pers. name Translation Earlier editors loge/login (OS 1935). Loge could possibly be intended for Llanllugan - the site of an ancient Cistercian nunnery founded in 1239, but this would place it beyond the Severn. The town should be somewhere near
well have been somewhere on the site of the present Exmouth which, as the name of the town, is not ancient. The 1422 reference suggests that the rock was originally called Orcheston and came to be named after the vill
71, 38v).Bought from Sotheby's on 16 February 1875 by the British Museum, using the Bridgewater fund (£12,000 bequeathed in 1829 by Francis Henry Egerton, 8th Earl of Bridgewater (b. 1756, d. 1829). John Chrysostom Euthymius Greece, S. Greece, S. (Peloponnese)
(ff. 71, 38v).Bought from Sotheby's on 16 February 1875 by the British Museum, using the Bridgewater fund (£12,000 bequeathed in 1829 by Francis Henry Egerton, 8th Earl of Bridgewater (b. 1756, d. 1829). Basil Euthymius Greece, S. Greece, S. (Peloponnese)
(ff. 71, 38v).Bought from Sotheby's on 16 February 1875 by the British Museum, using the Bridgewater fund (£12,000 bequeathed in 1829 by Francis Henry Egerton, 8th Earl of Bridgewater (b. 1756, d. 1829). Saint Euthymius Greece, S. Greece, S. (Peloponnese)
the red preparation ground for the silver. Rubrics in silver showing its red ground. Service book, fragment A list of ancient Italian kings ending with Julius Caesar added by a 14th-century hand (f. 126).Marginal notes and ~maniculae~ added by 14th-
of Priam sending Paris to Greece. Contains the Historia destructionis Troiae of Guido delle Colonne (c. 1287), in a French translation.The rubric of the prologue states that the translation was commissioned by a 'maire' of Beauvais for Charles V of
fol.16. - Op. I sawe in the secrees of Aristotille (see the Latin in Ms. Cott. Jul. D.viii). 3 3. Ancient treatise on Cookery, similar to the "Forme of Cury", published by Dr Pegge. Fol. 23. Inc. La maner pur
of London, by William Boghurst, apothecary." A poem, composed in the year 1666; the original copy. ff.53-66. Beginning, "London, the ancient seat of British kinges." 8 8. "De casu Londini versus Septem." f.66. Incip "Nunc jacet in flammis Londinum, quod