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VI.—Aydon Castle, Northumberland

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2012

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Extract

The attention of archseologists was first drawn to this important building on the appearance of the first volume of the late Mr. Hudson Turner's Domestic Architecture in England, now nearly half a century ago, but since that time no fresh account or description of it has been printed. It is the intention of the present paper to examine it more carefully, and to describe and illustrate it in detail.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1898

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References

page 71 note a Turner, T. Hudson, Some Account of Domestic Architecture in England, from the Conquest to the End of the Thirteenth Century (Oxford, 1851), 148, 149Google Scholar.

page 76 note a In the quite perfect hall of Penshurst in Kent, the brazier still exists. See frontispiece, Parker's Domestic Architecture in England, from Edward I. to Richard II. (Oxford, 1853).Google Scholar

page 80 note a See some illustrations in Parker's Domestic Architecture in England, from Edward I. to Richard II. (Oxford, 1853), 91.

page 81 note a It has been repeatedly asserted that these mangers are of the thirteenth century. Stables were at that time customarily of a less substantial character, and certainly the original vaulted chamber, accessible from the inside only, was a store place.

page 87 note a Calendar of Documents relating to Scotland, i. 69 [Pipe, 9 John, Rot. 1].

page 87 note b Ibid. i. 70 [Fine, 9 John, m. 1].

page 87 note c “Emma de Aydon is of the gift and has been married to Peter de Vallibus by king John, her land is worth £15 per year, Alina and Adelysia, daughters of the said Emma, have been married to James Kauz and John Kauz by king John, their land is worth £40 a year.” Hodgson, History of Northumberland, pt. 3, i. 229.

page 88 note a Calendar of Documents relating to Scotland, iii. 164 [Tower, Miscellaneous, Roll No. 459].