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was somewhat advanced in years, but effeminate, a chamberknight rather than a brave soldier. However, soon after coming to the earldom, he happened for once to obtain a more brilliant success than any one would have given him credit for. For Henry de Tracey, a man of great experience in war, who was on the king's side, had fortified the castle of Cary, to straiten more conveniently the Earl of Gloucester, and extend his own power in the district; upon which the earl hearing of it, marched there suddenly with a large force, and demolished the works which Henry had commenced, compelling him to make a retreat.

At that time Walter de Pincheny, who has been mentioned before, being released from his dungeon, mainly by the asistance of the Earl of Hereford, again flew to arms, and, assembling a gallant band of troops, he made an entry by a surprise into the castle of Christchurch, and killing some of those he found within, and putting others in chains, he ravaged the neighbourhood, and secured the lordship of a large district. But though he ought to have forsaken his old habits of cruelty and violence, lest through his sins he should fall once more into his enemies' hands, he continued to be still fierce and tyrannical; to plunder without mercy the possessions of the church; to worry his neighbours with quarrels, and continually to extort money and other offerings from all around, tormenting some and putting others to death for the mere love of cruelty. But God, the just judge, at length recompensed these grievous wrongs by a righteous judgment. For the inhabitants of this place, with some of the country folk, no longer able to bear his barbarity, forming a conspiracy with the soldiers on the lordship to which they belonged, and . . . . about the castle. Walter and his followers who had gone from the castle to the church of . . .. and implored him humbly to . . . . . his exactions; but he replying with an indignant power nay, that he would be more imperious than ever, one of them sprung forward and [severed] his neck with a single blow of a sharp axe. His

years after her son Henry II.'s accession to the throne, dying at Rouen A.D. 1167. Her character is pourtrayed throughout this narrative in a just and vivid manner.

1 See p. 411.

comrades were instantly despatched.

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were lying in ambush making their appearance those who held the castle forthwith. terms of peace were agreed on, and the castle was recovered. About the same [time] seized, by surprise the castle of Downton, which belonged of right to Earl Patrick, and gained by stratagem the possessions of the church of. .. the castle was plentifully victualled . . furnished with munitions of war, and a band of freebooters and other. was quartered in it1. . . .

'The imperfect state of the latter pages of our author's MS. and the loss of the conclusion of his memoirs, are much to be regretted. They probably extended to the death of Stephen, on the 25th of October, 1154, shortly after the pacification with Prince Henry. A short notice of the principal occurrences to that time will be found in the last pages of Huntingdon's History; but had our MS. been perfect, it would probably have thrown additional light on the important transactions which secured the reversion of the crown of England to Henry I.

THE END.

INDEX.

ABERCURNIG (Abercorn), monastery,

33. 114.

Acca, bishop of Hexham, 119. 126.
Acley, synod of, 136. 138.
Adda, a priest, 102.

Adgefrin, Northumberland, a royal
vill, 90.

Adhelm, bishop of Sherbourn, 118.
Adrian, emperor of Rome, 22.

Adrian, pope, 137. 139.

journey to Rome, and eulogy in
verse, 253; arrested by King Ste-
phen, and surrenders his castles,
270. 360; goes to Rome again, and
on his return restores Lincoln Ca-
thedral, 284; meets Pope Eugenius
at Auxerre, and death, 285; his
character, 284, 285; see also the
Dedication prefixed to Hunting-
don's History.

Ella, king of the South-Saxons, 44. ALFRED, king, consecrated by Pope

46, 47.

Aellistreu, battle with the Saxons, 40.
Esc, king of Kent, 45, 46.
Etherius, bishop of Arles, consecrates
St. Augustine, 69.

Etius, groans of the Britons to him,

34.

Agilbert, a Frenchman, bishop of Win-
chester, 99. 105.

Aidan, bishop of Lindisfarne, 97, 98.
105.

Alaric sacks Rome, 32.
Alban, St., martyrdom, 26.
Alban's, St., monastery, 27. 133.
Albinus of Anjou, Huntingdon's mas-
ter, 305. 317.

Alchred, king of Northumbria, 134,
135.

Alcluith (Dunbarton), 33.
Alemund, bishop of Hexham, 134.
Aldulf, king of East-Anglia (in Bede's
time), 92.

