INDEX.
The * signifies an engraving of the object referred to.
A.
Abbeys, of St. Alban, Herts, 85
St. Amand, Rouen, cartulary of, 7
St. Trinité, Caen, 24, cartulary of, 26
Abingdon, Berks, seal found near, 76
*Adderbury, Oxon, Church of, *door, and *dripstone in, 390
bead found near, 355
*Adeodatus, inscription to at Rome, 282
Aignebelle in Savoy, duplicate effigy of Peter d'Aquablanca, bishop of Hereford, at, 238
Altars, at Bedale, 258, and in Lorraine, 363
Anamzaptus, a mystic word, a charm against epilepsy, 359
Anglesea, invaded by the Irish Picts, A.D. 450, 227
cromlechs found in, 39
*spear-mould and celt-mould in, 257
Anstey, Herts, diminutive effigy at, 239
Aqueduct, 365
Archæological intelligence, 67, 155, 255, 348
recent publications, 102—104, 188—192, 393—396
Architecture, Gothic, Manuals of, reviewed, 379, 392—long and short work not proved to have been Anglo-Saxon, 285, the ancient Church of Brixworth beiug deficient in this masonry, 285, although great antiquity may be claimed for Churches which possess it, 287—lapidei tabulatus, towers rising in stages, and bonding-courses, borrowed from the Romans, 287—*windows, at Caistor, Northamptonshire, 288, *at Headbourn Worthy, Hants, 289, in Oxford Castle, 289, and at St. Cronan's, Ireland, 177—doors, at *Stanton Lacy, Shropshire, 289-297, and at Adderbury, Oxon, 390—capital at St. Benet's, Cambridge, 367—resemblance between the Churches of Crick, Northamptonshire, and of Bilton and of Astley, Warwickshire, 291—first explained as a system and a science by Rickman, 379, whose nomenclature has been long established and understood, 386—whereas the proposed new nomenclature is not an improvement, but the contrary, 381, Mr. Paley's Manual wanting clearness, and his proposed new styles natural divisions, 382—a style of architecture must have a distinct character, 383, which Mr. Bloxam's and Mr. Paley's proposed new styles have not, 384—remarks on foreign styles, 385, and on symbolism in architecture, 386—Saxon buildings, 386, their masonry not sufficiently observed, 387, often mixed with late Norman work, 388—Early English foliage, character of, 388—Decorated foliage, character of, 389—Mr. Bloxam's Manual the best for advanced students, 386, and Mr. Barr's the best for beginners, 391
military, 291, 295, 363
Ardragh, Donegal, Ireland, gorget found at, 37
Armour, ancient British, 352, 353
*Arrow-heads found at Woodperry, Oxon, 119
Ashburton, Devon, the market place at, 266
*Ashley, Hants, bell-cot, 207, and 'Church at, 299
Austin, St., in converting the Anglo-Saxons, A.D. 596, preserved their heathen temples, 195
*Axe of stone found at Llanmadock, Wales, 67
*Aycliffe, Durham, sculptured crosses at, 260
Ayot, St. Lawrence, Herts, effigy at, 239
Ayr, St., near Cotentiu, France, tore found at, 36, 37
B.
Badbury Camp, Dorset, tumulus found near, containing *ornamented urns and skeletons in cists, 348—352
Baldwin, bishop of Theronanne, 16
Comte of Flanders, charter of, 17
conducted Matilda into Ponthieu, to meet William I., where their marriage was celebrated, 21
Baliol, John, character of, 185
Barker, John, brass of, at Godalming, Surrey, 83
Barr, family of, 81
Barr's Manual of Gothic Architecture, 391
Barrows, 155—157, 348
Basin of free stone at Suckley, Worcestershire, 89
*Bath, Somerset, fragments of small Saxon crosses at, and stone vase dug up near, 356
Battle Abbey, Sussex, muniments of, in possession of Sir T. Phillips, 215
*Beads, found at Hoylake, Cheshire, 354—and near Adderbury, Oxon, of fine green glass, 355
Beauchamp, R., earl of Warwick, his statue at Warwick, 203—but buried at Lewes, 80
Becket, Thomas à, born in Cheapside, London, fled in disguise to Sandwich, and suffered in his fifty-first year, 374
*Bedale, Yorkshire, fragment of cross at, 260
*sculptured stone and altar, with *details of supposed Saxon tombs in crypt of church at, 258
Bede, on the chalice exhibited to pilgrims at Jerusalem, 131
Bedfordshire.—Bedford, 318
Bedford's Chart, illustrating the Architecture of Westminster Abbey, notice of, 183
Bells, arrangements for the hanging of in Churches, without Towers, 205—230
*Bell-cots, interesting examples of, 205—213
in the gable below the roof, as at Corhampton, Littleton, and Ashley, Hants, 206
in the west wall above the roof and gable, as at Manton, Rutland, 218
over the chancel-arch, as at Binsey, Oxon, 209
*in small turrets, on the west gable, as at St.Helen's, York, 211
in niches projecting from the face of the wall, as at *Godshill, Isle of Wight, 212
Berkshire.—Abingdon. 76; Hinksey, (North), 301; Reading, 141—148; Tubney, 69; Wallingford, 75; Windsor, 59—61, 104; Wittenham, (Long), 239
Bertram, J. C, pretended discovery by, 161
*Beverley, Yorkshire, Early English corbel-table at, 391
Billing, J., on the history and remains of the Friery at Reading, Berks, 141
Bingley, Mr., cromlechs mentioned by, 39
*Binsey, Oxon, Church of, 209
Birch, S., on the Torc of the Celts, 27—38
*Bircham Tofts, Norfolk, coped coffin at, 268
Bishop Wolston, of Worcester, *seal of, 261
Blanche, daughter of Edward III., effigy of, 237
Bloxam's Manual of Gothic Architecture, 386
Boat, ancient, found in Lough Fea, Ireland, 94
Bodowyr, Wales, cromlech standing at, 42, 43
Books, Prints, and Antiquities, presented to the Institute, 90
Bottesford, Leicestershire, effigy at, 239