Magazine Articles, fyc. 



193 



Vita S. Etlieldredse Eliensis aus MS Cotton, Faustina B. iii., fol. 260 [c. 

 1420] (Dialect von Wiltshire) verse, forms pp. 282—307 of " Altenglische 

 Legenden," edited by C. Horstmann. Heilbronn. Gebr. Henninger. 1881. 



Kingston House. A paper on Kingston House, Bradford-on-Avon, and its 

 garden, by B. W. W., is reprinted from The Garden by the Devizes Gazette, 

 January 3rd, 1895. 



Salisbury Plaiu. A Eeport on the Present State of Agriculture in 

 the Salisbury Plain District, by E. H. Bew, Assistant Com- 

 missioner to the Eoyal Commission on Agriculture, is reprinted in 

 the Wilts County Mirror, January 18th — April 5th, 1895. 



Notes on Eomano-British Articles recently added to the Museum 

 of the Wilts Archaeological Society, by the Rev. E. H. Goddard. A 

 short paper of five pages in the Reliquary and Illustrated Archceologist, 

 for April, 1895, vol. i., No. 2, with sixteen illustrations, nearly all of which 

 have already appeared in the Wilts Arch. Mag. The letterpress is simply a 

 concise description of the objects illustrated. 



Stockton House. A description of the gardens, &c, which appeared in the 

 Gardener's Chronicle is reprinted in the Wilts County Mirror, March 1st, 

 1895. 



Corsham. A short sketch of the History of Corsham, by M. K. W., appeared 

 in the Devizes Gazette, March 7th, 1895. 



Prehistoric and Eoman Devizes. Letters by H. G. Barrey on this subject 

 appeared in the Devizes Gazette of November 29th, 1894, January 10th, 31st, 

 February 28th, March 21st, and April 4th, 1895, in which he argues that the 

 boundary -line between the parishes of St. Mary and St. John was really the 

 line of a defensible outwork of the castle, and part of it marked by a Belgic 

 ditch. 



"OurEude Forefathers" is the title of an interesting lecture on pre- 

 historic and Roman Wilts, by E. Doran Webb, F.S.A., at the Blackmore 

 Museum. Printed in Salisbury* Journal, February 9th, 1895. He regards 

 Stonehenge as owing its existence to the joint efforts of the Aryan and non- 

 Aryan races. 



Eeport on Experiments with Potatoes and Onions in Warminster 

 and District, 1894. Eyre & Spottiswoode. Price Is. 



The Origin of the Thynnes. A note on this subject by J. H. Round 

 appears in the April number of The Genealogist, vol. xi. He disputes 

 altogether the assumption of Mr. Botficld in " Stemmata Botvilliana " that 

 the "inne" from which the family took its name could have been their 



