The English Alehouse: A Social History, 1200-1830 |
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Page 73
... tipplers succeeded each other in premises , as when Richard Jervys of Bodham in Norfolk sought a licence in 1607 for a house which he had just purchased and which ' heretofore has been used for trade of victualling ' . But continuity of ...
... tipplers succeeded each other in premises , as when Richard Jervys of Bodham in Norfolk sought a licence in 1607 for a house which he had just purchased and which ' heretofore has been used for trade of victualling ' . But continuity of ...
Page 102
... tipplers to give up brewing in southern England . Buying supplies from the common brewers also had positive advantages for the small alehouse - keeper . III Common brewers assisted tipplers in a variety of ways . Vital was the extension ...
... tipplers to give up brewing in southern England . Buying supplies from the common brewers also had positive advantages for the small alehouse - keeper . III Common brewers assisted tipplers in a variety of ways . Vital was the extension ...
Page 180
... tipplers applying at licensing ses- sions only received their permits sometime later , after their characters had been vetted . Licences themselves became generally more formalised and uniform , frequently they were printed . Petty ...
... tipplers applying at licensing ses- sions only received their permits sometime later , after their characters had been vetted . Licences themselves became generally more formalised and uniform , frequently they were printed . Petty ...
Contents
Chapter two The Emergence of the Alehouse c 12001500 20 | 20 |
The Incidence of Alehouses | 39 |
Chapter four The Alehouse and its Landlord 15001660 | 64 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
ale-sellers alehouse alehouse-keepers beer Brewing Industry brewing victuallers Cambridge Canterbury centre Chester City communal countryside County Court customers Diary Dorset Dorset RO drink trade drinking houses drunkenness early seventeenth century early Stuart East Sussex economic English Essex Essex RO established excise gallon Glos Greater London Greater London RO growing number Hanoverian History illicit important increasingly inns justices Kent Kent AO labourers Lancashire landlords larger Leicester Leics less licensed houses licensed victuallers liquor lodging magistrates major Manchester medieval Middlesex nineteenth century NNRO Northamptonshire Norwich Oxford parish passim poor popular drink population premises probably provincial public house publicans Puritan Q/SR Quarter Sessions Record Soc regulation reign retail Revolution selling servants Sessions Records sixteenth century small victuallers social Society Somerset spirits Stuart period taverns thesis Thirsk tied houses tipplers tippling house towns traditional Tudor unfol University unlicensed unpublished urban victualling houses village Webb Collection Wiltshire Worcestershire