Sussex archaeological collections relating to the history and antiquities of the county (1849) (14785107363)

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Sussex archaeological collections relating to the history and antiquities of the county (1849) (14785107363)

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Dean William Prestwick, Warbleton Church, Sussex
Identifier: sussexarchaeolog02suss (find matches)
Title: Sussex archaeological collections relating to the history and antiquities of the county
Year: 1849 (1840s)
Authors: Sussex Archaeological Society. 1n
Subjects:
Publisher: Lewes, Eng. (etc.) Sussex Archaeological Society
Contributing Library: Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center
Digitizing Sponsor: Internet Archive



Text Appearing Before Image:
141 Tlie hunter, the final r being dropped. So Chaucer has bout, from the Ang.-Sax. bunta, for hunter, similar to Webbe, for Webber. W. S. W. 142 Probably the same as Slugwash, near Lindfield, of modern pronunciation.Ralph de Suggewerch is a witness to a charter in 1279, at f. 125 of the LewesChart. 143 At the barn. 144 Gor, Ang.-Sax., at the mud. Kensington Gore, Gorton, town of muck, inLancashire. 145 Shoemaker. 146 John de Ottehalle (Oathall) is a witness in 1281, in Lewes Chartulary, f. 125. 147 The origin of Haywards Heath ?. The surname of Egardethye appears in thehundred of Bercombe,in Rot. Hund. v. 2. p. 210. 148 A fowler, Ang.-Sax. fugelere (W. S. W.); feweler or purveyor of fuel, or firing. Power or fewerlere, or fyyr-maker—focarius vel focaria, focularius. Prompt.Parv. p. 174. (A. W.)—In Carlton R. MS. (E. B 2106), 27 Edw. I, a dealer in fuelappears with the inappropriate name of Robert Snoubal, on the same principlethat gives the name of Sally Snow to Jim Crows wife. /
Text Appearing After Image:
A.D. 1436. 14th Henry VI DEAN WILLIAM PRE ST WICK, WARBLE TON CHUECH, SUSSEX MONUMENTAL BRASSES OF SUSSEX. 307 ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE MONUMENTAL BRASSES OF SUSSEX. By Mr. MARK ANTONY LOWER. READ AT BRIGHTON, JULY 3, 1849. The county of Sussex is remarkable for the number andvariety of its sepulchral monuments. Beginning with theshapeless hillocks upon the fair summits of our Downs,beneath which, in their inverted urns, repose the ashes of themighty of an unrecorded era, and gradually descending to thebetter understood, though nameless, memorials of the con-querors of the world, we at length arrive at the period whensculptured stones indicate the narrow house of an illustriousGundrada and a princely Magnus, and when eternal brasspoints to the common lot from which even a De Braose, investedwith all the dignity of feudal power, or a Nelond, possessed ofa plenitude of ecclesiastical influence, could claim no exemption.All the various descriptions of our monumental remains deservea fuller i

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1849
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Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center
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