\ Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2016 with funding from Getty Research Institute https://archive.org/details/historyfrommarbl94ding HISTORY FROM MARBLE COMPILED IN THE REIGN OF CHARLES II. BY THOMAS DINGLEY, GENT. PRINTED IN PHOTOLITHOGRAPHY BY VINCENT BROOKS, FROM THE ORIGINAL IN THE POSSESSION OF SIR THOMAS E. WINNINGTON, BAET. fy — . — • — * (y / WITH AN INTRODUCTION AND DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS BY JOHN GOUGH NICHOLS, F.S.A. PRINTED FOR THE CAMDEN SOCIETY. M.DCCC.LXVII. WESTMINSTER : PRINTED BY NICHOLS AND SONS 25 . PARLIAMENT STREET. [no. XC1V ] 5 «GEm CENTER Sk&Vv 4 , COUNCIL OF THE CAMDEN SOCIETY FOR THE YEAR 1866-67. President , WILLIAM TITE, ESQ. M.P., F.R.S., Y.P.S.A. ARTHUR ASHPITEL, ESQ. F.S.A. WILLIAM HENRY BLAAUW, ESQ. M.A., F.S.A. JOHN BRUCE, ESQ. F.S.A. Director. WILLIAM CHAPPELL, ESQ. F.S.A. Treasurer. WILLIAM DURRANT COOPER, ESQ. F.S.A. JAMES CROSBY, ESQ. F.S.A. EDWARD FOSS, ESQ. F.S.A SAMUEL RAWSON GARDINER, ESQ. THE REY. LAMBERT B. LARKING, M.A JOHN MACLEAN, ESQ. F.S.A. FREDERIC OUYRY, ESQ. Treas.S.A. EYELYN PHILIP SHIRLEY, ESQ. M.A., F.S.A. WILLIAM JOHN THOMS, ESQ. F.S.A. Secretary. HIS EXCELLENCY MONSIEUR SYLVAIN VAN DE WEYER. SIR THOMAS E. WINNINGTON, BART. M.P. The Council of the Camden Society desire it to be under- stood that they are not answerable for any opinions or observa- tions that may appear in the Society’s publications; the Editors of the several Works being alone responsible for the same. INTRODUCTION. Wonder not, mortal, at thy quick decay: See ! men of marble piece-meal melt away, When whose the image we no longer read, But MONUMENTS THEMSELVES MEMORIALS NEED. Crabbe y The Borough. Quandoquidem data sunt ipsis sua fata sepulchris. Juvenal , Sat. x. 146. The value of Church Notes, meaning memoranda of the epitaphs and heraldry in churches, before church architecture was understood or appreciated as it now is, has always been highly estimated by genealogists and biographers. The professional heralds deemed such evidences among their most reliable materials, at a time when they possessed the power, which they did not hesitate to exercise, to destroy or deface any display of armorial insignia assumed unduly or irregularly. Epitaphs, however apt to be flattering or even “lying” in their tributes of personal eulogy, are generally trustworthy for their statements of facts and dates, and may be ranked among the best kinds of contemporary testimony. The heralds, therefore, when riding on their visitations did not neglect their opportunities for gathering church notes, as well as notes of the armory displayed on the walls and windows of manor-houses, to contribute to their materials for the genealogies it was their business to construct. Many such notes are interspersed, with the pedigrees, in their MS. visitation-books, of which the Camden Society possesses a very interesting and excellent example in Camden's Visitation of Hunting- donshire, The same course was taken from time to time by several volun- teers, who, whilst heraldry was still a favourite study, formed CAMD. SOC. B 2 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. collections of this kind for the information and gratification of themselves and friends. 1 Our own Camden, before he was a professional herald, led the way in his “ Reges, Reginae, Nobiles, et alij in Ecclesia Collegiata B. Petri Westmonasterii sepulti.” The first edition of this was in 1600; another in 1603; and a third, “usque ad Annum 1606,” was printed in that year. A copy of the first edition in the British Museum (C. 32 e. 4) is very beautifully illuminated throughout with heraldic shields; and was doubtless so prepared as a New Year’s Gift either to Queen Elizabeth or to some nobleman of high rank. To a copy of the second edition in the same national library (577 c. 14) some former possessor has done the good service of appending a manuscript index, none having been provided by the stationer who published the book. The epitaphs of the other Metropolitan churches were gathered at an early date in John Stowe’s Survay of London, — not in the first quarto editions, but in the folio of 1618, and again with supplementary additions in the folio of 1633 — so that most of those which were existing before the Great Fire of 1666, and were then destroyed, have been thus placed upon record. The same valuable information was reprinted in the folio Histories of London, by Strype, 1720 and 1754; by Seymour, 1733; and by Maitland, 1739, 1756, 1760, and 1772; since which last date there has been no other great work of the kind: but still there is much original information in J. P. Malcolm’s Londinium Redivivutn , 4 vols. 4to., 1802-7, par- ticularly his valuable extracts from the parish registers ; for wdiich the Environs of London and the Middlesex Parishes of the brothers Lysons are also especially useful to the genealogist. Hutton’s New View of London , 1708, two vols., 8vo. may also be consulted with advantage for epitaphs of that period. 1 The earliest collection of epitaphs with which I am acquainted (it includes no armorial notes) is that found in the Register of the Grey Friars of London. (Cotton. MS. Vitellius, F. XII.) It contains nearly six hundred, recording many more than that number of individuals. I had the satisfaction to edit a careful abstract of this in the 5th volume of Collectanea Topographioa et Genealogica y \838. INTRODUCTION. 3 Another well-known name in this field of investigation is that of John Weever, whose Funerall Monuments — more valuable as preserving memorials that would otherwise have wholly perished than for strict accuracy — was published in 1631, and reprinted in 1767. Weever, after a long preliminary disquisition, arranged the substance of his collections within dioceses; and his printed work contains only the dioceses of Canterbury, Rochester, London, and Norwich, and part of Lincoln to complete the county of Hertford. 1 But the Diary of Richard Symonds, a cavalier in the army of Charles the First, which was edited for the Camden Society in 1859 by the late Mr. Charles Edward Long, more closely resembles in its general contents the church notes of the professional heralds, and is as valuable for its genealogical as it is interesting for its historical particulars. Its original note-books are preserved in the British Museum, and are interspersed with trickings of heraldry, accompanied by some slight sketches of monuments, glass windows, &c., but very inferior to those of Dingley . 2 1 There are two large volumes of Weever’s MSS. in the library of the Society of Antiquaries. They are in excellent preservation. One of them contains the materials of his printed' work, and some former owner (probably Mr. Lane, of Hillingdon, hereafter mentioned,) has been at the pains to mark throughout, in red ink, the pages of the Funerall Monuments in which the several passages are intro- duced. The second volume consists of other papers, partly perhaps used in Weever’s introductory disquisition. Among them is his unpublished fasciculus for the diocese of Lichfield, which by the same hand as before is marked in the margin with references to books where the epitaphs have since been printed. These interesting collections were presented to the Society in 1792, by William Southouse, Esq. E.S.A., who had then recently acquired them on the death of Mr. John Lane, of Hillingdon. (. Arehceologia , vol. xi. p. 447.) They are probably the same of which Hearne speaks as having come after Weever’s death into the hands of his nephew Mr. Caltharn, who lived in Little Britain. (Account of Antiquities in and about Oxford, at the end of Leland’s Itinerary, ii. § 6.) Upon Weever’s inaccuracy see the Gentleman’s Magazine, 1807, p. 808, and Gough’s British Topography, 1780, vol. i. p. 121. Possibly many of the errors of his work are those of the press, and might be amended by comparison with his MSS. 2 The Harl. MS. 965, one of Symonds’s not yet published, contains his church notes of the following places in Oxfordshire : — Burford, Cromarsh Battel, Cromarsh Gifford, Dorchester, Mapledurham, Wheatley, Whitchurch, and Whitney; of Worcester 4 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. There is a very magnificent volume of this character in the Har- leian collection , 1 formed by Gervase Holles, a colonel in the service of Charles I., and M.P. for Grimsby. It is filled with the epitaphs and heraldry of the greater portion of Lincolnshire, and of a few churches in the neighbouring counties of Nottingham and Derby . 2 It has never been printed as a whole, but portions have been published in some of the books of local history . 3 Cathedral, these extend from p. 168 to 21 1 ; and in Berkshire , of Abingdon, Aldworth, Cholsey, the three churches in Reading, and the Abbey gate-house, and Streatly. The Ilarl. MS. 964 contains his notes of the nine parish churches of Oxford, of six others in the suburbs of that city, of St. Bartholomew’s Chapel, Osney Abbey, and the college chapels of Magdalen, Merton, aud University. 1 No. 6829, a large folio of 349 pages. The heraldry throughout is depicted on the margin in colours, but there are no drawings of monuments. 2 Other volumes of Hnlles’s Lincolnshire collections are in the Lansdowne col- lection, and ono in the Addit. MSS. which was presented by Sir Joseph Banks. See some account of the Lincolnshire collectors, Holies and Bishop Sanderson, read before the Archaeological Institute at Lincoln in 1848, by the Rev. Joseph Hunter, F.S.A., reported in the Gentleman’s Magazine of that year, vol. xxx. p. 299 (but not priuted in the Institute’s Lincoln volume). 3 The books alluded to are: — Account of Boston and tho Hundred of Skirbeck. By Fishey Thompson. 1H20. (Second edition, 1856.) 8vo. and 4to. Historical Account of the Town and Soke of Ilorncastle. By George Weir. 1820. History of Old and New Sleaford and the neighbouring parishes. By James Creasy. 1825. 8vo. An Account of the Churches in the division of Holland, in the county of Lincoln, w ith sixty-nine illustrations. 1843. 8vo. Some of the most interesting portions of Holies’s MS. were printed in The Topo- grapher ', 1789 (see the several places in Lincolnshire recapitulated in the General Index of Articles at the end of vol. iv.) They were commenced by his account of Great Grimsby, including the sepulchral memorials of his own family, in vol. i. pp. 242-255 ; and in vol. ii. are his church notes of Mansfield in Nottinghamshire, among which (p. 52) is the memorial of his first wife. Various portions of Holies’s church-notes have also been printed, of late years, in the columns of the Stamford Mercury. These have been derived from a transcript made by Mr. George Agar Hansard (author of The Book of Archery'), which, on that gentleman’s leaving this country for Borneo, has been recently purchased for the library of the Dean and Chapter of Lincoln. .Another transcript, it is believed, was made for the late Lord Monson, and one formerly for Mr. Gongh. It is to be INTRODUCTION. 5 A still more important and systematic survey, undertaken about the same period, is described in the Life of Sir William Dugdale : — “ The sayd Mr. Dugdale, receiving encouragement from S r Chris- topher Hatton, then a member of the House of Commons, who timely foresaw the neere approaching storme, in summer a° 1641, taking with him one Mr. William Sedgwick, a skylfull armes- paynter, repaired first to the Cathedrall of St. Paul in the citty of London, and next to the Abby-church of Westminster, and there making exact draughts of all the monuments in each of them, copyed the epitaphs according to the very letter: as alsoe all armes in the windows, or cutt in stone. And having so done, rode to Peterborow in Northamptonshire, Ely, Norwich, Lincoln, 1 Newarke upon Trent, Beverley, Suthwell, Kingston upon Hull, Yorke, Selby, Chester, Litchfield, Tam worth, Warwick ; and did the like in all those Cathedrall, Collegiate, Conventuall, and divers other Parochiall Churches, wherein any Tombes or Monuments were to be found, to the end that the memory of them, in case of that mine then imminent, might be preserved for future and better times.” These collections were placed in the hands of Sir Christopher Hatton, who was in 1644 created Viscount Hatton of Kirby; and hoped, however, that no one will venture to print from any of these without due collation with the original, or errors will assuredly be incurred quite as serious as those in Weever. The following entries are extracted from the diary of Elias Ashmole : — 1675, Feb. 10, Colonel Gervais Hollis, a Master of Requests, died. March 9, Colonel Gervais Hollis’s body was carried through London towards Mansfield, in Nottinghamshire, where he was buried. Gervase Holies is briefly noticed in Wood’s Fasti Oxonienses , and other bio- graphical particulars will be found in a paper entitled “ Shadows of the Past, connected with the History of Grimsby,” written by the Rev. Edward Trollope (now Archdeacon of Stowe), and printed in the Reports and Papers of the Associated Architectural Societies for 1859. It is accompanied by a portrait of the Colonel, lithographed from a painting in the possession of the Duke of Portland. 1 The church notes of Lincoln, compared with those taken by Robert Sanderson (afterwards Bishop of that see), are printed in Peck’s Desiderata Curiosa, 1779, 4to. pp. 294 — 320. 6 niSTORY FROM MARBLE. they are, it is believed, still preserved in the library of his repre- sentative the Earl of Winchelsea and Nottingham. The earliest authors upon English topography did not include church notes in the plan of their works; but, after Sir William Dugdale set the example, in his History of Warwickshire (illus- trated by the etchings of Winceslaus Hollar), county historians and all other topographers gradually followed his plan, and church notes became a recognised feature of their books. 1 Nearly a century has now elapsed since Gough conceived the idea of his magnificent work on Sepulchral Monuments , which he pursued with untiring energy and a liberal expenditure; and by the hands of the best artists of his time, particularly Basire, John Carter, 2 and his amateur friends Michael Tyson, Craven Ord, and the Rev. Thomas Kerrich, he preserved and laid before the world representations of most of our finest monuments of the centuries anterior to the year 1500. To those of a subsequent date (except- ing in occasional localities) his work does not extend. At a more recent period the same design was taken up by a • But not of all. Tho great History of Kent, by Hasted, presents a remarkable exception. No epitaphs are given, but the sepulchral memorials of portions of that county are to bo found, not ouly in Weever as before noticed, but in three other books — Ilegistrum Jloffense ; or a Collection of Ancient Records, &c. See., together with the monumental inscriptions in tho several churches and chapels within the diocese of Rochester. By John Thorpe, M.D. 176D. Folio. Tour through the Isle of Tlianet and East Kent. By ZACHARIAH Cozens. 1793. 4 to. Tho Monuments and Painted Glass of upwards of one hundred Churches, chiefly in the eastern part of Kent. By Philip Parsons. 1794. 4to. Besides those of Canterbury (both cathedral and parish churches) in Somner’s History of that city, 1640, 4to. (second edition by Dr. Batteley, 1703, folio,) and in Dart’s History of the Cathedral Church. The monumental inscriptions at Canter- bury were again printed so recently as 1836 in a 4to. volume, entitled “ Illustrative Views of the Metropolitan Church of Canterbury',” the seventeen plates of which were the same which had first appeared in Woolnoth’s Cathedrals. 9 Some few of the finest sepulchral brasses were published in John Carter’s own work on Ancient Sculpture and Painting, 1780-87. INTRODUCTION. 7 gentleman now living. Mr. Edward Blore, F.S.A., who had contributed some of the most beautiful plates of sepulchral monu- ments to the sumptuous works on county history which dis- tinguished the last generation, and who furnished to Surtees’s History of Durham two series of plates of ancient seals that have never hitherto been equalled for their beauty and fidelity, commenced a work on the Monumental Remains of Noble and Eminent Persons. It was unfortunately limited to one volume (in imperial octavo), containing thirty plates, and bearing the date 1826. 1 The celebrated Charles Alfred Stothard had previously devoted his pencil to the accurate delineation of the Monumental Effigies of Great Britain. He pursued his labours with an eye of the utmost accuracy, a fine appreciation of excellence in art, and a true devotion to archaeological knowledge ; and he left a very beautiful though imperfect work ; 2 which was supplemented by a second series drawn and engraved by George and Thomas Hollis — artists not inferior in care, nor scarcely in execution, though unfortunately also prematurely carried off by death, before their undertaking was finished . 3 During several centuries of our mediaeval period, sepulchral me- morials were formed, perhaps for the most part, of those flat surfaces of metal 4 which are commonly called brass plates. This 1 The descriptions were written by one of the warmest friends of the Camden Society in its earliest days, the late Rev. Philip Bliss, D.C.L., P.S.A., Registrar of the University of Oxford. 2 Stothard (except in a very few cases) engraved the effigies only. It was his intention to have illustrated his descriptions with vignette representations of the monuments, but the descriptions were deferred, and not supplied until long after his death, by his brother-in-law Alfred John Kempe, P.S.A. The work was completed in 1832 (see the Gentleman’s Magazine, vol. cii. ii. p. 233) ; it had been commenced in 1811. 3 It was commenced in 1839 (in numbers), and left unfinished at the death of the junior Hollis, in 1844. 4 The old name was latten, or Collen plate, i.e. brought from Cologne. 8 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. material, though of itself more durable, offered greater temptation than stone or marble to spoliation, and consequently suffered ex- ceedingly from wilful destruction. The losses thus sustained in many churches are incalculable and almost inconceivable . 1 During the last thirty years 2 the remaining examples have attracted so much attention that almost all that are still existing have been carefully catalogued . 3 A large proportion has also been figured and published, more particularly in the works of which the following are the titles : — Collections, Historical, Genealogical, and Topographical, for Bedford- shire. By Thomas Fisher. 115 Plates. 1807. 4to. 1 Dr. Rawlinson, in his History of Hereford Cathedral (p. 137), reckons up, no doubt from the despoiled gravestones, as many as 170 brasses “visibly lost” in various parts of that church. Of those which remained in the time of Dingley and Rawlinson, there are now imperfect remains of only thirteen, which are particularly described in the Rev. Herbert Haines’s Manual of Monumental Brasses, 1861, p. 77. On the great destruction of monuments in the single church of the Grey Friars in London, where “ sixe hundred sixty and three persons of qualitie ” were interred, see Stowe and Wccver, and the Collectanea Topogr. et Gcneal. v. 276 (as before referred to). * It was about thirty years ago, or shortly before, that a collection of impressions of Brasses, which was formed fifty years before by Mr. Craven Ord (comprising some of which the originals have since disappeared), was purchased for the British Museum at the price of 40/. See a letter of John Charles Brooke (afterwards Somerset Herald) to Mr. Gough, describing Mr. Ord’s modus operandi t in Nichols’s Illustrations of the Literary History of the Eighteenth Century , vol. vi.p. 393. It was written in 1780, when Mr. Ord had already “ a large collection.” This collection is now in the Print Room: see Haines’s Manual, pp. ccl. cclvii. 3 First by C. R. Manning, Esq., of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge (now Rector of Diss and Secretary of the Norfolk Archteological Society), in his List of Monumental Brasses. 1846. 8vo. Next, in a Manual for the Study of Monumental Brasses, with a descriptive catalogue of 460 rubbings, in the possession of the Oxford Architectural Society. 1848. 8vo. Thirdly, in a list of the Sepulchral Brasses of England ; alphabetically arranged in Counties. By Justin Simpson. 1867. 8vo. Most completely in the Manual of Monumental Brasses, comprising an Introduc- tion to the study of these memorials, and a List of those remaining in the British Isles. With 200 illustrations. By the Rev. Herbert Haines, B.A. of Exeter College, Oxford. 1861. 8vo. INTRODUCTION. 9 Monumental Remains and Antiquities in the County of Bedford. (A second volume, by the same draughtsman.) 37 lithographic drawings. 1828. 4to. Illustrations for Hasted’s History of Kent. By the same artist. Antiquities in Westminster Abbey (containing all the remaining Sepulchral Brasses). Drawn by G. P. Harding, and described by Thomas Moule. 1825. 4to. Engravings of Sepulchral Brasses in Norfolk, tending to illustrate the Ecclesiastical, Military, and Civil Costume, as well as preserve memorials of Ancient Families in that county. By John Sell Cotman, Esq., with an Introductory Essay by Dawson Turner, Esq., F.R.S. F.S.A. &c. Second edition, with Additional Plates, and with Notes by Sir Samuel Rush Meyrick, LL.D. F.S.A. &c., Albert Way, Esq., and Sir Harris Nicolas, K.C.M.G. 1838. 4to. (as re-published by H. G.Bohn). 81 Plates. (Commenced in numbers about the year 1813.) Engravings of Sepulchral Brasses in Norfolk and Suffolk (the remainder of the title as before). Vol. II. 1839. Plates 82 to 111 of Norfolk brasses ; 6 supplementary plates of sepulchral monuments in Norfolk ; and an Appendix of 7 more Norfolk brasses. Suffolk brasses, 47 Plates. The Brasses of Northamptonshire. By Franklin Hudson. 1853. Folio. 93 Plates in tinted lithography, the brasses printed in metal, imitating the original. The editor was a surgeon at Braunston, near Daventry, and brought out the work under the patronage of the Architec- tural Society of the Archdeaconry of Northampton, being much assisted in the descriptions by Mr. M. H. Bloxam. Hudson died in his 35th year ; and after his death the book was formed into a complete volume, published by Thomas McLean, Haymarket, Nov. 1, 1853. Some of the monuments of the same county had been previously published in “ Sepulchral Memorials in the County of Northampton. By W. H. Hyett. 1817.” Folio. And another work on the Recumbent Effigies of Northamptonshire is now preparing by Mr. Albert Hartshorne. Illustrations of Monumental Brasses : published by the Cambridge Camden Society. [Edited by the Rev. J. M. Neale.] 4to. 1846. Containing 24 Brasses, in lithography, and numerous illustrative vig- nettes. CAMD. SOC. C 10 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. In the Transactions of the Exeter Diocesan Society several Brasses have been published very handsomely. Monumental Brasses and Slabs : an Historical and Descriptive Notice of the incised Monumental Memorials of the Middle Ages. With nume- rous Illustrations. By the Rev. Charles Boutell, M.A., one of the Secretaries of the St. Alban’s Architectural Society, &c. 1847. Royal 8vo. The Monumental Brasses of England : a series of engravings upon wood, from every variety of these interesting and valuable memorials, accompanied with brief Descriptive Notices. By the Rev. Charles Boutell, M.A., Rector of Downham Market, Suffolk, &c. &c. 1849. Royal 8 vo. Forty-five Plates. The Monumental Brasses of Wiltshire. By Edward Kite, Assistant Secretary to the Wiltshire Archaeological Society. 32 Plates. 1860. Royal 8 vo. A series of Monumental Brasses, from the thirteenth to the sixteenth century. Drawn and Engraved by J. G. and L. A. B. Waller. Com- menced in 1840, and completed in 1860. Folio. In these works (of which the last is the finest and on the largest scale, though most of the others also represent the brasses with great fidelity and beauty), and in the excellent disquisitions which accom- pany many of them, the sepulchral antiquities of this country have now been very amply illustrated ; still, we should not quit the subject without adverting to two other useful books ; an essay on Funeral Monuments , l written by the late Rev. C. II. Hartshorne, F.S.A., and a Glimpse at Monumental Architecture , by MATTHEW Holbeciie Bloxam, Esq , F.S.A. — to whom we are also in- debted for various interesting disquisitions on this subject 2 3 in the 1 41 An Endeavour to Classify the Sepulchral Remains in Northamptonshire ; or, a Discourse on Funeral Monuments in the County, delivered before the members of the Religions aud Useful Knowledge Society at Northampton. 