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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/surrna6 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.htm10 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/surrna5 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>[htt3 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 We15 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 pres8 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 mine18 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 on27 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, an13 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 was9 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 hor18 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 t6 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 origi6 KB (971 words) - 11:50, 12 February 2023