86 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Mayhem, or MiiibeiTi, its meaning, x. 208. 



Mayor of Misrule, ii. 132. 



Mayor of My lor, x. 263 



Mayoralty insignia, ii. 394. 



Mayors, their correct prefix, i. 380; ii, 303; iii. 92. 



Mayors and sheriffs, tlieir precedence, viii. 126. 605. 



Mayors of London, 1600—1605, xi. 2D7.. 271; are they 



privy councillors? iii. 496; iv. 9. 28. 137. 157. 180. 



236. 284; ix. 137. 158; natives of Suffolk, vi. 461; 



the last equestrian, xii. 363. 459. 501. 

 Maypole in the Strand, i. 142. 

 Mazarin (Duchess of), monument, ix. 249. 

 Mazer bowl, iv. 211. 



Mazer wood and gutta percha, iii. 239. 288. 467. 

 Meals, or malls, vii. 208. 298; ix. 409. 553. 

 Meath (Lady), lines in her Bible, vi. 124. 

 Mealh millers and St. Martin's day, v. 13. 

 Mece, a knife, ii. 276. 

 Mechal, its etymon, vii. 352. 

 Medallic queries, vi. 314. 459. 543; x. 444. 

 Medallists, their plagiarisms, vi. 529. 



Medals ; — 



Antoninus, emperor, vi. 336. 



bronze, v. 608; vi. 64. 135. 



Charles, grandson of James II., xi. 84. 



Chevalier de St. George, i. 58. 70. 103. 167; ix. 



105.311.479. 

 James I., Cajsar Caesarum, xj. 446. 

 Linnasan, ix. 374. 

 Mary Beatrice of Modena, vi. 487. 

 military service, xiL 287. 

 Palseologus (John), Emperor of Constantinople, vi. 



336. 

 Peace of Utrecht, ix. 399; x. 15. 94. 

 Satirical, ii. 298. 347; iii. 240; vii. 238. 

 Stukeley's (Dr.), i. 122; ii. 40. 78. 

 "William III. and Grandval, v. 75. 



Meddygon Myddvai, or surgeons of Myddvai, ii. 388. 



Mediajval, or middle ages, defined, v. 469 ; vii. 306. 



Mediaeval nomenclature, ii. 182; vi. 200. 



Medieval vessels, x. 206. 



Medical education, foreign, viii. 341. 398. 502. 



Medical license in America, xii. 202. 



Medical superstitions, x. 399. 



Medical symbols, i. 399. 



Medical terms, glossary of old, vi. 290. 348. 



Medicine, Eastern practice of, ix. 198. 



■Mediterranean, old chart of, xi. 502. 



Meekins (Dr. John), v. 440. 



Meetings, Eules for public, ix. 174; xii. 384. 412. 



Meg, a roaring, its origin, v. 105. 260. 



Meg: Long Meg of Westminster, ii. 131. 172; iii. 22; 

 V. 133. 259. 



Megatherium Americanum, vii. 590; viii. 19. 109. 



Meigham, a London printer, vii. 500. 



Melancthon (Philip), ejiigram by, i. 422; iL 111. 



Meleteticks, use of the word, ii. 327. 



Melton Mowbray church, effigy of a knigbt, vi. 497; 

 font inscription, vii. 408. 



Member of Parliament temp. Edward III., vii. 528. 



Members of Parliament, list previous ta tie Long Parlia- 

 ment, vL 388. 



Memnon (Prince),; his sister, viii. 622. 



" Memoires d'un Homme d'Etat," vi. 412. 588 ; vii. 



193. 

 Memoirs for the Ingenious, vi. 437. 

 " Memoirs (New) of Literature," its editor, v. 1 78. 

 Memoria Technica for the Books of the Bible, v. 414; 



for Shakspeare's plays, 464. 

 Memory, artificial, v. 227. 305. 355. 

 Men of eminence born in the same year,xi. 27. 72. 135. 



253. 372. 513; xii. 399. 

 " Menagiana," enigma from the, xii. 7. 118. 

 Mendelssohn (Felix), his Life, x. 89. 

 Mendicity, Anti, Societies, xii. 494. 

 Mendip, co. Somerset, map of, x. 103. 

 Mendham (James), jun., xi. 282. 

 Mennenius, " Delicife Equestrium," xii. 67. 

 Mennis (Sir John), Musarum Deliciae, i. 177. 210. 340; 



ii. 3; ix. 137; x. 101. 135. 333. 

 Mentmore, Bucks, notes from the i-egister, ii. 229. 

 Menzies (Geo.), his tomb-stone, vii. 330. 

 Meols. See Meals. 

 Mequinez, or Machaness, xi. 466. 

 " Mer des Histoires," i. 286. 325. 

 " Mercator," De Foe's connection with it, iv. 338. 

 Mercenary preacher, i. 384. 489; ii. 495. 

 Mercer's house at Newington, its painted glass, i. 197. 

 Merchant Adventurers to Spain, v. 276. 429. 499. 

 Merchingbye hermitage, x. 306. 

 Mercurialis (Dr. Hieron), v. 347. 

 M^re (Madame), her prophecy, x. 284. 514. 

 Mereworth Castle, Kent, ix. 124. 

 Merk lands and ures, vii. 618. 

 Merk, Scottish, the hangman's wages, xi. 13. 

 Merlin's prophecy of the electric telegraph, iv. 341. 

 Mermaid Tav«rn club, ix. 327. 

 Merrick (James), poet, iii. 60. 

 Merrilees (Meg), death of a descendant, xi. 299. 

 Merriman (John) bishop of Down, v. 584 ; vi. 20. 

 Merry Andrew, its early use, v. 128. 

 Merry Lwyd, or Merry Hewid, Christmas-eve custom, 



i. 173.315; vi. 410. 

 Merry-thought, or wish-bone, vi. 54. 

 " Merry Wakefield," origin of the proverb, iv. 369. 

 Menyweather's- Tempest Prognosticator, ix. 273. 

 Merton, negative given to the demand of the clergy at, 



vi. 17. 272. 

 Merton College postmaster, ix. 304. 

 Mesmer (Dr.) in England, vi. 147. 

 Mesmerism noticed by Apuleius, vi. 8. 

 Mess at feasts, explained, i. 153. 

 " Messager des Sciences Historiques," x. 187. 

 Messengers, the Queen's, I 186. 221. 445. 

 Metal, its meaning by Jeremy Taylor, xii. 451. 

 Metals, their transmutation, x. 8. 69. 

 Meteoric stone of the Thracian Chersonesus, vii, 105. 

 Meteorological notes on Greece, vi. 95. 

 Metheglin, a fermented liquor, iii. 276. 

 Methold family, vi. 360. 

 Methuen, Master of, i. 305. 

 Metlmsalem, anecdote of, vii. 134. 

 Methwen aims, iv. 424. 



Metrical Discourse at Cambridge, motto, iv. 406. 459. 

 Metrical Psalms and Hymns,. origin iii.£nglaad,^iii. 119. 



198; vii. 460,, 



