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Nicholas de Farndone : ウィキペディア英語版 | Nicholas de Farndone Nicholas de Farndone (sometimes written as Farindone or Farrington) was a 14th-century English merchant and politician who served four non-consecutive terms as Mayor of London. He was born Nicholas le Fevre, son of Ralph le Fevre, but assumed the surname of Farndone after marrying the daughter and heiress of William de Farndone, a goldsmith and alderman.〔Phillimore, W.P.W. () "The London & Middlesex Notebook" pp.114 - 115〕 Like William, Nicholas was a goldsmith.〔() "The London Goldsmiths" pg. 4〕 Nicholas succeeded his father-in-law as alderman of the ward of Farringdon Within,〔Wheatley, Henry Benjamin, and Cunningham, Peter () "London, Past and Present" pg. 31〕 and was elected mayor in 1308, 1313, 1320, and 1323. During his second term, on behalf of King Edward II, Nicholas issued a ban of the game of football, ancestor to the modern games of soccer and rugby, ostensibly due to the noise and disturbance ("great evils") caused by the game.〔Birley, Derek () "Sport and the Making of Britain" pg. 32〕〔Riley, Henry Thomas () "Munimenta Gildhallae Londoniensis, Vol. 3" pp. 439 - 441〕 Nicholas died in 1334, without male issue, and devised his aldermanry to Sir John de Pulteney, another mayor of London.〔Sharpe, Reginald R. () "Calendar of Letter-books Preserved Among the Archives of the City of London at the Guildhall" pg. 94〕 ==References==
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