Page:Archaeological Journal, Volume 3.djvu/430

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
400
INDEX.

Gait, Sir R., house of, at Hampton Gay, Oxon,88

*Galla Hill, Carlisle, seal found at, 76

Gallerus, inscription in oratory of, 174, 175

Galway, New, Ireland, Abbey at, 55

Gayton, Northamptonshire, effigy of a female at, 238

Gerbod, avoué of St. Bertin, 17, 18—brother of Gundrada, 16—married to Matilda, afterwards Queen of England, 20

Germany.—Berncastel, 362; Brauenfels, 27; Helmstadt, 33; Mayence, 131; Trèves, 365

———— torques found in, 27, 31

German, St., bishop of Isle of Man, founded a Church there, A.D. 447, 51

——— Cathedral of, in Peel Castle, described, 50

Gibson's history of the monastery at Tynemouth, diocese of Durham, reviewed, 366—373

Giéz in Touraine, the matrix of an English seal found there, 74

Glass, stained, 128, 363

Glendalough, Monastery, not older than the twelfth century, 179

Gloucestershire.—Cobberley, 239; Gloucester, 201, 308; Leckhampton, 352; Tenbury, 239

Gloucester, statue of Edward II. at, 201

Godalming, Surrey, brass of John Barker at, 83

*Godshill, Isle of Wight, decorated bell-cot at, 212

*Gorgets, Celtic ornaments fonnd in Ireland, 35-37—in Cornwall, 37—and in France, 37

Gothic Architecture, Manuals of, reviewed, 392. See Architecture.

Gough, Mr., cromlech described by, 41

Granavilla, R. de, brought from Palestine an eminent architect, named Lalys, 277

Grant to the Minorite Friery at Reading, 141

Guildford, Surrey, Angel Inn, crypt under, 83

*Guildhall, London, statues from porch of, 204

*Gundrada, inscription to, at Lewes, 81

———— not a daughter of William I., 3

Gunn, Rev. J., on Icenia: notices of Roman remains, and evidences of occupation, discovered in Norfolk, 246—251

Gunner, Rev. W. H., notices of the Priory of Southwick, in the county of Southampton, 214—222

H.

Haccombe Church, Devonshire, notice of a Decorated Pavement in, by Lord A. Compton, 151—154

————— brass of Sir Nicholas Carew in, 153, and little effigy at, 237

————— patterns of the tiles in, 152

*Halton Moor, torc found at, 28

Hampton-Gay, Oxon, named after Sir R. Gait, 88

Hants.—Ashley, 207, 299; Corhampton, 206; Crawley, 301; Godshill, (Isle of Wight), 212; Headborn-Worthy, 289; Hursley, 361; King's Sombourne, 207; Littleton, 207; Mitcheldever, 160; Otterbourne, 302; Penton-Mewsey, 210; Portchester, 56, 214—218; Porlsmouth, 218; Southampton, 229—233; Southwick, 214—222; Winchester, 60, 78, 139, 160, 310, 341; Winklersbury, 69; Wyke, 83, 84

Hartshorne, Rev. C. H., anomalies observable in the earlier styles of English Architecture, 285—297

—————— on the Castle and Parliaments of Northampton, 309—330

Hastings, Sussex, battle of, 13

Hawisia de Wygornia, copy of a grant by, 344

*Hawkswell, Yorkshire, cross in Churchyard of, 259

Helmstadt, Brunswick, torc found at, 33

Herefordshire.—Hereford, 138, 197, 238

*Hereford Cathedral, chalice and paten in, 138

———————— sculptured head from, 197

———— duplicate effigy of Peter, bishop of, 238

Hertfordshire—Anstey, 239; Ayot, St. Lawrence, 239; Mimms, (North), 139; St. Alban's, 85, 369; Waltham, 200

Hexham Church, Northumberland, crypt under, probably constructed by St. Wilfred, remarks on by Mr. Fairless, 163

———————— *incised slab in, 164

*Higham Ferrers, Northamptonshire, the churchyard cross, 97—tiles, 99—font, 100—and effigy at, 139

Hollingbury, Sussex, torc found at, 27

Holyhead, Wales, a cromlech near, 43

*Horsted Keynes, Essex, effigy at, 234

*House of St. Finam Cam, Kerry, Ireland, 173

*Howden, Yorkshire, bell-turret at, 384

*Hoylake, Cheshire, bead found at, 354

Huntingdonshire.—Sawtry, 312

I.

*Idbury, Oxon, bell-cot with pinnacle at, 209

Incised slab, ornamented, at Hexham, Northumberland, 164

*Inscriptions on stones at Neath, South Wales, 275—in the Roman Catacombs, 280—at Lewes, Sussex, 18—at Tynemonth, Northumberland, 367—and at Trèves, 365

*Inscription on a chalice formerly belonging to Rheims Cathedral, 134

Ireland, Ecclesiastical Architecture of, comprising the uses of the round towers there, by G. Petrie, reviewed, 166—183

———— round towers, not pagan, but Christian structures, 166—and used for belfries and for castles, 169

Ireland, 166.—Boyne, 156; Carrickmacross, 48; Castlereagh, 37; Clonmacnoise, 170; Clonmel, 165; Connemarra 28, 178: Cormac, 180, 182; Cuffborough, 155—157; Dublin, 35; Farney, 93—97; Finahoe, 182; Glendalougn, 177, 179; Kerry, 166—183; Lough na Glack, 46—48; Monaghan, 45, 96; Monalty, 48; Muinutir Eolais,45; Reyhole, 36; St. Cronan, 177; Timahoe, 179, 182; Trimleston, (Meath), 31; Tullyhaw, (Cavan), 45; Tyrone, 37

Isle of Man.—49-58.

Italy.—Aiguebelle, 238; Pisa, 196; Rome, 174—195, 278, 284

Jones, H. L., on the Cromlechs extant in the Isle of Anglesey, 39—44

K.

Kempsey, Worcestershire, spear-head at, 354

Kent.—Brabourne, 83; Canterbury, 202, 254; Darent, 388; Luddesdon, 76; Rochester, 77, 196; Sandwich, 374; Stone, 199

Kerry, Ireland, remains of stone fortresses in, 173

*Kilmalkedar, Ireland, stone pillar at, 175

*King's Somborne, Hampshire, a wooden bell-cot with one side of Norman stone-work at, 207

Kingston-on-Soar, Notts, vases found near, 159

Kingswear, Devon, extraordinary grave at, 264, 265

Kirk Manghold, Isle of Man, 49

Kistvaens, British, found under Pytchley Church, Northamptonshire, 105—113

————— stone coffins, 107, medieval, 108

————— of Saxon times, 109—but unnoticed by Norman masons, 110

————— fragments of British and Roman pottery found near, 113