1840.” 3 Mr. Bloxam has kindly circulated among some of his friends copies of an in- complete and untitled work (printed some years ago), lettered by the bookbinder Fragment a Sepnlehralia. 8vo. pp. 176. There is a copy in the library of the Society of Antiquaries. INTRODUCTION. 11 transactions of the Archaeological Institute and other kindred societies. Nor should we omit to refer to a work having illustrations very much akin to the present, the Topographical Collections for Wiltshire , of John Aubrey, F.R.S., a.d. 1659-70 ; corrected and enlarged by John Edward Jackson, M.A., F.S.A., Rector of Leigh Delamere, and lion. Canon of Bristol. Published by the Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Society, in 4to, 1862. The monuments, seals, and armory are appended, in more than forty plates, drawn for the anastatic process by Mr. Edward Kite. Some of our most remarkable churches have also been fully illus- trated by engravings of their monuments. Sir William Dugd ale’s History of St. Paul's Cathedral , pub- lished in 1658, contained engravings by Hollar of all the monu- ments in the old church, which were destroyed by the great lire of 1666. They were copied for the new edition of that work, edited by Sir Henry Ellis, 1818, in which were also engraved all the monuments which up to that date had been erected in the present cathedral church. In the Antiquities of Westminster Abbey , by John Dart, 2 vols. fol. (circ. 1723), all the monuments are engraved; as are the most remarkable in Ackermann’s History of the same edifice, 1812, 2 vols. 4to., and in that by Neale and Brayley, 1818, 2 vols. 4to. The last work contains, also, full transcripts of the epitaphs and the heraldry. (To the supplementary “ Antiquities in Westminster Abbey” I have already adverted.) A volume by Dart, corresponding to his Westminster, contains all the monuments of Canterbury Cathedral (1726, fob); those of York cathedral are engraved in Drake’s Eboracum (1736, fol.); those of Worcester cathedral in Dr. Thomas’s Survey of the Cathedral Church of Worcester, 1736, 4to; and those of Ely cathedral in Ben tham’s History of Ely (1771, 4to.). Other cathedral churches have been more sparsely illustrated in respect to engraving; but Browne Willis, in his Survey of the Cathedrals (3 vols. 4to. 12 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. 1727-1742), published most of their epitaphs, viz., those in the churches of York, Durham, Carlisle, Chester, Lichfield, Here- ford, Worcester, Gloucester, Bristol, Lincoln, Oxford, and Peter- borough. Thirteen other cathedrals are named in his title-pages; but the work was not further printed. But some had appeared previously, in small octavo volumes published by the enterprising Edward Curll. I believe the first was that relating to Winchester , in 1715, and which was carefully compiled by Mr. Samuel Gale, and founded on a brief account of the tombs and monuments, taken in 1683 by Henry, Earl of Clarendon. 1 Curll also obtained a copy of “ Mr. Abingdon’s Survey of the Cathedral Church of Worcester ” which he found some competent person to continue, and to add accounts of the neighbouring priory churches of Great and Little Malvern; to which were first appended the Monuments of Chichester cathedral; and afterwards those of Lichfield . 2 It does not appear who were the contributors to this book; but several of a similar character are attributed to the antiquarian zeal of Dr. Richard liawlinson, though published anonymously . 3 He 1 “ The History anil Antiquities of the Cathedral Church of Winchester, con- taining all the Inscriptions upon the Tombs and Monuments, with an Account of the Bishops, Priors, Deans, and Prebendaries. Also the History of Hyde Abbey, begun by the Right Honourable Henry, late Earl of Clarendon, and continued to this time by Samuel GALE, Gent. Adorned with Sculptures. 1715.” 8vo. It has eighteen plates, eight of which are of the most remarkable monuments. (See Upcott’s 11 i hliographical Account of English Topography, p. 284.) a “ The Antiquities of the Cathedral Church of Worcester by that learned anti- quary, Thomas Abingdon, Esq., to which are added the Antiquities of Cathedral Churches of Chichester and Lichfield. 1717.” 8vo. The book was evidently at first intended to terminate with Chichester, as all its portions before p. 240 are fol- lowed by au index which includes the whole of them. The Antiquities of Lich- Jield Cathedral are separately paged (pp. 62), and have no index. There are no plates to this book. 3 In the memoir of Dr. Rawlinson, in Chalmers’s Biographical Dictionary, it is stated that “ The books the publication of which he promoted are supposed to be the History and Antiquities of Winchester, 1715 ; the History and Antiquities of Hereford, 1717 ; the History and Antiquities of Rochester, 1717, 1723; Inscriptions INTRODUCTION. 13 is known to have produced a History of Hereford cathedral in 1717, 1 but his name does not appear on the title-page. “ The History and Antiquities of the Cathedral Church of Rochester" was published by Curll in 1717: another title-page is dated 1723. Of this Upcott remarks: “ This publication has been ascribed, to [the Rev.] John Lewis [author of the Histories of Feversham and the Isle of Thanet,] but it is generally understood to have been written by Dr. Richard Rawlinson. ( Gough’s British Topography, p. 414.)” And a similar statement is made by J. Russell Smith, in his Bibliotheca Cantiana , p. 282. The volume which contains “ The History and Antiquities of the Cathedral Church of Salisbury and the Abbey-church of Bath, 17 19. 8 vo.,” like that of Hereford, follows closely upon the steps of Dingley, as traced in the present volume; and to both these books reference will be made as “ Rawlinson,” in the descriptive contents which follow. The epitaphs of the cathedrals of Wales were collected by on Tombs in Bunhill-fields, 1717 ; History and Antiquities of the Churches of Salisbury and Bath, 1719, 1723 ; Aubrey’s History of Surrey, 1719 ; Norden’s Deli- neation of Northamptonshire, 1720; History and Antiquities of Glastonbury, 1722.” Curll’s book of the inscriptions in Bunhill Fields has been recently reprinted as a supplement to “ Proceedings in reference to the Preservation of Bunhill Fields Burial Ground. Printed by order of the Corporation of London. 1867.” 8vo. It is prefaced by some very interesting remarks upon the most eminent persons interred in that great cemetery of the Dissenting Churches. Some of the more important later memorials have been published in a book entitled, “ Bunhill Memorials. Sacred Reminiscences of Three Hundred Ministers and other persons of note, who are buried in Bunhill Fields, of every denomination. With the inscriptions on their Tombs and Gravestones, and other historical information respecting them, from authentic sources. Edited by J. A. Jones, 1849,” 12mo. (A companion volume entitled Sacred Remains , consists of ordination charges, sermons, &c.) but the genealogist will be glad to be referred to several MS. volumes of Epitaphs from Bunhill Fields, collected by the late Rev. Dr. Rippon, which are now preserved in the library of the College of Arms. 1 This was “ printed for R. Gosling,” not for Curll. The account of the Bishops and Deans of Hereford, occupying 100 pages of the volume, was contributed by Browne Willis, as acknowledged in the preface. 14 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. Browne Willis, and published in four octavo volumes; St. David’s in 1717, LlandafFin 1718, St. Asaph in 1720, and Bangor in 1721. The Sepulchral Antiquities of Oxford , collected by Anthony a Wood, were edited, so far as the parish churches are concerned, with additions, by the Rev. Sir John Peshall, Bart., in The Antient and Present State of the City of Oxford , 1773; and Wood’s collec- tions for the Halls and Colleges of Oxford were edited by the Rev. John Gutch, and continued to the year 1786. The Collec- tanea Cantabrigiensia , 1750, by Blomefield, the Historian of Norfolk, contains the epitaphs in the colleges and parish churches of Cam- bridge, and some other churches in that county. Pote’s Historyand Antiquities of Windsor (1749. 4to.), sets forth the epitaphs in St. George’s Chapel. 1 1 I take this opportunity to give the following particulars regarding the author- ship of this work. It was printed by Joseph Pote, bookseller at Eton, and in the preface, which is signed J. P., it is stated that “ necessity, not choice, obliged the Bookseller to act himself in the double capacity of Author and Printer.” He had previously acknowledged that the book had been compiled in great measure from Ashmole’s History of the Order of the Garter, together with the monumental in- scriptions which “ Mr. Mapletoft, one of the officers of St. George’s Chapel, by a commendable diligence, had collected.” I have discovered evident proof that Mapletoft did not consider that sufficient credit was awarded to him by Pote. There are two copies of the book in the library of the Dean and Chapter of Windsor, in one of which is inscribed — “ The gift of Dr. Joseph Goodall, Provost of Eton College, to the library of the Dean and Canons of Windsor. May 25, 1814.” ( Previously ) “E Libris G. Wingfield.” At the foot of the title-page is written (perhaps an autograph), “ John Mapletoft, Author .” The words “ Author and” (quoted at the commencement of this note) are erased at p. ii. of the preface, and at p. 408 is this further intimation : — “ John Mapletoft, Yerger and Sub-Chanter of St. George’s Chapel, Deputy- Governor of the Poor Knights, and Under Chapter-Clerk to the College, who was the Author of this book, died Anno iEtatis 58, October 4th, 1764, and lies buried under the lower pavement on the south side of the church.” Mr. Joseph Pote died April 3, 1787, aged 84; and in the Gentleman’s Magazine, vol. lvii. p. 365, is some account of him, and of his works, but without rendering- justice to Mr. John Mapletoft. INTRODUCTION. 15 The Monumenta Anglicana , of John Le Neve, is a Miscella- neous Collection of Epitaphs, in five thin octavo volumes. 1 These are the chief of our national authors, who, seconded by our topographers, have endeavoured, like Thomas Dingley, to extract History from Marble. To proceed to describe the numerous volumes of county and local history which contain church notes and epitaphs, would, as I have already intimated, be to mention nearly all the modern works that abound in that department of literature. I will only add some particulars that may not be generally known with regard to two or three of our English counties. The old Histories of Gloucestershire, by Sir Eobert Atkyns (1712), and by Eudder (1779), did not contain epitaphs: but that which goes by the name of Bigland — collected by Ealph Bigland, Garter, and published by his son (bearing the date of 1791), consists in very great measure of sepulchral records, 2 — the epitaphs of the i Volume I. Epitaphs from 1600 to 1649 Published 1719. „ II. )> 1650 to 1679 yy 1718. „ III. )> 1680 to 1699 yy „ IV. yy 1700 to 1715 (with an Obituary) „ 1717. „ V. „ 1650 to 1718 yy 1719. John Le Neve’s original collections are preserved in the British Museum among the Harleian MSS. They amount in all to twenty-six volumes, viz. — 3605-3616. Twelve volumes, in folio, of Monumental Inscriptions, of which the last No., 3616, was not included in his printed work. 3617-3624. Eight volumes, in folio, containing a list of all the Churches in England, their Value in the King’s Book, &c., to which he intended to add the Patrons’ names, and Monumental Inscriptions. This collection is, however, a mere skeleton. 3625. An Obituary, from the year 1678 to 1706: a large folio volume, indexed. 6127. Under this No. of the Harl. MSS. are catalogued five volumes, also in folio, being his collection for all the Cathedrals, their Monuments and Dignitaries; a design afterwards published in part by Browne Willis. 2 “ This modest work, which professes to be little more than a collection of Monumental Inscriptions, and ‘ rather a history of the Inhabitants of Gloucestershire than of the Shire itself,’ was begun about thirty years ago, by the late Ralph Bigland, Esq., principally to obtain information relative to his profession.” (Mr. Gough, in the Gentleman’’ 8 Magazine , 1786, p. 1062.) It, in fact, took its 16 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. churchyards as well as the churches being therein printed more fully and systematically than they have been for any other county. This work, however, was published in numbers; and the parishes, which were arranged alphabetically, were not printed beyond that of Newent, in consequence of the pecuniary embarrassment of Mr. Bigland. The MS. collections for the unpublished parishes having subsequently passed into the possession of Sir Thomas Phillipps, Bart., he printed seventeen more parishes, to Painswick inclusive (pp. 253 — 312), with which the book at present stops. The Monumental Inscriptions of Wiltshire were collected for Sir Thomas Phillipps, and printed at his private press at Middlehill, in the year 1822. Those belonging to South Wiltshire extend to 108 pages, and those of North Wilts to 286, in foolscap folio ; but as the impression was confined to six copies, it has almost the rarity of a manuscript. It is not to be found at the British Museum, but there is a copy in the library of the College of Arms. It is useful for reference as regards North Wilts. The epitaphs in South Wilts have since been reprinted in Sir R. C. Hoare’s History of that divi- sion of the county. The Parochial Collections for the County of Oxford , printed also by Sir Thomas Phillipps, consist of 98 pages and two leaves of pedigrees (without, date, and unfinished), and have also been very sparingly circulated. Of books of Armorial Church-notes, without epitaphs, we have two examples, ably executed, by Mr. Thomas Willement, F.S.A. These are — Heraldic Notices of Canterbury Cathedral, with Genealogical and Topographical Notes. 1827. 4to. An Account of the Restorations of the Collegiate Chapel of St. George, Windsor: with some particulars of the Heraldic Ornaments of that edifice. 1844. 4to. shape as an Appendix to the other histories, Atkyns having been reprinted in 1768 and Rudder published in 1779, after Bigland commenced his “ Historical, Monu- mental, and Genealogical Collections.” INTRODUCTION. 17 Very recently the whole existing armory in the Cathedral Church of Bristol has been surveyed by the Rev. John Woodward, and published in The Herald and Genealogist (May 1867); and the Heraldry of the Abbey Church of St. Alban’s, collected by the Rev. Charles Boutell, M.A., is now in preparation for the same periodical. An excellent Guide to the Cathedral Church of Gloucester, compiled with great judgment and abounding with sound archaeo- logical information, has just been published by the Rev. Herbert Haines, M.A., Head Master of the King’s School in that city ; but he has left a more thorough investigation of its heraldry to J. D. T. Niblett, esq., who has undertaken that task. The Rev. F. T. Havergal, M.A., the author of an excellent Hand-Guide to Hereford Cathedral, compiled by desire of the Dean and Chapter, is now pre- paring a more elaborate description of that edifice, to the preserva- tion of the antiquities of which he has materially contributed. Our author, Thomas Dingley, towards the close of his Irish jour- nal, when noticing the manner in which funerals were conducted in Ireland, takes occasion to express his lamentations upon the injuries which, in his time, sepulchral monuments were continually suffering, as well from dishonest spoliation, as from “ the sordid opinion in some people that Tombs and Monuments, with Epitaphs, relish of Romish Superstition and Popery.” “ So that at this day not onely here [in Ireland] but in England itself, by the neglect of Funeral State, and slight of Heralds, the ancient Gentry are prejudiced for want of publishing their armes, and bearings, on these occasions ; whence have arose doubts, questions, and suits of law touching descents, and issues in future. “ To help on with which, the dayly Church Robberies obliterate the memories of the defunct ; covetous filching [and] pilfrey having most sacrilegiously pickt out, eraz’d, and stoln away, for the mettal sake, most of the Inscriptions, Epitaphs, Arms, Pedigree and history of families, upon the goodly Tombes of our worthy ancestors. 0 that care were taken yett to preserve what remain, for to my knowledge not only in Ireland but England it self, monuments of the dead are thus abus’d.” CAMD. SOC. D 18 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. During the two centuries which have (almost) since elapsed, a more proper respect to Sepulchral Monuments, particularly if they have claims to general admiration as fine works of art, has arisen and has been generally sustained. And yet there is still much cause for expostulation with local authorities as regards such matters. Even the prevalent admiration of Ecclesiastical Architecture, which has latterly suggested so many great works of restoration, has involved to a lamentable extent the destruction of the veritable remains of ancient art, and it is now continually sweeping them away. At the same time it has still less mercy for those monuments of past generations which are valuable chiefly as memorials of persons and families, and which are found guilty of defacing or obscuring the beauty of architectural features , 1 or which interfere with modern arrangements for reseating churches, or with those for warming them. Such incumbrances are therefore either removed and put aside, or altogether cleared away. Thus it will be remembered that the monuments of many legal luminaries of former days have been removed from the area of the Temple Church to its upper passages ; and it is well if the displaced memo- rials, as at St. Bride’s, Fleet Street, find refuge in a vestibule or in the church tower. Bath Abbey also, which long ago was so covered with memorials of the dead that they suggested to some wit of the last century to exclaim: 1 It may be admitted that, during the three last centuries, monuments were often erected so as to mutilate and injure fine architectural features, and sometimes placed in very improper positions. Thus, a gigantic monument to the Duke of Bucking- ham, who was assassinated at Portsmouth in 1628, occupied the eastern wall of the church of St. Thomas in that town, until recently removed. So, at East Harptree, in Somersetshire, the monument of Sir John Newton, who entertained Leland in his itinerary, and gave him some valuable information, was erected on a similar spot, so that the communion-table stood partly in front of it. It has suffered accordingly. The ecclesiastical taste of the present generation has pulled it down, the tomb and effigy alone remaining. Its former appearance, with a canopy of Ionic columns, is preserved in an engraving in The Record of the House of Gournay , repeated in the Herald and Genealogist , vol. iv. p. 441. INTRODUCTION. 19 These walls, stuck o’er with monument and bust, Show how Bath waters serve to lay the dust; even those storied walls have been denuded, and it is to be feared that many records belonging to families in all parts of England have been obliterated and lost. In the last century the zeal for church ornamentation frequently took the course of presenting new pavements ; to make way for which the ledger-stones that bore relics of brass plates, or the matrices that denoted their former beauty, were cleared off without compunction. It was thus that in 1782 Lincoln cathedral was treated, when the havoc of the Parliamentarian soldiers was fairly obliterated ; and the like procedure was taken in St. George’s Chapel, at Windsor, in 1789, 1 when many of the stones once most remarkable for their size and splendour were removed to the neigh- bouring cloister. The encaustic tiles now so prevalent, though more appropriate to our ecclesiastical architecture than the lozenges of black and white marble which were admired by our grandfathers, have in their turn led to a disturbance of sepulchral memorials which is much to be regretted. Not unfrequently in modern restorations the flooring of a church is wholly removed, and perhaps its level altered. This was recently done at Cirencester, and how far the old stones are reinstated I am not informed. At Loughborough the grave- stones (both ancient and modern) have been turned out into the churchyard, and there formed into a footpath, which the frost will quickly destroy. 2 If we are no longer liable to the thorough desolation with which 1 I am happy to state that a plan of the whole edifice, marking the ancient interments, was previously taken by Mr. Emlyn, the architect, and that it is now in custody of the Dean ; together with a duplicate copy, in which subsequent interments in the chapel are denoted. 2 See Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries, Third Series, Dec. 1865, p. 205. Other complaints of the destruction of sepulchral monuments have been frequently made in that journal. 20 HISTORY FROM MARBLE, Wyatt destroyed the monumental chapels at Salisbury, to attain the imaginary charm of a vista , and then placed their fragments between the columns of the nave as an upholsterer would hang pictures, yet a partial removal of monuments is continually going on. At Bristol Cathedral the monument of Sir Charles Vaughan, drawn by Dingley at p. (67), and that of Sir John Young (ob. 1603), with their recumbent effigies, have lately been taken down, “ and are now decaying under the influence of the weather in the grave- yard adjoining.” ( Herald and Genealogist , May, 1867, p. 290.) In other cases, monuments suffer from injudicious and tasteless refurbishing, as at Exeter. 1 At Feckenham, in Worcestershire, the monumental effigies of Sir Martin Culpeper (ob. 1604) and his wife, although they were thought worthy of representation in the plates to Nash’s History of that county, 2 were actually buried below the pavement during repairs less than fifteen years ago. At Claines, in the same county, a fine effigy of John Porter, a lawyer (1577,), which is also engraved in Nash’s History, 3 was removed from the church into the churchyard about the year 1807, and is now perishing from the weather. 4 At Stan well, in Middlesex, the interesting monument of Thomas Wyndesor, esq. (ob. 1483), one of those which were erected to 1 “ At Exeter some of the most interesting tombs in the country have been simply destroyed. Of the Courtenay tomb there is not a vestige of old work left, and the so-called restoration is partly in stucco More than this, the monuments no longer stand over the places of interment. . . . The fine monument of Bishop Oldham was thus treated: First, all vestiges of old colour, of which much remained in its original condition, were removed; then all the stone-work, except the sculpture, and, it is said (though I can scarcely believe it), the effigy was retooled, and finally the whole was painted up in oil-colours of the most distressing crudeness. The furbish- ing up of the Carew monument is not a hit better; even the inscriptions are now of no sort of authority, except as possible copies.”— Letter, signed John C. Jackson, in The Times , July 12, 1867. 2 Yol. i. p. 156; described in p. 442. 3 Vol. i. p. 68. 4 Notes and Queries, III. xi. 440, 530. LIFE AND WORKS OF THOMAS DINGLEY. 21 serve also foi*an annual imitation of the Holy Sepulchre at Easter, 1 was destroyed in 1863. It has always been more or less the case that living generations have thrust aside for their own convenience, or to commemorate their more immediate relations and friends and their personal im- portance, the mouldering relics of their foregone and forgotten pre- decessors. They are thus continually assisting the encroachments of time and decay; whilst the historians, on the other hand, — the Weevers, the Dingleys, the Le Neves, the Biglands — and their fol- lowers are doing their utmost to rescue, at least in part, by repre- sentation or description, the perishing relics of our ancestors, and to prove that while the litera scripta manet , paper records may be more permanent than those of brass or marble, and that a book may become a monumentum cere perennius. This will be more particu- larly the case when a new art comes in aid, and multiplies the indi- vidual existence of our History from Marble into a goodly supply of fac-simile copies. The proper place now arrives for some account of the author of this volume ; but the available materials for his biography are very scanty. No mention of him by his literary or antiquarian con- temporaries has hitherto been discovered, and from such of his manuscripts as we now possess few personal particulars are to be gleaned. 