 Sainthill entered the Commons for a recently enfranchised borough. Such virtue had not been its own reward, for in the previous year he had bought former monastic land to the tune of £600 and he would go on to make regular, if smaller, purchases and to rebuild his house at Bradninch. In 1546 he supported a successful claim to a coat of arms with the declaration that he had ‘long continued in virtue and in all his acts and other his demeaning hath discreetly and worshipfully guided and governed himself’. Correspondence address: 1 Admiral Way, Doxford International Business, Park, Sunderland, Tyne & Wear, SR3 3XP. He was probably a Middle Templar, for his first wife was the daughter of one of that inn’s luminaries, his friends and colleagues seem to have been largely drawn from its members, and his son was to be admitted there. He inherited a small estate in Moreton but evidently preferred to make his home at Bradninch. ![]() Peter Sainthill came of a gentle family which had been settled in the neighbourhood of Moreton Hampstead since the 14th century. relief, Devon 1550, sewers, London 1554 dep. of Stephen Wilford and Alexander Writhington, 2s. ![]() ![]() of William Shine of Bradley, Berks., wid.
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