ae 
Recent Wiltshire Books, Pamphlets, and Articles. 75 
—Mere, in churchyard—Minety (Pre-Norman sculptured fragments)— 
m Netherhampton, in churchyard—Netherhampton, wayside cross—Purton, 
i in churchyard—Ramsbury (Pre-Norman sculptured stones in Church)— 
Rodbourne-—Salisbury Market Cross—Salisbury, St. Martin’s, in church- 
a yard—Wayside cross on Pepper-Box Hill, five miles from Salisbury— 
ie Sedgehill, in churchyard — Sherston, base in vicarage garden— Shrewton 
—Steeple Ashton, in village — Stourhead, Bristol Cross—Stratford Tony, 
; wayside ‘‘Cooper’s Cross ’’—Tisbury, in churchyard—Trowbridge, re- 
i mains in Church porech—Wilton Market Cross—Wraxall, North, in 
a village. 
; Mr. Adye notes Blindhouses and Lock-ups as existing still at Amesbury, 
Box, Bradtord, Chippenham, Colerne, Downton, Heytesbury, Hilperton, 
Lacock, Luckington, Malmesbury, Maiden Bradley, Pewsey, Shrewton, 
Southwick, Steeple Ashton, Sutton Benger, and Trowbridge. 






















He also notes Stocks as still existing at Chilton (on a district road east 
of the mill at Laverton, now in Berks, but formerly in Wiltshire), Wootton 
Bassett (under the Town Hall), Melksham (at the Town Hall), Great 
Bedwyn (a tree still stands called the ‘‘ Stock Tree,’’ to which the stocks 
were formerly fastened), and West Knoyle (near the Church). 
Of Public Monuments Mr. Adye enumerates the Gore and Chitterne 
Robbery monuments—the stone coffin west of Beckhampton, on the road 
side—the three “ Shire Stones ” at Colerne, marking the junction of the 
three counties of Wilts, Gloucester, and Somerset—The inscription on 
St. John’s Hospital at Malmesbury—the obelisk at Warminster—the 
Lydeway monument to James Long—and the Maud Heath monuments 
and inscriptions at Kellaways Bridge; the Cliff, Chippenham ; and Wick 
Hill, Bremhill. 
Mr. Adye has done most useful work in this report, which does not 
pretend to give an exhaustive list. In the matter of crosses, of course, 
it might be considerably added to. 
_ Annals of the Seymours. By H. St. Maur. 10 x 63, 534 pp, 
Kegan Paul. £2 10s. net. 1902. 
“A portly family history, in which Mr. St. Maur traces the name to 
the ‘small, but very ancient’ French village of ‘ Saint-Maur-sur-Loire’ 
—so-called, as legend has it, from a ‘black hermit’ of seventh century 
fame. He follows the family to England and narrates their subsequent 
history from 1491 in a series of short biographies, fully illustrated by 
photographs from pictures and prints, genealogical tables, &c., with copious 
notes.” —Times Literary Supplement, July 4th, 1902. 
Stonehenge, The Architectural Discoveries of 1901 
- at, by Detmar J. Blow. Read before the Royal Institute of British 
Rechitects, Monday, 20th January, 1902. A paper in Journal of the 
Royal Institute of British Architects, vol. ix. 3rd series. No.6. 25th 
January, 1902, pp. 121—142. Illustrated with a plan (from the Times, 
9th April, 1901), a small ‘‘ General Plan,” and thirteen illustrations from 
photos of the operations, amongst the best that have appeared in any 

