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Archival authority for Henry III’s England: a carefully prepared calendar of charter rolls that maps land, law and lineage across 1226-1257. Documents speak across the centuries. This charter rolls calendar reproduces concise entries drawn from the public record office archives, arranged to function as a clear historical document collection that guides readers through royal grants, confirmations and legal transactions. Rich in medieval English legal records and english legal manuscripts, Volume I records medieval land grants, tenurial changes and administrative precedents that shape our understanding of British medieval history. Designed for primary source research, the volume acts as a legal historians resource and a practical aid for genealogy research in England; even casual readers interested in thirteenth century documents will find named places and dates that open local histories.Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. Its historical significance is straightforward: these calendars translate knotty manuscript phrasing into an orderly reference, letting scholars follow the mechanics of royal government and patterns of landholding across the Henry III period in England. For legal historians the calendar is a dependable tool; for family historians and those undertaking genealogy research England-wide it supplies the original entries needed to corroborate lineage and property claims. Casual readers can browse for compelling administrative detail and human names, and classic-literature collectors value a faithful edition that belongs on any shelf devoted to primary texts and the study of thirteenth-century documents. Practical, dignified and reissued with care, this volume restores a foundational witness to medieval administration and offers a direct route back to the records themselves. Suitable for library reference or private collections, it reconnects the present with the documentary fabric of British medieval history and rewards both the casual opener and the meticulous researcher.