1 “ My body to be buried in the north side of the quere of the chirch of our Lady of Stan well, afor the ymage of our lady, wher the sepultur of our Lord stondith; wherupon I will ther be made a playne tombe of marble of a competent hight to th ’ entent that yt may ber the blissid body of our Lord the sepultur at the time of Estre, to stond uppon the same , and with myne Armes and a scriptur convenient to be sett aboute the same tombe by th?tdvyse of myne executors and overseers underwretyn.” (Will dated 1479.) A representation of this monument is fortunately preserved in the Gentleman’s Magazine fof 1793, p. 993. 22 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. There were two families of Dingley, both of very considerable antiquity, one of which was seated at Charleton in Worcestershire, 1 and the other at Woolverton in the Isle of Wight, 2 and both bore the same arms, pointing probably to a common origin. Indeed, the Worcestershire race boasted to derive their line from an earlier source, “the ancient family of the Dineleyes or Dingleyes of Lancashire,” as it is designated in the epitaph of Francis Dingley, Esq. of Charleton, who died in 1624. It was, however, the opinion of Habingdon, the Worcestershire historian, that they had come from Dingley, in Northamptonshire. 3 The Dingley Arms are, Argent, a fess sable, and in chief a mullet between two pellets of the last ; and for Crest, Out of a ducal coronet a dragon’s head or. The same were used by our author, without any difference. 4 Dr. Nash, the historian of Worcestershire, having met with Dingley ’s MSS. in the library of Stanford Court, very naturally claimed him for a Worcestershire man. He speaks of him 5 as Thomas Dineley of Withall Chapel, in the parish of Bromsgrove, 1 Of the family of Dingley of Charleton, in the parish of Cropthom, near Pershore, Nash gives a pedigree in his History of Worcestershire , vol. i. p. 272. They became extinct in the male line about the beginning of the last century, having latterly written their name Dineley, which orthography was adopted by their suc- cessors, the Dineley Goodyeres. Our author paid great attention to their monuments at Cropthorn, as will be seen hereafter. 2 There is a pedigree of Dingley of Woolverton in the Hampshire Visitation of 1634. This has been printed by Sir Thomas Phillipps ( Visitation of Hampshire), and also in Berry’s Hampshire Genealogies. But the family was of much higher antiquity than that pedigree shows, as appears by its alliances with many other dis- tinguished Hampshire families. Its head who was contemporary with our author was Sir John Dingley. Hasted, the historian of Kent, was maternally descended from the family of Dingley of Woolverton; as the celebrated comedian Foote was from the Dingleys of Charleton. 3 See in the Appendix some account of Henry Dingley, a genealogist of the Charleton family, and Habingdon’s remarks in reference to him. 4 As drawn for the frontispiece of his Journall through the Low-Countreys, and in other parts of his MSS. 5 History of Worcestershire, Supplement, p. 16. LIFE AND WORKS OF THOMAS DINGLEY. 23 having assumed (apparently only upon the evidence of his Christian name) his identity with the fourth son of Henry Dingley, Esq. of Charleton, who was Thomas Dingley, of Withall Chapel. This, however, suggests too early a date for the birth of our antiquary ; for Henry Dingley, the father of that Thomas, is stated to have died before his father Francis Dingley, Esq. whose decease was in 1624. It has since been suggested 1 that he was identical with “ Thomas Dingley, gent.” who was buried at King’s Norton, another chapelry of Bromsgrove, on the 26th of August, 1690 ; but I have seen the will of this gentleman in the registry at Worcester, and am able to affirm from its autograph signature ( Thomas Dineley) that he was not our author. 2 Modern writers who have had occasion to mention our author have written his name Dineley, following Dr. Nash. He appears himself to have usually written it Dingley , 3 though some instances 1 In Mr. E. P. Shirley’s introduction to Dingley’s Irish Journal, in the Transac- tions of the Kilkenny Archaeological Society. 2 The Dingley s were in fact numerous at King’s Norton, and in the copious extracts from the register of that place, which are to be seen in Dr. Prattinton’s Worcestershire Collections in the Library of the Society of Antiquaries (sub tit. Bromsgrove) the name is of frequent occurrence. The gentleman who died there in 1690 (and whose eldest son Edward was born there in 1680), mentions in his will his wife Judith, his father-in-law William Fitter, and John Fitter of King’s Norton, yeoman: and, moreover, another contemporary of his own names — “ Thomas Dineley of Stoke Pryor, gent.” 3 It is so on the title-page of his earliest book, the Journal of the Low Countries. The letters of reference to objects in his drawings frequently form his name. In his French Journal he has followed this conceit in his plan of Dieppe, in his view of the castle of Richelieu, in the monument at Fontevraud, in his view of Mons. Guille’s house at Tours, and in a representation of the Grand Vizier’s standard. In all these five cases the letters spell out THOMAS DINGLEY. In his Irish Journal (p. 181) the references to the draught of the fort of Hale- bolin on Cork river furnish the spelling THOMAS DINELEY; but a few pages further on the view of Glyn Castle is marked with THOMAS dingl, and subsequently the plan of the castle of Limerick THOMAS dingley. So in our own volume, in the north sketch of the King’s Bath at Bath (p. 62) we again decipher thomas dingley. 24 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. of Dineley are also to be found. This probably arose from the ordinary pronunciation of tbe name resembling most nearly the latter form. At p. 116 of the present volume will be found a bold autograph signature, accompanied by a motto — Tho. Dingley, Virtute Duce, Fortuna Comite. In the dedicatory inscription appended to the view of Newport House, in p. 207, he has written, T. Dineley, Societ. Grayes Inn. But in the admission-book itself at Gray’s Inn we find the older orthography, 1670, Aug 6. Thomas Dingley, son and heir of Thomas Dingley, of Southampton, co. Southampton, esq. And this entry opens to us a fresh view of Dingley’s parentage. It is clear that he was not of the Worcestershire family. The Hampshire Visitation of 1622, besides the pedigree of Dingley of Woolverton, contains the following distinct table for Dingley of Southampton. From the original Visitation of Hampshire made in 1622 and 1624 (in the College of Arms, C. 19, f. 34 b ). Arms: Argent, a fess sable, and in chief a mullet between two pellets of the last : impaling Gnles, crusilly fiteby and a lion rampant or, for Hopton. Thomas Dingley de=f=Maria, una filiarum Johannes villa Southampton Joh’is Gregorii Hopton ar. Aldermani ejusdem villae Southampton. Dorothea uxor Mathan Hol- lowav de London. Nicholaus Dingley=^Dorothea filia et armiger, Contraro- tulator Subsid. Regis in Portu South’ton et ejusdem villae membris. una heredum Jo. Hopton de Hopton-in-le- Hole in com. Salopiae armigeri. Thomas Dingley, unicus filius, aetatis 3 annorum et amplius 18 Septemb. 1622. Elizabetha, prima filia et haeres,nuptaRic’do Hop- ton de Cherbery in com. Salopiae militis, cui avunc’us Michael Hopton (frater senior patris sui Joh’is Hopton) dedit omnia terras et tene- menta sua ex concensu p’dicti Jo. Hopton. ( Signed ) Nicholas Dingley. LIFE AND WORKS OF THOMAS DINGLE Y. 25 The Thomas Dingley named last in this pedigree was clearly the same who is mentioned, in the admission-book at Gray’s Inn, as the father of our antiquary ; 1 for the latter, in his account-of Sir Thomas Coningsby’s Hospital at Hereford, mentions that one of the over- seers for the performance of the will of that benefactor “ was my honoured great-uncle S r Richard Hopton, of Cannon Froom, in y e county of Hereford, Knt.” Sir Richard, as appears in the above pedigree, was the husband of the maternal aunt of Dingley’s mother. We derive some intimation of Dingley’s education from a passage at the close of his first journal, where, having arrived at Calais on his return homewards, he apologises for the shortness of his account of that city by the attractions of “ the magnetick power of Dover cliffs,” which, though scarce discernible through a mist, drew his eyes thither, making good “ this saying often us’d by my worthy and learn’d schoolmaster, James Shirley, Poet-laureat, 2 PATRLE FUMUS ALIENO IGNE LUCULENTIOR EST.” From Wood’s Athence Oxonienses it appears that the scene of Shirley’s academy was “ mostly in the Whitefriars,” near the Temple, in London: — “After the King’s cause declined . . . following his old trade of keeping- school, which was mostly in the Whitefriers, he not only gained a comfortable subsistence, but educated many ingenious youths, who after- wards proved most eminent in divers faculties.” With Dingley he was at least successful in implanting a lasting love of the classic poets, for our author’s journals are full of quotations from Virgil, Ovid, Horace, and others of the writers of antiquity, with occasional passages of Greek. 1 He died in 1660, about July: see in Mrs. Green’s Calendar of Domestic State Papers y of that date, the petition of Richard Walker of Southampton, merchant, asking for the vacant place of Comptroller of the Port. 2 See in Dingley’s Alphabett of Arms (p. xiii. 42, of the present volume), “ Shirley, James, a famous Poet, my Schoolm r , bore paly of 6 Or and azure a Canton erminee.” CAMD. SOC. E 26 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. Towards the end of 1671 (the year following his admission at Gray’s Inn), Thomas Dingley was engaged to become one of the suite of Sir George Downing, then about to return as ambassador to the States-General of the United Provinces. This expedition was commemorated in “The Journall of my Travails through the Low-Countreys,” the first of the MSS. here- after described. It commences with the following particulars : — On y e of December, 1671, 1 S r George Downing, K nt and Barr 4 , Ambassador from his most sacred Ma tie to y e States Generali of the United Provinces, took Barge at his house inWestminster, being attended by George Berkley, Esq., S r Philip Carteret, Barr 4 , Cornet Watson of His Ma ties Guards, Georg Downing, Esq r , Thomas Walker, Esq r , Captain Sadlington, Mr. William Downing, and my self. About 4 of the clock that Evening, having reached Green-wich, and at- tended his Excellency on board His Ma ties yatch the Cleveland, Cap 4 Fasebey master, at night his Excellency arrived at Gravesend, and after four dayes stay there, being out at sea, and forc’d in again at y e Isle of Tenet, and almost a week’s striveing with contrary winds, at length with great difficulty y e yatch came to anchor near Flissing in Zeland. Our forced stay there allowing (those that would) time enough to view the whole island. After this there is scarcely any further record of personal adven- ture in the journal; but the principal places in the Low Countries are described in the following order: — In Zeland: Middlebourg, Yeere, or Traveer, Pamekens, Armuyden, and Flushing. In Holland: Scheveling, the Hague, Riswick (where his Excellency the Ambassador, after five days’ stay incognito, made a solemn entry, which is fully detailed), Lausdune, Leyden (“ our lodging in this Citty was at an English house, at the signe of the White Hart,”) Voerden, Yianen, Utrecht, and Amsterdam (where, “ upon the 1 The date is unfilled up, and at first November was written, but altered to De- cember. As the title-page of the Journall (the MS. of which is described hereafter, Appendix i.) bears the date 1674, it would seem that before it was written fairly, the author had forgotten the exact date of his departure. LIFE AND WORKS OF THOMAS DINGLEY. 27 recommendation of Mr. Waller, we took up our lodgings at a French ordinary,” and “ the next morning early began our survey, accom- panied with Mr. Ward, a very considerable merchant of this Citty.^) In North Holland, or Westfreisland : Surdam, Edam, Moneykey- dam, Horn, Anchusen, Medemblijch, Alkmaer, Harlem, Delft or Delph, Scheidam, Eotterdam, Dort, Gorckum, Worckum, and Ileusden. In Brabant: Bolduc, or Bois-le-duc, and Breda, “where (before we waited upon the Governor, the Herr van Zuyluich- stein, naturall son to the Prince of Orange,) we received a visit from a commander in this garrison, a very worthy English gentle- man, Captain Butler.” In the Spanish Provinces : Antwerp, 1 Malines, Bruxelles, 2 Alost, Ghent, 3 Bruges, 4 Ostend, and Nieu- port. And in the French territory: Dunkirk, Gravelin, and Calais. Having ruminated on the results of his earliest travels for the next three years (for the date 1674 stands in the title-page of his Low-Countreys Journall), Mr. Dingley found an opportunity for a tour in France. He names his companions in the opening passage of his journal of that voyage, but in a very singular and tantalising manner. They were, “ T. B. Esq., A. B. gent., John Bowcock, 1 “Here belongs to the Jesuits Colledge a famous library, which, together with all the curiosities of the church, were shown us by Father Wortesley, an English Jesuite, and Brother Philip, a student.” 2 “ In this Citty (Bruxelles) are two English Cloysters of Nunnes, one of Benedic- tines, whereof Madam Vavazor of Yorkshire is Lady Abbesse; the other of Do- minicans, founded by y e L rd Ph. Howard, whereof Madam Boyle, related to the L rd Burlington, is Lady Abbesse.” 3 At Ghent, “ the Colledge of English Jesuites is but very small and mean ; here we were treated by them w th great civility. “ The English Nunnery of Benedictines, wherein none known to any of our com- pany but Dame Peters and two Howards sisters.” 4 Again he remarks at Bruges: “ In this citty are two English nunnerys ; the one of the order of S l . Austen, Mad m . Beningfeild Lady Abbesse ; the other of Fran- ciscans, Mad m . Birker Lady Abbyesse. In the last the Nuns have the power of electing a new lady Abbyess every 3 yeer. Where are also seven of the senior sisters, which, upon all important occasions, advise with y e Lady Abbyesse. Nuns related to some of our company in these Mon stres are two Dame Windsores sisters, and Dame Acton, all 3 of Worcestershire.” 28 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. M.A. of Cambridge, 1 and T. J.” He says nothing of them in the subsequent pages of his narrative, but from one of his drawings 2 we gather a little further information. It is dedicated to T. B. Esq., as the engraved plates of books often were in those days, and after the same fashion the arms of the dedicatee are introduced. These are, a chevron between three buck’s heads caboshed (the colours not indicated), and for crest a buck’s head. Families of the name of Beckingham and Broughton (either of which would fit the initial B), have borne such arms; but I have not been further assisted towards identifying Dineley’s companions in France. I suspect, however, that the arms and crest might be found to have been used by some person of the name of Buckley. The party sailed from Shoreham on the 11th September, 1675, in a small yatch called the Norrington, and after being beaten back to Portsmouth, and waiting there for a better gale, they landed at Dieppe on the afternoon of Tuesday the 14th. Dingley de- scribes Dieppe at length, and afterwards Rouen, Havre de Grace, Caen, Bayeux, and Coutances, and some places on the road from Rouen to Paris. Of Pontoise, where there was then an English nunnery, 3 he gives some account, and of the royal abbey of Mau- buisson; afterwards of Alincourt and Argenteuil. Next a long description of St. Denis and the royal tombs there; after which he comes to Paris. 4 It then appears that he had travelled thither from Rouen in a stage-coach. Intending to view the wonders of the French metropolis on his return, Dingley proceeds to Orleans, describing the places on his 1 John Bowcocke, of Clare Hall, B.A. 1661, but not M.A. 2 The Platform of Melun, at p. 285. 2 See much regarding that nunnery in The Herald and Genealogist , vol. iii., where Dingley’s account of the murder of Lord Carrington at Pontoise has been ex- tracted at p. 65. The English epitaphs copied by Dingley at the Huguenots’ Burying-place at Charenton, near Paris, are printed in The Topographer and Genealogist , vol. iii. p. 298. 4 He remarks, “ Paris is not altogether (as I take it) so large as London, but more populous.” LIFE AND WORKS OF THOMAS DINGLEY. 29 route; and after spending many pages on the city of Orleans, he has drawn upon a folded sheet of vellum a prospect of the Castle of Richelieu, and next describes Touraine and Tours. At “ Font Evrault Abbey for Nunns” 1 he has drawn the great monument 2 erected in 1638 by the Lady Abbess Jeane Baptiste de Bourbon, to contain the royal effigies of our Anglo-Norman race, since so well known from the accurate drawings of the late Charles Alfred Stothard. Then follows a Journey from Nantes to the Baths of Bourbon, describing the city of Angiers on the way. It was our traveller’s intention to have inserted “ A memorial of the chiefest strangers which formed the company at Bourbon 1’Archambaud,” at this season, May 1676,” but the page remains unfilled. At p. 179 he again signs his name, Tho. Dingley. Then commences his return “ Journey from Bourbon to Paris;” in the course of which he describes Moulins, 3 Nevers, Tours, Chatillon, Nemours, Fontainebleau, Melun, and several other places (many pages being left blank for unfinished portions of his descrip- tion). The next hundred pages are occupied with particulars of Paris and its environs; and the remainder of the manuscript with miscellaneous observations, there being no formal conclusion of the journal. 1 “ A.D. 1676. The present lady abbess is Mademoiselle de , sister to Madam de Montespan, minion and concubine to the present French king, Lewis XIV.” 2 A large engraving of the same is given in Sandford’s Genealogical History of England, edit. 1677, p. 65. The drawing had been sent to him by the lady abbess, “ delineated by her own scenographer,” about three years before her death. Sand- ford describes it as “ that stately Monument erected An. Dom. 1638 by the late Lady Abbess, Madam Jeane Baptiste de Bourbon, daughter of King Henry the Great, out of a high respect to the memory of our Kings and Queens interred in the church of the said monastery.” 3 At Moulins, the concourse on the great meadow along the Allier, called Champ- bonnet, “was the more numerous this June 2nd and 3rd, 1676, because of a flatt bottom’d boat built there, lin’d with crimson velvet fring’d with gold, and prepar’d on purpose to transport Madam de Montespan, cheif mistress t o’ the K (at her returne from the Bourbon Baths), by this river towards Nevers, and down the River Loyre to the Abbey of Fontevrault, neer Saumur, where her sister is Lady Abbess.” 30 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. In the year 1680 Dingley repaired to Ireland, and the result was a similar journal to that which had commemorated his French voyage. But it is even less in the form of a personal narrative, and the course of his actual travels is very uncertain, because lie probably notices some places that he did not personally visit. He appears to have landed at Dublin, to which he paid minute attention, for it occupies nearly one-fourth of his manuscript. He then proceeded to Carlow, which he describes as a “ fine, thriving, flourishing town, belonging to Henry Earl of Thomond,” who is further characterised as “ one of the best landlords in Ireland.” It would seem indeed that the main object of his journey was in this quarter. A mile and a-half from Carlow was Staples Town, which had been purchased from Sir John Temple (Master of the Rolls in Ireland) by John Tench, Esq., late of Lincoln’s Inn, by whom it was set to Captain Edward Brabazon, a Privy Councillor in Ireland and brother to the Earl of Meath. Dingley here mentions the civilities he received from “ worthy Mr. James Moor, the minister,” who had been chaplain to Sir John Temple, and from Walter Welden, Esq. He mentions also William Ewers, Esq., of the neighbouring castle of Benekerry, and his sisters, who “ bore the bell away this Anno 1681,” in a competitive trial of “ the young women and maydens of this county to employ all their skill, industry, and endeavours to exceed each other in spinning, weaving, whitening,” and the other operations of the linen manufacture. From thence Dingley appears to have made an excursion to Wicklow, and visited Tullow, Hacketstown, Ballinderry, Rathdown, and Wicklow. Returning to Carlow he went to Limerick, by Abbey-Lease, Barros, Roscrea, and the Silver Mines; in his draught of which he points out “A new Work beginning 1681.” From Limerick he appears to have returned to Carlow another way, by Abbey Oney (where he copied many inscriptions), Bilboa, Golden- bridge, Cashel, Killenoule, Lismolin, and Laughlin-bridge. During this journey he visited Grayne Church, Miltown Abbey, and Emly. LIFE AND WORKS OF THOMAS DINGLET. 31 Of Limerick he gives a very detailed account, and of very many castles, mansions, &c. in its neighbourhood ; and from thence he made an excursion to Clare and Ennis. This seems to have been the western limit of his itinerary. Kilkenny is very succinctly noticed; and then the manuscript brings its reader back again to the neighbourhood of Limerick ; and next follows a journey from Bunratty, the ruined castle of the Earl of Thomond, by Fermoy Bridge and Tallow, to Youghal. Of Youghal there is a long and interesting description, concluding with an account of the passage thence to Minehead, in Devonshire ; and this was, it would seem, the route by which our tourist returned home . 1 He twice mentions that his stay in Ireland extended to a twelve- month and more . 2 Whilst he is describing Youghal, the following statement occurs : — “ The garrison consists of two companyes of the ancient Scotch, com- monly known by the name of the Douglass Regiment, under the command of the Earl of Dunbarton, one whereof is commanded by y e Lord Grenade as Lb -Coll 11 . And y e other by my Major George Arnot as Captaine. The officers in town were Lieuten’t Barclay, Lieut 1 . Hamilton and Ensigne Grant, who have been in eminent service for the Crown of France.” The designation “ my Major ” in this passage seems to lead to an inference that Dingley had himself acted in a military capacity ; 3 but of any such feature in his career we have detected no other intimation. It is true that he is careful to describe the way in 1 He does not distinctly say so ; but the latter part of his hook (pp. 215-236) bears this title, “ A Journey from Bunratty Castle in the county of Clare, unto the famous Port and Town of Youghall in the county of Cork, and thence to the Port of Minehead in England.” On a vacant page soon after there is what appears to be a slight sketch of Stonehenge. 2 P. 252 and p. 296 ; pp. 14, 34 of printed edition. 3 The annotator of this part of the Tour in Ireland remarked, that “ Dineley had been Arnot’s subaltern when he served under the command of the Duke of Beaufort.” But I believe this was founded only upon some misapprehension. 32 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. which the castles and other military posts of Ireland were com- manded; 1 but that is no more than any traveller of his time would have done. On the whole, it is evident that the course of his travels is not to be decidedly ascertained from this journal as now arranged, for whilst in the earlier portions of the book (pp. 59, 84, 99), he writes in the year 1681, 2 towards the end, at pp. 167, 179, we find him at Rathlahine Castle, co. Clare, on the 10th of Dec. 1680. His view of that castle (at p. 167) is surmounted by the appearance of a comet, and at p. 1 7 9 is a more careful drawing of “ The Blazing Starr (as it appeared to me and others in the county of Thomond or Clare) taken at y e Castle of Ballahine, belonging to Giles Vanderlure, Esq r ., one of his Ma ties . Justices of y e Peace for y l county in Ireland. “At its first appearance here at Rallahine Castle, being on Friday night, Decemb r . 