Transactions, Volume 22

Front Cover
 

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page xxvi - was voted to the Chair. The minutes of the last Annual Meeting were read and confirmed. The Treasurer
Page vii - The Most Rev. His Grace the LORD ARCHBISHOP OF YORK. The Right Rev. the BISHOP OF
Page 24 - his wife for their souls when they shall have departed this life and for the souls of the late Queen Philippa, Thomas de Fulnetby,
Page 74 - THE HOTHAMS, being the Chronicles of the Hothams of Scorborough and South Dalton, from their hitherto unpublished family papers, by AMW Stirling.
Page 45 - (Fig- 5-) The second example is precisely similar in shape and construction to the box already mentioned, the ivory being fastened to the wood by small pegs. The top, however, is more elaborately decorated by nine pieces of ivory, the centre one being lozenge-shaped, bearing the initials " TF" and dated 1665. Around this are
Page 69 - to the National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty, in
Page 5 - says that about Midsummer Day many ships " among them one which carried Geoffrey, Provost of Beverley, nephew of Roger, Archbishop of York, chancellor of the young King and many other nobles, perished at St. Valéry. Many other ships, nearly 30 or more, carrying wine from Poictou also perished.
Page 35 - spot close to the Bempton and Flamborough Road, at which the stream which runs from the northward passes to the inside of the Dyke, thinking that as this was a spot from which a water supply had been obtained by the defenders, they would probably have congregated on the rampart and dropped their utensils about in this place.
Page 38 - We see from this that the flakes must have been formed on the top of the rampart and washed down the slope with the silting during subsequent ages. But whilst excavating the top of the rampart just beneath the crest an important observation was made by the workmen.
Page 5 - the young King for 11,000 marks of silver ; but what amount of money by tale (ie coin) is meant by eleven thousand is not perhaps wholly a mystery to some, a very mysterious remark ; from which it would appear that it was not the chancellorship of England, but only of the young King, which had been bought for him.

Bibliographic information