The Digital Ark: Early Modern Collections of Curiosities in England and Scotland, 1580-1700

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John Robinson ( - )

A John Robinson, farmer, is mentioned Thoresby's diary entry for 13 August 1702:
[I] Walked over the Black-moor; had Haw-caster-rig and Tuninghal (or hough, rather) hill, on the left hand, and Moor-Allerton, and the Street-lane on the right; to Allingley, (in old writings, Alwoodley), whence Mr. Midgley walked with us to Eccup Moor and Adle, to direct to the place where the heaps of ruins were lately discovered. After a transient view went to the mill below; discoursed John Robinson, an intelligent person, who having occasion to plough a parcel of ground he had leased of Cyril Arthington, of Arthington, Esq. lord of the soil, was the happy occasion of this discovery of a Roman town, which by the ruins seems to have been very considerable; they have got up so many stones, though they have dug no deeper than necessity obliged to make way for the plough, that they have already built therewith two walls, one a yard high and twenty seven rood long (I: 375-376).
Artisan or Craftsman - creator
Relevant locations: Residence at Addle-Mill, Adel
Linked manuscript items: as Sender of a letter - "[Letter from John Robinson to Ralph Thoresby]," Yorkshire Archaeological Society MS8, Leeds
Linked print sources: as Artisan or Craftsman - creator - The Diary of Ralph Thoresby, F.R.S. author of the topography of Leeds. (1677-1724).
as Donator of object(s) - Ducatus Leodiensis; or the topography of the town and parish of Leedes and parts adjacent ...
References in Documents:
Thoresby, Musaeum Thoresbyanum (1713)

W. Foster's perpetual Almanack, engraved upon a Copper-Plate, the Bigness of a Crown-Piece. Don. Bart. Shuttleworth. A Sort of perforated Brick-Tiles, contrived and made by John Robinson of Addle-Mill (who sent it me); it prevents a great Consumption of Hair-Cloths that he formerly used in drying Oats, &c.