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An Essay towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk
… that of Solmess, and I find a legacy to the making of the steeple in 1503. Reg. Coll. de Metingham, fol. 24. …
An Essay towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk
… pile, covered with reed, over the porch hangs a bell, the steeple being down. On the left hand near the entrance into …
An Essay towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk
… passant, in pale, or,and those of Calthorp. In 1677, the steeple fell down, and defaced part of the church; 2 bells …
The Environs of London
… Within the memory of man they were thrown from the church steeple to be scrambled for, a custom which prevailed also …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… books at 21. 13. 1.; net income, 653. The church and steeple are widely detached, probably in consequence of the … by an act passed in the 8th of George I., to that of Steeple, and valued in the king's books at 11. 0. 10: the …
An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset
… c. 1500; 2nd by R. Wells, Aldborne, 1784, (removed to Steeple (1)). Gallery: at W. end of nave, with oak panelled …
Survey of London
… and a bridge over the sewer to Upper Ground is marked on Morden and Lea's map of 1682 on the site of Boddy's Bridge, …
Old and New London
… army in the battle of Naseby. The lower storey of the steeple is formed by eight projecting Ionic columns, bearing …
Old and New London
… the only London church that could then boast of a leaden steeple, except St. Dunstan in the East." Richard Glover, the …
A Survey of London
… de Arcubus, of the stone Arches or Bowes on the top of the Steeple, or bell Tower thereof, which arching was as well on the old steeple, as on the new, for no other part of the church … 332, ll. 204. before Aprill collected.] But concerning the steeple litle was done, through whose default God knoweth: it …
Displaying 3111 - 3120 of 3236