Mar. 1. 1851.] 



NOTES AND QUERIES. 



169 



Bishop Hooper's Godly Confession, Sj-c. — Being 

 engaged in editing Bishop Hooper's works, and 

 finding myself impeded by want of the original 

 edition of his Godly Confession and Protestation of 

 the Christian Faith, printed at London by John 

 Day, 1550, I am induced to seek your assistance, 

 and to ask whether you can inform me where a 

 copy of the above work may be found ? 



(The Rev.) Charles Nevinson. 



Browne's Hospital, Stamford. 



Extradition, Ignore, Diamagnetism. — In pur- 

 suance of my note to you regarding the definition 

 of words in science and literature which may have 

 sprung up of late years, will you allow me to 

 quote, as instances in the latter department, the 

 two words " extradition " and " ignore ? " 



1. Is the followinsi a correct definition of " ex- 

 tradition," viz., " the surrender by a state, of a 

 political refugee, at the request of a foreign 

 power? " 



2. Is the etymology of the word made up of 

 "extra" and " ditio " put for " deditio," a giving 

 up or surrendering ? 



Does "ignore" mean to "treat as non-existent;" 

 and are there no other words in the language 

 which express exactly the meaning conveyed by 

 tliese two ? 



In science, I would ask, is " diamagnetism " 

 correctly explained by terming it " the property 

 of any substance whereby it turns itself, when 

 freely suspended, at right angles to the magnetic 

 meridian." P. S. 



Cinquante Lettres d'' Exhortation. — Can any of 

 your readers inform me who is the author of the 

 following work ? — 



" Cinquante lettres d'exlioitation et de consolation 

 sur les soiifTrancus de ces derniers terns, et siir quelques 

 aiitres siijets ; ec-rites a diverses personnes par Mons. 

 D. V. 13. pendant ses exils et ses prisons, en F"rance ; 

 et (lepuis que par ordre du lloi, il s'est retire en 

 Hollande. La Haye. 1704, 8vo." 



The copy which I have seen is lettered on the 

 back " Beringke-Letcres ; " but I can find no 

 account of any person of that name at all likely 

 to have written tlie letters, nor any authority ibr 

 ascribing their authorship to a person of that 

 name. TrBo. 



Dublin. 



Old Tract on the Eucharist. — Can any of your 

 readers tell nie the name of the author of the 

 following tract ? — 



" A J-'iill View of the Doctrines and Practices of 

 the Ancient Church, relating to tlje Eucharist, Lond, 

 1688." 



Wishing to procure a copy, I have asked geve.- 

 ral booksellers, hut without success It has been 

 most strongly rccomnieudecl by a wj-itur of tlie 

 present day. AsmtA. 



jacpTtCiS. 



cardinal's monument. 



(Vol. iii., p. lOG.) 



Your correspondent and querist, J. D. A., asks 

 for some information respecting the coat of arms, 

 surmounted by a cai'dinal's hat, sculptured and 

 affixed to one of the pillars of the south transept 

 in St. Saviour's Church, Southwark. I send in 

 reply an extract from a now scarce book, Arthur 

 Tiler's History and Antiquities of St Saviour s, 

 1765, with which all the later historians of the 

 church agree : — 



"Anno 1400. 2 Hen. IV. 



" The whole church was new built about this time ; 

 Henry Beaufjrt (second son of John of Gaunt, Duke 

 of Lancaster, son of Edward III.), Cardinal of St. 

 Eusehius, and Bishop of Winchester from the year 

 1405 to the time of his death in 1447, might have con- 

 tributed towards the building, being a man of great 

 wealth, for which he was called the rich Cardinal, as 

 the arms of the Beuuforts are carved in stune on a pillar 

 in the south cross aisle; and hij the remaining sculpture on 

 each side it appears to be done for stringx penrlant from a 

 Cardinal's hat placed over them. The arms are quar- 

 terly France and England, a border compone argent 

 and azure." 



AYhen the transepts were rebuilt, some years 

 since, the cardinal's hat, which till that time was 

 nearly defaced, was then restored, and the coat of 

 arms newly emblazoned. A\'. B. 



19. Winchester Place, St. Saviour's, Southwark. 



[G. A. S. and James H. Smith have forwarded 

 similar replies.] 



With reference to the Query of J. D. A. (p. 106. 

 ante), it would appear that the cardinal's hat, 

 but with a difference in the number of rows of 

 lassels, is sometimes seen on the monuments of 

 men who never were raised to that dignity. 



In the Cathedral of St. Canice, Kilkenny, are 

 two monuments placed there during the rule of 

 the Confederate Catholics, viz., that of James 

 Cleere, " Protonotarius et Rector ecclesiae D. Jo- 

 annis Dioecesis oporiensis," who died a. d. 1643, 

 ISIov. 14 ; and David liothe, intrusive Roman Ca- 

 tholic Bishop of Ossery, who died some years 

 after — on both of which the arms of the individual 

 are surmounted by a cardinal's hat. It is q\iite 

 certain that neither of these ecclesiastics had a 

 right to this distinction as cardinals. For the 

 rightof Bishops and Prothonotaries to wear hats or 

 caps of the same shape as the cardinals, with their 

 colours and peculiarities, see Glossary of Heraldry 

 (Oxford), under "Cap-Cardinals." Any further 

 examples will oblige J. Ckaves. 



Kilkenny, Feb. 10. 1851. 



The Cardinal's hat, with armp beneath, on a pillar 

 near the j)oet (lower's monument, in St. Saviour's, 

 Southwark, refers <lirectly to the beneficence of 

 that busy cardiuiU and ver_y remijrkable man, 



