Skyscript: Astrological Attributes and rulerships of ...
... alewives, malsters, drunkards, oisterwives, fisherwomen, charwomen, tripewomen, and generally such women as carry commodities in the streets; midwives, nurses, &c, hackneymen ...
www.skyscript.co.uk
Museum of London - Medieval horses
In 1396 the hackneymen (horse-hirers) of Southwark, Dartford, Rochester and other towns on the Dover road charged 12 pence for each of the stages Southwark to Rochester and ...
www.museumoflondon.org.uk
London Taxis :: London's History :: Discover its great, its strange ...
The horses could be hired from hackneymen's stables, which were set at intervals along the route from London to various Towns. These stables became known as hackney stages.
storyoflondon.com
Introduction to Astrology: Chapter XI. Of the Moon, her Properties and ...
also midwives, nurses, &c.; hackneymen, watermen, water-bearers. 1. Sickness.--Apoplexies, palsy, the cholic, the stomach-ache, diseases in the left side, the bladder and members of ...
www.sacred-texts.com
Book Review by Bruce Boehrer of Horse and Man in Early ...
In the late Tudor period, hackneymen had already become so numerous in certain parts of the realm that they required regulation, and in general, horse-related misbehaviour ...
www.history.ac.uk
We are today facing some of the toughest times any
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www.radtax.co.uk
Stoke Newington - Economic history | British History Online
There was a 'weyemaker' (cheesemaker) in 1344 (fn. 72) and hackneymen of Stoke Newington were mentioned in 1428, c. 1473, and c. 1540. (fn. 73) There were a tailor and a ...
www.british-history.ac.uk