10 th , 80, it showed it self with a prodigious long pale taper ray, of a leaden saturnine colour, without any signe of a starr to be discern’d at its poynt. And that it continued until January the 13 nth fol- lowing is all the observac’on I could make and comunicate to my freinds in England . As being unacquainted with Astrology. But my acquaintance Mr. Francis Herne, belonging to Mr. Kerney sergeant-at-armes, and a learned mathematician, from his house in Castle-street, Dublin, sent down this account into Munster, where it came into my hands ” (and he then transcribes it). Though Dingley nowhere distinctly intimates the circumstances which conducted him to Ireland, yet it is evident that his greatest 1 Many of Dingley’s sketches in his Irish Journal have groups of soldiers by way of figures. These were cut out of some prints, and stuck on to his foregrounds. An instance will be found copied in the view of the Exchange and Quay of Youghal, but the engraver has generally omitted them. 2 Again, in opposite pages, both years 1680 and 1681 occur. In p. 196, he writes, “ Glyn Castle, in the county of Limerick, now 1681, in the hands of Major Fitz Gerald,” and in p. 197 he mentions “ Kilrush, a town in the county of Clare, belong- ing to the Right Hon b 'e Henry Earle of Thomond, at this time, 1680, in the tenure of Major Granniere.” LIFE AND WORKS OF THOMAS DINGLEY. 33 friends in that country were among the dependents of the Earl of Thomond. In his subsequent book upon Wales 1 he takes occasion, on the mere incidental mention of Brian, one of the old Kings of Ireland, to remark that “Of the name of Brian, or O’Brien, and family, are descended the most noble Irish Earles of Thomond,” and then introduces a view of Bunratty Castle, 2 and a description of the monument of Donagh, Earl of Thomond, in Saint Mary’s church at Limerick, which, having been defaced in the rebellion, was restored in the year 1678 by his grandson Earl Henry. Such a digression is at first view most extraordinary, but its motives will be under- stood when considered with regard to the connection that existed between the Thomond family and that of his new patron the Duke of Beaufort, for whose acceptance the Welsh volume was intended. 3 1 Notitia Cambro-Britannica, p. 106. 2 This drawing was, in fact, removed from p. 171 of his Irish Journal. 3 Edward Earl of Worcester, the Duke of Beaufort’s father, and the Earl of Thomond, had married sisters, the coheiresses of Henry fifth Earl of Thomond ; and it is certain that the intercourse of the families was maintained, for in 1686 Lord Ibrachan, the Earl of Thomond’s son and heir-apparent, was married to Lady Henrietta Somerset, daughter of the Duke of Beaufort. This young couple were not, however, cousins, as might be supposed, for the Duke of Beaufort was the son of his father’s first wife, Elizabeth Dormer. The relationship is shown in the fol- lowing table: — Donogh O’Brien, 4th Earl of Thomond. Barnabas, 6th Earl. Elizabeth Dormer, 1st wife. Edward Som- =F Ladv Mar- erset,Earlof Worcester. garet O’Brien, died 1681. Henry Somerset, 1st Duke of Beaufort =f= i Lady Mary Somerset, died young. Lady Ann = Henry O’Brien, 1st wife, died 1645. „ . 7th : Earl of Thomond, died 1691. Lady Henrietta Somerset, =7= Henry Horatio O’Brien, Lord marr. 1686. | Ibrachan, died 1690, iEt. 21. i : Sarah Russell, 2nd wife. Henry, 8th and last Earl of Thomond, died 1741. F CAMD. SOC. 34 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. It was in the year 1684 that the opportunity occurred, which enabled Dingley to take a survey of all the chief places in Wales, with its scenery and antiquities. The Duke of Beaufort, who was then Lord President of the Principality, had determined to make a progress throughout his jurisdiction, 1 chiefly, it would seem, with the view of strengthening the political party to which he was attached, that of the King and arbitrary power; for, like the heir- presumptive to the throne, he was a Roman Catholic. The Duke left his house at Chelsea, near London, on Monday the 14th of July; and on the 17th as Lord President entered Ludlow, then the seat of government for Wales, in a solemn procession, which Dingley minutely describes. Lie does not, however, name the capacity in which he formed one of the cavalcade. Whatever it may have been it led to his admission, during the ss, as an honorary freeman of the borough of Brecknock, and in like manner of the borough of Monmouth. After visiting all the t un- ties of Wales, reviewing the militia, and receiving th hospitalities both of the territorial lords and the muni rpo- rations, the Lord President concluded his progress on the 21st of August, 1684, when, quitting his son’s house at Troy, near Mon- mouth, he repaired to his own scat at Badminton, in Gloucester- 1 Lord Macaulay, in his History of England, when describing the preparations made by the government and loyal noblemen to resist the invasion of the Duke of Monmouth in 1685, and enlarging on the great influence of the Duke of Beaufort, remarks that “His official tours through the extensive region in which he represented the majesty of the throne were scarcely inferior in pomp to < 3ses,” quoting for his authority the London Gazettes of July 1684. There is, however, no authority for concluding that the Duke of Beaufort made any other official tour as Lord President of Wales than this of 1684, which was evidently specially undertaken to re-establish, if possible, the waning loyalty of the Welsh towards the House of Stuart, at tha t ticklish time when the Crown was doing its utmost to mender of municipal charters. See particularly the speech made by the Recorder of Car- marthen (p. 138), and the account of the surrender of the Charter of Cardiff at p. 201. In the History of Shrewsbury, by Owen and Blakeway, there is another misapprehension respecting the Duke’s progress, viz., that it was inaugural upon a re-appointment to the office of Lord President. LIFE AND WORKS OF THOMAS DINGLEY. 35 shire. (See the Notitia Cambro-Britannica further described in Appendix No. IV.) When at Shrewsbury, 1 to which town the Lord President deviated from Powis Castle, Dingley copied there in the parish church of St. Chad an epitaph which had been recently placed on the pavement over the body of “ an eminent preacher, whom I have often heard.” This was Roger Hayward, D.D. one of the King’s chaplains, who died in 1680, at the premature age of forty -three: and the inscrip- tion commemorates that for his pulpit eloquence 2 he had been one of many thousands, and highly esteemed “ non solum in Academiis apud doctos, sed etiam inter magnates in Aula Serenissimi Car. II (li . cui erat a sacris.” This passage might have furnished some further hints towards the slight materials for our author’s biography if he had added where he had so often heard Dr. Hayward’s sermons, whether at the Court, the University, or in public churches. The History from Marble, which is now printed, is referred to by its author in his last-mentioned volume as his “ English Journall,” and in the Irish Journal as “ my English Itinerary.” It was probably in progress during many years. 3 Its materials are gathered from various counties, but are more particularly copious and curious for Herefordshire and Wiltshire, and for the cities of Bath and Oxford. They are chiefly of his own collection, but in the latter part he has not refrained from copying Weever, Dug- dale’s History of St. Paul’s, and other printed books. 1 Besides Shrewsbury and Ludlow, Dineley’s Welsh Journal contains also in its earlier pages some notes of Worcester, with several drawings made in that cathedral, which are probably the fruit of some longer and quieter visit than that he made in attendance on the Duke of Beaufort on the morning of the 17th July, 1684. There are other notes of Worcester in the present volume. 2 Only two printed sermons by Dr. Hayward are mentioned in Watt’s Bibliotheca Britannica. They are dated 1673 and 1676. 3 Some of the dates which occur are — 1680, when he notices Windsor : “ten years ago from 1681 King’s Peon and Weobley in Herefordshire 1682 ; Hampton Court in Herefordshire, Jan. 1683 ; Lacock Abbey in Wiltshire, April 30, 1684 ; Spy Park and Sir Walter Long’s drawn on the next day ; Hereford in the same year (p. 200). 36 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. Such are the few particulars I have been able to collect of Thomas Dingley, chiefly from his own journals. My researches in other directions had been entirely without result, until at length the record of administration to his property has been discovered at Doctors’ Commons. From this we derive some important information : that his home was Dilwyn, in Herefordshire, and that he died when again en- gaged in foreign travels, at Louvaine, in Flanders. W e also learn that he had lived a bachelor, and was the last of his family, his heir being a niece, the daughter of his sister. Mense Maii 1695. Thomas Dingley. Vicesimo quarto die exiit com- missio Elizse Melling, uxori Willielmi Melling, nepti ex sorore Thomas Dingley nuper de Dillwin in comitatu Herefordiaq sed apud Lovaine in Flandria coelibis defuncti, habend’ &c. ad administrandum bona, jura, et credita dicti defuncti de bene &c. vigore commissionis jurat®, Anna Gwillim uxore Johannis Gwillim sorore ex dimidio sanguine prius rcnun- ciante, prout ex actis curias liquet. In the margin , this note of a second Administration , Administrate de bonis, &c. exiit Januarii 1702-3. Dingley was probably attracted to Dilwyn by its propinquity to some of the property he had inherited from his grandmother the coheir of the Hoptons. On the 9th of July 1867, 1 visited the church of Dilwyn, in the company of my friend the Rev. Charles J. Robinson, vicar of the neighbouring parish ofNort 1 i >n, and the parish register was shown to us by the Rev. Dr. Heather, the vicar. We had not then time to pursue any genealogical inquiries ; but a remarkable confirmation of Dingley’s former residence was presented to our view, in various fragments of his MS., some of them, once portions of the present volume, being stuck upon the first leaf of the book, where they had evidently been placed either by his own hands or by those of his friend the contemporary vicar. They relate not only to the monuments and painted glass at Dilwyn, but also to Weobley, to Stretford, and Burford ; and I shall take a LIFE AND WORKS OF THOMAS DINGLEY. 37 future opportunity to compare them with Dingley’s accounts of those places. The Alphabett of Arms with which this volume commences con- tains the names of some of Dingley’s antiquarian friends, as that of Mr. Theophilus Alye 1 (under the entry Perrot), and in the same page (43) the following paragraph : — Skull. Hereff. G. a bend between six lion’s heads erased or. This is borne by Skull of Much Cowarne in com. predict, of w ch family Mr. Cromp of Worcester, hath a pedigree. Qre. further of Mr. Blount of Orleton. tc Mr. Cromp of Worcester ” was afterwards Portcullis pursuivant 1689, York herald 1700, and (in addition) Carolina herald 1705. He had been “ originally an herald-painter in Worcester.” 2 u Mr. Blount of Orleton,” in Herefordshire, was a man of greater mark : the author of three popular works, — the Glossographia ; Boscobel , an account of the Escape of King Charles 11. after the battle of Worcester ; and the Fragmenta Antiquitatis , or Ancient Tenures of Land and Jocular Customs of Manors ; and he was the compiler of collections for the history of Herefordshire, which still remain in manuscript. It is agreeable to find even so slight a notice of Dingley’s intercourse with one of the most eminent anti- quaries of his own time and county. Possibly, now that attention has been directed to the very inter- esting literary remains of this industrious collector, some additional facts in his history may arise before the Camden Society issues the conclusion of this work ; and the recovery of the Commonplace- book (noticed hereafter as No. VI. of his Manuscripts) is very desirable for this object. J. G. N. See p. 42 hereafter. 2 Noble’s College of Arms, p. 359. 38 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. The manuscript works of Dingley, now known to be in existence, are six in number: — I. The Journall of my Travails through the Low-Countreys. Anno Dni 1674. Thomas Dingley. The author’s name is written on a ribbon attached to the orna- mental framework of the title-page. As a frontispiece is a sketch of the arms and crest of Dingley, with a profile helmet and mantling, but no motto, and undifferenced by any mark of cadency. At the back of the title is this quotation in praise of travel : — I. LIPS. IN EPISTOL. Humiles istse et plebeice animae clomi resident, et adfixre sunt suae terra;: Ilia divinior est, quae coelum imitatur, ac gaudet motu. The journal consists of 115 pages, including an insertion of ten which contains a printed catalogue of the museum at Leyden; after which succeed somewhat more than fifty pages of appendices, consisting of Generali Observacions on the Low- Countries, the Genealogie of King Henry the Fourth of France, papers on the Jews, the Jesuits, Orders of Chivalry, &c. There are some spirited sketches in pen-and-ink, but they are not of very frequent occur- rence. The penmanship throughout is exceedingly neat. F rom the date 1674 on the title-page it appears that it occupied the author’s attention for two or three years after the date of the journey, which began in December 1671. It was evidently fairly transcribed: for, in his Irish Journal, p. 272, he repeats a siege-pie< e of Breda “drawn in my Dutch Journal, page 86:” but the MS. before us has no pagination. This is an octavo pocket volume, bound in leather, and its edges gilt. In the library of Sir Thomas Edw. Winnington, Bart., at Stanford Court, Worcestershire. LIFE AND WORKS OF THOMAS DINGLEY. 39 II. (Arms of France, under a crown.) Observations in a Voyage in the Kingdom of France. Being a Collection of several Monuments, Inscriptions, Draughts of Towns, Castles, &c. (Crest of Dingley.) T. D. It is a quarto book of 434 pages (the edges uncut), bound with the Tour in Ireland, hereafter described, in a parchment cover, in the library of Sir Thomas Edw. Winnington, Bart., at Stanford Court. III. (Arms of Ireland, under a crown.) Observations in a Voyage through the Kingdom of Ireland. Being a Collection of several Monuments, Inscriptions, Draughts of Towns, Castles, &c. (Crest of Dingley.) T. D. This manuscript forms the second portion of the volume of which the earlier division has been just described as containing the Voyage in France. It is separately paged by the author, consists of 328 pages, and abounds with sketches drawn by the pen. Its publication was commenced in the Journal of the Kilkenny Archceological Society , in the year 1856, and it is still in progress. The task of editor was undertaken by Mr. Evelyn Philip Shirley, who has received valuable assistance in notes contributed by many of the best living antiquaries of Ireland. “ Some liberties have been taken with the original MS.” These are, the omission of quotations from the Pacata Hibernia and other printed books, and also of a few passages of a somewhat coarse character, which, however they might suit the taste of the seventeenth century, would be out of place in the present day ; and the re-arrangement of the journal into separate districts, rendered necessary by the confused form of the original, as well as to suit the local knowledge of the various assistant-editors. A selection of the drawings which illus- 40 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. trate the MS. has also been made, but none of interest have been omitted. They are engraved on wood. On a fly-leaf at the end of this volume is fastened a remarkably neat drawing of the monument erected in the Capitol at Rome to commemorate the naval victory of Lepanto, won over the Turks in 1571 by the allied forces of Spain, Rome, and Venice, the Roman contingent being under the command of Marc Antonio de Colonna. 1 This is upon a leaf that has been cut out of a book ruled with red lines in the margin, as Dingley’s journals are, and it bears the figures 510, 511 in the corners, which show that it belonged to a volume of considerable bulk. Dingley may very probably have extended his travels into Italy, and this may have been a leaf of his Italian journal. IV. Notitia Cambro-Britannica : A Voyage of North and South Wales. Being various cursory Remarks touching their ancient Kings of y c North and South, Princes of y e British and y e English Line, Lords Presidents, Militia, Speeches, Enterteinments, Seals of Corporations, Views of Churches, Funerall Monuments, Epitaphs, Inscriptions, Marbles, Roman Ara’s, Fragments of Antiquity, Castles, Seats of * Gentlemen, Coat armors of divers British and other Families, Customes, Pedigrees, Sayings, Manners, Maps, Prospects, Land- marks, Havens, Market Towns, Faires, Wakes, Commodities of the respective Counties of Wales, with sundry other Observacons in attending his Grace the Duke of Beaufort, in his Progres and Generali Visitacon of his Com’ands there, An 0 D'ni MDCLNXXIV. Intermixt w th some Historicall Observations, Annotations, and brief Notes from approved Authorities, Manuscripts of others, Records, ancient Charters, &c. By T. D. gen . spe labor levis. This book was known to Mr. Gough, who was not aware of those by the same author in the library at Stanford Court. In a letter 2 1 See Litta, Famiglie Celebri Italiane , art. Colonna. But Litta does not give an engraving of the monument in question. 2 Nichols’s Literary Illustrations, vol. v. p. 519. LIFE AND WORKS OF THOMAS D1NGLEY. 41 to Mr John Price, of the Bodleian Library, written in 1775, he expresses a desire that the Duke of Beaufort might be induced to publish it; and he has described it in his British Topography , 1780, p. 488, appending a catalogue of its curious drawings. By the liberality of the present Duke of Beaufort it has now passed through the press, under the editorial care of Charles Baker, Esq. F.S.A., the author’s drawings being beautifully engraved on wood. As appendices are added — 1. A copy of the royal warrant appointing the Duke of Beaufort Lord President; 2. An abstract of the Instructions given to Lord Carberry on his appointment to the same office in 13 Chas. II.; 3. A statement of the services and expenses of the Marquis of Worcester for his King and Country, from his own autograph submitted to Charles II. The last fills fifteen pages, separately paged; the former portions of the volume consisting of pp. vi, 284, in 4to; its title — An Account of the Progress of his Grace Henry the First Duke of Beaufort through Wales, 1684. And Notitia Cambro-Britannica. By T. Dineley. Edited from the original MS. in the possession of his Grace the eighth Duke of Beaufort, by Charles Baker, his Grace’s Steward of the Seigniories of Gower and Kilvey. Printed for private circulation, MDCCCLXIV. The number of copies was strictly limited to one hundred. The manuscript is neatly bound in morocco, with the Beaufort arms at each corner on each side. It is remarkable that the motto which Dingley has placed on the title-page of this volume is that of John Weever on the title of his Funerall Monuments. It also occurs on the monument of Bishop Babington, in Worcester Cathedral (ob. 1610). V. History from Marble: being Ancient and Modern Funerall Monuments in England and Wales. By T. D., Gent. This volume, the original of the work now produced in fac-simile (by the new process of photolithography, conducted by Mr. Vincent CAMD. SOC. G 42 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. Brooks), is, like the two already noticed, in the library of Sir Thomas Edward Winnington, Bart. The reader will become perfectly ac- quainted with every portion of the interior (including certain red lines which were intended to ornament the pages, but which some- times unfortunately interfere with the text — they have, however, in a great degree, been removed by Mr. Brooks — as their colour is not reproduced in photography); it will therefore be sufficient to say of its exterior that it presents the appearance of a small thick quarto, bound in parchment, and stained of a green colour. VI. One other MS. of Dingley is in existence, but has for the present disappeared, after making a brief but unregarded public appearance three years ago. From the following description, which is the only notice hitherto taken of it, it seems to be a pocket common-place book : — u Curious old volume of miscellaneous aubjects in manuscript, com- prising Old Epitaphs, Poems, and commonplace meins., including curious pen-and-ink drawings, appear to have been conjointly written by Theo- philus Alye and Thomas Dineley, between 1640 and 1680. 8vo. bound, 105.” [This was an entry printed in 1864 in the Catalogue of Messrs. Lincoln, book- sellers, of London, but they are unable to tell to whom the volume was sold.] Theophilus Alye was a gentleman resident at Hereford, by pro- fession an attorney-at-law, and who became a “commensal” or fellow-commoner of the College of Minor Canons, where Dingley was probably a frequent guest. His name will be often found in the ensuing pages as having contributed to Dingley’s collections. He is also mentioned by Dingley in his Notitici Cambro-Britannica (p. 259) as “a diligent searcher after antiquities,” and the possessor of part of the robe in which Llewellyn the Great had been buried at the Abbey of Conway. LIFE AND WORKS OF THOMAS DINGLE Y. 43 Sir Thomas Winnington has no positive evidence how the three volumes which he possesses of Dingley^s MSS. came to Stanford Court. 1 He thinks, however, that they were probably part of the library demised to his family from that of JefFereys, of Ham Castle, 2 who were for some generations attached to literary studies. 1 have now to fulfil the pleasant duty of stating how much, as Editor, I am indebted to the kind encouragement and co-operation of Sir Thomas Winnington, by whose liberal permission the Camden Society is enabled to publish this book, and to the information I have derived from various other friends. It has been my endeavour in the following Description of the Contents of the work to show how far the objects noticed by Dingley have been described or represented by authors since his time ; and also to ascertain, as far as possible, whether the objects themselves are still existing or not. In regard to the church architecture and monuments of Hereford- shire and Worcestershire I must first acknowledge the assistance I have received from Mr. J. Severn Walker, architect, of Worcester (the Hon. Secretary of the Worcester Diocesan Architectural So- ciety). The Rev. F. T. Havergal has been a most efficient guide to the monumental antiquities of Hereford cathedral, over which he has recently exercised a conservative care. In Wiltshire the Rev. 1 One “Thomas Dingley” was witness to a deed of Sir Francis Winnington, March 1673. (Bewdley.) (Prattinton MSS. Soc. of Antiq., index of names.) 