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
at the beginning of the manuscript. Facsimiles in ink and often colours of manuscripts in Oxford, Cambridge, Dublin, Durham, Lichfield, Milan, Leyden, Utrecht, Stockholm, St. Gall, and Abbeville. Collection of 42 facsimiles of manuscript pages copied by J. O. Westwood
Mr Gastrell Jan. 11 1756 to Richd. Greene Apothecary Lichfield' (f. 33).Richard Greene in 1756 (b. 1716, d. 1793), antiquary and museum proprietor, of Lichfield: his book-plate (inside upper cover); inscribed 'Lichfield 9 October 1767 Sir/ I beg your acceptance
Mr Gastrell Jan. 11 1756 to Richd. Greene Apothecary Lichfield' (f. 33).Richard Greene in 1756 (b. 1716, d. 1793), antiquary and museum proprietor, of Lichfield: his book-plate (inside upper cover); inscribed 'Lichfield 9 October 1767 Sir/ I beg your acceptance
Mr Gastrell Jan. 11 1756 to Richd. Greene Apothecary Lichfield' (f. 33).Richard Greene in 1756 (b. 1716, d. 1793), antiquary and museum proprietor, of Lichfield: his book-plate (inside upper cover); inscribed 'Lichfield 9 October 1767 Sir/ I beg your acceptance
Mr Gastrell Jan. 11 1756 to Richd. Greene Apothecary Lichfield' (f. 33).Richard Greene in 1756 (b. 1716, d. 1793), antiquary and museum proprietor, of Lichfield: his book-plate (inside upper cover); inscribed 'Lichfield 9 October 1767 Sir/ I beg your acceptance
Lancashire 'Written probably at Lichfield' (McIntosh, Samuels and Benskin 1986, vol. 1, p. 150), Linguistic Atlas Grid Reference: not mapped, LP 21. Ff. 81r-84r - Scribal Dialect: South Nottinghamshire 'but written by a scribe of Lichfield' (McIntosh, Samuels and Benskin
Scribal Dialect: Scribe 1 - Staffordshire, Scribe 2 - Lichfield, Staffordshire. Linguistic Atlas Grid Reference: not mapped. A late fourteenth/early fifteenth-century copy of the Prick of Conscience . ff. 3r-114r Prick of Conscience (IMEV 1193 ) 'Here bygynneþ þe soþe
Holkham Hall, Library of the Earl of Leicester 668 s. xiv/xv English Latin Scribal Dialect: Scribe 1 - Lichfield; Scribe 2 - Lichfield; Scribe 3 - Staffordshire; Scribe 4 - too short to assess. Linguistic Atlas Grid Reference: not mapped
Arundel 57 s. xiv ex English Scribal Dialect: Lichfield, Staffordshire. Linguistic Atlas Grid Reference: not mapped (Benskin and McIntosh 1986, p. 239; Lewis and McIntosh 1982, p. 79). A late fourteenth-century copy of Cursor Mundi and the Prick of Conscience
manuscript is related to London, British Library, MS Harley 1205 and Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Eng. poet. a.1 and the Lichfield subgroup throughout (1982, pp. 115-116). Dennison, L., Orr, M. T., and Scott, K. L. ed, 2001. An Index of
All Saints (Wakefeld) : ecclesiastical parish Location: Le Peek (le Peek) : undefined Cannot identify Location: Wakefield, All Saints (YorkshireWestRiding) Place(s): Wakefield (Wakefeld) : township Location: York (Ebor') : diocese Location: Coventry (Coventren') : undefined Location: Lichfield (Lichefelden') : diocese
138. 142, 143. 147-150. Paper, XVIth cent., supposed (but apparently on insufficient grounds) by the late possessor, the Bishop of Lichfield, to have been transcribed by Sir John Harington. Small Quarto. Source Microfilm Collection British Literary Manuscripts from the British