Aldulf, archbishop of York, 179.
Aldulf, bishop of Rochester, 121.
Alexander Severus, emperor, 25.
Alexander de Blois, bishop of Lin-
coln, raised to the see, 251; his

Leo, at Rome, 150; succeeds to the
throne, 154; wars with the Danes,
154, 155; retreats to Athelney,
156; victory at Heddington, ib.;
settles Guthrum in East-Anglia, ib.;
takes London, 157; treaty with
Hastings, 158; drives the Danes
from the river Lea, 159; naval ar-
maments, 157. 160; his death, and
verses to his memory, 161.
Alfred, son of King Ethelred, 201,
202.

Alfric, archbishop of Canterbury, 179.
Alfric, ealdorman of Mercia, banished,
177, 178.

Alfrid, king of Deira, 106. 114. 119.
Alfwold, king of Northumbria, 135.
138, 139.

Algar, earl of Chester, 203, 204.
Alice, second queen of Henry I., her
grace and beauty, verses addressed
to her, 249; marries William D'Au-
bigny, and receives the Empress
Maud in Arundel Castle, her dower,
277. 366, and the notes.
Allectius, usurper in Britain, 26.
Alric, killed in Nortnumbria, 140.

Ambrosius Aurelius, 40, 41.
Anastasius, emperor, 45.
Antoninus, Pius, emperor, 22.
Anderida Sylva, the weald of Sussex,
44. 132.

Anlaf Curran, 173.

Anlaf, king of Northumbria, 172.
Anna, king of the East-Angles, 59.
99. 102.

Anselm, archbishop of Canterbury,
224. 240, 241.

Appeals to Rome introduced, 287.
Arcadius, emperor, 32.

Arthur, king of the Britons, 48.
Arundel Castle, the Empress Maud
entertained there by Queen Alice,
366.

Athelard, archbishop of Canterbury,

139. 141.

Athelney, Isle of, 156.

Athelstan, king of Kent, 143; defeats
the Danes in a naval action at Sand-
wich, 150.

Athelstan, king of Mercia, crowned at
Kingston, 169; gains a great victory
over the Scots and Danes at Brunes-
burg, 169; his death, 171.
At-the-Wall, a royal vill in North-
umberland, 102.

Attila, king of the Huns, 34.
Augustine, St., his mission to convert
the English, 66; lands in the Isle
of Thanet, 67; archbishop of Can-
terbury, 69; controversies with the
British Christians, 80; death and
epitaph, 82.

Augustine, St., abbey of, 76. 82.
Aurelian, emperor, 25.

Badington, Robert de, a freebooter,
265. 336.

Bagsac, a Danish king, 153.
Baldred, king of Kent, 142, 143.
Baldulf, or Beadulf, bishop of Whit-
herne, 139.

Baldulf, bishop of Rochester, 315.
Baldwin, earl of Flanders, 202. 208.
213. 248. 313.

Baldwin de Rivers, 265. 337. 343,
344. 364.

Baldwin Fitz-Gilbert, 277. 332.
Bamborough Castle, 179. 226.
Bangor, slaughter of monks, 81, 82.
Bath, description of, 351. 357.
Battle Abbey founded, 212.
Bede, Venerable, 92. 123, 124. 126.
Bedford, siege of, 346.

Belesme, Robert de, 241, 242. 245;
his character, 311.

Benedict, abbot of Wearmouth, 113.
Beort, Egfrid's general, 113. 117.
Berkeley, Roger de, 417.
Bernred, king of Mercia, 133.
Bernulf, king of Mercia, 141.
Bertha, Ethelbert's queen, 68.
Berthwald, first English archbishop
of Canterbury, 116. 123.
Berthwulf, king of Mercia, 149.
Bertric, king of Wessex, 137. 139, 140.
Birinus, bishop of Dorchester, 99.
Blecca, governor of Lincoln, 91.
Blois, Henry de, brother of King
Stephen, bishop of Winchester and
papal legate, 27; holds a synod,
282. 287; proclaims Stephen, 326;
temporizes with the pretender, 366;
comes to terms with the empress,
and proclaims her at Winchester,
381; takes offence, and watches the
turn of affairs, 384; cabals for King
Stephen's deliverance, 385; is be-
sieged at Winchester, 386. 387;
mediates between King Stephen
and Henry II., 294; his character,
"half monk, half knight," 315.
Boniface, pope, 83; his letter, with
the pallium, to Justus, archbishop
of Canterbury, 86; letters to King
Edwin and Queen Ethelburga, 87.
Bosa, archbishop of York, 107.
Brian, Fitz-Count, 367. 390.
Bristol, description of, 350; the strong-
hold of the freebooters, 353; siege
proposed, 354; abandoned in de-
spair, 355; annoyed by the garrison
from Bath, 357; head-quarters of
the empress and her brother Robert,
earl of Gloucester, 267. 367; King
Stephen imprisoned in the castle,
379.