2 The heiress of this family was married to Edward Winnington, esq. counsellor- at-law and M.P. for Droitwich, fourth son of Sir Francis Winnington, of Stan- ford Court, and younger brother to Sir Francis Winnington, solicitor-general to James II. 44 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. Mr. Canon Jackson of Leigh Delamere and the Rev. Edward Wilton of West Lavington have materially assisted me ; and the Rev. H. M. Scarth has enabled me to show the value and curiosity of Dingley^s notices of the Roman antiquities of Bath. In compiling my introductory review of the literature of our monumental antiquities I have received valuable suggestions from Mr. Matthew H. Bloxam of Rugby, from the Rev. Herbert Haines of Gloucester, and from F. G. West, esq. of Ilorham hall, Thaxted, Essex. In the difficult and at first unpromising task of tracing Dingley’s personal history, I have been indebted to two friends for the most important documentary evidence, which lias at last attained the desired object. Mr. G. E. Adams, Rougedragon, supplied me with a copy of Dingley’s admission at Gray’s Inn ; and Mr. T. C. Paris, of the Department for Literary Inquiry at Doctors’ Commons, dis- covered the administration to his effects, and therewith the date of his death, to which we had previously no clue. J. G. N. INDEX TO THE INTRODUCTION. Ackermann’s History of Westminster Abbey, 11 Alye, Theophilus, 37, 42 Aubrey’s Wiltshire Collections, 11 Bath Abbey Church, 13, 18 Bentham’s Ely Cathedral, 11 Bigland’s Gloucestershire Collections, 15 Blore’s Monumental Remains, 7 Blount, Thomas, of Orleton, 37 Bloxam, M. H. 9, 44 ; Glimpse at Monu- mental Architecture, 10 ; Fragmenta Sepulcralia, ibid. Boutell’s Monmnental Brasses and Slabs, 10 Monumental Brasses of Eng- land, 10 Brass Plates for Monuments, 7 ; lists of, 8 ; engravings of, 9 Bristol Cathedral, 12, 17, 20 Bunhill Fields, 13 Cambridge, 14 Cambridge Camden Society, Monumental Brasses, 9 Camden’s Visitation of Huntingdon- shire, 1 Epitaphs of Westminster Abbey, 2 Canterbury Cathedral, 6, 16 Carter’s Ancient Sculpture and Paint- ing, 6 Cathedrals of England, 12 — of Wales, 13 Chichester Cathedral, 12 Cirencester, 19 Cotman’s Norfolk and Suffolk Brasses, 9 Cozens’s Tour through Thanet and East Kent, 6 Dart’s Westminster Abbey, 11 Canterbury Cathedral, ibid. Dineley, or Dingley, 22, 23 Dingley, Thomas, biography of, 21 ; his parentage, 24, 25 ; his schoolmaster, 25 ; admitted of Gray’s Inn, 24 ; travels in the Low Countries, 26,38; in France, 27, 39 ; in Ireland, 30, 39 ; in Wales, 34, 40 ; perhaps in Italy, 40 ; his En- glish itinerary, 35, 41 ; residence at Dilwyn and death at Louvaine, 36 Dingley Arms, 22, 24 • of Southampton, 24 of the Isle of Wight, 22 of Worcestershire, ibid. Dingley, co. Northampton, 22 Drake’s Eboracum, 11 Dugdale’s Church Notes, 5 St. Paul’s Cathedral, 11 History of Warwickshire, 6 Easter Sepulchre tomb, 21 Ely Cathedral, 11 Exeter Cathedral, 20 Exeter Diocesan Society : brasses, 10 Fisher’s Collections, 8, 9 Font Evrault, 29 Gale’s Winchester Cathedral, 12 Gloucestershire Cathedral, 12, 17 Gough’s Sepulchral Monuments, 6 Grey Friars (London), Register of Monu- ments, 2, 8 Haines’s Manual of Monumental Brasses, 8 Hartshorne, Albert, Recumbent Effigies of Northamptonshire, 9 C. H. Funeral Monuments, 10 Hatton’s New View of London, 2 Hatton, Viscount, his collections, 5 Havergal, Rev. F. T. 17, 43 Hereford Cathedral, 8, 12, 13, 17 Holles’s Lincolnshire Church Notes, 4 46 INDEX TO THE INTRODUCTION, Hollis’s Monumental Effigies, 7 Hudson’s Northamptonshire Brasses, 9 Hyett’s Sepulchral Memorials of North- amptonshire, 9 Jackson, Rev. J. E. 11, 43 Kite’s Brasses of Wiltshire, 10 Le Neve’s Monumenta Anglicana, 15 his Manuscript Collections, ibid. Lichfield Cathedral, 12 Lincoln Cathedral, 5, 12, 19 Loughborough, 19 Lysons’s Environs of London, 2 Middlesex Parishes, ibid. Maitland’s History of London, 2 Malcolm’s Londinium, 2 Manning’s List of Monumental Brasses, 8 Mapletoft, John, 14 Monuments recently destroyed, 20 Nash, Dr. T. R. 22 Neale and Bray ley’s History of West- minster Abbey, 11 Ord, Craven, 8 Oxford, 14 Oxfordshire Parochial Collections, 16 Parsons’s Monuments of East Kent, 6 Phillipps, Sir Thomas, 16 Pote’s History of Windsor, 14 Prattinton, Dr. his Worcestershire col- lections, 23 Rawlinson, Dr. Richard, 12 Rippon, Dr. his MS. collections, 13 Rochester Cathedral, 13 St. Alban’s Abbey, 17 Salisbury Cathedral, 13 Sanderson, Bishop, 4, 5 Sedgwick, an arms painter, 5 Seymour’s History of London, 2 Simpson’s List of Sepulchral Brasses, 8 Stothard’s Monumental Effigies, 7 Stowe’s Survay of London, 2 Strype’s History of London, 2 Symonds’s Diary, 3 Temple Church, 18 Thomas’s Worcester Cathedral, 11 Thorpe’s Registrum Rolfense, 6 Waller’s Monumental Brasses, 10 Weever’s Funerall Monuments, 3 his MS. collections, ibid. Westminster Abbey, 2, 9, 11 Willement’s Canterbury Cathedral, 16 St. George’s Chapel, ibid. Willis’s Survey of the Cathedrals, 11 Wiltshire, Monumental Inscriptions, 16 Brasses, 10 Winchester Cathedral, 12 Windsor, 14, 16, 19 Wood’s History of Oxford, 14 Worcester Cathedral, 11, 12 York Cathedral, 11, 12 DESCRIPTIVE CONTENTS OF u HISTORY FROM MARBLE.” DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. [The paging of the original is in many places irregular, partly in consequence ot leaves inserted, and possibly from errors of the binder. The present copy has con- sequently been repaged, thus (vii). The other figures not in parentheses show the original pagination of the author.] First fly-leaf. Inter duos [Wiltoniensis agri] Rusticos Dialogus. Upon Marriage. Second fly-leaf. Epigram on Art, Fortune, and Ignorance. Title-page. History from Marble. Being Ancient and Mo- derne Funerall Monuments in England and Wales. By T. D. Gen. The curtain is supported by figures of Painting and Sculpture : on the arm of the latter is a shield of the arms of Dingley. Beneath her are written these verses : Aspera vox Ite y Vox est benedicta Venite, Dicetur reprobis Ite , Venite piis. A somewhat different version of this distich, which Dingley appears to have found in the church of St. Mary Magdalene, by Oxford (see the margin of his page 133), and also at All Saints, Hereford (see p. cxxi.) occurs on a mediaeval seal : Mortis vel vite brevis est vox, Ite, Yenite, Dicetur reprobis Ite, Yenite probis. Page (vii.) 36. “An Alphabett of Arms additional to those I have mett with on Funerall Monuments, Tombstones, Churches, Castles, Publick Buildings and Seats in this Journall.’ , This is in a great measure compiled from the popular work of Guillim, to whose pages references are made; but it may be observed that particular attention is paid to Herefordshire families, with which the author was familiar in the vicinity of his residence at Dilwyn. (xv.) 44. An East View of Bath Abbey Church. Advice from a Father to his son in y e University. CAMD. SOC. H 50 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. Page (xvii.) 46. The South-East View of Bath Cathedral, taken from the Bowling Green. Epitaph of John Pelling, S.T.B. Printed in The Antiqui- ties of the Abbey-Church of Bath , p. 237, by Dr. Rawlinson. 1 The bust mentioned by Dingley no longer remains. (xviii.) 47. Epitaph of Robert Culliford, Esq. of Encombe, in the Isle of Purbeck, 1616 (who broke his neck coming into Bath, as stated in p. 17). Arms of Culliford. (This is unno- ticed by Rawlinson, and does not now exist : but see the pedigree of Culliford in Hutchins’s History of Dorsetshire, third edit. 1862, vol. i. p. 516.) Description of the Monument of Bishop Montague. (xix.) 48. Drawings of the Bishop’s monument, and of its coats of arms. (See a larger drawing of the same, p. xxix.) Short account of the monument of Sir William Waller. (xx.) 49. Epitaph of Dr. Tobias Venner, 1660, and his arms. (Printed in Rawlinson , p. 198. See Guidott on the Lives and Characters of the Physicians of Bath, p. 169.) (xxi.) 50. Epitaph of William Chapman, 1647, and his arms. ( Rawlinson , p. 263.) Epitaph of Sir George Ivy, of West Kington, Wilts. (Raw- linson, p. 179.) (xxii.) 51. Arms of Ivy quartering Yyell (but the fess should be either ragulee or crenellee). Arms of Hyde (Lady Ivy). She was aunt to Lord Chan- cellor Clarendon; but in his Life, 8vo. p. 2, the name is mis- printed Fuy. Inscription on the Pulpit. Epitaph of Mary Wakeman, 1655. Possibly the wife of Richard Wakeman the elder, Town Clerk, ob. 1656, whose epitaph is in. Raiulinson, p. 240. Inscription in verse to Oliver King. (See Guidott , p. 92.) 1 The History and Antiquities of the Cathedral-Church of Salisbury, and the Abbey-Church of Bath, 1719, 8vo. (subsequently quoted as Rawlinson.') DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 51 Page(xx iii.) 52. Sketch of the “ Pulpit of freestone, June 9, 1684.” This pulpit appears in Vertue’s engraving of the interior of the abbey-church. It no longer exists, and has been succeeded by a wooden one. Epitaph of Jane Lady Waller, and arms of Waller and Rey- nell. ( Rawlinson , p. 193.) Epitaph and arms of John Sherwood, M.D. 1620. ( Rawlin- son , p. 192.) See Guidott, p. 165. (xxiv.) 53. Epitaph of Hester, wife of Henry Barnes, 1659, and arms of Barnes impaling Bave. ( Rawlinson , p. 191.) Arms of Pierce or Peirce. 1 Arms of Bisse, and Bisse impaling Epitaph of Walter Ernele, esq. 1618. (Rawlinson, p. 253.) Arms of Ernele, and Heytesbury and Hungerford quarterly, (xxv.) Epitaph and arms of John Maplet, M.D. Dingley gives only the beginning of this epitaph, which will be found entire in Rawlinson , p. 255, and also in the memoir of Dr. Maplet by Guidott; by whom the epitaph was written. Dingley has the date of Mrs. Maplet’s death, incorrectly, u vi Feb.” instead of “ xiv Feb.” Epitaph of John Yavasour of Spaldington, co. York, esq. 1678, and arms of Yavasour impaling Frend, or Williams ; (Rawlinson, p. 257.) Epitaph of John Belingham of Earingham, co. Sussex, esq. 1577 ( Rawlinson , p. 201); and arms of Belingham quartering Ford, or Adlar ? See the pedigree of Bellingham in Berry’s Sussex Genealogies , p. 190, where is named “ Thos. Belling- ham of Eringham, buried at Bath,” which must be an error for 1 “ This last coat is over y e daughter of Dr. Pierce,” i.e. Robert Peirce, M.D. Oxf. 1661, Fellow of the R. Coll. Phys. 1689, author of Bath Memoirs , 1697 ; a very curious work from the multitude of cases it contains relating to the higher ranks of society. He died at Bath in June 1710. Munk’s Roll of the Royal College of Physicians, i. 441. 52 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. John. He was buried Nov. 11, 1576 (not 1577); and Rawlin- son has a misprint, Farneham for Earingham. Page (xxvi). Arms (two bendlets) on a monument without in- scription. Epitaph and arms of John Wally, 1615. ( Rawlinson , p. 209.) Inscription on the church doors, beautified by Chief Justice Sir Henry Montague, 1617. (Now worn away or painted over.) (. Rawlinson , p. 217.) (xxvii.) West view of the King’s Bath. For an account of the baths see Warner’s History of Batli , 1801, chap. v. and The Baths and Mineral Waters of Bath , by Randle Wilbraham Falconer, M.D. (4th edition, 1867), a manual containing in a brief compass a satisfactory description of the admirable and extensive arrangements now provided for the employment of the mineral waters. It is illustrated with five plans of the various baths in their present state. The baths were first minutely described by Dr. Guidott in 1676, a few years only before they were seen by Dingley. Inscription set up by Richard Roe, preacher of God’s word in Warwick, 1653. (xxviii.) Inscription and arms on Bellott’s Hospital. 1 The arms are those of Rustat, Argent, on a saltire between four cross-crosslets fitchee sable, an annulet or. Thomas Bellott was steward of the household and one of the executors of the great Lord Burghley ; hence the arms of Cecill placed under the inscription. 1 Dingley writes the name “Billet,” and so in the inscription he gives. It was probably so commonly pronounced, and thus agrees with the rebus in the east window of the abbey church, put up by the benefactor, which is full of heraldic billets. Bellott’s arms were, Argent, on a chief gules three cinquefoils of the first. Crest, an arm couped at the elbow and erect in armour proper, holding in the gauntlet a baton or, tipped at each end sable (alluding to his office of steward to Lord Burghley). These have lately been placed in carving on the roof of the abbey church. DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 53 Page (xxix.) A large drawing of the monument of Bishop Montague. (xxx.) Epitaph and arms of Robert Mason, D.C.L. 1662. ( Rawlinson , p. 242.) Epitaph of Mary, wife of Sir Augustine Nicolls, Justice of the King’s Bench, 1614, and arms of Nicolls impaling Hemings. ( Rawlinson , p. 252.) Sir Augustine Nicolls himself has two monuments, one at his own church of Faxton in Northampton- shire, and the other at Kendal in Westmerland, where he died when sitting as Justice of Assize, August 3, 1616. They bear the same epitaph : see it printed in Bridges’s Northamp- tonshire, vol. ii. p. 95, and in Nicholson’s Kendal, 2nd edition, 1861, p. 65. In the Herald and Genealogist , vol. iii. pp. 308-315, are some remarkable particulars of the family of Sir Augustine Nicolls, and their kinsfolk of the names of Purefey and Dudley. (xxxi.) 52. Orders for the almsmen and women of the Hospital of St. John the Baptist at Bath. (xxxiii.) Copy of the title of a pedigree of Strode of Parnham and Chantmerell, co. Dorset, made in 1636 ; with coats of Warin de la Strode, Strode of Devon, Strode of Norfolk, and Strode of Gloucestershire. Bromham, co. Wilts. Epitaph of Sir Edward Baynton (and his figure in brass); his first wife Agnes Ryce, ob. 1574; and his second wife Anne Pakyngton, ob. 1578. Arms of Baynton, quartering Dandeley, 1 Beauchamp of St. Amand, Roche, Delamere, and Wanton ; the same impaling Ryce quartering Griffith ap Elider ; and the same impaling Packington quartering Harding. See a full description in The Monumental Brasses of Wiltshire , by Edward Kite, Assist- ant Secretary to the Wilts Archaeological Society, 1860, 8vo. 1 In Monumental Brasses of Wilts , p. 463, this is erroneously blazoned, and assigned to Beauchamp. 54 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. where in plate xxiv. the figures of Sir Edward, his two wives, a son and daughter (all kneeling) are delineated. Page (xxxiv.) Brass effigy of Elizabeth lady of St. Amand, daughter and heir of Gerard Braybroke, and wife of Sir Roger Tocotes, 1492. Arms of: 1. St. Amand; 2. Quarterly St. Amand 1 and Braybroke; impaling, quarterly Delamere and Roche; 3. Tocotes impaling Braybroke ; 4. Tocotes. See Monumental Brasses of Wilts , p. 36, where a pedigree is given, showing the connection of the several families whose armorial bearings are here combined. The effigy is delineated in plate ix. of that work. (xxxv.) Drawing of the gravestone and brass of John Baynton, esq. 1517; with four shields: 1. Baynton quartering Delamere and Roche; 2. the same impaling Digges ; 3. as No. 2; 4. as No. 1. This description of the two latter shields is corrected from plate xvi. of The Monumental Brasses of Wilts , for this excellent example of the armour of its date still remains com- plete, and it is fully illustrated in that work, pp. 45-47. Arms of Richard Beauchamp lord of St. Amand, quartering Braybroke. Remaining portion of the epitaph of Sir Roger Tocotes, the second husband of Elizabeth lady of St. Amand, describing him as a knight of the body of King Henry the Seventh, and Comptroller of [his Household?]. These lines are now lost; but in The Monumental Brasses of Wilts , at p. 37, is a notice of the effigy of Sir Roger, which was formerly attributed to a Lord St. Amand. It is of alabaster, and represents him in armour, with a collar of esses. (xxxvi.) Epitaph of Hugh Webb, Rector, ob. 1597, father of George Webb, S.T.B. pastor of the church of Steeple Ashton (who was afterwards, in 1636, Bishop of Limerick.) Arms of Gilbert de Neville, Eudo Earl of Britany, Roger 1 Dingley has here incorrectly drawn Baynton instead of St. Amand, as it remains in the original shield. DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 55 de Bellemont, William de Warren, John de St. Amand, Uc- tredus son of Cospater, Beauchamp impaling Mortimer, Dan- deley impaling Beauchamp of St. Amand, Baynton, Braybroke impaling St. Amand, and Roche impaling Delamere. Page (xxxvii.) 54. View of Spy Park Lodge, in co. Wilts, taken May 1, 1684: sketch of a Private Room in the Grove; and arms of Baynton impaling Thynne. (xxxviii.) 55. “ S r Walter Long’s seat, May 1, 1684.” This was at Whaddon, near Melksham: taken down 1835. Arms of Long. Arms at the White Hart Inn in Sandy Lane, Wilts: 1. Hungerford with Compton on an escocheon of pretence ; 1 2. Hungerford impaling (probably meant for) Pretyman. 2 (xxxix.) 56. Bath. Its Roman antiquities. View of the Cross Bath from the Gallery built by Robert Lord Brooke in 1675. (This is now a public hath, for the use of the poorer classes : see Dr. Falconer’s Baths of Batli, p. 11.) (xl.) 57. Roman inscription in the City wall (now lost). Inscription erected by “ Mr. Chambers the antiquary.” The only notice of that person which has been found occurs in Dr. Guidott’s Discourse of Bathe and the Hot Waters , at p. 73, where he speaks of “two Gravestones erected in the North wall of a garden by the Cross Bath, belonging to Mrs. Crofts, preserved by Mr. Robert Chambers, father to Dr. Humphry Chambers, born in this city, between which Robert Chambers hath this inscription, which preserveth him as he has done the other two : H^c monvmen. &c.” (in which our author has inadvertently written R. G. instead of R. C.) 1 Edward Hungerford, esq. of Farley Hungerford, who died 1681, married Lady Alethea Compton, only daughter of the first marriage of James Earl of Northampton : she died 1676. As her father had sons by his second marriage, the coat of Compton was not correctly placed on an escucheon of pretence : see Addenda , hereafter. 2 Susan Pretyman was the wife of Edward Hungerford, of Cadenham. He died in 1667, and she died at Caine, 1705. (See Hungerfordiana , pp. 20 and 22.) 56 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. Inscription set up in the Cross Bath by the Mayor after Queen Katharine had used it : 1 The name of Cross now lost it hath, And shall be called Queen Katherine’s Bath. Roman urn (drawn again in p. xlvi). Page (xli.). Chippenham. View of Chippenham Church. Epitaph of Sir Gilbert Pryn [ob. 1627.] Arms of: 1, Pryn; 2, Seymour impaling Pryn; 3, Hastings impaling Pryn. The last was really quarterly of eight; see it represented in fig. 106 of the plates attached to the Wiltshire Collections of Aubrey and Jackson, 1862, 4to.; where the epitaph (with its date) is printed at p. 70. Monument erected, after Lady Pryn’s death in 1628, to her mother, Jane, wife of Mr. John Davis, esquire of the body to King Henry VIII. with arms of Davis impaling Carew. See note in Wiltshire Collections , p. 71, where it is left doubtful where this monument was. Description of arms of Wroughton and Rees or Ryce, figured in the Wiltshire Collections , Nos. 84, 85. (See the monument hereafter.) Epitaph of Thomas Hungerford, 1665. (xlii.) 57. Arms on the roof of the church: 1. Hungerford impaling Heytesbury; 2. Hungerford impaling Peverel. View of Chippenham Pump-House, erected by Sir Edward Hungerford, 1679. Epitaphs of Mr. Jonathan Gyare, Vicar, 2 1680; Alice Haw- kins, 1657; Thomas Hawkins, 1676; and Judith Snell, 1628. 1 Her Majesty’s visit was in the year 1663, as appears by the following passage of Bath Memoirs , by Robert Peirce, Dr. in Physick, 1697, p. 257 : “ Amongst others that greatly encouraged the drinking of them [the Bath waters] was Sir Alexander Frayser, chief Physitian to King Charles the II. He waiting upon His Majesty and Queen Katherine, in 63 (whose Court was then at my House, the Abby, in Bath).” Pepys, on the 15th June, 1668: “ Looked into the Baths, and find the King’s and Queen’s full of a mixed sort of good and bad, and the Cross only almost for gentry.” At the present day it is a cheap public bath. 3 The widow of “the learned, eloquent, and pious Mr. Jonathan Gyare, late DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 57 Common Seal of the town of Chippenham, bearing the arms of Gascelyn and Husee. Page (xliii.) 58. Bath. Description of the City and its springs. (xlv.) 60. Roman Antiquities in Mr. Chambers’s garden. 1 Sepulchral monument of M. Valerius. ( Scarth , Plate xxi.) Sepulchral monument of Caius Murrius. ( Scarth , p. 61.) (xlvi.) 61. Drawing of a Roman urn. This is now lost. From the account of its contents it appears to have belonged to a Roman lady. The 16 packing needle ” was evidently a hair-pin, an article frequently found. A cist of somewhat similar form, filled with burnt bones, was found at Combe Down, near the Roman villa there, accompanied by a stone coffin. (H.M.S.) Inscription in the City wall. ( Scarth , Plate xxii.) Bas-relief of a naked boy carrying an olive branch and torch. (Now lost, and not mentioned by any author on the Roman antiquities of Bath.) (xlvii.) 62. The North sketch of the King’s Bath. (The letters of reference to this drawing form the author’s name THOMAS DINGLEY.) (xlviii.') 63. Inscription set up in 1682 under the statue of King Bladud. 2 minister of Chippenham,” died in 1688, and was buried in Bath Abbe}'. She was Elizabeth daughter of John Williams, Esq. of Herringstone, co. Dorset, by Eleanor, one of the daughters and coheirs of Richard Philips, Esq. of Montacute, co. Somerset. Her long epitaph will be found in Rawlinson’s Antiquities of Bath Abbey , at p. 188. 1 There are various works on the Roman antiquities of Bath, from Dr. Thomas Guidott, the contemporary of Dingley, to the present day, including the magnificent work of Mr. Samuel Lysons, Reliquice Romance (Part II.) : but the latest and most comprehensive memoir on this subject (to which references are made on the present occasion) bears this title : Aqu^ Solis, or Notices of Roman Bath ; by the Rev. H. M. Scakth, M.A. Prebendary of Wells and Rector of Bathwick, &c. &c. With fifty-two illustrations by C. S. Beckett, 1864, 4to. 2 “ Bladudus Magus, that wyse Magic} r an,” who discovered, if he did not actually contrive, the hot springs, as tells Dr. Jones, in The Bathes of Bathes Aycle, 1572. “ According to Stukeley this statue formally occupied a niche in the North Gate above the arch, where, in 1363, it represented King Edward III. It was taken down CAMD. SOC. I 58 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. Arms of Sir Francis Stonor, of Stonor, 1624. 1 Verses inscribed on the Pump-house. Page (xlix.) Inscription dated 1653 regarding the Physician ap- pointed for poor persons by the charitable gift of Elizabeth Viscountess Scudamore. Seated statue of King Bladud, in the King’s Bath. Fragment of a Roman inscription. (See Scarth , pp. 10, 78.) (1.) 65. Roman sepulchral inscription to Succ. Pctronia. ( Scarth , p. 70.) Now lost. View of the Queen’s Bath. This bath was constructed at the cost of Mr. Bellott in 1597 ; but was first named the Queen’s Bath after it had been used by Anne, the Queen of James I. (li.) Roman bas-relievos of heads in profile, termed Ccesars by Dingley. (See Scarth , Plate i.) The head-dresses as delineated by Dingley are probably correct, one having apparently a palm- branch wreathed around the head, and the other a peculiar cap, or it may be a wreath. (H. M. S.) Fragment of a Roman inscription. (Scarth, p. 11.) Translation of lines on Bath by Necham. Head of King Bladud, winged. (Hi.) 67. Head of Ludrudibras (or Lud Hudibras, as in p. 63, the father of King Bladud). Balustrade of a fair stone house inspecting the Queen’s Bath, ANNA] REGIN7E SACRVM, i.e. Anne of Denmark, the Queen of James I. See in Warner’s from thence, ancl somewhat altered by a common mason to represent King Bladud, and then transferred to the King’s Bath.” Falconer’s Baths of Bath, p. 7. 1 “ Above the stone chair is a mural tablet recording the gift of an ornamental balustrade for the bath by Sir Francis Stonor in 1697 [but Guidott gives the date 1624, and this is now confirmed by Dingley], the ornamental portion of which between the balusters has been lately restored, and a balustrade of the same pattern placed on the eastern side of the hath.” Falconer, 1867. DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 59 History of Bath , p. 320, an anecdote of the Queen changing her bathing from the King’s Bath to the New Bath, whereupon the citizens erected a tower or cross in the middle of that bath, inscribed Ann^: Regina sacrum, and it was thereafter called the Queen’s Bath. Queen Anne first visited Bath in 1613; but it was on her second visit in 1615 that this occurrence took place. (See Nichols’s Progresses , $c. of King James I. vol. ii. p. 640, vol. iii. pp. 97, 100.) Winchester Cathedral. Drawing of the Monument of Cardinal Beaufort. Page (liii.) 68. Arms and mottoes of Bishop Courtenay and Bishop Fox. Arms of Henry VII. and Elizabeth of York. Epitaph of Bishop William of Edindon, 1366. Epitaph of Bishop Horne, 1580. (liv.) 69. Latin epitaph of William Wither, son of William Wither of Manidown, esq. 1671; written “By D l Beeston, Schoolm r of Winchester.” Southampton, described. Arms of Richard Earl of Cambridge. (lv.) Chippenham Church, co. Wilts. Table monument bearing shields of Wroughton and Ryce. Epitaphs of Mary, 1 wife of John Brookes, 1666; John Scot, clothier, 1619; Henry Bull, gent. 1658 ; and Elizabeth his relict, 1664; and Elinor, wife of Richard Scott, 1658. (lvi.) Epitaph of Richard Scott, clothier. Tomb belonging to Andrew Baynton. (See Wilts. Collec- tions , p. 69, and Plate vi. No. 95.) Epitaph of Elizabeth and Mary Neate, 1661. 1 Mary, daughter of Thomas Fereby, Vicar of Bishop’s Cannings. See Aubrey’s Nat. History of N. Wilts, p. 109, and Wilts. Collections, Aubrey and Jackson, p. 279. 