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XI. Mr. Barrington's Observations on St. Justin's (or Justinan's) Tomb. In a Letter to the Reverend Mr. Norris

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 July 2012

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Extract

As the Council of the Society hath so far approved of a drawing, which I presented to them, from the Tomb-stone of the Saint to whom the church of Laniestin, in Anglesey, is dedicated, as to have ordered it to be engraved in the Archaeologia; it is incumbent upon me to give the best account I am able of this British Saint.

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Research Article
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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1777

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References

page 143 note * This very accurate drawing I received From the Rev. Mr. Davis of Baron-Hill in Anglesey. See Pl. IX.

page 144 note [a] Besides those which I shall hereafter cite, I have consulted, the Florilegium Sanctorum Hiberniae, Parisiis, 1624. 4 to.—the English Martyrology, by a Catholic Priest [Mr. John Wilson] 1608, without any place at which the book was printed.—and, A Supplement to a Memorial of Ancient Piety; or, a British Martyrology, duodecimo; printed for Needham, over-against Gray's Inn Gate, Holborn, 1761.

page 144 note [b] See Baronius's Calendarium Romanum, who treats of five St. Justins. As also Butler's Lives of the Saints, 6 vol. 8vo. 1756, London.

page 145 note [f] It is thus cited in Ames's Typographical Antiquities, p. 93. As also in the Catalogue of the Bodleian Library, which adds Capgrave's Christian name of John. I cannot find, however, the name of the compiler in any part of the work. It was printed by Wynken de Worde, A. D. 1516.

page 145 note [g] The Welsh use boats made of these materials to this day—they are called coracles; but of late they have substituted pitch'd canvass instead of leather, in the neighbourhood of Monmouth.

page 145 note [h] The new Legend of Saints, folio 201. B. This well, as also a church, of St. Justinian, is marked in Bowen's Map of South Wales, just to the Westward of St. David's.