References
- Norwegian settlement was heavy in Cleveland and along the coast in Whitby strand wapentake. The Danish settlement was concentrated mainly in the Vale of Pickering. Many place-names contain later elements which indicate continued connections with the Scandinavian countries at least to A.D. 1000
- Customs Accounts P.R.O. E 122/57/1
- Reg. Papal Letters II (1305–42). Mandate to appropriate church of Seamer
- Register of Archbishop William booth York: D. Reg. fo. 224
- 1909 . The Old Seaport of Whitby 238 A suggestion by Gaskin in
- 1328 . C.C.R. 280 (p. Reg. Papal Letters Vol. II (1305–42).
- P.R.O. C. At Settrington, for example, 134/82. See also Cal. of Inquisitions
- P.R.O. For corn bought in Yorkshire in 1298 see E. 101/6/32
- 1304 . R.O. E. 101/6/38 and 12/8. Corn expenses (and details of carriage
- Atkinson , J. C. , ed. Whitby Chartulary 612 – 13 . II, pp. ed., 1879–81 Surtees Society, Durham
- loc. cit.
- 1321 . C.I. Misc. 137 (
- 1358 . C.P.R. 157 (
- C.P.R. 198 Yarm shipped lead from the Richmondshire mines in 1182 Pipe R. 28 Hen. II (Pipe Roll Soc.). The principal exports seem to have been corn and agricultural products in later centuries. (1338–40 pp.201.)
- Early English Customs System 221 – 22 . Document given in N.S.B. Gras
- N.I. 243 – 45 .
- The value of its burgesses' goods was, for example, comparable to several large market towns of the north-east, e.g., Northallerton £46; Malton £33
- 221 – 22 . Gras op. cit.
- P.R.O. E 101/6/38
- Ibid ‘from the Rector of Settrington 80 quarters of oats carried to Scarborough through twelve leucas at a cost of 16/8’
- 1338 . P.R.O. E. 372/183/47. Pipe Roll for
- Sessions of the Peace. Wool merchants on a national scale: they had been summoned to Edward III's council of merchants. Y.A.S. Vo. 100. p. xliv
- D. Reg. The Bridlington Priory grange at Burton Fleming on the Wolds sold much of its com in Scarborough. York: R.H. 60
- 1225 . C.P.R. 2 (pp., 5, 8, etc
- Monastic Notes II. Vol. 81 , 51 Y.A.S. Vol.
- Gaskin . op. cit.
- P.R.O. E. 101/6/38
- C. Ch. 147 R. I.
- 1923 . British Borough Charters (1216–1307) 303 – 05 . See Ballard and Tait
- 1798 . History of Scarborough Hinderwell
- White Vellum Book of Scarborough Corporation Documents contained in the No. 10A
- Rot. H. 11 There is little evidence to show that the Priory did anything to stimulate a port at Bridlington. In fact the Canons exported some of their wool from Filey in the late thirteenth century. (Vo. I, p.)
- Rowntree , A. 1931 . History of Scarborough 168
- 1256 . C.P.R. 477 (
- Cartwright , J. T. 1872 . Chapters of Yorkshire History 267 – 70 . . There was a later dispute (1584) between Scarborough and Seamer over their boundaries. N.R.R.S. Vo. I, p. 229
- The following, among many others examined for Whitby, Scarborough, Hull and Ravenser, proved useful: P.R.O. E. 122 55/16; 55/23; 56/3; 56/7; 56/10; 56/14; 57/1; 134/2; 134/3
- Three main factors influenced the port's development in the late fourteenth century: war, town riots and oligarchic administration of a particularly odious kind. This brought about a decline
- 1953 . Archaeologia Aeltana Vol. 31 , 4t – 204 . R.O. E. 163/Q.R. Exchequer Mise. 2/1. See also ‘Shipping and Trade in Newcastle upon Tyne 1294–96’. J. Conway Davies in Vol.h Series pp. 175
- R.O. E. 122/134/3
- R.O. E. 122/134/3
- Power , E. 1941 . ‘The Wool Trade in English Medieval History’ London See
- 1394 . W.C. 672 – 73 . II, pp. C.C.R. (p. 386
- R.O. E. 122/55/23. Petty Custom on Imports
- R.O. E. 372/207 m. 46 and Bawtry to London, m. 51