60 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. View of Rowd church, with the chimney erected by the minister who taught school there, in consequence of the intoler- able cold of the winter 1683-4. Epitaphs of Abigail, wife of Timothy Richards, Vicar, and daughter of Samuel White of Polshot, gent. 1643; Edgar Webb, clothier, 1674; and Eleazar Webbe, clothier, 1647. Page (lvii.) 70. Bristol. “From y e city of Bath to Bristol are ten miles, and y e conveniency of a stage-coach each day, through- out the season of the Waters, the passengers paying half a crown apiece.” Busts of Belinus and Brennus the British Kings, and arms of Belinus. There were statues of these heroic personages at St. John’s Gate and Lawford’s Gate. (Seyer, Memoirs of Bristol, 1821, yoI. i. p. 55.) Those which sit in state on the south front of the tower of St. John’s church (and are probably coeval with that structure, circ. 1370,) are engraved in Seyer’s title-page. Notices of the curious bronze posts with flat basons at the Tolsey, Bristol ; also of the Hot Well, St. Vincent’s Rocks, and the Bristol diamonds. Longevity in Bitton Hannam parish in 1671. Abbot 5 8 Leigh, co. Som. Account of the family of Norton. (lviii.) Trumpet banner of George Norton when High Sheriff of Shropshire in 1653: Norton impaling Quarterly of eight: — 1. Grey; 2. blastings; 3. Valence; 4. [Quincy]; 5. Astley ; 6. Widevile; 7. [Bonvile] ; 8. Maltravers [w< t t Harrington]. A label of three points ermine, extending over the first three quarterings. See the same arrangement in the seal of the Earl of Stamford for his peculiar of Groby, engraved in Nichols’s History of Leicestershire, vol. iii. pi. xci. (lix), 72. The south view of St. Mary Redcliff in Bristol. DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 61 Page (lx.) 73. Monument and epitaph of Sir William Penn, 1670. His arms were, Argent, on a fess sable three plates, a crescent for dif- ference. His funeral in- signia remained in St. Mary Redcliffe not many years ago, and then bore the appearance shown in the annexed engraving, which has been kindly furnished by Matthew Holbeche Bloxam, esq. F.S.A., from the privately- printed volume mentioned p. 10. (lxi.) 74. Monument of William Canynges. (lxii.) 75. Effigy of John Lavington. (lxiii.) 76. A pagan idol in a niche in the wall. It might be supposed that this carv- ing was a Roman sculpture : but no Roman antiquities found at Bristol have been pre- served or recorded, except some pigs of lead found in 1866 (and noticed in the Afchce- ological Journal). Possibly the “idol ” might have been brought from Bath. It is not known to be now in existence. The Cathedral Church of Bristol. Cross-legged effigy of a Berkeley. (Engraved in Gough’s Sepulchral Monuments , vol. i. pi. xiv*.) (lxiv.) 77. Tombstone of Edith Bushe, 1553. Effigies of William Delafount (ob. 1480) and Alice his wife. 62 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. Page (lxv.) 78. Monument of Bishop Paul Bushe, 1558. Monument of Abbot Naileherte. (See The Herald and Gene- alogist , vol. iv. pp. 291, 303.) (lxvi.) 79. Epitaph of Sir Charles Vaughan, 1630. (lxvii.) 80. View of his monument. (Recently removed.) (lxviii.) 81. Epitaph of Sir Henry Newton of Barscourt, 1599. Arms of Newton impaling Paston. (lxix.) 82. Epitaph of Sir John Newton of Barscourt, 1661. (See The Herald and Genealogist , vol. iv. pp. 444, 445.) View of St. Austin’s Church in Bristol. Couplet on scabbard of the City Sword. (lxx.) 83. Leigh, near Gloucester. Epitaph of Robert Hunting- ton, vicar, 1664. Gloucester. View of the South Gate, with the Royal armorial insignia as restored in 1671. The shields on either side are those of the King’s brothers, James Duke of York and Henry Duke of Gloucester. This gate was rebuilt in 1643, having fallen down soon after the siege of the city; and it is described as “ almost intire ” by Rudder, Hist, of Gloucestershire, 1779, p. 87, but was pulled down soon after, with the East and North gates, under an improvement Act. Fosbrooke’s Gloucester, 1819, p. 130. (lxxi.) 84. Acrostics on Papa and Mors, extracted from Blount’s Glossarium . South view of Gloucester Cathedral. Epitaphs in the churchyard on Richard Wright and George Willerts (see Fosbrooke, p. 287). (lxxii.) 85. Curiosities of the Cathedral. (lxxiii.) 86. Epitaph on the wife of John Cholmeley, esq. View of the monument of Robert Curthose, Earl of Glou- cester, surrounded with the arms of the Nine Worthies (as described in The Herald and Genealogist , 1862, vol. i. p. 177), and engraved in Sandford’s Genealogical History of England, 1677, p. 16, Fosbrooke’s History of Gloucester, 1819, 4to. p. 252. DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 63 Page (lxxvi.) 93. Berkeley. Epitaphs on Mr. William Hopton and Mr. Timothy Bevin. (The initials T. A. in this page and in p. 116 perhaps indicate that these epitaphs were not taken on the spot by Dingley, but communicated by his friend Theo- philus Alye.) Bushley. Epitaph of Koger Dowdeswell, gent. 1633. Pillar inscribed to Judeth, wife of William Dowdeswell, esq. 1666. (lxxviii.) Translation of the epitaph on Richard Dowdeswell, esq. “ that eminent Attorney/’ 1673 ; “ made by Mr. Thomas Hodges of Oxford.” (lxxix.) 96. The Latin epitaph. Arms : Dowdeswell impaling Pleydell. Sepulchral Brasses of Thomas Payne (ob. 1500) and Ursula his wife. Epitaph and arms of Roberts Freeman, gent. 1651. (Ac- cording to a memorandum in the next page this appears to have been at Twining, and not Bushley.) (lxxx.) Twining. Translation of the epitaph of Baldwyn in the next page. Arms of Baldwyn. Two coats often repeated on the roof. (lxxxi.) 94. Epitaph of Edwin Baldwyn, 1669; also written by Mr. Thomas Hodges before mentioned. Inscription to R. S. 1678. Coat painted in the glass of Mr. Charles Hancock’s house. Note upon the fossils found at Alderly. Oxford. King Richard I. born at Beaumont Palace. (lxxxii.) 95. Christ Church, and Cardinal Wolsey. (lxxxiii.) 98. St. Mary’s. Arms of the University. Epitaph of Walter Wright. (lxxxiv.) 99. Epitaph of William de Hawkesworth, Provost of Oriel, 1349. 64 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. Inscription on the Browne Bowl of Oriel College. Epitaph of William Scot, 1441. Page (lxxxv.) 100. Epitaph of Edmund Croston, 1507 ; and his rebus. (lxxxvi ) 101. Another rebus for Croston. (lxxxvii.) 102. Epitaph of Nathaniel Butler, 1628. Epitaph of Walter de Ulilete. (Ixxxviii.) 103. Arms, quarterly : Arms of Boys impaling Brooke of Cobham. Constitution of Archbishop Arundell regarding Wiclif. (This is an extract in another person’s writing fastened upon the page.) (lxxxix.) 104. Cambridge. Its Publick Library and St. John’s College. (xc.) 105. Queen’s College. (xci.) 108. Oxford. St. Mary’s. Epitaph of John Doo, 1467. “ J. Doo, sometyme Bedle of the Faculty of the Law, son of Will, and Mary of Fincham in Norfolk, died 7 Nov. 1507. Arms, a beadle’s staff between three doe’s heads erased.” ( Peshall , App. p. 11, but Dingley’s date, 1467, is evidently the true one.) (xcii.) 109. University College. Wadham College. Inscription over the Gate, and arms of W adham impaling Petre. (xciii.) 110. Arms of Fleming? Bisse, Strangwayes, Wadham impaling Petre, Montague Bishop of Bath and Wells, Montague Bishop of Winchester, Lake Bishop of Bath and Wells, and Laud Bishop of Bath and Wells. ( Gutch , pp. 399, 400.) (xciv.) 111. New College. Arms of Archbishop Warham. Arms of the College. Epitaph on Ned Morgan, who made the epitaph on Dolham, who made the organ. (xcv.) 112. Windsor. Royal badges in the window of the dining-room at the Deanery. DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 65 Painting of Edward Prince of Wales in Oliver King’s Chapel. (Engraved with its companions in Carter’s Antient Sculpture and Painting .) Epitaph of Sir George Maners, Lord Roos, 1513. (Printed in Pote’s History and Antiquities of Windsor , 1749, 4to. p. 391, and there engraved; but more correctly in Nichols’s History of Leicestershire , 1792, vol. i. pi. xvi.) Page (xcvi.) 113. Prince Rupert the Constable of Windsor Castle in 1680. (xcvii.) 114. Oxford. St. Olave’s church. Epitaph of Nicholas Roope, gent. 1613; and his arms. Epitaph and arms of Thomas Smith, twice mayor ; died 1646. Epitaph and arms of Mr. John Willmote, 1649. (xcviii.) 115. Epitaph and arms of Arthur Strode, 1612. Epitaph of Elizabeth, wife of Sir Richard Belasyse of Lud- ford, co. Durham, 1641; and arms of Belasyse impaling Sponer. Epitaph of Richard Williams, twice Mayor, died 1578. Windsor Castle. (xcix.) 116. Figures, arms, and epitaph of Anne Duchess of Exeter and her husband Sir Thomas St.Leger. (Engraved in Sandford’s Genealogical History of England, 1677, p. 377; Pote’s History of Windsor; and Nichols’s Leicestershire, vol. i. plate xv.) Inscription on the grave of King Charles, 1648. (ci.) 116. Cirencester. Atchievement of nine quarterings of Sir Thomas Roe, Ambassador to the Great Turk : 1 viz. 1. Roe; 2. Goldwell ; 3. Holland ; 4. Malmaynes ; 5. Haute; 6. ; 7. Surrenden ; 8. Palmer (?); 9. Arms of Prelate, and of Dyxton. 1 Sir Thomas Roe was elected to parliament as burgess for Cirencester in 1620, the year before he went to Turkey : see his memoirs in the biographical dictionaries. His portrait is engraved by Vertue, 1741, and in Ogborne’s History of Essex, 1814, 4to. p. 93. CAMD. SOC. K 66 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. Epitaph of two Latin lines, and translation. Description of figure of Richard Duke of York in the east window of the north aile. Page ( ciii.) 118. Oxford. Corpus Christi College. All Souls College. Yerses formerly on the screen of the chapel, commemorative of James Gold well, Bishop of Norwich. They are to be read as follow : Cancia clara quide pastoru nobile lumcu Hue Jacobu Goldwell pjepidu genuit. Presul qui quonda Norvvhicensis gen’osns, Istius atq, domus hie soeius fuerat. Ille deo Sacratii opus hoc construxerat alt’ Promptus Collegii uam Benefactor erat. Pari perpetue p’cor hec qui carmina c’nis Commendare velis hue p’ce dulce tua. They are printed by Gutch, 1 p. 287. The word 'prece in the last line was at first written by Dingley voce , which accounts for its appearance in the fac- simile. 2 3 Gutch has printed the fifth line thus: — Ille Deo gratus molem hanc construxerat altam. The screen erected at the Bishop’s cost was described as “ sacratum opus,” not molem. (civ.) 119. Epitaph of David Lloyd, bachelor, and Thomas Baker, scholastic of civil law, who both died on the 27th Dec. 1510. [Gutch, p. 295, but erroneously “ die xxiiii.”) Epitaph of Roderic Lloyd, B.C.L. Registrar of the Uni- versity, 1609. [Gutch, p. 293.) Epitaph and arms of Philip Polton, Archdeacon of Glou- cester, 1461. (Gutch, p. 295.) 1 “ The History and Antiquities of the Colleges and Halls in the University of Oxford. By Antony Wood, M.A. With a Continuation to the Present Time. By the Editor, John Gutch, M.A. Chaplain of All Souls’ College. 1786.” 4to. It contains all the epitaphs and all the heraldry then existing. 3 He has nearly rubbed out the v, but every mark in the MS. whatever its shade of colour, is necessarily of a uniform tint in the ink used for printing. DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 67 Page (cv.) 120. Epitaph of Richard Dobbys, 1465. ( Gutch , p. 292.) Epitaph of Richard Spekynton, LL.B. 1490. (Gutch, p. 295.) Arms on the gate of All Souls Cloisters ; that in the centre impaling the see of Canterbury. (Not described by Wood or Gutch.) Epitaph and arms of William Osberne, M.A. 1628. (Gutch, p. 293.) (cvi.) 121. Epitaph of the Rev. Robert Hoveden, 1614. Four coats of arms. (Gutch, p. 291.) Epitaph of Richard Moket, D.D. 1618, and his arms. (Gutch, p. 292.) Epitaph of Christ. Petty 1610, and his arms. ( Gutch , p. 293.) (cvii.) 121 bis. Two coats impaled by Petty : Charnells, and another. Rebus of William Brooke, Fellow of All Souls’. (A.M. in capitals may have been intended to be read a second time as Artium Magister.) The photographic process has not caught the colours of this drawing, which are therefore more distinctly copied in this woodcut. Arms of Archbishop Morton, and of a lion rampant impaling three castles in chief. (cviii.) 123. Church of Allhallows in Oxford. Epitaph of Richard Drayton, 1631. (Wood’s History of Oxford, edit. Peshall , Appendix, p. 6.) 68 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. Epitaph of a merchant who died 1417, and his wife Alice. Page (cix.) 124. Coat on the wall painted on buckram. Merchant’s mark of one Bereford on a brass plate. (See afterwards, in p. cxvii.) Arms of Boswell, Wayte, Myriell, and Wardour impaled with Bowdler. Epitaph of Thomas Wayte, waxchandler, 1521. ( Peshall , Appendix, p. 7.) (cx.) 125. Epitaph of John Bosswell, esquire bedell, 1501. (Ibid. p. 6.) Epitaph of William Dagfeld, mayor of Oxford. (Peshall.) Epitaph of Mrs. Frere (born Bamfylde), and arms of Frere (with three quarterings) impaling Bamfylde. ( Peshall , ibid.) (cxi.) 126. Epitaph of William Freures, esq. and Annes his wife. With two shields of arms. (Peshall.) Epitaph of a justice of the peace of the city of Oxford and for the shire, and eight times mayor. (William Freurs, ob. 1549. Peshall.) Arms of Frere impaling (cxii.) 127. Epitaph of Edward Frere, esq. 1565. (Ibid.) Epitaph of one Goode. (1609. PeshalL) Epitaph of Richard Drayton; already given in p. (cviii.) (cxiii.) 127 bis. Brass of a priest, on his cope 1-Jagf. Another, with a merchant’s mark and the initials «. JF. Probably Roger Folkyns, died 1444. Arms, Party per pale, a chevron engrailed. ( Peshall , App. p. 6.) A third (six Latin encomiastic lines). Epitaph of Robert Hughes of Lincoln college, gent, son of Humfry Hughes of Swercles, 1 co. Merioneth, esq. 1650. (Peshall, p. 5.) Epitaph of Margarett Brooke, 1646. ( Peshall , p. 6, with the date 1641.) 1 Speercles in Peshall. DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 69 Page (cxiv.) 128. Epitaph of James Young, esq. gentleman of the King’s privy chamber, 1644. ( Peshall , p. 7.) Epitaph of William Smith, citizen of London, 1637. Epitaph of Henry Myriell, B.D. 1643. ( Peshall , p. 6.) See arms before, p. cix. Epitaph of Sir Edward Wardour, knt. 1652. ( Peshall , p. 7.) See arms before, p. cix. (cxv.) 129. Shield and crest of Drayton. (The epitaph before, in p. cviii. and p. cxii. Peshall, p. 6.) Westminster Abbey. Drawing of the monument of Abraham Cowley the Poet, oh. 1667, erected by George Duke of Buck- ingham. Engraved in Dart’s Westminster Abbey , p. 88. (cxvi.) 130. Oxford, All Saints Church ( continued ): 1 Sepulchral brass of a citizen, ob. 1500. The four shields are those of the Mercers, the Grocers, the City of Oxford, and a merchant’s mark. (cxvii.) 131. Epitaph of John de Bereford and Agneys his first wife, promising 620 days of pardon to those who should pray for their souls. ( Peshall , App. p. 6.) See before, p. cix. Epitaph of Agnes Tanfield, 1442. Epitaph of Elizabeth, wife of Thomas Dennis, mercer, 1638. Epitaph of Margaret wife of Henry Sowtham, 1626. Monument of William Levins, alderman of Oxford. (cxviii.) 132. Epitaph of the same, who died in 1616, in his 100th year, having been five times mayor of Oxford ; and of his wife Ursula who died 1573. ( Peshall , App. p. 5.) Arms of Levins as cut on the feet of his effigy and on his sword- hilt. (Argent, on a bend sable three escallops of the first. Ibid.) (cxix.) 133. Arms of Sir Thomas Penyston, Bart, quartering 1 The old church of Allhallows (now usually called All Saints) was removed shortly after the accidental fall of its spire in 1699, and rebuilt in 1705-8 from the designs of Henry Aldrich, D.D. Dean of Christchurch. The ancient monuments described by Anthony a Wood are given in Sir John Peshall’s Ancient and Present State of Oxford , 1773, Appendix, p. 6: but some of those now noticed by Dingley are not there mentioned. 70 HISTORY FROM MARBLE, Beauchamp of Holt, Mowbray, and Beauchamp of Bedford, with Watson on an escucheon of pretence. St. Magdalen’s Church, Oxford. Latin distich of an epitaph there, with a translation in English rhyme by Mr. Thomas Carles minister of Cirencester. Page (cxx.) 134. Notice of Magdalen College, and the Arms of William Patten alias Waynflete, Bishop of Winchester, the founder. Queen’s College. Arms of Cardinal Beaufort, and inscription commemorating King Henry Y. as a student. (cxxi.) 135. View of the Clarendon Theatre. Notice of Ricot Chapel. Notice of IsLir, and the chapel of Edward the Confessor. Shield of Rowland Lacy, of Pudlicot, co. Oxon, esq. Epitaph upon John Craker, maker of bellows. Another upon Gammer Trewman, the predecessor of Mother Lowse, as an alewife. Hereford. (cxxii.) View in Hereford Road from Stretford Bridge. View of Hereford Cathedral. View of the White Cross, near Hereford : bearing the arms of Charlton. This is still standing in good preservation, its base having been repaired by Cottingham in 1850, and its upper stage by G. G. Scott in 1864, on both occasions at the expense of Lord Saye and Sele, one of the present Canons of Hereford. (A view in Duncumb’s History of Herefordshire, vol. i. p. 397.) Date (1519) on the north door of the Cathedral. (cxxiii.) Sepulchral brass of Bishop Trilleck (ob. 1360). En- graved in Gough’s Sepulchral Monuments , vol. i. pi. xi. It has been lately replaced in the choir. 1 1 An account of the discovery of Bishop Trilleck’s coffin, with an engraving of the head of his crczier, is given in “ A short Description of a Portable Shrine ” (Saint Ethelbert’s), by the Rev. Thomas Russell, M.A. 1830. 8vo. The crozier is also engraved in The Antiquarian and Topographical Cabinet. DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. VI Page (cxxiv.) Sepulchral brass of Richard Delabere, canon, 1386. Description of the monument of Dean Frowsetoure, and its inscription; ob. 1529. The shield or arms of King Ethelbert. fcxxv.) The monument of Bishop Lewis Charlton, 1369. (Engraved in Gough Sepulchral Monuments , vol. i. pi. xlvii.) The lower portion of this remains, but the canopy has been destroyed. (cxxvii.) 129. Account of the same Bishop. Continuation of the inscriptions to Dean Frowsetoure. Epitaph of William Plott, gent. 1628. (. Rawlinson , p. 38.) Now preserved in the south transept. Monument of Mr. Thompson, a proctor. (cxxviii.) 140. Monument of Bishop Trefnant, 1404. Account of the painted glass over that monument. Epitaph of Richard Weaver of the Above Eigne, gent, six times M.P. for Hereford. Died 1642. ( Rawlinson , p. 101.) Epitaph of his wife Katherine. 1631. (cxxix.) 141. Gravestone (the brass figure lost) of William Webb, Archdeacon of Hereford, ob. 1522. (. Rawlinson , p. 37, Duncumb , p. 557.) Now destroyed. Epitaph of Alexander Denton, esq. and Anne his wife, daughter and heir of Richard Willy son of Suggewas, co. Here- ford, she died 1566. Her husband was buried in 1574 at his own church of Hillesden : see his epitaph in Lipscomb's Buckinghamshire , iii. 21. ( Rawlinson , p. 119.) Shield of the arms of Denton. Epitaph of Richard Jaqueson, canon-residentiary, 1497. (cxxx.) 142. Monument of Lucy, wife of John Booth, 1673; and arms of Booth impaling Whitney. ( Rawlinson , p. 10.) Now in the Bishop’s cloisters. Epitaph of Anne, wife of James Parry, prebendary, 1674. 72 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. It is signed T. B., the initials of Thomas Broad, one of the vicars of the Cathedral. ( Rawlinson , p. 132.) Page (cxxxii.) 144. Autograph and Motto of the Author. (cxxxiii.) 145. Gravestone, inlaid with brasses, of Sir Richard Delabere (ob. 1514) and his two wives. [Rawlinson, p. 36.) (cxxxiv.) 146. Arms of the see of Hereford impaling Lindsell. Epitaph of Bishop Augustine Lindsell, 1634. ( Raivlinson , p. 32.) Epitaph of Bishop George Coke, 1646. [Rawlinson, p. 33.) (cxxxvi.) Monument of Bishop Stanbury, 1462. (See its inscrip- tion in Rawlinson , p. 40.) (cxxxvii.) Monument of Bishop Herbert Westfaling, 1601. (. Rawlinson , p. 126.) This “noble monument of freestone, supported by three sphinxes,” as it is described by Duncumb , p. 562, was destroyed by Wyatt (during the repairs of the cathedral, 1786-1798) : the effigy has been lately restored to its original place. Part of the inscription is preserved on the south wall of the Bishop’s cloisters. At St. Margaret’s West- minster was formerly, on the south side of the communion table, a mural monument with the effigy of Mrs. Anne West- faling, wife of Herbert Bishop of Hereford, and daughter of Dr. Barlow, Bishop of Chichester. It is placed in a list of “ Monuments lost or destroyed” in Walcott’s History of St. Margaret’s Westminster, 1847, 8vo. p. 32. (cxxxviii.) Brass of Richard Rudhall, Doctor of Decrees, Arch- deacon of Hereford, ob. 1376. ( Rawlinson , p. 134.) ISow fixed against the wall of the south-east transept. (cxxxix.) 147. The Epitaph of Bishop Coke, continued from page (cxxxiv.) (cxl.) 148. Gravestone of Thomas Downe, Canon- Residentiary, 1489. [Raivlinson, p. 28.) Now gone. Devices on the bosses of the Bishop’s cloisters. (cxli.) Monument of Bishop Coke. This was also destroyed by DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 73 Wyatt; but the effigy has been replaced, and part of the inscription. The arms of Coke on this monument were, Gules, three crescents and a canton or ; and the impalement, Sable, a fess cheeky between three horse’s heads erased argent, for Heigham. Page (cxlii.) 152. Gravestone of John Fuyster, five times Mayor of Hereford (ob. 1455), and Katharine his wife. (. Rawlinson , p. 116, where the first fourteen words are deficient, and Duncumb , p. 544, where there are some additional words at the end. Now gone. 1 ) (cxliii.) 155. Brass of Robert Jordan, canon, 1445. ( Rawlinson , p. 30.) The effigy is gone, but the inscription remains. Brass of William Porter, S.T.B. 1524. ( Rawlinson , p. 27.) (cxliv.) 156. Monument of Sir Richard Pembridge, 1375, en- graved in Gough’s Sepulchral Monuments , vol. i. pi. liv. This fine effigy was originally in the church of the Black Friars, and was brought to the cathedral church at the Dissolution. It has been recently restored at the cost of the Rev. Lord Saye and Sele, Canon Residentiary, and has now a right leg, which is deficient in Dingley’s drawing. “ Over the monumental effigy in Hereford Cathedral of Sir Richard Pembridge, who died in 1375, his jousting helme and shield continued to a late period to be affixed. The helme has within the last few years been taken down, and presented to Sir S. R. Meyrick.” (Bloxam’s Funeral Rites of the Middle Ages , p. 134.) See it mentioned by Symonds in his Diary , p. 201. It is now at Goderich Court. Epitaph of Blanch, wife of Thomas Rogers. (cxlv.) 159. View of Erdestland Church. It is near Leo- minster, and the nave is very ancient. See a print contributed 1 The shield above Fuyster’s head is of his arms, Gules, three fleurs de lis or, as they appeared in the third window on the south side of the nave. ( 'Duncumb , p. 543.) On the shield between the heads of the mayor and his wife was a bend and in sinister quarter a lion rampant. {Ibid. p. 544.) CAMD. SOC. L 74 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. by Mr. J. Severn Walker, of Worcester, to the Ham Anastatic Society 1864; which contains a south-east view of the church in 1863, and fac-similes of the sketches in Dingley’s MS. The church was restored in 1864 under the architectural super- intendence of Mr. Henry Curzon. During the repairs the chancel arch was rebuilt, and on stripping tho plaster from the wall there were evident indica- tions of the church having originally terminated with the present nave, the wall having three lancet lights, and a round or oval window above. The small south doorway shown in Dingley’s sketch would be the original priest’s door. The present chancel is of the Middle- Pointed style. To the west Mr. Curzon believes the nave was about 8 ft. 6 in. longer, with perhaps a tower beyond that, of the full width of the nave, as usual in this type of church in Herefordshire. The present tower was almost entirely rebuilt about 100 years ago, and wants the spire shewn in Dingley’s sketch. The tomb for the Holy Sepulchre, drawn by Dingley, is under the two-light Decorated south window of the nave. The arms, Barry argent (or?) and gules, impaling a Pile, ought to identify the person commemorated; but they do not occur in the old rolls of arms. Shield of arms in a window. Page (cxlvi.) 160. Three other shields in the windows. The Font. This was recognised by Mr. Curzon serving as an old bowl in a cottager’s garden in the village. The present font is modern, and of bad design. Leominster Church. Brass of Alice, wife of Philip Redyng, 1473. ( Prices His- tory of Leominster , 1795, p. 104. (cxlvii.) 