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Definition of Aulnage
1. n. See Alnage and Alnager.
Definition of Aulnage
1. alnage [n -S] - See also: alnage
Lexicographical Neighbors of Aulnage
Literary usage of Aulnage
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Statutes at Large from the Magna Charta, to the End of the Eleventh by Great Britain (1762)
"... willing to have the fame to aulnage to power and authority to let to ferm,
... and aulnage of cloths good ..."
2. English Economic History: Select Documents edited by Alfred Edward Bland (1919)
"THE aulnage OF CLOTH [Court Roll, 178, 97, m. 2d.], 1291.2 Court on Monday [14
May, 1291]. Hamo of Bury "St. Edmunds brought a letter patent of 1 The clause ..."
3. Reports of Cases in the Reigns of Hen. VIII, Edw. VI, Q. Mary, and Q. Eliz by Great Britain Courts (1794)
"5. and this an is confirmed i. H, 4. Raft.Officers j. 4. c. 13. The aulnage may
be committed to farm with improvement by advice of the treasurer and barons ..."
4. Reports of Cases in the Reigns of Hen: VIII. by Great Britain Courts (1794)
"The aulnage may be committed to farm with improvement by advice of the ...
or of aulnage, contrary to the effect of the faid Jail ..."
5. A Catalogue of the Library of the London Institution: Systematically Classed by London Institution Library, William Upcott, Edward William Brayley, Richard Thomson (1840)
"Some considerations in relation to the antient duties of Subsidy and aulnage, on
woollen manufactures. Folio Broadside. Miscellaneous Petitions, Art. 76. ..."
6. Preston guild merchant, 1882. Memorials of the Preston guilds by William Alexander Abram (1882)
"... ought to be quit of aulnage, as the Councell of this Defendant doth let hym
understand, and so have bene and continued w'thout ..."