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  • ...ets were: 15 hides; 12 ploughs, 120 acres of meadow, woodland, herbage and pannage worth 75 hogs. It rendered £30 10s 0d.<ref>[http://www.gwp.enta.net/surrna
    6 KB (893 words) - 20:29, 18 June 2014
  • ...ert. Its Domesday assets were: 4½ ploughs, 5 acres of meadow, herbage and pannage worth 18 hogs. It rendered £8.<ref>[http://www.gwp.enta.net/surrnames.htm
    10 KB (1,701 words) - 22:43, 28 January 2016
  • ...th 17s, 10½ ploughs and 2 oxen, 30 acres of meadow, woodland, herbage and pannage worth 23 hogs. It rendered £10 10s 0d.<ref>[http://www.gwp.enta.net/surrna
    5 KB (770 words) - 18:03, 8 July 2011
  • ...re: 5 hides; 1 church, 2 mills worth 12s 6d, 20 ploughs, 4 acre of meadow, pannage worth 100 hogs. It rendered £14 and 2d from a house in Southwark.<ref>[htt
    3 KB (452 words) - 22:01, 11 November 2011
  • ...e: 34 hides. It had 2 mills worth 11s 10s, 29 ploughs, 12 acres of meadow, pannage and herbage worth 183 hogs. It rendered £40.<ref>[http://www.gwp.enta.net/
    9 KB (1,422 words) - 13:08, 22 February 2016
  • ...manded a royal inquiry, the archbishop granted the townspeople pasture and pannage in the Westwood and other places.
    16 KB (2,553 words) - 10:03, 26 December 2017
  • ...e this time, the Weald was used as summer grazing land, particularly for [[pannage]] by communities living in the surrounding areas. Many places within the We
    15 KB (2,497 words) - 20:58, 25 March 2012
  • ...granted the burgesses of Petersfield freedom from toll, stallage, picage, pannage, murage, and pontage throughout the realm of England. All charters are pres
    8 KB (1,261 words) - 22:51, 16 September 2014
  • ...1322 as being within "a circuit of sixteen leagues, and is yearly worth in pannage, aeries of eagles, herons and goshawks, in honey, millstones, and iron mine
    18 KB (2,702 words) - 12:30, 13 June 2013
  • ...pigs between September and November to eat fallen acorns and beechnuts (''pannage'' or ''mast''). There were also licences granted to gather bracken after 29 ...ing to the weather – and when the acorns fall. The Verderers decide when pannage will start each year. At other times the pigs must be taken in and kept on
    27 KB (4,200 words) - 13:55, 5 February 2018
  • ...d 17 villeins, with 6 cottagers, having 6 carucates, there is wood for the pannage of 5 hogs. In the time of king Edward the Confessor, and afterwards it was ...17 villeins, with 3 boarderers, having 4 carucates. There is wood for the pannage of 5 hogs. In the time of king Edward the Confessor it was worth 10 pounds,
    12 KB (1,841 words) - 09:58, 15 November 2018
  • ...of seven shillings and six-pence, and twelve acres of meadow, Wood for the pannage of sixty hogs. In the time of king Edward the Confessor, and afterwards, an
    13 KB (2,036 words) - 14:50, 15 November 2019
  • ...ol 24; 2 (April 1980) p. 80.</ref> The king's foresters collected fees for pannage rights in a typical year, 1319, from pig farmers, at least one of whom was
    9 KB (1,382 words) - 15:48, 26 March 2021
  • 7 KB (1,004 words) - 20:25, 17 May 2021
  • ...ith the lords of Bramber and [[Bewbush]] holding the rights. The tithes of pannage and herbage were given to Sele Priory in 1235. The forest also had wild hor
    18 KB (2,989 words) - 13:58, 12 January 2023
  • ...linga Scittas"'', mentioned in a charter of AD 953. in connection with the pannage of pigs to feed on acorns.<ref>Jerrome, 2002, page 15</ref>
    3 KB (409 words) - 09:47, 28 January 2023
  • ...Downs, and the under-down spring line, brought their swine for the autumn pannage (nut harvest) in the Wealden woods, and their cattle for the lush bite of t
    6 KB (1,008 words) - 20:27, 7 February 2023
  • ...the late Saxon and early Norman period, initially as extended pastures for pannage by a number of manors to the south. The name itself is of Anglo-Saxon origi
    6 KB (971 words) - 11:50, 12 February 2023