236 



XOTES AND QUEKIES. 



[No. 201. 



ji.-sicMSiOj.oGXCA.jM •won:s.s 



JOHN YOXGE AKERMATs^ 



TELLOW AND SECRKTARY OF THE 

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AN ARCH^OLOGICAL 



INDEX to Remains of Antiauity of the Celtic, 

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A NUMISMATIC MANUAL. 



1 vol. 8vo., price One Guinea. 



««* The Plates which illustrate this Vo- 

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 the types of Greek, Roman, and English Coins, 

 than can be obtained by many hours' careful, 

 reading. Instead of a fac-simile Engra\-ing 

 being given of that whicli is already an enigma 

 to the tyro, the most strilting and characteristic 

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 themselves, so that the eye soon becomes fa- 

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A DESCRIPTIVE CATA- 

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AN INTRODUCTION TO 



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CoNTE.vTs : — Section 1. Origin of Coinage 



Greek Regal Coins. 2. Greek Civic Coins. 3. 

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A GLOSSARY OF PROA^IN- 



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TO ALL WHO HAVE FARMS OR 

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THE GARDENERS' CHRO- 

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 of 



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Gunnersbury Park 



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in, by Mr. Lovell 



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growing of, with- 

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after vetches 



Lois Weedon cul- 

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QOME ACCOUNT of DOMES- 



O TIC ARCHITECTURE in ENGLAND, 

 from the Conquest to the end of the I hirteenta 

 Century, with numerous Illustrations of Ex- 

 isting Remains from Original Drawings. By 

 T.HUDSON TURNER. 



" What Horace Walpole attempted, and what 

 Sir Charles Lock Eastlake has done for oil- 

 painting _ elucidated its history and traced its 

 progress in England by mtans of the records 

 of expenses and mandates of the successive 

 Sovereigns of the realm — Mr. Hudson Turner 

 has now achieved (or Domestic Architecture ia 

 this country during the twelfth and thirteenth 

 centuries." _ Architect. 



" The writer of the present volume ranks 

 among the most intelligent of the craft, and 

 a careful perusal of its contents will convince 

 the reader of the enormous amount of labour 

 bestowed on its minutest details, as well as the 

 discriminating judgment presiding over the 

 general arrangement."— JfocHinff Chronicle. 



" The book of which the title is given above 

 is one of the very few attempts that have beetl 

 made in this country to treat this intcrestinK 

 subject in anything more than a superfici^ 

 manner. 



"Mr. Turner exhibits much learning and 

 researck, and he has consequently laid before 

 the reader much interesting information. It 

 is a book that was wanted, and that affords us 

 some relief from the mass of works on Eccle- 

 siastical Architecture with which of late years 

 we have been deluged. 



" Tlie work is well illustrated throughout 

 with wood-engravings of the more interesting 

 remains, and will prove a valuable addition to 

 the antiquary's library." — Literary Gazette. 



" It is as a text-l:ook on the social comforts 

 a'ld condition of the Squires and Gentry of 

 England during the twelfth and thirteenth cen- 

 turies, that the leading value of Mr. Turner's 

 present publication will be found to consist. 



" Turner's handsomely-printed volume is 

 profusely illustrated with careful woodcuts of 

 all Important existing remains, made from 

 drawings by Mr. Blore and BIr. 'Twopeny." — 

 A thenceum. 



JOHN HENRY PARKER, Oxford ; and 

 377. Strand, London. 



Now ready, price 21s. uniform with the above, 



rpHE DOMESTIC ARCHI- 



l TECTURE OF THE MIDDLE AGE3. 



Vol.11 THEFOURTEENTHCENTURY. 



By the Editor of " The Glossary of Architec- 

 ture." 



This volume is issued on the plan adopted by 

 the late Mr. Hudson Turner in the previous 

 volume ! viz., collecting matter relating to 

 Domestic buildings of the Period, from cotem- 

 porary records, and applying the informatioa 

 so acquired to the existing remains. 



Not only does the volume contain much 

 curious information both as to the buildings 

 and manners and customs of the time, but it is 

 also hoped that the large collection of careful 

 Engravings of the finest examples will prove as 

 serviceable to the profession and their em- 

 ployers in building mansions, as the Glossary 

 was found to be in building churches. 



The Text is interspersed throughout with 

 numerous woodcuts. 



JOHN HENRY PARKER, Oxford ; and 

 377. Strand, London. 



WH. HART, RECORD 

 • AGENT and LEGAL ANTIQUA- 

 RIAN (who is in the possession of Indices to 

 many of the early Public Kecords whereby his 

 Inquiries are greatly facilitated) begs to inform 

 Autliors and Gentlemen eneaged in Antiqua- 

 rian or Literary Pursuits, that he is prepared 

 to undertake searches among the Public Re- 

 cords, MSS. in the British Museum, Aneisnt 

 Wills, or other Depositories of a similar Na- 

 ture, in any Branch of Literature, History, 

 ■Topography, Genealogy, or the like, and va. 

 wliich he has had considerable experience. 

 1. ALBERT TERRACE, NEW CROSS. 

 HATCHAM, SURREY. 



Pnnted by Thomas Ci.abk Shaw, of No. 10. Stonefield Street, in the Parish of St. Mary, Islington, at No. 5. New Street Square, in the Parish of 

 SSl-^'^^f ' '" ^^^ ^''y °'' London : and published by Geokoe Bei.i,. of No. 186. Fleet Street, in the Parish of St. Dunstan iu the West, iu the 

 atyot London, Publisher, at No. 186. Fleet Street aforesaid.— Saturday, September 3. 1S53. 



