The Archaeological Journal, Volume 8Longman, Rrown,(sic) Green, and Longman, 1851 - Archaeology |
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Page iv
... various Antiquarian Notices ) , by Frederic Dixon , p . 111. Descriptive Catalogue of Antiquities found in Excavations at the Royal Exchange , and preserved in the Museum of the Corporation of London , by William Tite , Esq . , F.R.S. ...
... various Antiquarian Notices ) , by Frederic Dixon , p . 111. Descriptive Catalogue of Antiquities found in Excavations at the Royal Exchange , and preserved in the Museum of the Corporation of London , by William Tite , Esq . , F.R.S. ...
Page 4
... various countries enables us , with the aid of philology , to trace out many unsuspected national affinities , while at the same time it gives us the means of comparing a number of unwritten creeds . In an uncivilised age men do not ...
... various countries enables us , with the aid of philology , to trace out many unsuspected national affinities , while at the same time it gives us the means of comparing a number of unwritten creeds . In an uncivilised age men do not ...
Page 6
... various stages of its development . The Mexican will present to us a system in which the Pictorial is predominant ; the Egyptian hiero- glyphics will enable us to trace the gradual extension of the Phonetic and Emblematic , the ...
... various stages of its development . The Mexican will present to us a system in which the Pictorial is predominant ; the Egyptian hiero- glyphics will enable us to trace the gradual extension of the Phonetic and Emblematic , the ...
Page 21
... various races have shown a greater or less degree of intellectual power ; it is from the study of the architectural problems so solved that we obtain a common measure of the mind of races perfectly distinct from any other standard . In ...
... various races have shown a greater or less degree of intellectual power ; it is from the study of the architectural problems so solved that we obtain a common measure of the mind of races perfectly distinct from any other standard . In ...
Page 24
... various objects which may form part of the great Exhibition of 1851. The task which England has undertaken for 1851 is an Exhibition of the Industry of all nations at the present day ; the object which Archaeology would achieve if ...
... various objects which may form part of the great Exhibition of 1851. The task which England has undertaken for 1851 is an Exhibition of the Industry of all nations at the present day ; the object which Archaeology would achieve if ...
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Common terms and phrases
Amenophis Amenophis III amongst ancient Anglie Anthony à Wood antiquaries antiquities appears Archæologia Archaeological archaeologists architectural barrows Bishop Bristol British British Museum bronze building Caerleon Castle celt century Chapel character Church collection College colour commenced curious deposited discovered ditch Duke Earl Edward effigies Egbury enamelled England engraved example excavations exhibited feet figure fragments given gold hauberk Henrie Townshend Henry House inches inscription Institute interesting John Journal king knights lego Lord Talbot meeting memoir mentioned ments metal monuments Museum notice numerous objects observed original ornaments Oxford period plate portion prænomen present preserved probably quod reign relics remains remarkable Richard ring Roman Rosellini sculptured seal Segontiaci sepulchral side Silchester silver singular Society specimen stone style supposed Swerford tion Totnes Totton Tower traces tumulus vestiges VIII Wadham College wall Walter Walter Map Winchester College
Popular passages
Page 262 - Speak thou, whose thoughts at humble peace repine, Shall Wolsey's wealth, with Wolsey's end, be thine? Or liv'st thou now, with safer pride content, The wisest justice on the banks of Trent? For, why did Wolsey, near the steeps of fate, On weak foundations raise th
Page 256 - Call you that desperate, which, by a line Of institution, from our ancestors Hath been derived down to us, and received In a succession for the noblest way Of breeding up our youth, in letters, arms, Fair mien, discourses, civil exercise, And all the blazon of a gentleman ? Where can he learn to vault, to ride, to fence, To move his body gracefuller, to speak His language purer, or to tune his mind Or manners more to the harmony of nature, Than in these nurseries of nobility?
Page 244 - Museum, shows painted in the upper part of the illuminated border of the first page the armorial shield of Thomas of Woodstock, Duke of Gloucester, the youngest son of Edward III.
Page 90 - T^HE ROMAN WALL: an Historical, Topographical, and Descriptive Account •*• of the Barrier of the Lower Isthmus, extending from the Tyne to the Solway, deduced from numerous personal surveys.
Page 361 - Inn Hall (which were upon the surrender replenished with the Presbyterian faction) for several years after. Further, also, having few or none in them, except their respective principals and families, the chambers in them were, to prevent ruin and injuries of weather, rented out to laiks. In a word there was scarce the face of an University left, all things being out of order and disturbed.
Page 138 - After by that phrase the district which the Roman geographers assigned to the Belgse proper — I should be little disposed to quarrel with the conclusion they have come to. Nor would I venture summarily to dismiss even the suggestion of Stukeley, that it was Divitiacus who here fixed the limits of the Belgic dominion, though I may smile at the etymological trifling by which he endeavours to support his hypothesis. This Divitiacus...
Page 202 - They brought me a draft of their drink in a brown bowl, tipt with silver, which I drank off, and at the bottom was a picture of the Virgin with the child in her arms, done in silver.
Page 133 - Belgae came as refugees to this country, and were first located in the Isle of Wight — driven, it may be, from their own country by some inundation of the sea, an accident which appears to have been the moving cause of several of those great migrations we read of in Roman history. It is clear from Caesar, that for some centuries before Christ, the...
Page 138 - Our English antiquaries assume, that the word Celtica, in this passage, was used with the same meaning as by Strabo and his contemporaries, or, in other words, that it signified Gaul, and they conclude that the island was Britain, and the round temple Stonehenge, or Avebury, or the llolrich circle, according to the particular hypothesis they are interested in supporting.
Page 108 - Choice Examples of Art Workmanship, selected from the Exhibition of Ancient and Mediaeval Art at the Society of Arts. Drawn and engraved under the superintendence of PHILIP DE LA MOTTE.