486 



INDEX. 



Greece- Roman, alphabet inscribed on a pillar- 

 stone at Kilmalkedar, 133, 134. 



Gratianus Lucius. See Lynch. 



Graves, the hills, or mounds, at Oenach na 

 Cruachna [Rathcroghan], stated to have 

 been, 105. 



or giants' beds, 102. 



Greece, character of the oldest churches in, 191. 



Greek buildings, oldest doorways of, 167, 169- 



corrupted architecture of, 230. 



fire worshippers of, 70. 



Groat, use of, in Ireland, 220. 



Grose, preface to his Antiquities of England, 

 quoted, 126. 



Grouting, interior of walls of ancient Irish 

 churches, filled up with, and rubble, 162. 



Guaire Aidhne, king of Connaught, cathedral 

 church of Kilmacduagh, erected by, for St. 

 Colman, 175, 402. 



Guebre Towers in Persia, stated to have been 

 occasionally in part applied to sepulchral 

 purposes, 79, 80 ; Gheber tower and ceme- 

 tery, 81. 



Guebres, temples of, 14, 30, 31, 69. 



Gunn, Rev. M., his Essay on Gothic Architec- 

 ture quoted, 204. 



H. 



Hanway, his Travels into Persia referred to, 



30, 31. 



fire temples seen by, 71- 



Harold, King of Denmark, 211, 225. 



coins of, 226. 



Ki n g> sailor of, 256. 



Harris, Walter, a warm advocate for the theory 



that the Towers were erected for the use of 



anchorites, 109. 

 examination and refutation of his 



arguments in support of the theory that the 



Round Towers were erected for the use of 



anchorites, 109-115. 



Harris, Walter, his Plate of Armagh Cathedral 

 referred to and quoted, 158. 



erroneous statement of, 215. 



his edition of Ware's works, referred 



to, 228. 



his edition of Ware's Bishops. See 



Ware. 



his additions to Ware, quoted, 311. 



Hawk, of Kildare. See Kildare. 



Hay, ancient oratory and monastic habitation 

 thatched with, 127, 128. 



Hayes, Samuel, Esq., of Avondale, in the County 

 ofWicklow, 253. 



Heads, human, capitals decorated with sculp- 

 tures of, 237- 



Hector Boethius, his History of Scotland quoted, 

 353. 



Henry I., coins of, 226. 



Hercus, buried in the church of Cerne, in the 

 plain of Bregia, 141. 



Heremon, provinces possessed by the race of, 

 99-101. 



burial place of the kings of the race 



of, 99-101. 



Hermse, Grecian, 69. 



Hernicius, 165. See Ernicius. 



Herringbone masonry, examples of, 187, 413. 



Hibernicius, disciple of St. Patrick, 164, 165. 



High Island, ruins of ancient monastic estab- 

 lishment on, 127, 130, 131, 421, 424, 443. 

 See Ard-Oilean. 



Hindostan. See Bhaugulpore. 



Hingar, a Danish chief, standard of, 260. 



Hiona See lona. 



History of the Academy of Inscriptions and 

 Belles Lettres, quoted, 211. 



Hoare, Sir Richard Colt, his approbation of 

 Doctor Smith's theory, in his own words, 

 120. 



observations of, 407, 434. 



Hope, Mr., his Historical Essay on Architec- 

 ture quoted, 191. 



