1365 - John Petit of Abbeville: Difference between revisions

From International Robin Hood Bibliography
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  |data3=John Pety among more than 25 people who unlawfully carried away goods and merchandise floating to shore from ship wrecked off the Northumberland coast near Seaton Delaval
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{{#display_map:50.104819,1.838036|width=34%}}<div class="pnMapLegend">Abbeville, the capital of Ponthieu under English rule.</div>
{{#display_map:50.104819,1.838036|width=34%}}<div class="pnMapLegend">Abbeville, the capital of Ponthieu under English rule.</div>
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== IRHB comments ==
== IRHB comments ==
 
Ponthieu, with Abbeville as its capital, was alternately French and English during the Hundred Years' War, It was ceded to England following the Treaty of Brétigny<ref>[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Br%C3%A9tigny Wikipedia: Treaty of Brétigny.]</ref> in 1360 and remained in Englis possession for the next 15 year or so, except for a brief period when it was recaptured by France. It was thus under English rule when the incident detailed in the Patent Roll entry took place.
== Lists ==
== Lists ==
* Not included in {{:Sussex, Lucy 1994a}}.
* Not included in {{:Sussex, Lucy 1994a}}.
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== Background ==
== Background ==
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abbeville Abbeville.]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abbeville Wikipedia: Abbeville]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Br%C3%A9tigny Wikipedia: Treaty of Brétigny.]


== Also see ==
== Also see ==

Revision as of 17:40, 8 November 2018

Record
Date 1365
Topic Ship belonging to John Petit, merchant of Abbeville, boarded and taken over by pirates who subsequently sold cargo and vessel in Sussex
Loading map...
Abbeville, the capital of Ponthieu under English rule.
Place Max Lejeune in Abbeville / Pline, 12 May 2013, Wikimedia Commons.

By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-08. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-08.

Record

[7 Aug. 1365:]
The like [sc. commission of oyer and terminer] to Richard, earl of Arundel, Ralph Spigumell, Andrew Peverel and William Merlot, touching a complaint by John Petit, merchant of Abbevill, that some evildoers boarded a ship of his laden with wheat and other goods, wounded the mariners, brought the ship and cargo to the county of Sussex and sold the same there.By K.[1]

Source notes

Membrane 29d. of the Patent Roll for 39 Edward III - Part II. Italic type as in printed source. IRHB's brackets. Marginal note: "July 18. Westminster".

IRHB comments

Ponthieu, with Abbeville as its capital, was alternately French and English during the Hundred Years' War, It was ceded to England following the Treaty of Brétigny[2] in 1360 and remained in Englis possession for the next 15 year or so, except for a brief period when it was recaptured by France. It was thus under English rule when the incident detailed in the Patent Roll entry took place.

Lists

Sources

Background

Also see

Notes


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