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Thursday, February 21st, 1901
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 May 2010
Abstract
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- Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1901
References
page 266 note * See Archaeologia, xliii. 409.
page 266 note † See Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian Society, vii.
page 266 note ‡ Archaeologia, xliii. 396.
page 266 note § 2nd S. xvi. 244.
page 266 note ‖ Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian Society, xl. p. 1.
page 268 note * Some of these horizontal beams were measured and found to have a diameter of 10 inches to 1 foot.
page 268 note † Here there appears to have been a sort of pit or pool, for vegetable matter, pottery, and a piece of leather were turned out at a lower level than the road surface
page 270 note * Or rather two conjectural lines ; but the second, which I hare shown passing close to the eastern ramparts, is not likely, because something more definitely like a road should then have been struck where the deposit of ore was found.
page 271 note * While at Smyrna in April of this year I purchased a bell of almost exactly the same type, but a little larger.—H. S. C.
page 272 note * Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian Society, xv. 377–380.
page 273 note * This chest was thought by the meeting to be more probably of Flemish work of the third quarter of the fourteenth century.
page 275 note * Mrs. Jameson, , Legends of the Madonna (1879), 117–8Google Scholar.
page 275 note † Christian Symbolism, 283.