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III.—Remarks on the History of Seat-Reservation in Churches

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2012

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Extract

Having a very strong personal objection to the system of seat-reservation and appropriation in church, I naturally looked forward with considerable satisfaction to reading the pamphlets and works on the subject which I was told would convince me of the antiquity of the “free and open” system, and that “appropriation” and “reservation” were innovations of a comparatively-speaking recent date.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1892

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References

page 96 note a Well-bred, i.e., gentry.

page 96 note b Wilkins, Concilia, i. 142.

page 97 note a Journal of the British Archaeological Association, xxiv. 255Google Scholar.

page 97 note b History of Pews i 49Google Scholar

page 97 note c History of Pews, 33.

page 97 note d Ibid. 49

page 97 note e Ibid. 34.

page 97 note f Ibid.

page 98 note a Bodmin Register, 1827, p. 33.

page 98 note b Works of Richard Rolle of Hampole, Early English Text Society, preface, xviii.

page 98 note c History of St. Lawrence's Reading, by Rev. C. Kerry, 1883.

page 98 note d History of Pews, i. 34Google Scholar.

page 98 note e Accounts of the Churchwardens of the Parish of St. Michael, Ccrnhill, by A. J. Waterlow, 11, 35.

page 99 note a Collectanea Topographica et Genealogica, iii. 134Google Scholar, etc.

page 101 note a History of Peus, i. 80Google Scholar.

page 102 note a Archaeologia, xlv. 57Google Scholar.

page 102 note b Star Chamber Proceedings, Henry VIII. Bun. 17, No. 208.

page 102 note c Ibid. Bun. 24, No. 149.

page 103 note a Ecclesiologist, i. 108Google Scholar.

page 104 note a Mr. Fletcher Rigge in his work on Cartmell Priory Church, kindly pointed out to me by our Fellow, Chancellor Ferguson, refers to an interesting feature in some old pews in that priory church. Some of these pews, he says, were very old, one was found to have a large oak ball-castor under each corner, as if it had been made to be wheeled about.

page 104 note b History of Pews, i. 30, 31Google Scholar.

page 104 note c Early English Text Society, lines 915–918.

page 105 note a Bb. Gloss 12.

page 106 note a History of Pews, i. 152Google Scholar.

page 106 note b Exchequer Bills and Answers, Commonwealth. London and Midd. No. 257.

page 106 note c History of Pews, i. 170Google Scholar.