revenue paid to the Pope by a bishop or other cleric on his appointment, collected in England and sent to Rome; also known as the 'First Fruits' (primitive in Latin)
an official in a government department, in particular, one perceived as being concerned with procedural correctness at the expense of the people's needs
a significant body of property, mostly but not exclusively situated in Lancashire, which personally belonged to the king but was formally the territory of the duke
money raised by the king from additional sources as one-off payments when he faced an emergency or an unforeseeable expense of government; this could be made up of parliamentary grants, loans clerical taxes
a right by which the Crown could impose a tax on their tenants for the knighting of the eldest son, the marriage of the eldest daughter or to ransom a lord
the most intimate of an English monarch's courtiers, who became a man in whom much confidence was placed a royal secrets were shared as a matter of course
a group of free cities originating in the 13th century, which came together to form a commercial union with the intention of controlling trade in the Baltic Sea; the league dominated commercial activity in Northern Europe from the 13th-15th century
medieval system of governance where the head of the household, invariably an adult male, had authority over the property, labour, and mobility of everyone living on his land