Southwick Cartularies

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The Southwick Cartularies was an early 13th-century chronicle which listed the wealthiest people in England at the time. The chronicle also contained the first ever reference to the city of Portsmouth.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cartulary</span> Medieval book of charters

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<i>Hemmings Cartulary</i> 11th century English manuscript

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William de Chesney was a medieval Anglo-Norman nobleman and sheriff. The son of a landholder in Norfolk, William inherited after the death of his two elder brothers. He was the founder of Sibton Abbey, as well as a benefactor of other monasteries in England. In 1157, Chesney acquired the honour of Blythburgh, and was sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk during the 1150s and 1160s. On Chesney's death in 1174, he left three unmarried daughters as his heirs.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Supetar Cartulary</span>

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<i>Chronicon Petroburgense</i>

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cartulary of Mont-Saint-Michel</span>

The Cartulary of Mont-Saint-Michel is a collection of illuminated manuscript charters from Mont-Saint-Michel Abbey in Normandy. It was begun in the mid-12th century in the abbey's scriptorium, but more documents were added up to the 14th century. It is currently kept in the ancient collection of the Bibliothèque Intercommunale, Avranches.