356 
3. That the number of Honorary Members in each 
Section, natives of Great Britain and Ireland, shall not ex- 
ceed one-half of the total number in that Section. 
‘* 4, That the election of Honorary Members shall take 
place only at the Stated Meeting in November. 
«5. That none shall be eligible as Honorary Members 
unless previously recommended by the Council, and that the 
choice of the Council shall be determined by Ballot. 
«6. That the former By-laws of the Academy relating 
to Honorary Members be repealed, and the foregoing substi- 
tuted in their place. 
On the recommendation of Council, it was REsoLvep,— 
That the Committee of Antiquities be authorized to make a 
selection of specimens from the purchased articles in the Mu- 
seum of the Academy, to be presented to the Royal Museum 
of Copenhagen, by the hands of Mr. Worsaae; and that this 
donation be accompanied by drawings of other antiquities. 
The Rev. Charles Graves made a communication supple- 
mentary to his paper on the date of the Book of Armagh. 
On the margin of fol. 64, b., and opposite to that part of 
the text which contains the twenty-first verse of the thirteenth 
chapter of St. Mark’s Gospel, the proper name Cellach occurs, 
written in the peculiar Greek character of which examples 
have been already given.* As it was an ordinary thing for a 
scribe to make in the margin of a page a memorandum relat- 
ing to some circumstance which took place at the time he 
was writing it, there is reason to suppose that the name 
Cellach, written here, was intended to record some event in 
which a person of that name bore a principal part. Unfor- 
tunately, as the name was a very common one amongst Irish 
ecclesiastics, we cannot, with any certainty, fix upon the in- 
* Proceedings of the Academy, vol. iii. p. 318. 
