communicated by J. P. Matcotm, Esq. 
VU. Copy of a Roll of the Expenses 
of King Edward the. First at Rhuddlan 
vastle, in Wales, in the tenth and eleventh 
years of his reign, remaining among the 
Records tx the ‘Power ; communicated 
by Samurz.Lysons, Esq. F.R.S. Direc- 
tor, with a Translation by the Rev. Joun 
Branp, M, A, Secretary. 
_ Ix. Copy of a Libel against Archbishop 
Neville, temp. Rich. Lf. and of the 
Draft of an Indenture of Covenané for 
the erecting of a, Monument to King 
pene the Eighth, and his Queen, by 
eter Forrigiano,; communicated by 
WILLIAM ILLinGworty, Esq. F.A.S, to 
William Bray, Esq. Treasurer. 
_X.. Further, Remarks on an Ancient 
Coin of Atusa, by the Rev. Steruey, 
Westox, m another Letter to the Eark 
of Leicester, 
XL. Copies of fece curious, Writs. of 
Privy Seal, one of them in the time: of 
~ Queen, Mary, and the others of Qucen 
Hlizabeth; copamunicated by Craven 
“Opne, Esq. F.R.S V.P. from the Collec- 
ton, of the late Sir Walliam Musgrave, 
_ AIL. Inquiries, respecting the Origin 
of the Inhabitunts of the British. Islands, 
in three Letters from the Rev. SamuEy 
GreaTHEeD, F.S.A. to John Wilkinson, 
M.D. F.A.S, | 
XIil. An Lazentory of certain Articles 
dehvered out of the Armoryat the Tower ; 
contained in the Schedule to a Writ of 
' Priny Seal, Anno 83 Henry VI., pre- 
served among the Records in. the Tower; 
‘communicated by, Samurt Lysons, Esq. 
XIV. Some Account of Roman Anti- 
qutties discovered at Caerhun, in Carnar- 
vonshire, and in other parts of -thut 
County; also communicated by Mr. 
Lysoys. Caerhun appears to have becn 
the ancient Conovium; a station which 
occurs in the eleventh iter of Antonine’s 
Itinerary, and in the. first of that of 
Richard of Cirencester. Its site, SAVE 
Mr. Lysons, is nearly a square of 26Q 
feet, surrounded with.a shght vallum of 
earth, at the distance of somewhat more 
than §00 feet from the river Conwy, on 
the side next to which the ground is 
very. steep from the edge of the station, 
Within this ancient site stands the 
church of Caerhuz, but no_ dwelling. 
house, the village being at some dis 
tance. Having meationed the discovery 
of the ancient sepulchres, some years 
ago, with a shield and some fragments 
of pottery, Mr, Lysons proceeds to the 
656, Retrospect of Domestic Li 
pearance. The. commendation which 
terature—Antiquities. 
prosecution ef same farther discoveries 
m the latter end of July, 1801: between 
which time and the close of the year, a 
large suite of apartments were laid open.. 
Mr, Gritiths, the proprietor of the spot, 
who proposed aud. principally pursued 
the investigation, in a letter at the 
close of ‘his jabours, considered the 
suite “as actually a place set apart for. 
the manufacture of earthen ware.” Ex- 
cepting the fragments by whick this opi- 
nion was confirmed, the discovery of 
household instruments or utensils was. 
rare. “ My discoveries (says Mr. Grif- 
fiths in one of his letters) have. by no 
meéans been commensurate to. the ex- 
pectations I had formed of therm.” 
XV. Account of an Antique Persian 
Gem, by the Kev. StEPHEN WeEsToN, 
in a Letter to the President, exhibiting 
an engraved head of Shalumee, or Erene, 
the daughter of Chosru Parvees, the,vic- 
torious, twenty-first monarch of the race 
of Sassan, of the fourth dynasty. of 
Persia. ¢ ben 
XVI. Notices of seme Antiguities dis 
covered in Cornwall, in the year 1793, 
In a Letter from the Right Hon, R. Pe - 
Carew, F.R.S. and F.A.S. to Samuel 
Lyons, Esq. | 
XVII. Teo Extracts from a Manu- 
script Copy of Hardyng’s Chronicle, 
among the Harleian Manuscripts in the 
British Museum; by Henry Ex.is, 
Esq. F.A.S. in. a Letter to Nicholas 
Carlisle, Esq. Secretary. One of these 
little transcripts 1s stated to preserve the 
letter of defiance which the insurgent 
Lords sent to Henry the Fourth imme- 
diately before the battle of Shrewsbury. 
The other relates to the spurious Chro- 
nicie said to have been forged by John 
of Gaunt, in which Edmund Crouch, 
back was made the eldest son of Henry 
the ‘Third. Neither of which passages 
occur in the Chronicle printed by-Grat- 
ton in 1543. oon | 
_ XVII. Observations on the Situation, 
of Camulodunum, im a Letter from 
Tyomas Watrorpb,. Esq. F.A,S. to 
Samuel Lysons, Esq. tending to confirm 
the opinions of those antiquaries who 
have placed it at Colchester. 
XIX, Account of a Silver Fetradraem, 
with SiculerPume Characters, by ihe 
Rev. StepHEN Weston, supposed to-be 
a Com of Camarina. yr ae | 
Hitherto we have neticed but three 
volumes of the Antiquarian and Lopo- 
graphical Cubinet, of which the fourth, 
nfth, and sixth, have made their ap- 
ve 