Britain, description of, 1.
Britons, the origin of, 9.
Bruneburh, great battle of, 169-171.
Burford, battle of, 130.

Burrhed, king of Mercia, 149, 150.
154.

Cadwalla, king of the West-Britons,
95, 96, 97.

Cadwalla, king of Wessex, 62. 113.
115.

Caldoet, Henry and Ralph, insurgents
in Gloucestershire, 416.
Caligula, emperor, 18.
Canterbury Cathedral, 76. 88. 258.
Canterbury, Roman church of St.
Martin, 69.

Canterbury, city, burnt by the Danes,
190.

Canute, king of Denmark and Norway,
his struggle for the crown of Eng-
land, 191; sails up the Thames,
192; battles with Edmund Iron-
sides, 193, 194; duel with him,
195; Canute acknowledged king,
196; marries Emma, the Norman,
ib.; wars in Sweden and Norway,
197; goes to Rome; his death, 198;
his greatness; story of his chiding
the waves, 199.
Caracalla, emperor, 24.
Carausius, 26.

Cassibelaun, a British king, 13.
Castle Cary taken, 355.
Cataract (Catterick), 91. 101.
Ceaulin, king of Wessex, 51, 52, 53.
Cedd, bishop of the East-Saxons, 104,
105.

Celibacy of the clergy enjoined, 241.
252.257.

Cenric, or Kenric, king of Wessex,
48. 50.

Ceolfrid, abbot of Wearmouth, 113.
Ceollach, bishop of Repton, 104.
Ceolnoth, archbishop of Canterbury,
142.

Ceolred, king of Mercia, 118, 119.
Ceolric, king of Wessex, 54.

Ceolwulf, king of Wessex, 54, 55.
Ceolwulf, king of Mercia, 141. 155.
Cerdic, king of Wessex, 46, 47, 48.
Chad, or Cedd, archbishop of York,
106.

Chalk-hythe synod, 137.

Charlemagne, emperor, 134. 140.
Charles, earl of Flanders, 254.
Charmouth, Danes defeated at, 149.
Chiche (St. Osyth), monastery, 251.
Chichelm, or Kichelm, king of Wessex,
55. 58. 87.

Child-Wulnoth, the South-Saxon, 187.
Cissa, king of the South-Saxons, 47.
Claudius invades Britain, 18.
Claudius II., 25.
Coenred, see Kenred.

Coifi, high-priest of Northumbria, 89,

90.

Coinwalch, see Kenwalk.
Colman, bishop of Lindisfarne, 105.
Columba, abbot of Iona, 33. 98.
Commodus, emperor, 24.
Constantine, emperor, 28.
Constantius, emperor, 28.
Crema, John, cardinal of, 252.
Crida, king of Mercia, 53, 54.
Crispin, William, count of Evreux,
245. 247.

Crusade, the first, 226-236; the se-
cond, 418.

Cumbra, ealdorman of Wessex, 131,
132.

Cuthbert, St., bishop of Lindisfarne
and Hexham, 114.

Cuthbert, archbishop of Canterbury,
128. 133.

Cuthred, king of Wessex, 128, 129.
131.

Cuthwine, king of Wessex, 55.
Cyneard, etheling of Essex, slain, 136,
Cynegils, king of Wessex, 99.
Cynewulf, king of Wessex, 133. 136,
137.

Dagobert, king of the Franks, 96.255.
Damian, archbishop of Canterbury,

102.

Ceolwulf, king of Northumbria, 123. Danegelt first levied, 178; abolished,

126. 128. 134.

264.

FF

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