Archaeological Studies on the Two Manors of Ponsbourne & Newgate Street in the Parish of Bishop's Hatfield, Co. HertsSimson and Company, 1906 - 16 pages |
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Page 8
... head . When at work they wore a scapular , which consisted of a sleeveless garment made of two strips of cloth , hanging down before and behind . Tanner specifies 113 houses of this Order in England . The information regarding this ...
... head . When at work they wore a scapular , which consisted of a sleeveless garment made of two strips of cloth , hanging down before and behind . Tanner specifies 113 houses of this Order in England . The information regarding this ...
Page 15
... head of a nun , is believed to portray the Abbess of Elstow , the early patroness of the church ; the heads of a king and queen appear on each side of the chancel arch . Some of the faces are singularly hideous . The stairs leading to ...
... head of a nun , is believed to portray the Abbess of Elstow , the early patroness of the church ; the heads of a king and queen appear on each side of the chancel arch . Some of the faces are singularly hideous . The stairs leading to ...
Page 16
... heads were first built , may be supposed to have sufficed for the needs of the village population ; but in the fifteenth century they indulged in what was for their church a big western tower to hang their bells in . " The credence is ...
... heads were first built , may be supposed to have sufficed for the needs of the village population ; but in the fifteenth century they indulged in what was for their church a big western tower to hang their bells in . " The credence is ...
Page 18
... head of this doorway is similar to that of Wolsey's Gateway , Ipswich . With regard to the history of the building , I have up to the present been unable to ascertain anything definite . According to a recent issue of " Kelly's ...
... head of this doorway is similar to that of Wolsey's Gateway , Ipswich . With regard to the history of the building , I have up to the present been unable to ascertain anything definite . According to a recent issue of " Kelly's ...
Page 18
... head , which was fast in the clay , he had been drowned . But God of His goodnesse preserved him . " With regard to the tradition of Wolsey's ownership , I have only been able to trace it back to " an old History of Hertfordshire ...
... head , which was fast in the clay , he had been drowned . But God of His goodnesse preserved him . " With regard to the tradition of Wolsey's ownership , I have only been able to trace it back to " an old History of Hertfordshire ...
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Archaeological Studies on the Two Manors of Ponsbourne & Newgate Street in ... James William Carlile No preview available - 2020 |
Common terms and phrases
acres aisle ancient Andrews Anthony Denny appears Archæological Ardeley Aspenden Bayford bells Bishop Bishop's Stortford Brent Pelham brick building Buntingford buried Castle century chancel Charles church Council Cussans daughter death died dragon Earl Edward Elizabeth England English erected Essendon Essex Farm feet feild France Hadham Hall Henry Chauncy Henry VIII Hertford Hertfordshire Hitchin Hyde inscription King King's Knight Lady land Little Hadham living London Lord Aston Lord Capell Manor married Mary Meesden memory moat monument mound nave Nicholas owner parish Parliament Pounde present Priory probably Queen Ralph Sadleir Rector remains Richard road Robert Roman roof says Shonks Sir John Sir Ralph Sadleir Six Hills Society Standon Standon Lordship Stevenage stone Thomas Thomas Pounde Throcking Thundridge tower tumulus Vicar W. B. GERISH Walkern wall Walter Ware Welwyn wife William window Wymondley
Popular passages
Page 293 - Some men make it a case of conscience, whether a man may have a pigeon-house, because his pigeons eat other folks corn. But there is no such thing as conscience in the business : the matter is, whether he be a man of such quality, that the state allows him to have a dove-house ; if so, there's an end of the business ; his pigeons have a right to eat where they please themselves.
Page 273 - But he laying hold on what they said, as if they had offered him the greatest encouragement in the world, pressed the more vigorously through the snow-drift, and said, "How glad should I be, if what you say might prove true!
Page 286 - June, in the ninth year of the reign of our Sovereign Lord George, by the Grace of God, of Great Britain, France, and Ireland, King, Defender of the Faith, &c., and in the year of our Lord Christ one thousand seven hundred and thirty-five.
Page 201 - Then they did put me on the rack, because I confessed no ladies or gentlewomen to be of my opinion, and thereon they kept me a long time ; and because I lay still, and did not cry, my lord Chancellor and Master Rich took pains to rack me with their own hands, till I was nigh dead.
Page 314 - ... out of the window of his chamber in the night, over the wall of the Tower; and had been directed through what part of the ditch he might be best able to wade. Whether he found the right place, or whether there was no safer place, he found the water and the mud so deep, that, if he had not been by the head taller than other men, he must have perished, since the water came up to his chin. The way was so long to the other side, and the fatigue of drawing himself out of so much mud so intolerable,...
Page 274 - The Plain Doctrine of the Justification of a Sinner in the Sight of God,
Page 285 - I give and bequeath to my dearly beloved wife Sarah Barry for and during the term of her natural life...
Page 323 - Where is the instrument that did it?" He then brought -the axe. "Is this the same axe ? are you sure ? " said my lord. " Yes. my lord," saith the hangman ; " I am very sure it is the same.
Page 270 - England in 1637, published by his own direction, for the satisfaction of all such who either are or finally might be offended with his scandalous submission made before the High Commission Court Feb. 11, 1635.