330 



Index. 



Bees, folk-lore about, 181. 

 Bcllus Locus, former name of Beaulieu, 

 6-2. 



Boutley Wood, North, 113. 



Beteston Bogcr, tenure of, at Eye- 

 worth, 114. 



Bible, words in the, now provincialisms, 

 193. 



Birds, bones of, discovered amongst the 

 foundations of the Priory Church, 

 Christchurch, 14 (foot-note); see Or- 

 nithology. 



Bishop's Ditch, 79. 



Black Bar, large mound at, 210. 



Blackhcath ^leadow, Roman pottery at, 

 210. 



Boghanipton, village of, 127. 



Buldre, derivation of, 80; clmrch, 79. 



Books, at Beaulieu Abbey, just before 

 the dissolution, 65 (foot-note). 



Botany of the Forest, 2.50-257; contra- 

 dictions in the, 251; characterized by 

 its soil, 251, 252; bog-plants, 252; 

 carices abundant, 252 ; its position 

 under Watson's system, 253, 254; its 

 trees, 254; its St. John's Worts, 254, 

 255; its ferns, 255, 256; other plants, 

 256, 257. (^ee Appendix II., 289.) 



Bottom, meaning of the word, 187. 



Bowles, Caroline, married to Southey at 

 Boldre church, 80. 



Bouvery Farm, 69. 



Bramble Hill, oaks at, 16; view from, 

 111. 



Bramshaw, village of. 111. 



Bratley Wood, H3. 



Bratlev Plain, barrows upon, 113, 199- 

 205." 



Breaniore, village of, 119. 



Brinken Wood, 83. 



Brockcnhurst, derivation of, 75; tenure 

 at, 76; church, 77; scenery round, 78. 



Brook Beds, the, 245, 246. 



Brook C'ommon, 111. 



Buckholt, in Domesdai/, 51 (foot-note). 



Buckland Rings, Roman coins found at, 

 154; described, 199. 



Burgate, village of, 120. 



Burleigh, Lord, his advice to his son, 

 1,2." 



Burley, 82; Lodge, 83. 



Bustard, last seen in the Forest, 14 

 (foot-note). 



Butt's Ash Lane, barrows near, 197 

 (foot-note). 211 (foot-note). 



Butt's Plain, barrows on, 209. 



Buzzard, Honey, breeding habits of, 

 262-265; weight of the eggs of the, 

 264 (foot-note); common, breeding of 

 Ihe, 265, 266. 



C.vi)i;NiiAii Oak, tiie, 110. 



Cadland's Park, 50. 



Calshot Castle, built by Henry VIII., 

 52; mentioned by Colonelllammond, 

 52 (foot-note) ; the Cerdices-ora of the 

 Chronicle, 53; different forms of the 

 name, 53, 54. 



Cantcrton, held by Chenna, in Domes- 

 da;/, 28. 



Canute, Forest laws of, 35; Charta de 

 Foresta of, extracts from, 36 (foot- 

 note). 



Castle Hul, 118. 



Castles, so-called, in tlie Forest, 32. 



Catharine's, St., Hills, 126. 



Cattle, right of turning out, in the 

 Forest, 46. 



Cerdices-ford, now Charford, 54, 118, 



Cerdices-ora, probably Calshot, 52, 53. 



Chapel, chantry, of the Countess of 

 Salisbury, 137, 138; of Robert Harys, 

 143; of John Draper, 143. 



Charford, the Cerdices-ford of the 

 Chronicle, 118. 



Charles I., his attempt to revive the 

 Forest laws, 42 ; gives tlie New 

 Forest as security to his creditors, 

 42 ; embarks for Carisbrook from 

 Leap, 56; seized by Colonel Cobbit, 

 152 ; imprisoned in Hurst Castle, 

 153, 154 ; liow treated by Colonel 

 Hannnond, 153 (foot-note) ; by Colo- 

 nel Cobbit, 154. 



Charles II. bestows the young woods 

 of Brockcnhurst to the maids of 

 honour, 43 ; encloses three hundred 

 acres for oaks, 44. 



Charnwood Forest, the birds of, 275. 



Chestnuts, formerly common in the 

 Forest, 13 (foot-note). 



Chewton Glen", 147, 148. 



Chichester, Reginald Pecock, Bishop 

 of, on the legend concerning the man 

 in the moon, 177. 



Chough, its increasing scarcity, 275. 



Christchurch, 129 ; its Old-English 

 names, 131; ^thclwald at, 131; in 

 Domesdaij, 131 ; the castle of, 131, 

 132; Norman House at, 132; Cham- 

 berlains' Books of, 135 (foot-note); 

 Priory Chin-ch of, 135,141-144; the 

 conventual buildings of, 138, 139; 

 legend of the Priory Church of, 175. 



Chronicle. The, on the afforestation of 

 the New Forest, 25, 26; the great 

 value of its evidence, 23. 



Church, its date should be told by its 

 style, 123. 



Churches in the Forest mentioned by 

 Doniesdai/, still in part standing, 31. 



