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Britton, John
The architectural antiquities of Great Britain: represented and illustrated in a series of views, elevations, plans, sections, and details, of ancient English edifices ; with historical and descriptive accounts of each (Band 5) — 1835

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https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.6914#0396
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INDEX.

ki

160, PI. No. 2.; its probable origin and history,
164; remains of Roman architecture, 162.
Duildwns Abbey, built, 116.

C

Cambridgeshire, Ely Cath. Tower, &c. 129; octagon
tower and lantern, 138 ; St. Mary's or Trinity Chap,
at Ely, 140; King's College Chap. 18.

Canons, distinction of regular and secular, 10.

Canterbury, foundation of the see of, 8 ; Cath. account
of its erection, 118.

Carter, John, his Ancient Architecture, 30 : inaccurate
respecting the dates of buildings, 57,108.

Cassiodnrus, passage from his works, 36.

Castle Rising Ch. its architecture, 175, PI. No. 14.

Castor Ch. Tower described, 175, PI. No. 15.

Cathedral, origin of the term, 9.

Celibacy of the Roman clergy, 11.

Cesariani (Cesar), on the German style, 82 note.

Chantries, their use, 19.

Chapels, Free, their nature, &c. 19.

Chaucer (G.), Clerk of the Works at St. George's
Chap. 149.

Chichester, foundation of the see, 9.

Christianity, its early progress in Britain, 160.

Christian Religion, its introduction into Britain, and
consequent effects, 3—23 ; revival of, after the settle-
ment of the Normans, 16.

Christians, their early places of worship, 90 ; their
churches at Tyre, &c. 91 ; on the probable deco-
rations of their places of assembly, 90, 91, N. ;
situation of their churches, 92 ; their sacred edifices,
built by Constantine, 93, N.

Churches, Cruciform, 106; Parish, institution of, 9;
liberal donations to, 11, 12; built of timber, 96;
one mentioned in Domesday Book, 97 ; on the con-
jecture that all early Saxon churches were timber, ib. ;
erected principally by ecclesiastics, 104 ; on the early
forms of, 105.

Circles of stones, noticed, 88.

Clarke (Charles), on the pointed arch, 70.

-(Dr. E. D.), his examples of pointed arches in

Greek buildings, 37.

Clergy of Britain, secular and regular, their increase
during the tenth and eleventh centuries, 16.

Clerici, latitude of the term, 10.

Commanderies. See Preceptorics.

Constantine, churches erected by him, at Rome, 93, N.

Convent. See Abbey or Priory.

Cresy (Edw.), on the Baptistery of Pisa, 39.

Crosses, called Queen Eleanor's, 137; list of, with re-
marks, Appendix, No. VI.

Croyland, monastery of, the various officers employed
in, 20 ; its erection, 103.

Crusades, effects attributed to, 17, 21.

D

Dallaway (Mr.), remarks on Norman and Saxon archi-
tecture, 33 ; on Italian edifices, termed ■' Gothic,"
42 ; his mistake about the progress of architecture in
England, in the fifteenth century, 150.

Danes, their ravages in Britain, 13.

Dickinson, (W. R.) adopts Warburton's theory of the
origin of pointed architecture, 51.

Door-ways, specimens of, described, 177, 212, Fls.
Nos. 17,18. 72. 78.

Dorchester Ch. windows in east end, 204, Pis. Nos. 61,
62, 63.

Druids, their tenets, 88.

Dunstaple Pr. Ch. built, 117.

Durham Cath. observations on its architecture by the
Society of Antiquaries, 55 ; arch from, PI. 82; re-
building of, in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries,
121; Carter's mistakes relative to, 108.

E

Edifices, ecclesiastical, of Great Britain, 2, 3; chrono-
logical list of, Appendix, No. II.

Edward III., architecture of his reign, 27.

Eleanor, Queen of Edward I., her monument, 135 ;
Dallaway's remarks on her statue, 136 note ; memo-
rial Crosses for, 135 —137.

Ely Pr. Ch. built in the fourteenth century, 138 ; Trinity
Chap, at, ib. 140; Tower and Lantern of the Cath.
built, 138; Arch, from Conven. Ch. PI. 81, 82.

Essex (James), on pointed architecture, 63; on his
works and his theory, 65.

Eiesham, Abbot's Tower at, 209, PI. No. 69.; St.
Lawrence Ch. at, ib. PI. No. 68.

Exeter Cath., erection of, 137.

F

Fonts, six, described, 281, PI. No. 26; list of, Appen-
dix, No. V.
Friaries, described, 19.

G

(iarbctt (W.), ascribes parts of Winchester Cath. to the
Saxons, 109.

Glastonbury, Ch. there supposed to have been of wicker-
work, 96.

Gothic Style, remarks on the term, date of its first
appearance in England, 27 ; ornamental and florid,
ib.; Rev. G. Millers and Dr. Sayers, relative to, 29;
opinion of the Italians on, 26 ; of the French and
English, 26, 27. See Pointed Style.

Gregory J. Pope, introduces the Gospel into Bri-
tain, 6; abuses of the Romish church attributable
to him, 7.

Gunn (Rev. Wm.), uses the term Romanesque, 30,
his references to specimens of the pointed arch,
in Egypt, &c. 37; on the date of the Baptistery
of Pisa, 39; his opinion controverted by Mr. E.
 
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