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 Great! Thank you very much, Keith! 
This one is a fine proof to the etymology.

Vlad


Пятница, 14 декабря 2012, 9:39  от Keith Briggs <[log in to unmask]>:
>Here is a rare explicit reference to the purchasing of shoelands, in this case by Abbott John of Ramsey in 1285:
> 
>Et perquisivit terras et tenementa, ex quibus assignavit conventui decem libras pro calciamentis.
> 
>(Cartularium monasterii de Rameseia, ed. Hart 1893,  vol. 3, page 185)
> 
>Keith
> 
>From: Briggs,KM,Keith,DUB2 R 
>Sent: 10 December 2012 16:47
>To: The English Place-Name List
>Subject: RE: obedientiary system in pns
> 
>sholands 1381/2 ‘shoe-lands’ (Foxhall (Sf), in lands of Sibton Abbey).
> 
>JEPNS  42 (2010) p.39.
> 
>Keith
> 
>-----Original Message-----
>From: The English Place-Name List [ mailto:[log in to unmask] ] On Behalf Of Vladislav Alpatov
>Sent: 10 December 2012 16:26
>To:  [log in to unmask]
>Subject: obedientiary system in pns
> 
>Dear All,
> 
>Knowles in "The Monastic Order" mentions that in DB some lands were assigned specifically to provide clothing for the monks at the Old Minster at Winchester (de vestitu monachorum) and Canterbury. Has anyone come across field names that would account for this or suchlike arrangement? (and indeed any other place-name traces of "obedientiary" system of specialised land assignment, leaving aside the well-evidenced similar parish system with its Lamplands and Bell fields). Thank you!