The Yorkshire Archaeological Journal, Volume 13Yorkshire Archaeological Society., 1895 A review of history, antiquities and topography in the county. |
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Page 4
... head of the doorway is an E.E. niche of plain character . The pediment of the central division of the front is enriched with the curvilinear ball - flower , and the great central window has been of E.E. character , but is filled with ...
... head of the doorway is an E.E. niche of plain character . The pediment of the central division of the front is enriched with the curvilinear ball - flower , and the great central window has been of E.E. character , but is filled with ...
Page 7
... heads . The windows are rectilinear insertions , and are of two lights with square heads and labels . The east window is also square and has five lights . The eastern wall has a gable crowned with an ornamented cross . The interior will ...
... heads . The windows are rectilinear insertions , and are of two lights with square heads and labels . The east window is also square and has five lights . The eastern wall has a gable crowned with an ornamented cross . The interior will ...
Page 12
... Head . The country bleak and very dreary , and looked the more wretched amidst the unceasing rain . We went over the lighthouse at Flamborough Head , which is extremely interesting . The coast is very bold , and the sea was raging in a ...
... Head . The country bleak and very dreary , and looked the more wretched amidst the unceasing rain . We went over the lighthouse at Flamborough Head , which is extremely interesting . The coast is very bold , and the sea was raging in a ...
Page 17
... head . There is a good Norman arch between the nave and chancel , spring- ing from shafts having foliated capitals and the square abacus . There is a north chapel to the choir , and in the north wall of the chancel a Norman window and a ...
... head . There is a good Norman arch between the nave and chancel , spring- ing from shafts having foliated capitals and the square abacus . There is a north chapel to the choir , and in the north wall of the chancel a Norman window and a ...
Page 19
... heads of all a circle containing quatrefoil . The clerestory has in each compartment a range of five arches ... head of the central arch is a pierced trefoil ; the dripstones and mouldings are richly ornamented with the tooth ...
... heads of all a circle containing quatrefoil . The clerestory has in each compartment a range of five arches ... head of the central arch is a pierced trefoil ; the dripstones and mouldings are richly ornamented with the tooth ...
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Common terms and phrases
acres of meadow aisle Anno Appletreewick Archbishop of Canterbury Archbishop of York berewicks Bishop bordars bovates bovates for geld buried carucates for geld carucates of land castle chancel chapel church clerestory Coat of arms Count of Mortain daughter demesne Dodsworth Domesday Doncaster east eight carucates Elizabeth five carucates foresaid four carucates four ploughs Grant half a leuga half a plough half for geld heirs held Henry Hugh John King land for geld Lascy Lenchwick length and half leuga in length leugæ Lord Margaret Margaret Craven Mary mouldings nave Nether Thong Nigel oxgangs parish pasturable Pontefract Richard Robert Robt Roger Sandal Castle seal shafts shillings side six bovates six carucates soke Stapleton Thomas Thorp Thos three carucates three ploughs tower Vavasour villanes Wapentake waste whole manor wife William Craven Wood worth twenty shillings Yorkshire
Popular passages
Page 281 - So very narrowly he caused it to be " traced out, that there was not a single hide, nor one virgate of land, nor even, " it is shame to tell. though it seemed to him no shame to do, an ox, nor a cow, " nor a swine was left, that was not set down.
Page 155 - God, and to blessed Mary, and all Saints, and my body to be buried in the Church of S.
Page 236 - She hath been the devil's instrument to bring many (I fear) to eternal fire: now she herself, with her old sister of Walsingham, her young sister of Ipswich, with their other two sisters of Doncaster and Penrice, would make a jolly muster in Smithfield ; they would not be all day in burning.
Page 481 - March, 1545, giving his soul to God Almighty, St. Mary, and All Saints, and his body to be buried in the...
Page 286 - ... hundred eight pounds. If any one shall have been exiled according to law, no one but the King shall pardon him. But if an Earl or Sheriff shall have exiled any one from the country, they themselves may recall him, and pardon him if they will.
Page 192 - Roger de Mowbray, who died at Ghent, in 1298, and was buried at Fountains.
Page 70 - Canterbury ; and, with the other bishops of the church aforesaid, duly consecrate the person elected, as his lawful primate. But if the archbishop of York shall die, his successor, accepting the gift of the archbishopric from the king, shall come to Canterbury, or where the archbishop of Canterbury shall appoint, and shall from him receive canonical ordination. To this ordinance consented the king aforesaid, and the archbishops, Lanfranc of Canterbury, and Thomas of York ; and Hubert subdeacon of...
Page 73 - During Lent, in the same year, the archbishop of York came to London by command of the king's justices; but when he came to Westminster with his cross, he was forbidden by the bishop of London and the other bishops of England thenceforth to presume to carry his cross in the province of Canterbury. On this, he contumaciously made answer that he would not lay it aside for them ; but, listening to the advice of his own people, he hid it from before the face of the people, lest a tumult might arise among...
Page 14 - The church is a small building, consisting of a nave, with a north aisle, and a chancel. At the eastern end of the aisle are two tombs, on one of which is the figure of a knight, in chain armour, crosslegged ; on the other that of a lady, with a lion at her feet. . . . By the side of these is the tomb of Sir Robert Dymoke, who was champion at the...
Page 576 - House, London, W. Single copies of the yearly Index may be obtained. Many of the societies in union with the Society of Antiquaries take a sufficient number of copies to issue with their transactions to each of their members. The more this plan is extended the less will be the cost of the Index to each society.