| Wales - 1821 - 492 pages
...remainder consisted >pf religious tracts, one on heraldry, historical notices, and poems. Most 9*' the latter are still to be found in other collections...CHRONICLE. The STATUTE OF WESTMINSTER. An ESSAY on the WELSH TRIADS, by Mr. VAUGHAN, of Hengwrt (the Antiquarian). An ESSAY on BLATOS,— ie on a coin... | |
| BLACK AND ARMSTRONG - 1838 - 478 pages
...as related by the Strieker, and which Benecke has printed in his " Beytr'dge\" from a manuscript of the latter end of the thirteenth or the beginning of the fourteenth century, is the first of the series in point of age ; and certainly the most interesting to us as Englishmen,... | |
| 1838 - 524 pages
...this subject was a translation of a Greek treatise, supposed to have been written by Nicephorus in the latter end of the thirteenth or the beginning of the fourteenth century, in which the writer maintains that ' although a bishop was unjustly deprived, neither he nor the church... | |
| Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1839 - 524 pages
...this subject was a translation of a Greek treatise, supposed to have been written by Nicephorus in the latter end of the thirteenth or the beginning of the fourteenth century, in which the writer maintains that ' although a bishop was unjustly deprived, neither he nor the church... | |
| Saturday magazine - 1840 - 1078 pages
...hour; he w» bora 1265, and died in 1311, » iW striking clocks could not have beenverj uncommon at the latter end of the thirteenth, or the beginning of the fourteenth century. The clock of Basle, 157 Cobbett, William. Bom 1762; died 1SW. His self-education, unconquerable perseverance,... | |
| William Dansey - Rural deans - 1844 - 472 pages
...beginning of the twelfth century, yet, it feems probable, it was never generally fettled in England, till the latter end of the thirteenth, or the beginning of the fourteenth." " At leaft thus much is evident, that whereas neither the name nor the office of the suffragan bt'sftops... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - 1845 - 618 pages
...it was the place of his birth. Therefore the existence of the house is carried back by them to the end of the thirteenth or the beginning of the fourteenth century, at which period the ancestors of Richard II. first resided at Aquitaine, then in possession of the English,... | |
| John Inett - 1855 - 402 pages
...beginning of the twelfth century, yet it seems probable it was never generally settled in England till the latter end of the thirteenth or the beginning of the fourteenth. At least thus much is evident, that, whereas neither the name nor the office of the suffragan bishops... | |
| Architecture - 1865 - 276 pages
...the base of the square towers that terminate the composition, and they are magnificent specimens of the latter end of the thirteenth or the beginning of the fourteenth century. The entrance under the northern tower is remarkable for the representation of the zodiac, that is sculptured... | |
| Cheshire (England) - 1885 - 784 pages
...stone rubble; but which on further examination proved to be some splendid bosses belonging perhaps to the latter end of the thirteenth or the beginning of the fourteenth century. These had been cleaned for the purposes of inspection, and as they would be left in the open air but... | |
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