The sellers of timber shall stand between the tenement which is called St. George's Hall and St. Edward's Lane….

The sellers of hogs and pigs shall stand between the churches of St. Mary and All Saints and on the north side of the street.

The ale or beer shall stand between St. Edward's Lane and the tenement sometime of Alice de Lewbury on the south side of the king's highway.

The sellers of earthen pots and coals shall stand between the said lane of St. Edward and the tenement sometime of John Hampton … and from that place upward.

The sellers of gloves and whittawyers shall stand between All Saints' church and the tenement which was sometime John the Goldsmith's….

The sellers of furs (? monianiorum) and linendrapers and langdrapers shall stand from the tenement which was John the Goldsmith's to the tenement of the abbot of Osney, in the corner, which John Smith sometime inhabited.

The bakers selling bread called Tutesyn shall stand between the shop which Nicholas the Spicer now holdeth and the tenement which John Coyntroyer holdeth.

The foreign[3] sellers of fish and those that are not free or of the Gild shall stand on market days behind the said sellers of bread, towards the middle of the street.

The foreign or country poulterers shall stand between Mauger Hall and the tenement called Somenois Inn….

The sellers of white bread shall stand on each side of Quatervois, from the north head thereof toward the south.