161. The font and the pulpit. Brasses of Ralph Hacluit (ob. 1527) and Elizabeth his wife. (See this memorial noticed in Symondss Diary , p. 267 ; and in Price , p. 104 ; it no longer exists.) DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 75 Page (cxlviii.) 162. Epitaph of Elizabeth (ob. 1633), wife of John Tombes, Vicar, daughter of Henry Scudder, 1 Kector of Col- lingbourne Ducis, in Wiltshire, by Bridget, daughter of George Hunt, fifty years Vicar of the same church, who was son of John Hunt, adjudged to be burned in the reign of Mary. Gravestone and arms of Isaac Seward, esq. 1652. (Price, p. 105, where the arms are incorrectly blazoned.) Gravestone of Katharine, wife of John Barneby, esq. 1633, and arms of Barneby impaling Cornwall. (Compare with Symondss Diary , p. 268 ; and Price , p. 105, where Cornwall is misprinted “ Coswall.”) (cxlix.) 163. King’s Pion. South prospect of the Church, 1682. This view resembles its present appearance, except that it has now no spire. (J.G.N. July 9, 1867.) Dingley’s statement of Dr. John King, bishop of London, and his nephew ( not brother), Dr. Henry King, bishop of Chichester, being of the family of King 2 of King’s Pion, is un- founded. They were of Oxfordshire, and their more remote ancestry, it is said, of Devonshire. Mr. George Carver, mentioned by Dingley, was buried at King’s Pion, March 4, 1682, and has a monument in the chancel, on which his name is spelt Karver. He married the eldest daughter of the celebrated Colonel John Birch, of Garnston. The monument drawn by Dingley in the same page remains as he represented it. It is under the window of the south transeptal chapel shown in the exterior view: and it is really that of the lady in the rear. She has a square head-dress, somewhat resembling that of Philippa, Lady Mohun, in West- 1 This name is misprinted Studder in Price’s Leominster, p. 106, and in Town- send’s Leominster, p. 234. The biography of Mr. Tombes will be found in the latter work, p. 116. 2 There is a pedigree of King, of Black Hall in King’s Pion, in the Visitation of Herefordshire, 1683. (Coll, of Arms, K. 6, f. 71.) 76 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. minster Abbey, engraved in the works of Sandford, Gough, and Stothard. The effigy of the knight is of an earlier age, removed from another tomb, and placed in front of the lady’s monument. His limbs are wholly gone, except the upper portion of his right leg, and there is nothing to indicate what was the posi- tion of his hands. His coat-armour is clearly Mortimer, carved not on a shield, but on his closely-fitting surcoator jupon. On the inescucheon is apparently a scroll (it is certainly not a chevron), perhaps intended for an inscription. The deep camail (or gorget of chain-mail) shows the age of the effigy to be towards the end of the reign of Edward HI. Page (cl.) 164. The gravestones which contained matrices of brasses, and of which Dingley has sketched one, are wholly removed, and the chapel has been new paved. Bromyard. The font, and epitaph in the churchyard on James and Mary Michel. Ledbury. Epitaph on Sir Kobert Callow (more correctly given on a subsequent page). (cli.) 165. View of Garnston, a seat belonging to John Birch, esq. and his arms. (clii.) 166. St. Ethelbert’s Well at Hereford. This interesting structure is now wholly destroyed. Ding- ley’s view of it may be compared with another sketch made by Dr. Stukeley in 1721, and copied in the volume of the Anastatic Drawing Society for 1855, pi. xxx. The well remained until these few years, but the spot has now been inclosed in private grounds. “ The south prospect of Weobley Church, as its steeple now stands, 1682, beautified, repaired, and adorn’d by John Birch, esq r , one of the Hon ble Burgesses for this ancient corporacon.” (cliii.) 167. Hereford. Cypher, arms, and devices of Ed- mund Frowcetur, dean of Hereford, 1519. ( Raiclinson , p. 140.) Compare the shield with that of Bishop Mayo in p. 185. (clxxiii.) Katharine-wheel : see others in p. ccii. DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 77 Page (cliv.) 168. Biography of Bishop Peter de Eugueblanke, or de Aqua Blanca, and inscription to him. Arms- of the Bishopric and of Bishop Field. (civ.) Epitaph of Bishop Theophilus Field, 1636. (Printed in j Rawlinson, p. 17.) Inscription to Bishop Thomas de Cantilupe, ob. 1282. (clvi.) Sketch of a cross-legged effigy in mail armour. The only known effigy of this character was placed near the western wall of the north transept. A head, which may possibly have belonged to it, has been lately found, and erected against the wall in the north-east transept. Sketch of the silver mace of the cathedral (still in daily use.) (clvii.) 171. View of the monumental basis of the shrine of Saint Thomas of Hereford (Cantilupe). Engraved in Dun- cumb’s History of Herefordshire , p. 549; Britton’s Hereford Cathedral, pi. xv. ; The Antiquarian and Topographical Cabinet; the Record of the House of Gournay , p. 182; and Murray’s Handbook of Hereford Cathedral , 1864, plate iv. It is of the period of his translation, A.D. 1286. Epitaph of William Evans, D.D. and his arms. ( Rawlinson , p. 13.) (clviii.) 172. Epitaph of Mary his wife, daughter of Nicholas Tayler, esq. of Presteigne. (. Rawlinson , p. 14.) Epitaph of Katharine, wife of Bridstock Harford, esq. 1665. (The Arms of Harford impaling Read in the opposite page.) Printed in Rawlinson, p. 129; and that of her husband, who died 1713, in p. 128. (clix.) 173. A sketch of Burton, a seat of John Brewster, esq. This ancient mansion is now in the possession of Captain Clowes ; during recent repairs a fine oak roof has been found in the centre of the structure, and has been carefully restored. Two shields of arms in glass over the entrance to the Bishop’s Cloister at Hereford. 78 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. “ The Library of Hereford Cathedral,” the ancient Lady Chapel, recently restored. Page (clx.) Curiosities in the Library. On this subject see Murray’s Handbook of Hereford Cathedral , 1864; wherein, in plate x. the curious appearance of the ancient book-shelves, now removed to the old archive room, but still guarded with chains, is represented, and in plate xi. a miniature copy of the monastic Mappa Mundi , mentioned by Dingley, the work of Richard de Haldingham in 1314. (See in the Gentle- mans Magazine for May 1863 the translation of a paper written upon it by M. D’Avezac, President of the Geographical Society of France.) At p. 44 of the Handbook is a story that this map “was discovered, about a century ago, under the floor of Bishop Audley’s chapel;” but Dingley’s mention of it shows that it was considered one of the curiosities of the library nearly two centuries ago. Gravestone exhibiting the outlines of a knight and lady. This stone is preserved in the north-east transept, its incised portions filled with white cement. It may be fairly doubted that it commemorated a Knight of the Garter; for Dingley admits that it had “ lost all its brass inlaying, 5 ’ and the circles which he has inscribed with the motto of the most noble Order do not entirely bear the form of garters. It may there- fore be concluded that in this case he allowed his imagination to run too far. It is possible that the slab was not inlaid with brass, but with alabaster or coloured marbles, some fragments of which have been found. (clxi.) Arms in glass in the small (Audley) chapel. The fret is the coat of Bishop Audley, repeated in p. (clxvii.) 179. Seal of Thomas de Holand, Earl of Kent. (Engraved in Sandford’s Genealogical History of England , edit. 1677, p. 124.) (clxii.) Drawing of the monument formerly attributed to Hum- phrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford, temp. Edw. III. He was DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 79 not here buried ; but the monument is of that date. (It is represented in the engraved title-page of Britton’s Hereford Cathedral. The shield and mantling placed on the canopy have nothing to do with it ; they are of Dingley’s time, and seem to have been stuck upon his drawing as if he intended to dedicate it to one of his friends.) Page (clxiii.) 175. Sepulchral brasses of Richard Delamere, esq. who died 1435 {not 1535 as written by Dingley), and Isabella his wife, who died 1421. ( Rawlinson , p. 103.) (clxiv.) 176. Inscriptions on the bells of the cathedral. (See Rawlinson , p. 7, where other inscriptions are given, the greater part of the peal having been recast in 1697 and 1698.) (clxv.) 177. Sepulchral brass (name lost) dated 1394. The effigy is preserved on the wall of the south-east transept. Epitaph on Mr. Thomas Weeks. (clxvi.) 178. West front of the Cathedral Church of Hereford. It will be remembered that this portion of the church fell in 1786; and though there are other views 1 that represent it before that catastrophe, yet this drawing is valuable for its careful details. (clxvii.) 179. Monument of Joan, wife of Humphrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford, called Joanna of Kilpeck, from her residence in that castle (ob. 1327). She was sister and heir of Sir Alan de Plukenet. The shields, though only superficially painted, are still visible ; they are those of Bohun and Plukenet. Shields on the Audley Chapel : erected by Bishop Audley, who was translated to Salisbury in 1502, and was buried in that cathedral. (clxviii.) 180. Sepulchral brass of John Homme, canon, 1483. (. Rawlinson , p. 102.) Above his head is the shield of Hum- phrey Duke of Gloucester, to whom he was secretary. 1 In Duncumb’s Herefordshire, p. 520 ; in Willis’s Cathedrals ; and in the European Magazine 1792, from a drawing made in 1724. It is shewn in ruins' in Hearne and Byrne’s Views. 80 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. Epitaph of Dean Thomas Chawndeler, 1490 (printed in j Rawlinson, p. 43.) Epitaph of Philip Traherne, twice mayor, 1645. Printed in Rawlinson , p. 107, but partly omitting and misprinting the words “bis Majorem, Irenarcham, vice-Colo, manus bellicae,” which means that the deceased was twice mayor, a justice of the peace, and lieutenant-colonel of the city trained-bands at the time Hereford was besieged by the Scots. See also an English inscription to the same person (one of the compositions of Thomas Broad) printed in Rawlinson , p. 31, Duncumb , p. 559. Epitaph of Robert de la Hay, gent. 1668. (In Rawlinson, p. 132 ; also Sarah his wife, widow of William Johnson, D.D.) Page (clxix.) 181. Arms on the arches of the College Cloisters — Devereux, Viscount Hereford, K.G. and others. Epitaphs of Richard Delamaine, minister of' the gospel, 1657; Martha West, 1657; Mary, wife of William Skinner, D.C.L. 1672 ( Rawlinson , p. 44); and Charles Triste, 1664. (clxx.) 182. Gravestone of Agnes, wife of Roger Ocleye, in the chapel of the Bishop’s palace (which chapel was destroyed in the time of Bishop Egerton, 1724-1746). Epitaph of John Prophete, mayor. ( Rawlinson , p. 104.) Epitaph of Henry Martun (or Martyn), archdeacon of Salop; printed in Rawlinson , p. 37. (clxxi.) 183. Monument of Bishop Robert Lozinga, ob. 1095. See engraving in Gough’s Sepulchral Monuments , vol. i. plate iii.* Monument of Bishop Robert de Melun, ob. 1162. (clxxii.) 184. Monument of Bishop Robert de Betune, ob. 1148. Monuments of Bishops Robert Foliot, ob. 1186, and William de Vere, ob. 1199. These effigies are five of ten which were erected during the Perpendicular period as memorials of earlier Bishops, and which are now scattered in various parts of the cathedral. See a wood-cut in the title-page of Britton’s Here- ford Cathedral for their arrangement. DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 81 Monument and arms of Bishop Ricliard Mayo, 1516. (En- graved in Britton’s Hereford Cathedral , pi. xiii.) Page (clxxiii.) 185. Monument of Bisliop Robert Benet, 1617. See Raiolinson, pp. 41 — 43. This canopied monument has been destroyed : the effigy, shields, and wooden tablets are preserved. The arms and supporters which Dingley has pasted over part of his drawing are those of Bennet Earl of Tankerville ; but those borne by the Bishop were different, viz., Argent, on a cross between four lions rampant gules a bezant ; with which he quartered Paly argent and vert (Langley ?) (clxxiv.) 186. Arms of the Bishop (imperfectly drawn). (clxxv.) 187. Inscription to Bishop Reynelm, 1115. ( Rawlinson , p. 176.) Epitaph and arms of John Harford, M.D. 1681. (See others of this family in Rawlinson , pp. 25, 128, 129.) Brass of Richard Brumfelde, canon, and under-almoner to King Henry VII. ob. 1518. See Rawlinson , p. 127; who agrees with Dingley in stating that it was taken away, and the stone turned. Description of the monument of -Bishop Thomas Charlton, 1343. (See Rawlinson , p. 43.) (clxxvi.) 188. Drawing of the same. (An engraving in Gough’s Sepulchral Monuments , vol. i. plate xxxv. 1 ) View of the tomb of Bishop Ethelstan, ob. 1056 or 1061; ( Raivlinson , p. 173.) This apparently stood in the north-east corner of the north transept, but is not now existing. ' (clxxvii.) 189. Monument of Bishop Robert Kilwardby, 1282; and gravestone of Gilbert de Swinefend. 1 It is difficult to interpret the mural inscription. The Bishop of Hereford who died in 1282 was the famous Thomas de Cantelupe, afterwards canonized ; and no such bishop as Robert Kilwardby is on 1 Gilbert de Swinfield was nephew to the Bishop of that name, and Chancellor of Hereford. See various references to him in the index to the Household Roll of Bishop Swinfield, printed for the Camden Society. CAMD. SOC. M 82 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. record ; but that was tbe name of the contemporary archbishop of Canterbury wbo was consecrated in 1272, and resigned that see in 1278, when he became a cardinal. The effigy does not remain, at least in situ; for the arch may be recognised as that decorated with the balhfLower in the southern wall of the north-east transept, now occupied by the effigy of an unknown layman, recently placed there. Epitaph of Jane, wife of William Bowdler, gent, daughter of Dr. Fell, Dean of Christ Church, 1660. ( Rawlinson , p. 19.) Arms of Bowdler impaling Fell. Page (clxxviii.) 190. Gravestone of the same Jane Bowdler. Epitaph of Mary, wife of William Bowdler, gent, and daugh- ter of Richard Seabourne, esq. 1665. ( Rawlinson , p. 19.) Epitaph of Joice, wife of Sir Samuel Aubrey, knt. daugh- ter and coheir of William Rudhall of Rudhall, esq. 1638. (. Paw - linson , p. 18.) (clxxix). Monument attributed to Dean Berew or Beaurieu, ob. 1462, with his rebus of a boar, wearing a coat of the arms of the deanery (Or, five chevronels azure,) among leaves of Rue. (See Rawlinson , p. 225, and Murray’s Handbook of Flereford Cathedral, p. 33.) (clxxx). Monument of Bishop Richard de Swinefend, 1316. (clxxxi.) 191. Monument of Bishop Hugh de Mapenore, 1219. Epitaph of Sir Samuel Aubrey, 1645. [Rawlinson, p. 18.) Dingley has omitted the word militis : but the five Latin lines which follow the English verses, and prove this to be the same Sir Samuel Aubrey as in a former page, are omitted by Raw- linson. Epitaph of Thomas Philips, son of Dr. Thomas Philips, a Canon, 1681. [Rawlinson, p. 122.) (clxxxii.) 192. Brass of John Bynnur, citizen of Hereford (having a fish and a weaver’s shuttle beneath his feet). (“ Byndden” in Rawlinson , p. 29.) DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 83 Imperfect brass of a priest, with a scroll proceeding from his mouth, inscribed: — Deprecare regem celi pro me virgo Katerina adjuvare qneso veni et salvare me festina. Verses, part of an epitaph written by Dr. Kerry on one of his sons (“ not now to be seen ”). ( Rawlinson , p. 128.) Page (clxxxiii.) 193. Brass of Edmund Ryall, canon, 1428. (Raw- lins on, p. 26.) Brass of John Stockton, once mayor, 1480. (He stood on a tun, Rawlinson, p. 29.) (clxxxiv.) 194. Epitaph of the same. Epitaph of Thomas Rogers, esq. mayor, 1643. Epitaph of John Monnington of Shelwicke, gent, and arms. Brass of William [Lochard], canon-residentiary and pre- centor of Hereford, and dean of the chapel royal o£ St. Burian in Cornwall (to which the royal arms over his head allude). See Dugdale’s Monasticon, edit. 1830, vi. 1448 ; Le Neve’s Fasti Eecl. Anglic, (edit. Hardy, 1854,) vol. i. p. 486. He died 1438. The epitaph states that among other good works he erected the great window at the west end of the cathedral- church. Brass of Richard Burghehyll, master of the grammar-school of the city, 1492. (Raivlinson, p. 117.) (clxxxv.) 195. Monument of Bishop Charles Booth, 1535. (Rawlinson, p. 27.) Other epitaphs of the Booths at St. Clement s Danes, London. Arms of France, and of Mortimer, in a window. (clxxxv L) 196. Epitaph of Ottowell Berrington, blacksmith, 1652. Epitaph of John Philpot, esq. who died in his mayoralty, 1686. (Rawlinson, p. 28.) Epitaphs of Henry Mclling, prebendary of Landaff, 1665, and of Sarah his wife, daughter of Roger Maynwaring, Bishop of St. David’s, 1664. (The former, but not the latter, is in Rawlinson , p. 104.) 84 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. Page (clxxxvii.) 1 97. Epitaph of Elizabeth, wife of Richard Philpots, esq. and twice mayoress, 1656. (She was the daughter of Humfrey Walter, gent.: see the Latin epitaph to her husband in Paiolinson , p. 48.) Epitaph of James Lawrence, esq. 1668. Epitaph of Anne, wife of John Wellington, gent, and daughter of Nicholas Philpot, gent. 1676. ( Rawlinson , p. 107.) Epitaph of Richard Benson, canon- residentiary, 1548. (. Raw- linson , p. 26.) (clxxxviii.) 198. View of the Preaching Cross in the centre of the Bishop’s Cloisters. This was probably a hexagon, erected over an ancient well still existing under the surface. It fell into decay in the latter part of the last century. A view of it is among the churches and crosses placed in the margin of Taylor’s Map of the City, 1757. Description of a monument in “ the charnel-house, a vault under a chapel on y e North side of the Presbitery — this refers to the monument of Andrew Jones and his wife, drawn on the subsequent page (cciii.) 199. (clxxxix.) Fresco painting of Saint Thomas of Canterbury, holding an archiepiscopal cross, and his cope powdered with the letter iE : opposite to which was a corresponding painting of Saint Thomas of Hereford, having his chasuble embroidered with leopard’s heads. Abstract of The Life and Gests of St. Thomas a Cantilupe, Bishop of Hereford, and sometime Lord Chancellor of England, written by R. S. Societat. Iesu, and printed at Ghent [1674]. (cxc.) Secretum or privy seal of William Longespe (copied from Sandford’s Genealogical History of the Kings of England). (cxciii.) Epitaph of Mary Smyth, wife of Miles Smith, D.D. canon-resident of this church, and afterwards Bishop of Gloucester, 1612. (cxciv.) The names and titles of the Prebendaries as they are DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 85 ranked by the statutes of the Church of Hereford. (Being those living when Dingley wrote.) Page (cxcv.) The names, titles, and Dignitaries, w th their Preach- ing Daies. (cxcvi.) Seal of Herbert Croft, Bishop of Hereford, consecrated 1662; died 1691. (See his gravestone in Rawlinson , p. 98.) (cxcvii.) Notes on St. Thomas of Hereford, and his arms. (cxcix.) Inscription commemorating William Harper, a bene- factor. He died 1641 : see Rawlinson, p. 47 ; but Dingley must be more correct in the sum “ 6 1 * * . 6 s . 4 d .”, which is printed in Rawlinson “6s. and 4 d” Inscription on a sun-dial. Epitaph of William Morris and Frances his wife, 1625, and Walter his son, 1656. Note on the long continuance of the name of Morris as Tanners in Hereford, and also of the name of Symonds. Epitaph of William Hayfold, a vicar of the college, and music-master of the school, 1633. (Rawlinson, p. 60.) Carving; of a boar saddled. This occurs in the curious roof over the Vicars 5 Cloisters. (cc.) Figure of the Virgin in painted glass in the college library. This drawing is dedicated by Dingley “ Puellaa in- tactse E. Thompson , 55 under her arms in a lozenge. 1 Description of the Poculum Charitatis , a large silver bowl given to the College by Bichard Cox, the Custos. He is again mentioned in p. (cciv.) 200, but died in the same year, “the 9th of March, 1684” (probably 1684-5): see his epitaph in Rawlinson , p. 67. (cci.) Cypher of W. B. with the motto JI$0£ann£L Shields of Berkeley impaling ; Berkeley im- paling ; and of 1 It is very probable that this young lady was a sister of the Mary Thompson whose epitaph at Tewkesbury will be seen in p. cccxlvii. and therefore a grand- daughter of Dingley’s friend Theophilus Alye. 86 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. Page (ccii.) Drawings from painted glass: Katharine's wheels, the device of ^o|)n (Dean 1449 — 1462), as before in (cliii.) 167. An angel, holding a scroll, JHftttljCUS. Quarry, with acorns and oak leaves. Device, with initials, A. L. W. (cciii.) 199. Inscriptions on other Plate given to the College: — 1. By Sir John Erneley. 2. By Kev. Richard Osgood, LL.D. with his arms. The Monument in the Charnel-house (as before mentioned in p. (clxxxviii.) of Andrew Jones, merchant, and Elizabeth his wife. The inscription records that he repaired the Charnel-house for the feast of All Saints 1498, and established a chaplain to celebrate therein for the future. The figures were incised on a large slab of alabaster which remains tolerably perfect, in the centre of what is now- called the Crypt, under the Lady Chapel. From their mouths proceeded these verses — a variety of those so well known from the Malvern tile (drawn in a subsequent page) and other examples: — Remember thy life may not ever indure, That thou dost thiself therof art thou sewre. But and thou leve thi will to other men is cure, And thou hare it after, it is but a venture. Dingley has dedicated this drawing to his friend Alye in the following terms: Hoc M. seq. viro Generosissimo et rei antiqvaria: conseryatori Theophilo Alye, ddc. t.d. (cciv.) 200. View of the Quadrangle of the College cloisters. A stag is seen browsing upon its grass-plot. Drawing of the Sun-dial there, bearing the initials B. R. Some account of the College: and rebus of Dr. Gardiner, a native of Hereford, and canon of Christ Church Oxon. painted on the screen of the College refectory or Hall, 1670. (ccv.) 201. “This Colledge is not without its Library Parti- DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 87 cular, whereto Mr. Theophilus Alye hath been a benefactor, as the Collegians themselves gratefully own.” See in the Appendix an extract from the Eecords of the College. Shield of arms: Argent, three bars azure, on a chief gules three hawk’s bells strung on a ring or, in fess a mullet of six points. Kneeling figure of John Brugg, merchant of London, in a window of the College library. Dingley styles him “Alderman or Lord Mayor of London, in his scarlet robes:” and he gives hereafter, p. cccxxxi. from the church of St. Nicholas Acous in London, the epitaph of Sir John Bruges, Lord Mayor in 1520. It appears that he was represented kneeling in prayer to the figure of the Virgin, already drawn in p. (cc.) so that the window was probably executed at his expense. View of the parish church of St. Nicholas, Hereford. “ Over the south door and a dozen Leathern Water-buckets the Guift of Theophilus Alye, gent.” read this motto : — Da tv a dvm tva svnt, Post mortem tvnc tva non svnt. The Hereford antiquary had no doubt borrowed this line from some mediseval original. Kneeling figure of Koger Beele, in a north window of St. Nicholas church. (He died 19 Hen. VIII. being then mayor of Hereford.) Page (ccvi.) 202. Sketch of a wooden porch. Two ancient gravestones; one of a canon, bearing a cross and CD 1 7 O eight shields. The situation of these is not mentioned. (ccvii.) 203. Verses from a brass plate in the Tolsel of Here- ford, recording the redemption of toll by Kichard Phelips, seven times mayor. Now preserved on the wall of the cathe- dral (near the Bishop’s Cloisters doorway) and printed in Rawlinson , p. 111. A Kalendar of Benefactors to Hereford City: (but reciting only the benefactions of Alderman Phelips and Bishop Scory.) 88 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. Account of the four City Swords, and their inscriptions. Page (ccviii.) 