Sussex Archaeological Collections Relating to the History and Antiquities of the County, Volume 9Sussex Archaeological Society, 1857 - Archaeology |
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Page vii
... Building Interior of Building . Bell . Dudeney Chapel Rottingdean Church , Carved Bracket Lower side of Bracket Newhaven Church , East Window of Tower Inside of Belfry · Tumulus at Pulborough , Barrow and Foundation of Wall Sword Flint ...
... Building Interior of Building . Bell . Dudeney Chapel Rottingdean Church , Carved Bracket Lower side of Bracket Newhaven Church , East Window of Tower Inside of Belfry · Tumulus at Pulborough , Barrow and Foundation of Wall Sword Flint ...
Page ix
... buildings and works of art have been carefully examined and described ; the genealogy of many county families , which was heretofore obscure , has been elucidated ; manners , cus- toms , and personal biography , have been investigated ...
... buildings and works of art have been carefully examined and described ; the genealogy of many county families , which was heretofore obscure , has been elucidated ; manners , cus- toms , and personal biography , have been investigated ...
Page 29
... buildings were soon converted into an ordinary dwelling - house . Sir William Fitzwilliam , to whom the grant of the site was made , and to whom , as lord of the manor of Cowdrey , only 1 lb. of cumin , worth 3d . , had hitherto been ...
... buildings were soon converted into an ordinary dwelling - house . Sir William Fitzwilliam , to whom the grant of the site was made , and to whom , as lord of the manor of Cowdrey , only 1 lb. of cumin , worth 3d . , had hitherto been ...
Page 30
... Building.35 filled the empty seats at her feasts with some of her own private friends . It was perhaps reserved for Queen Elizabeth to be the first to preside here at a princely banquet , and to fill the refectory with her goodly ...
... Building.35 filled the empty seats at her feasts with some of her own private friends . It was perhaps reserved for Queen Elizabeth to be the first to preside here at a princely banquet , and to fill the refectory with her goodly ...
Page 31
... Building.37 faith as the nuns , received Queen Elizabeth as his guest in their former refectory , during her visit to Cowdray . " On Tewsday her Majestie went to dinner at the priory , where my lorde himselfe kept house , and there was ...
... Building.37 faith as the nuns , received Queen Elizabeth as his guest in their former refectory , during her visit to Cowdray . " On Tewsday her Majestie went to dinner at the priory , where my lorde himselfe kept house , and there was ...
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Common terms and phrases
abbey acres aforesaid ancient appears arms Arundel bapt belonging Bishop of Chichester Bodiam Bodiam Castle brass Brighton brother Buxted called canons Castle chancel chapel church Coll Cuckfield Dalyngruge daughter deed died Earl East Grinstead East Mascalls Echingham Edward Edward II eldest Elizabeth feast gent grant Gules Hastings heir held Hellingly Henry Horsham inches Kent Kidder King King's knight landes 20 landes John landes Richard landes Sessors landes Thomas landes William Lewes Lewknor Lindfield London Lord manor Maresfield Margaret married Mary Master Mayfield messuage Midhurst Newhaven Nicholas Noyes nuns parish possession present prioress priory probably Pulborough Ralph rector Richard Kidder Robert Roger Rusper Sadelescombe Samuel Jeake says seal Sir John Sir William sister Southover stone Sussex Sussex Arch Templars Temple Thos tion tithes tower vicar viijd visitation wall Walter wife William Newton window worth
Popular passages
Page 187 - Profundis, after the Salisbury use, and pray especially for his soul, and for the souls of his father and mother, and for all Christian souls.
Page 361 - ... fine house in it, was yet ambitious to entertain the king (Edward VI.) For that purpose he new painted his gates, with a coat of arms and this motto over them, in large golden letters, OIA VANITAS. Sir Anthony offering to read it, desired to know of the gentleman what he meant by OIA, who told him it stood for omnia.
Page 175 - ... and if any one presume to attempt this, let him know that he will incur the indignation of Almighty God, and of his blessed apostles Peter and Paul. Given at Rome in Saint Peter's on the twenty-fourth of February in the second year of our pontificate.
Page 285 - DAY set on Norham's castled steep. And Tweed's fair river, broad and deep. And Cheviot's mountains lone : The battled towers, the donjon keep, The loop-hole grates where captives weep. The flanking walls that round it sweep, In yellow lustre shone.
Page 24 - Commission, exercised on the 26th day of the month of July, in the year of the Lord, at the ninth hour before noon.
Page 6 - Martyr, in the 86th year of the reign of King Edward the Third from the conquest of England.
Page 197 - One day a visitor to the school of observing some deep-coloured stains upon the oaken floor, inquired the cause. He was told that they were occasioned by the leakage of a butt of Madeira, which the master of the grammar school, who had grown lusty, not having had for some time any...
Page 192 - Left off school at 2 o'clock, having heard the spellers and readers a lesson apiece, to attend the cricket match of the gamesters of Mayfield against those of Lindfield and Chailey.
Page 7 - At one nunnery we find the nuns complaining that their house is £20 in debt " and this principally owing to the costly expenses of the prioress, because she frequently rides abroad and pretends that she does so on the common business of the house although it is not so, with a train of attendants much too large and tarries too long abroad and she feasts sumptuously, both when abroad and at home and she is very choice in her dress, so that the fur ,, trimmings of her mantle are worth...
Page 29 - Houses do rather choose to rove abroad in apostacy, than to conform themselves to the observation of good religion ; so that without such small Houses be utterly suppressed, and the religious persons therein committed to great and honourable Monasteries of religion in this realm where they may be compelled to live religiously, for reformation of their lives, the same else be no redress nor reformation in that behalf.