First name | Geoffrey |
Last name | Cobbe |
Gender | Male |
Source | TNA JUST 1/103 m. 4 |
ID | Summary | Description | Location | Role | Charges | Comments on role | View incident |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
3538 | William atte Ree, William Shepherde, John Cook and John Prat break the close of John Walter | Armingford. The jurors say that William atte Ree of Steeple Morden and William Shepherde servant of Geoffery Cobbe, together with others unknown, and with John Cook of Barton, leader of felons, and John Prat servant of Geoffery Cobbe, on Monday 17th June 1381, with force and arms feloniously broke into the close of John Walter at Croydon, and seized and carried away his goods and chattels to the value of 40 s. And that the same John Prat assaulted the wife of the said John Walter, and seized the keys of his chamber, and entered it; and that he is a common malefactor. And that the said William atte Ree organised the aforesaid wrongdoers and others to burn the buildings of the said John Walter, but they were not burnt. | Croydon,Armingford Hundred,Cambridgeshire | Mentioned | View Incident page | ||
3540 | Geoffrey Cobbe sells goods belonging to Thomas Haselden | Also the jurors at Armingford say that Geoffrey Cobbe with other unknown persons subject to him, feloniously and like traitors entered the manor of Thomas Haselden at Guilden Morden and Steeple Morden, namely on Saturday 15th June 1381, and proclaimed publicly, pretending that they had a commission from the king for doing many evil deeds, when they had no such thing. And they sold there 155 quarters of grain, 6 quarters 7 bushels of peas and 5 quarters 2 bushels of barley and oats belonging to the said Thomas. | Steeple Morden,Cambridgeshire; Guilden Morden,Cambridgeshire | Accused | View Incident page |
person 1 | relationship with person 2 | person 2 | relationship with person 1 | Certainty | Sources | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Geoffrey Cobbe ( 16387 ) | Master | John Prat ( 16389 ) | Servant | Certain | ||
Geoffrey Cobbe ( 16387 ) | Master | William Shepherde ( 16386 ) | Servant | Certain |