Reliquiæ antiquæ eboracenses; or, Remains of antiquity: relating to the county of YorkCooke and Clark, Printers, 1855 - 96 pages |
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Page 22
... tower , ( as shewn on the annexed woodcut . ) The colors are argent , a chevron azure , a label of three points gules in chief . does not mention the label of three points . Wilson Joan Swillington , A Walter Calverley , Adam , son and ...
... tower , ( as shewn on the annexed woodcut . ) The colors are argent , a chevron azure , a label of three points gules in chief . does not mention the label of three points . Wilson Joan Swillington , A Walter Calverley , Adam , son and ...
Page 23
... tower at the west end is of a later date than any other part ; the window is perpendicular , temp . Edward IV .; on it are the arms of the Swillingtons , and a niche in which there has formerly been the figure of the Virgin Mary , the ...
... tower at the west end is of a later date than any other part ; the window is perpendicular , temp . Edward IV .; on it are the arms of the Swillingtons , and a niche in which there has formerly been the figure of the Virgin Mary , the ...
Page 24
... tower , two of the date 1656 ; on one of them is the following distich : - WHEN I DO RING GOD'S PRAYSES SING . WHEN I DO TOULE PRAY HEART AND SOULE . T.L. T.W. CHURCHWARDENS . The third bell has the date 1732 . The parish register ...
... tower , two of the date 1656 ; on one of them is the following distich : - WHEN I DO RING GOD'S PRAYSES SING . WHEN I DO TOULE PRAY HEART AND SOULE . T.L. T.W. CHURCHWARDENS . The third bell has the date 1732 . The parish register ...
Page 26
... Tower Hill , near Warley , in the parish of Halifax . The site of this discovery is part of a line of ancient military defences , at present known by little more than their names , extending from the entrenchments at Hunter's Hill , to ...
... Tower Hill , near Warley , in the parish of Halifax . The site of this discovery is part of a line of ancient military defences , at present known by little more than their names , extending from the entrenchments at Hunter's Hill , to ...
Page 27
... Tower Hill ; the soil thus precipitated from the moor impeded the progress of excavation , and in its removal the larger Urn was brought to light ; it measures nine inches high , and is twenty - two in cir- cumference . But , in the ...
... Tower Hill ; the soil thus precipitated from the moor impeded the progress of excavation , and in its removal the larger Urn was brought to light ; it measures nine inches high , and is twenty - two in cir- cumference . But , in the ...
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Common terms and phrases
17th Century altar amongst ancient ANTIQUARIAN DRAFTSMAN Antiquaries barrows BAWTRY beneath BEVERLEY bones BRADFORD BRIDLINGTON Brigantes bronze buried Caer Castle church coins COUNTY OF YORK crosses Crown decorated defence Derbyshire discovered discoveries DIXON DONCASTER earthworks east Edward Ellis excavations feet Field four lines Grocers HALF PENY Halifax Hall Hill HVLL inches interment J. R. SMITH JAMES WARDELL Kiddal Killingbeck KING King's head KINGSTON knot dividing Leeds London Lord MALTON Manor Mercers moulds mound O.
R. IOHN ornamented parish PENNY period PLATES AND WOOD-CUTS PONTEFRACT relics remains RICHARD RICHMOND Ripon river road ROBERT Roman Camps SAMVELL Saxon sepulchral SHEFFEILD Sheffield shew side skeletons SMITH stone Swillington Thomas Markenfield Thos Todwick Tower true lover's knot true lovers tumuli vallum vessels Whitby WILBERFOSS WILLIAM BOWMAN William Lodge window yards Yorkshire Philosophical Society Yorkshire Tradesmen's Tokens
Popular passages
Page 83 - And it came to pass on the morrow, that Balak took Balaam, and brought him up into the high places of Baal, that thence he might see the utmost part of the people.
Page 52 - Light, God's eldest daughter, is a principal beauty in a building: yet it shines not alike from all parts of heaven. An east window welcomes the infant beams of the sun, before they are of strength to do any harm, and is offensive to none but a sluggard. A south window in summer is a chimney with a fire in it, and needs the screen of a curtain. In a west window in summer time towards night, the sun grows low, and over familiar, with more light than delight.
Page 32 - March, 1545, giving his soul to God Almighty, St. Mary, and All Saints, and his body to be buried in the...
Page 4 - Patroclus. The mound supposed by Xenophon, to contain the remains of Alyattes, father of Croesus, King of Lydia, was of stone and earth, and more than a quarter of a league in circumference. In later times, Alexander the Great, caused a tumulus to be heaped over his friend Hephestion, at the cost of twelve hundred talents, no mean sum even for a conqueror like Alexander, it being £232,500 Sterling.
Page 3 - And they shall not lie with the mighty that are fallen of the uncircumcised, which are gone down to hell with their weapons of war: and they have laid their swords under their heads, but their iniquities shall be upon their bones, though they were the terror of the mighty in the land of the living.
Page 8 - The intrepid countenance of the Britons, and the spirit that animated their whole army, struck Ostorius with astonishment. He saw a river to be passed; a palisade to be forced ; a steep hill to be surmounted ; and the several posts defended by a prodigious multitude. The soldiers, notwithstanding, burned with impatience for the onset. All things give way to valour, was the general cry. The tribunes and other officers seconded the ardour of the men. Ostorius reconnoitred the ground, and having marked...
Page 32 - May, 1449,) giving her soul ut supra and her body to be buried in the Quire of the parish Church of Fryston upon Ayre.
Page 4 - Hector's barrow was of stones and earth. Achilles erected a tumulus upwards of an hundred feet in diameter, over the remains of his friend Patroclus. The mound supposed by Xenophon to contain the remains of Alyattes, father of Croesus, king of Lydia, was of stone and earth, and more than a quarter of a league in circumference. In later times, Alexander the Great caused a tumulus to be heaped over his friend Hephaestion, at the cost of 1200 talents, no mean sum, even for a conqueror like Alexander,...
Page 22 - Eboracenses, a quarto work, published at Leeds in the year 1852. The following extract from the article will explain the nature of the discovery. " They were found in quarrying on Tower Hill ; but owing to the nature of the operations, and the unlocked for discovery of relics by the people employed, it is believed that many similar remains were demolished. On one occasion, an urn, bleached by the tempests of an entire winter, was observed to protrude half its own bulk from the stratum of soil in...
Page 52 - In a west window in summer time towards night, the sun grows low, and over familiar, with more light than delight. A north window is best for butteries and cellars, where the beer will be sour for the sun's smiling on it. Thorough lights are best for rooms of entertainment, and windows on one side for dormitories.