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Appendix

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 June 2012

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Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1831

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References

page 385 note b Phil. Trans, vol. XXXV. p. 428.

page 389 note a nous avons.

page 389 note b œuvres.

page 389 note c advenées.

page 389 note d cœur.

page 389 note e ayeul Roy.

page 390 note f cette.

page 390 note g dorenavant.

page 397 note a Plate XXXIII. fe 14.

page 397 note b R. XXXIII. f. 3.

page 397 note c PL XXXIII. f. 16.

page 397 note d See Ruding, pl. VII.

page 397 note e Pl. XXXIII. f. 2 and Ruding, pl. VI. f. 9.

page 397 note f Pl. XXXIII. f. 15.

page 402 note a Mr. Dallaway, in the Preliminary History to the first Volume of his “Western Sussex,” suggests a reason for the Itinerary describing the road from Regnum [Chichester] to London by the circuitous way of Clausentum [Southampton], instead of from Regnum through the Weald of Sussex and Surrey by Billinghurst and Dorking, to be this, that the Romans first of all employed themselves in making or perfecting from British tracks the four great Roads across the Island, the Weald of Sussex and Surrey being at that time a very great extent of uninhabited country, presenting an almost impervious passage through the dense wood, standing on a deep clay soil, and that when they had finished the great roads, and their armies had little employment, they were set to work to make a road through that difficult passage.

page 403 note a Annals of Coinage, vol. i. p. 235.

page 404 note b p. 21.

page 404 note c Creyke, Joh. S.T.P. is one of the subscribers to the book, “in Anglia.”

page 404 note d Page 25.

page 405 note e Ruding, vol. I. p. 237, and plate 7, number 23.

page 407 note a This date does not exactly agree with the Inscription.

page 407 note b Annals, vol. I. part ii. p. 203.

page 407 note c Ibid. p. 206.

page 408 note d Hunter, p. 69. Lodge, vol. II. p. 126.

page 409 note e Ellis, second Series, vol. II. p. 334.

page 409 note f The Lansdowne Manuscript, vol. xxv. art. 85, contains two accompts of the charges for the Lady Lennox's Funeral, March 22, 1577. In one, the cost in money is said to have amounted to £37. 3s. 4d. The second seems to have been an estimate only, the total of which amounts to £54. 3s. 4d. It says “to xij Prebendaries, if so many be present, xijli.” The first says, “to five Prebendaries then being presente vli.”

“The Chardges of the buriall of the Right Honourable the Counties of Lennings, at Westminster.

“Imprimis for breakinge the grounde xli.

“Item to Mr Dean and to foure of his men, blacks.

“Item to five Prebendaries, then beinge presente, vli.

“Item to the Chaunter of the Quier xiijs. iiijd. and black.

“Item to foure Petty Cannons xls.

“Item to the Mr of the Choristers xs.

“Item to xij. singing men, every on of them vji, viijd—iiijd.

“Item to ij. Vergers, blacks.

“Item to ij. Sextons xs.

“Item to the Register vjs. viijd.

“Item to the Scoole-master xiijs. iiijd.

“Item to the Vsher xs.

“Item to foure bell-ringers, and others for ringinge, xxvjs. viijd.

“Item to the maker of the grave xs.

“Item to xl. Her Mats scollers xls.

“Item to ten Choristers xs.

“Item to xij. Her Mats Almesmen xij. gownes, blacks.

“Item to the inferior officers and servants of the howse xls

“Item for the blacks in the Church and the Chauncell vjli, xiijs. iiijd.

“Som' totalis, besides the gownes and coats, xxxvijli. iijs. iiijd.”

page 415 note a Montfaucon, Suppl. vol. IV.

page 416 note a Plate XXXIV.

page 421 note a See one of these, Plate XXXV.

page 421 note b Crwm, crooked, or bending; Llech, stone: i. e. the stone for bending in adoration.

page 421 note c Llwyd's Additions to Glamorganshire. Gibson's Camden's Britannia, p. 619.

page 421 note d The Topographical Dictionary mentions the holy well on Cevyn Bryn; this is doubtless the same. Carlisle's Topog. Diet, of Wales, under Llanridian.

page 422 note e See also Mr. Logan's Observations on the Druidical Circles in Scotland. Archæologia, vol. XXII. p. 198, and Appendix to ditto, p. 410.

page 423 note f The Cambrian Traveller's Guide. Stourport, 1808.

page 423 note g Pref. to Myvyrian Archæology, vol. II.

page 423 note h Note by Sir Richard Colt Hoare, in his translation of Giraldus Cambrensis, vol. II. p. 309.

page 424 note g Leuchra, Mr. Logan says, signifies in the Gaelic, ‘reedy, abounding with rushes.’ Lloughor (pronounced Luccur) stands on a marsh. The Leuchar, which Mr. Logan speaks of, Appendix to Archaeologia, vol. XXII. p. 410, is situated on an extensive moss. It is evident that in calling their station Leucarum the Romans merely added a Latin termination to a British word.

page 425 note h See Bede's Ecclesiastical History, Book I. chapter 30. “I knew an instance of a great quantity of the bones of fowls being found buried in the body of a parochial church. What were these but the relics of heathen sacrifice? Socrates, before his death, directed a cock to be sacrificed to Esculapius.”

page 427 note a Rymer, vol. II. p. 204.

page 427 note b One stroke of the u is omitted by mistake.

page 428 note a Vol. XLVII. p. 416.

page 428 note b Ibid. vol. XCIV. p. 296.

page 428 note c Bibl. Top. Brit. No. XLI. p. 61.

page 429 note d P. 32.

page 429 note e Vol. II. p. ccliii.