204. Documents communicated to the author by Mr. Theophilus Alye, u a lover of ancient records.” Warrant for the observation of Gunpowder Treason day. Bond of Richard Clements, dated 31 Jan. 1587. (ccix.) 205. A view of Almeley Church, Herefordshire. Notice of Eardisley Castle, and the arms of Baskervile. (ccx.) 206. Devices in painted glass at two houses in the Broad Capuche lane in Hereford : 1. A May -bush, on a mound or: the rebus of John Mey, for 22 years mayor, annis regnorum Ii. 4. 5. and 6. 2. J. B. cypher of Bedyng. 3. Rebus of an eagle, wings erect. Proceedings of an Inquest relative to a pale or fence between the gardens of Richard W ootton and J ohn Mors. (ccxi.) 207. Four shields of arms, from painted glass, and an account of others in a window at Register Reinolds. View of the old mansion named Newport , 1 near Eardisley: thus dedicated (with the arms of Pember) : D n0 D no TIIOM/E pember gen. COL. omn. animar. oxon. Socio d.d.c.q. t. dineley Societ. GRAYES inn . 2 The patent of the arms of the City of Hereford, granted by Sir Edward Walker, Garter, 1645. 3 1 This has long since disappeared. Newport has since been a seat of the Foleys, and has lately been rebuilt a second time, by Mr. Gibson Watt, grandson of the great engineer. 2 There is a pedigree of Pember in the Herefordshire Visitation of 1683 (Coll. Arm. K. 6). Devereux Pember was of Newport and Bollinghill. His grandson John of Tuthill, co. Hereford, was rntat. 49, 1683; Thomas the Fellow of All Souls’ graduated B.A. 1676, M.A. 1680, and it therefore seems uncertain whether he was Thomas younger brother of John, and fifth son of the Rev. John Pember, Vicar of Bodenham, or a more distant relation. 3 The ancient arms of Hereford had been Gules, three lions passant argent. The augmentation of the bordure with saltires was intended to allude to its siege by the Scots, from which it was relieved by the arrival of the King in person in Sept. 1645. DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 89 Page (ccxiii.) 209. Arms of the Anglers of Hereford, ingeniously fancyM by Mr. Theophilus Alye. (ccxiv.) 210. Record of the day’s sport of four anglers in the Wye at Hereford on the 19th Oct. 1677 Drawing by Mr. John Fisher of Hereford, of the figure of Ganymede on the roof of Mr. Alye’s Summer-house. Drawing by the author of a Ganymede at Chambord in France: and the prospect of Beaugency on the river Loire. “ Orders laied downe ( anno 1589) aswell for government in Courte as for the relief of the Poore inhabitinge within the Cittie of Hereforde.” (ccxv.) 211. Proceedings of the three Inquests re-electing Roger Squyer to be Master of the Waytes (temp. Wm. Boyle, Mayor of Hereford). (ccxvi.) 211. Acknowledgement of Luke Prosser as owing to Richard Ravenhill 31 bushels of summer barley, 31 Eliz. Proceedings of the three Inquests appointing Thomas Gough one of the two Beadles of the city of Hereford. (ccxvii.) 213. View of the Town-iiall. The upper story of this very curious structure 1 was defaced and plastered over about 1750, and its lower portion removed in 1862. It has been the subject of many prints, but is most completely de- lineated in four plates of the magnificent work of the late Mr. Clayton, architect, of Hereford, entitled “ A Collection of the Ancient Timber Houses of England by John Clayton. 1846.” Devices and scriptural mottoes of the several Corporations of the City, in the chambers of the Townhall. 1 This fine example of timber architecture was erected in 1618-20. It is attributed to John Abell, the master builder of that century, together with the principal edifices of the same character still existing in the county — and how far his claims justly extend it would be interesting to ascertain. John Abell died in 1694, aged 97, and has a monument (said to have been carved by himself) in the church- yard of Sarnesfield, with his kneeling effigies and those of two wives, and a poetical epitaph, in which he is styled an “ architect.” He was appointed “ one of His Majesty’s carpenters ” during the defence of Hereford at the siege of 1643. CAMD. SOC. N 90 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. Page (ccxviii.) 214. Verses in the chamber of the Clothiers, (ccxix.) Letter of John Garnons, esq. of Garnons, to his cousin Clerke, May 12, 1594. Memorandum relative to the family of Clarke, town clerks of Hereford. (ccxx.) Bond of Thomas Farley of Birch-end in the parish of Bosbury yeoman and William Farley glover to Richard Cooke of Stretton Grandison butcher. 31 Eliz. (ccxxi.) View of All Saints’ Church, Hereford. Inscriptions to the painting of the Last Judgment (see before, in remarks on the Title-page ) Inscription over the Creed. Description of the Rood-loft and its ancient organ, and of the stalls. Glazed tiles in the chancel: 1. Arms of Beauchamp. 2. Arms of Edward the Confessor. 3. Arms of Clare. 4. Verses recommending benefactions to be made during life and not left to the care of executors. 1 — (A tile of this pattern is let into one of the pillars of Malvern priory church, and it has also occurred at various other places ; it is engraved in fac- simile, 2 of its real size, in my Examples of Decorative Tiles , sometimes called Encaustic. 1845. No. 72.) (ccxxii.) Royal badges in the middle aile: 1. The Falcon on an open fetterlock, crowned. 2. A Fleur-de-lis, crowned. Inscription on the mayor’s seat. (ccxxiii.) View of Sir Thomas Coningsby’s Hospital for old Servants and Soldiers, 3 formerly the Blackfriars. 1 See many varieties of mediaeval verses, conveying these sentiments, collected in an article in the Gentleman’s Magazine for October 1833, p. 302. 2 The word which Dingley has written “ remit ” (and which has been misread in various ways by others) is hepist in the original. 3 See Duncumb’s History of Herefordshire , vol. i. pp. 405-409. Sir Thomas Coningsby had served in the wars of France, and was the writer of the letters which, collected in a narrative form, have been printed for the Camden Society in the first volume of their Miscellany, under the title of A Journal of the Siege of DESCRIPTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. 91 Arms and devices in the windows of the chapel. The initials T P C are for Sir Thomas Coningsby and Philippa FitzWil- liams his wife. The initials FW C C for FitzWilliams Co- ningsby and C. his wife. Page (ccxxiv.) View of the Hospital, from the Preaching Cross, (ccxxv.) Letter of Sir Thomas Coningsby, Thomas Wygmor, and Thomas Jones to the mayor of Hereford, 1594. Constitution of the Hospital. (ccxxvii.) Seal of the Hospital. (ccxxix.) The Preaching Cross of the Blackfriars, said to have been erected circ. 1350. It was rebuilt in 1864, and has lost (at least for the present) the picturesque aspect it bears in several old prints. In Grose’s Antiquities are two views of this Cross drawn by S. Hooper in 1775, one showing Coningsby ’s Hospital in the background, the other the ruins of the Friary, (ccxxx ) Kuins of the house of the Blackfriars. Seal of the Bailiffs of the City of Hereford. Some account of Sir Thomas Coningsby ’s Will. 1 (ccxxxi.) Deed devising a tenement in St. Thomas Street, 8 Nov. 49 Hen. VI. (ccxxiii.) Another (imperfect) deed of the same parties, (ccxxxv.) Babilon door (blank). Priory of St. Guthlac (blank). Sketch of Wye Bridge, taken from Doctor Wadeley’s. Hospital of St. Giles. Inscription over the door of the chapel ; rebuilt 1682. Inscription on Mr. Williams’s Hospital; rebuilt 1675. (Still remaining.) (ccxxxvi.) Arms of Cornewall on the gate leading to this hospital. Rouen, 1591. He acted during that campaign as muster-master of the English army commanded by the Earl of Essex, and was one of the twenty-four knights made by the Earl on the 8th October. His biography is further traced in the Intro- duction to his Journal at p. 5. 1 Sir Thomas Coningsby was buried in the church of Hope, May 30, 1652. (Price’s History of Leominster, p. 169). 92 HISTORY FROM MARBLE. Bodenham Church. The spire is still unfinished, as shown by Dingley. The chancel he has made too long. Arms of Richard II. and his device of a White Hart. Monumental effigv of a Devereux. Page (ccxxxvii ) Monumental effigy of a lady and child. Gravestone of Thomas Mayo, gent. 1625. Epitaph of Thomas Higgins, 1659. Epitaph of Anne, wife of John Pember, B.D. 1630. 1 Gravestone of Magdalen, wife of William Boyle-sonne, gent. 1632. (ccxxxviii.) Hampton Court, co. Hereford. Painted glass in the chapel. Shields of Lenthall quartering and of Lenthall quartering checquy or and azure. Shields of Coningsby impaling three bars and in chief a lion , and Coningsby impaling Fitzwilliam. The picture of Sir Thomas Coningsby with his dwarf Cricket, mentioned in this page, is now in the possession of the Earl of Essex, and was placed in the National Portrait Exhibition at South Kensington 1866, No. 501. (ccxxxix.) Sketch of the Portrait of King Henry the Fourth. This picture is also in the possession of the Earl of Essex, by whom it was placed in the National Portrait Exhibition at South Kensington, 1866, No. 10. Vertue made this picture, with one then in Kensington Palace and now at Hampton Court Palace, the authority for his head of this sovereign. 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P-fWi&ys ,v BouolvtoW a&AvjAdo worn/td^ ^fiAdo i^SuA. jA— — — Autb afAArb^ Rirfs eJ aAytix nsriam vfara A-- - Coi*new^1l $tAj(pv SetpHbyi' >ro7itAo;ite 9mrHr > oYnpAi r ' rfAtvcrhAn l>6rfet jjjfoniotn kj£T(x'T'OJV JiCci ffr-^ a i O no ' / ^tccirton ire tXhf hr) f dJfU. (X lr-c 71 A OX -{/c AvCf/i. 6 . Jiirvnf f c~r ^cnxn^aZnf (p^y* REPORT OF THE COUNCIL OF THE CAMDEN SOCIETY, ELECTED 2nd MAY 1866. The Council of the Camden Society, elected on the 2nd May 1866, have to express their regret that the Obituary of the Society for the present year contains the names of several Members whose loss is extremely to be lamented. Foremost in the melancholy register stands the late President of the Society, the Most Honourable The Mar- quess Camden, K.G., and his name is followed by those of, Thomas Batcheldor, Esq. F.S.A. Robert Bell, Esq. John Jackson Blandy, Esq. Local Secretary for Reading. Right Hon. Sir James Lewis Knight Bruce, F.R.S., F.S.A, Henry Jackson, Esq. Sir Thomas Rokewode Gage, Bart. John Gidley, Esq. The Lord Ivory. Henry Eyres Landor, Esq. James Lucas, Esq, Maurice Peter Moore, Esq. Kenyon S. Parker, Esq. Henry Crabb Robinson, Esq. F.S.A. Right Hon. Sir James Wigram, M.A., F.R.S., F.S.A. Newman Smith, Esq. Mrs. Thornhill. Charles M. Willich, Esq. Francis John Wright, Esq. On the occurrence of the death of the late President, the Council im- mediately held a Special Meeting, and passed the following Resolution of sympathy and condolence 2 REPORT OF THE COUNCIL, 1866. “That this Council has received the startling tidings of the death of its President with the most sincere regret. His Lordship^s constant presence at the Meetings of the Council, the patient and considerate kindness with which he presided over its consultations, and the readiness with which he gave his name and influence to any measure deemed likely to benefit the Society, have justly attached every Member of the Council to his person and presidency. His loss is deeply lamented ; and the Council directs that this expression of its feeling be not only entered on its proceedings, but be communicated to the family of the late Marquess, with a strong assurance of the sympathy and condolence of the Council, on their great bereavement.” A special General Meeting of the Society subsequently expressed its full concurrence in the resolution of the Council ; and the resolutions, both of the Council and the Society, were duly transmitted to the present Marquess, and by him most kindly acknowledged. The Council recalls attention to the subject on the present occasion, in order to put on perma- nent record the evidence that this Society was not wanting in its expression of those feelings which were universally excited by the sudden removal of a nobleman so much respected and deplored as our late President. The loss of so many Members by death during the past year has not been compensated to the Society by the number of Members recently elected. The diminution in our strength is a renewed call to exertion on the part of all those who wish well to the Society. The names of candidates for admission will be received with satisfaction by the Council, and not less so those of gentlemen willing to act for the Society in country districts in the capacity of Local Secretaries. In pecuniary respects the affairs of the Society, as shewn by the report of the Auditors, are entirely satisfactory. With a cash balance more than adequate to discharge all claims and liabilities, and an investment in the Government funds which is of sufficient amount to give permanence to the Society and safety to all the operations of the Council, we stand in a position of peculiar advantage, and are ever ready to undertake any publications which fall within our scope and may be for the benefit of Historical Literature. REPORT OF THE COUNCIL, 1866. 3 During the past year the following Works have been added to the list of suggested publications I. A Second Volume of Documents connected with James the First’s Relations with Germany. To be edited by Samuel Rawson Gardiner, Esq. II. A Narrative of Proceedings in the Star Chamber and Court of High Com- mission in the Year 1632. To be edited by John Bruce, Esq. F.S.A. III. A Spanish Account of the Proposed Marriage between Charles Prince of Wales and the Infanta; by Francesco de Jesus, from an original MS. To be edited, with a Translation, by Samuel Rawson Gardiner, Esq. IV. A Military Memoir of Colonel Birch, sometime Governor of Hereford during the Civil War. To be edited from the original MS. by the Rev. John Webb, M.A. F.S.A. The following are the Books which will be delivered to Members in return for the Subscription due on the 2nd May, 1866 : — I. Pope Alexander the Seventh and the College of Cardinals. By John Bargrave, D.D. Canon of Canterbury (1662 — 1680); with a Catalogue of Dr. Bargrave’s Museum. Edited by James Craigie Robertson, D.D. Canon of Canterbury. II. Accounts and Papers relating to Mary Queen of Scots. Edited by Allan J. Crosby, Esq. and John Bruce, Esq. Both these have already been issued. They will shortly be followed hy— III. History from Marble. Being Ancient and Modern Funerall Monuments in England and Wales ; by Thomas Dingley, Gent, in the reign of Charles II. Reproduced in Fac-Simile of the Original MS. belonging to Sir Thomas Edward Winnington, Bart. M.P. by the process of Photo-Lithography, by Vincent Brooks. With an Introduction by John Gough Nichols, Esq. F.S.A. Part I. There are two points in connection with this interesting volume to which the Council thinks it right to call the attention of the Members. In the first place, the Society is indebted for the use of the original MS. to Sir Thomas E. Winnington, Bart. M.P. it being one of the treasures of his valuable Library at Stanford Court. To the same Library the Society has been indebted on two previous occasions. From it was derived the very important Household Roll of Bishop Swinfield, so admirably edited by the Rev. John Webb ; and still more recently the Justification of Queen Elizabeth in relation to her treatment of Mary Queen of Scots, just pub- lished by Mr. Bruce. Such reiterated tokens of good-will towards the Society, on the part of Sir Thomas Winnington, will no doubt receive due and hearty recognition from the present Meeting. REPORT OF THE COUNCIL, 1866, The other point to which the Council desires to refer arises out of the nature of the work entitled “ History from Marble . 53 Thomas Dingley not only inserted in his work copies of Monumental Inscriptions, but also drawings of Monuments, Arms, Brasses, Antiquities, Churches, and Mansions. The expense of reproducing these drawings by any of the ordinary processes used for book-illustration would have been so great, that, although Sir Thomas placed the volume at the disposal of the Society, the Council feared that the Society would not be able to avail itself of his liberality. Neither lithography, wood-engraving, nor any other of the customary processes would have answered the purpose; but, it having been suggested that the book might be reproduced in fac-simile by photo- lithography, the Council communicated on the subject with Mr. Vincent Brooks, whose skill in such matters is universally acknowledged. Even- tually the volume has been placed in his hands for production in fac-simile; and, to make the publication in every way satisfactory, Mr. Nichols, who is already well acquainted with Dingley’s labours, has kindly undertaken to prefix such an introduction as may be necessary, and to superintend the production of the volume. The Camden Society is doing, it will be perceived, for Dingley’s Manuscript, what the Government has done for Domesday Book, and is doing for a series of Historical Documents, with this addition, that those publications are mere fac-similes of manuscripts, whilst Dingley is full of pictorial illustration interwoven with the text. The process employed is one which, when public attention has been thoroughly drawn to it, may work important changes in the mode of publishing manuscripts, especially where, as in Dingley’s case, there are drawings combined with literary or historical matter. It therefore especially deserves the attention of all antiquarian and publishing Societies. Dingley 3 s work, the Council trusts, will be doubly welcome to the Society, both from its own intrinsic curiosity, and from the novelty of the mode of production. By order of the Council, John Bruce, Director. William J. Thoms, Secretary. 24 th April , 1867. REPORT OF THE AUDITORS We, the Auditors appointed to audit the Accounts of the Camden Society, report ito the Society, that the Treasurer has exhibited to us an Account of the Receipts and Expenditure from the 15th of April 1866, to the 31st of March 1867 5 and that we lave examined the said accounts, with the vouchers relating thereto, and find the same to be correct and satisfactory. And we further report that the following is an Abstract of the Receipts and Expenditure during the period we have mentioned. Receipts. £ s . d. To Balance of last year’s account. . 178 11 7 Received on account of Members whose Subscriptions were in ar- rear at last Audit 138 0 0 The like onaccountof Subscriptions due on the 1st of May, 1866.. .. 267 0 0 The like on account of Subscriptions due on the 1st of May, 1867. .. . 11 0 0 One year’s dividend on ^1016 3 1 3 per Cent. Consols, standing in the names of the Trustees of the Society, deducting Income Tax. . 29 19 8 To Sale of the Publications of past years to Members of the Society 23 17 0 To Sale of Promptorium Parvulorum (3vols.ini) 17 19 0 To one Composition in lieu of Annual Subscription 10 0 0 £616 7 3 Expenditure. £ s. d . By one Subscription paid in error returned 1 0 0 Paid for printing 600 copies of No. 92, Alexander VII. and his Cardinals 46 16 0 Paid for printing 600 copies of No. 93, Mary Queen of Scots 45 19 0 Paid for Miscellaneous Printing 4 10 0 Paid for delivery and transmission of Books, with paper for wrappers, warehousing expenses, &c 27 12 0 Paid for Binding 500 Relations between England and Germany, 500 Register of Worcester Priory, and smaller numbers of former books 43 11 7 Paid for Insurance 110 Paid for Advertisements 7 1 6 Paid for Paper 15 4 0 Paid for Transcripts 13 6 4 Paid for postages, carriage of parcels, and other petty cash expenses 5 11 1 By Balance 464 14 9 £616 1 3 And we, the Auditors, further state, that the Treasurer has reported to us, that « over and above the present balance of £464 14s. 9 d. there are outstanding various sub- scriptions of Foreign Members, and of Members resident at a distance from London, which the Treasurer sees no reason to doubt will shortly be received. H en. Hill. William Douglas Hamilton. 23 rd April, 1867. LAWS OF THE CAMDEN SOCIETY. I. That the Society shall be entitled “The Camden Society, for the Publication of Early Historical and Literary Remains/ 5 II. That the objects of the Society shall be, First, the publication of inedited Manuscripts ; Second, the reprinting of Works of sufficient rarity and importance to make Reprints desirable ; and Third, the publication of Translations of Historical Works not previously rendered into English. III. That the Society shall consist of One Thousand Two Hundred Members, being Subscribers of One Pound annually ; such Subscription to be paid in advance, on or before the first day of May in every year. IV. That the management of the affairs of the Society shall be vested in a President and a Council consisting of fifteen Members, which President and Council shall be elected annually by the Society at large, at a General Meeting to be held on the 2nd day of May, being the Anniversary of Camden’s birth ; or on the Monday following, when the 2nd of May shall happen to fall upon a Sunday. Y. That the President and Council shall, from amongst their own body, elect a Director, who shall act as Chairman of the Council in the absence of the President, and also a Treasurer, and a Secretary. YI. That the Accompts of the Receipts and Expenditure of the Society shall be audited annually by three Auditors, to be elected at the General Meetings, and that the Report of the Auditors, with an Abstract of the Accompts, shall be published. VII. That the names of Members proposed to be elected as President, Council, and Auditors, shall be transmitted by the proposers to the Secre- tary, one fortnight before the General Meeting, and that notice of the persons so proposed shall be forwarded by the Secretary, one week before the General Meeting, to all the Members residing within the limits of the Twopenny Post, and to all other Members who shall, in writing, request to receive the same. VIII. That no Member shall be entitled to vote at any General Meeting whose Subscription is in arrear. IX. That in every year one-fifth in number of the Council of the year preceding shall be ineligible for re-election ; and that in case any Member of the Council shall not attend more than one-third of the number of Meetings of the Council, such measure shall be considered to be one of the retiring Members. X. That in the absence of the President and Director, the Council at their Meetings shall elect a Chairman, who shall have a casting vote in 8 LAWS OF THE CAMDEN SOCIETY. case of equality of numbers, and shall also retain his right to vote upon all questions submitted to the Council. XI. That the Funds of the Society shall be disbursed in payment of necessary expenses incident to the production of the Works of the Society, and that all other expenses shall be avoided as much as possible. XII. That, after the Members of the Society shall have reached One Thousand Two Hundred, vacancies in that number shall be filled up by the Council, from time to time as they occur. XIII. That every Member not in arrear of his Annual Subscription, shall be entitled to One Copy of every Work published by the Society during that year. XIV. That the Members shall be invited to contribute or recommend Works for publication. XV. That Editors of Works printed by the Society shall be entitled to Twenty-Five Copies of the Works they edit. XVI. That the Council shall determine what number of copies of each Work shall be printed, and that the copies over and above those required by the Members shall be sold in such manner, and at such prices, as shall be fixed by the Council, the proceeds being carried to the account of the Society. XVII. That the Publications of the Society shall all form separate and distinct Works, without any other connexion than that which must neces- sarily exist between the volumes of such Works as consist of several Volumes. XVIII. That any Member of the Society may at any time compound for his future Annual Subscriptions, by payment of £10 over and above his Subscription for the current year. XIX. That every Member of the Society who shall intimate to the Council his desire to withdraw from the same, or who shall not pay his Subscription for the current year within three Months after his Election, or after such Subscription shall have become due, shall thereupon cease to be a Member of the Society. XX. That the Council may appoint Local Secretaries in such places, and with such authorities as to them shall seem expedient ; every Local Secretary being a Member of the Society. XXI. That no alteration shall be made in these Laws, except at a General Meeting, nor then, unless One Month’s notice of any alteration intended to be proposed at such Meeting shall have been given in writing to the Secretary. 7 _ — — GETTY CENTER LIBRARY 3 3125 00639 2571