Record: Lichfield County Staffordshire Transcript lichefeld Icon description spired church with cross, convent buildings Icons church with cross Description Appearances faded Etymology Letocetum, a Celtic name of a Roman town, meaning 'grey wood' + OE feld, 'field' Translation Earlier editors
Stafford could be the Sow although Stafford is shown on the wrong bank. The tributary from Lichfield to Birmingham could be the Tame although Lichfield would then be misplaced (Parsons). Early Maps Trent (Angliae Figura) Overwritten no Attested spelling Trent
an erased inscription in Latin characters (f. [i verso]).Samuel Butler (b. 1774, d. 1839), headmaster and bishop of Coventry and Lichfield: his sale catalogue, Payne & Foss, 1841, no. 550, purchased by the British Museum: inscribed (f. [180v]). Hybrids Germany
an erased inscription in Latin characters (f. [i verso]).Samuel Butler (b. 1774, d. 1839), headmaster and bishop of Coventry and Lichfield: his sale catalogue, Payne & Foss, 1841, no. 550, purchased by the British Museum: inscribed (f. [180v]). Initial word
an erased inscription in Latin characters (f. [i verso]).Samuel Butler (b. 1774, d. 1839), headmaster and bishop of Coventry and Lichfield: his sale catalogue, Payne & Foss, 1841, no. 550, purchased by the British Museum: inscribed (f. [180v]). Unfinished initial
Room. Large and small initials in plain red or blue. Laws of King Alfred Written by Laurence Nowell, dean of Lichfield (b. c. 1516, d. 1576), according to G. F. Warner whose note is kept with the manuscript and whose
Room. Large and small initials in plain red or blue. Laws of King Alfred Written by Laurence Nowell, dean of Lichfield (b. c. 1516, d. 1576), according to G. F. Warner whose note is kept with the manuscript and whose