The Fraternities of Sarum. 



137 



Advertisement of the expected return of the Comet of 1532 and 1661, in the 



year 1788, vol. lxxvi., p. 126. 

 Concerning the Latitude and Longitude of the Royal Observatory at Greenwich ; 



with remarks on a Memorial of the late M. Cassini de Thury, vol. lxxvii., 



p. 151. 



An attempt to explain a difficulty in the Theory of Vision, depending on the 



different Refrangibility of Light, vol. lxxix., p. 256. 

 Observations on the Comet of 1793, vol. Ixxxiii., p. 55. 



An account of an Appearance of Light, like a Star, seen in the dark part of the 



Moon, vol. lxxxiv., p. 435. 

 On a property of the tangent of three arches trisecting the circumference of a 



circle, vol. cxvii., p. 122. 



Clre Jfratctnitics of j$aram. 



By the late Rev. R. H. Cluttebbuck, F.S.A. 1 

 [Mead at the Salisbury Meeting of the Society, 1896.] 



U "WANT to ask your attention to the fact that we are met 

 pfj in a venerable city, which can show, perhaps, more com- 

 pletely than any other spot in the South of England what were the 

 most developed features of social and religious life throughout the 

 Middle Ages. And its records are so complete that there can 

 hardly be a. subject of enquiry for the antiquary to engage in for 

 which New Sarum would not supply authorities and illustrations. 

 I shall try and confine myself within the narrowest limits, and 

 trust to future opportunities of presenting more ample notes, which 

 may probably be more useful and less tedious, in a printed form. 

 You will observe I have chosen for the title of my paper " The 

 Fraternities of Salisbury," and I had better thus early define what I 

 intend to include in that definition. I mean by the Fraternities those 



1 The lamented death of the author soon after the reading of this paper — 

 whereby the cause of archaeology in Salisbury and on the Hampshire border has 

 suffered an irreparable loss— has deprived this paper of those " more ample notes " 

 which he had intended to give in illustration of it. It is here reprinted as it 

 stands in the columns of the Salisbury Journal, July 16th, 1896. — [Ed.] 



L 2 ' 



