Description (Repository) |
Patent Roll 1266-72: p 70
Because it is shown that the dean of Arches, sometime master
of the House of Converts, London, and other masters of that house,
have been accustomed to receive their whole robes twice a year ; the
king commands Richard de Ewell and Hugh de Turri, buyers of the
wardrobe, and others-buyers of the wardrobe, to let Adam de Cestreton,
king's clerk, who has expended of his own in buildings and other
works for the utility of the said house, and whom the king has
appointed to be master and keeper thereof, his whole robes, to wit,
a tunic, supertunic and cloak ('pallium) with furs and sendal fitting,
twice a year from the wardrobe so long as he be master. |