DEA 
killed by : omen arrow, Henry y the fecond beftowed on it 
everal m wo oaks weekly out of 
In the fuc 
n foun d prejudicial t 
ay ood. couiened in lteu of ra 
At ee time of the diffolution the annual revenues were va- 
Ined at r12/. 135. 3d. he abbey was granted to fir An- 
— Kington, abbot’s lodge was in tolerable pre- 
Me is late as t en a con viderable 
all cine ben 
and feven §* ftone coffin “lids, » probably 
dug up, fculptured with ornamental aoe 
is an in(cription to the memory of Mrs. Catherine Boevy, 
o die £726; tor whom a cenotaph, commemorative of 
her virtues, was erected in Weftminfter abbey. Rudge’s 
a oe of Gloucefterfhit ,2 2 vols. Svo. 
the 
retodltits ort y perambu- 
ffere nt oe its extent was limited. The 
quantity of lands ene to the crown, at prefent, ap- 
pears to be 23,015 acres che of other property, which 
It 
o full o od, 
s for travellers S iG through it, 
from the fhelter it forded to banditti. Formerly it afford- 
ed fuch excellent oak, and in fuch a by for the 
ntry, and 
G} lonceltecthive. 
sy the. peat grants ie erent fovereigns, the 
gicet of the fore eee si nudieos fellings, aoe 
ae ae elestiag and ing, to encourage the growth of 
yo mber; fuch dee ee taken place, and are 
fill anna that threaten its annihilation as to the pur- 
pofes of the navy. At prefent it nape the royal dock yards, 
oo with about 100c loads of timber. In its prefent 
fta management, the ie is Aivide Into . a 
and i government velted in a lord-w who is by 
tue of his office conftable of St. Wale eu 3 fix rae 
wardens; four verderors, who are chofen by the frecholders 3 : 
a chief forefter in fee; a 
gavelier; and a fteward of the {wainmote officers 
are empowe old a court of attachment every forty 
days, and another court called - jultice feat, e€ in three 
: 
years. s are held at the fpeech boa or king’s 
lodge, which is fituated near the ae of the forett. The 
whole peng extra-parochial, and the seer exempted 
from many taxes, with liberty of pafturage, and the privi- 
lege of tinking ae has induce perfons to tak 
The colliers not 
up their refidence her 
only claim a right to aq v 
the confent of the gaveller, to be fupplied wk timber for 
their refpective works. The fix iat Part of the oe 
fro om. each mi ne belongs to the crow noual c com 
ing in the foreft Soo deer; but 
are become fo fcarce, that the annual royal warrant, iffued 
DEA 
for ou bucks us four does, is frequently returned unex 
ecnit 'The general appearanc e of the foreft is beautiful 
and riaarel containing cite Sia pak ieee bs 
a Mea abounding in pace with fine cop and 
c The new roads lately made ‘- virtue oe alt ad, 
gra aie i in the 36th year of his prefent majeity, have great. 
ly facilitated the means of travelling through it. Accord-~ 
ing to the accoung of fir Robert Atkins, the forefk on 
but, according to the returns under the 
ment, the number ne ie within it was me and the po- 
. pulation amounte 
Dean River, or  euonk a8 in appa tect wei is, 
in fact, a fide branch of the Trent = (which here has 
two channels,) paffing clofe under the walls of Newark caf- 
tle; it is nav aes for about three niles, from the Trent 
river, to the town of Newark, has tw 
boats of 50 e tons can navigate it ; bee exports thereon 
corn, wool, Coddington paving-ftone, oe lias,) and plaf- 
ter-ftone or gypfum; the imports are coals, principa lly 
from the Derbythire pits at Codnor-Park, and Ikefton ; in 
3 and 
at ae at Brin eke Biasile, and Eaftwood : 
orkfhire, at Park-Gate and Br ord ; the latter for the 
black{miths’ inle : Crich and Birrow lime are alfo imported, 
with deals, iron, & k 
and furrounding country. 
0 
the paffage of the flood waters of this impetuous river. 
See Canau. 
ANE, Epmonp, in ae Heteg brother to the bifhop 
Salto 
of Offory, was born at nitall, in Yorkfhire, in 1572. 
At the age ai ni n he was nied at Merton college in 
xford, and having continued there, and at St Iban’s 
a 
. Sam. ood beds was efteemed half author of 
this book, there bei cing in it fome of his tracts 5 {c. Cathe. 
licon phyficorum, Me cei redivivus, &c. ean is {up 
poled to have was about a om the civil wars broke om 
but in what pa not kno ood’s Athenz Oxo 
DEAR 4 DERE, in Guar ae a river of European Tare 
key, in Bulgaria, which runs into the Mariza near Demo- 
ad 
teas 
Q 
w 
DEARNE and Dove Canat, is the parliamentary 
name of a navigable canal in laa between the 
river, a few miles below Rotherham, to the Barnfley cana al, 
and to Cob-car Jog ; it ferves for the export o coals and 
iron . the great run of coals along which it pafl:s. Sce 
‘DEARTICULATION, in natomy. See Drare 
THROSIS, 
DEA 
H, in Phyfelony. § v ed e ave Dr. Johnfon, * is 
the feparation of the fou he > However corre 
this definition may be cel in amo i or religious se 
f view, we cannot admit it as serseeuaa ly precife for the 
poles of the phyfician ad phyfiolegit. We fhould oa 
ofe to define it as **the irrecoverable ceffation of all the. 
funétions which belong to a living animal.”” By this expla- 
Y2 nation 
