Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Plural form of
cartulary .
Etymologies
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Examples
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You would like me, perhaps, to sign the order for that box of ancient — cartularies — is not that the proper word for them?
Mary Anerley Richard Doddridge 2004
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True, skepticism had been spawned, and throughout Western Europe grave and dedicated men were poring over charters, deeds, and cartularies, and casting a jaundiced eye on those monkish tales that had done service for history for nearly a thousand years.
Amateurs Plumb, J.H. 1965
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Scottish Text Society (Edinburgh) are of great value; and many episcopal registers and cartularies of the Scottish abbeys have been printed by the Bannatyne, Maitland, Spottiswoode, and other societies.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 13: Revelation-Stock 1840-1916 1913
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There are annotated cartularies where the various documents are arranged in chronological order for the reign of the abbot or prince during which the events took place.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 1: Aachen-Assize 1840-1916 1913
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He read all the Latin authors, studied all the chronicles of France and those of the neighboring countries, visited the monasteries, deciphered account-books, cartularies, treaties; and, in this way, succeeded in discovering certain references scattered over the ages.
The Hollow Needle; Further adventures of Arsene Lupin Maurice Leblanc 1902
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Of such a kind are the various monastic cartularies, law-books like Glanvill's, records like the Patent, Close, and Charter Rolls, collections of letters, and modern collections of documents like T. Rymer's Foedera or J.H. Round's Calendar of
The History of England from the Norman Conquest to the Death of John (1066-1216) George Burton Adams 1888
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The D'Ewes collection was a curiously miscellaneous one, containing much trivial matter side by side with learned treatises, transcripts of important cartularies, monastic registers, public and private muniments of the most varied description.
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You would like me, perhaps, to sign the order for that box of ancient -- cartularies -- is not that the proper word for them?
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In the two cartularies of that house, of which abstracts will be found in Oliver's
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Charlemagne was conscious of this, and therefore ordered in his cartularies, that no judge should hold a court of justice except in the morning on an empty stomach.
Knickerbocker's History of New York, Complete Washington Irving 1821
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