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Clerical biographies, xi. 69, 137
Clerical biographies and testamentary burials,
c. 1650-1850, iii. 297; 1854-1912, iii. 387
Clerical Directory, earliest, vi. 64, 157, 194, 237,

259

Clerical Index Society, ix. 510; xii. 238, 316 Clerk of the Crown in the northern Counties, vi. 189, 217

Clerke (Edmund), clerk of the Privy Seal, his history, v. 12, 83

Clerks of Assize, records of the, vi. 328

Clerks in Holy Orders as combatants, i. 77, 132,

253; ii. 36

Cleveland, Archdeacons of, complete list of, iii. 272, 344

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Clown of London,' periodical of 1845, iv. 12, 145

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'Club and Society," difference between,
Clubs: Amateur glee singers, Moray Minstrels,
viii. 371
i. 10, 54, 134, 214, 313, 376; Bean, 1660-1922, xii.
32, 74 (corrigendum 120); Black Balled
323;

Athenæum, xi. 135; Coloquhoun, x.
Cleveland (Mr.), The Life and Adventures of,'

xi. 350

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Clio." See Sansom (Mrs.)

Clitheroe and bribery, iii. 417, 510; iv. 23; payALL ments for killing hedgehogs and polecats, 140; Parliamentary election, 1675, letters on, 278 Clitheroe marriage registers, duplicate entries in, v. 198

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Clive (Kitty), actress, her husband, vii, 250, 297 Clock-house," earliest use and meaning, xi. 272, 335, 417

Clock-makers: John Bushman, xi. 30, 78; John Coates of London, ix. 510; D. Compigne, Winton, c. 1670, i. 47, 97, 117, 172, 296; John Frost of Chichester, ix. 489; Richard Gamwel or Camwel, viii. 230; Joseph Hemmins, xi. 173; William Kipling and Richard Motley of London x. 431, 478, 495; John Lacy of Portsmouth, ix. 510; Eardly Norton, xi. 47; Isaac Rogers, vii, 108; George Voyce, iv. 75; of Cirencester, vii. 58; of London, xi. 36, 247 Clock and watchmakers, v. 153, 237, 241, 305 Clocks: early reference to twenty-four hour clock, x. 106; grandfather, inscribed J.L. Bath, Bath, vi. 251, 298, 320; grandfather, date wanted, vii. 19; hands as described by Dickens, x. 468; "Parliament clocks," iii. 462; history and examples of, iv. 23, 61, 118, 144, 202, 243, 258; viii. 451, 493, 515; ix. 16, Clogs," meaning of the word, vii. 15 Clogs calkers, use of the word, vi. 295

Correspondence, ix. 320, 360; Cosmopolitan, 1874, i. 291, 435; Daubigny's, its history, c. 1789, ii. 28; Goldsmith, xi. 412; Hell-fire, of smugglers in Scotland, i. 466; Leander, viii. 212; London: bibliography, ix. 41, 89, 174; Lumber Troop, Fetter Lane, i. 469, 515; MidVictorian, x. 321, 417; Nobody's Friends, x. 417; Noviomagian Society, xi. 56, 135, 177; Oakendene Cricket, xi. 47, 117; Oyster and Parched Pea, ix. 189; Pillow (Pilar), ix. 169, 235; x. 175; Private Social, London meeting places of, c. 1775, xii. 230, 275, 295; Star, x. 491; Travellers', viii. 291; Membership longevity, viii. 410, 453

Clyburne (William) and Stucley, x. 266 Clynock (Morgan (?) Morris), Custos of the English Hospital at Rome, ix. 46

Coach, the first in Dublin, name of driver, iii. 448

Coach, the "Unanimity," of Manchester, xii. 110

Coaching and carrier's inns in 1732, London, viii. 61, 84, 102

Coaching: London-Salisbury flying coach in 1738, ix. 29

Coaker (Jonas), "The Dartmoor Poet," ix. 448, 496, 515

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Coal-balls, patent fuel used temp. Queen
Elizabeth, iii. 89

Coale-rents, meaning of term, x. 70, 113
Coalheavers' festival, xi. 233
Coals: Moira coals, Times
1815, i. 38, 96

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advertisement,

Coaís to Newcastle," early references to the phrase, ii. 250, 299

Coast defences, Tudor, ix. 352 "Coaster "=" bottle-slider," vii. 471, 516; viii. 37, 53, 96, 237

"Coat and conduct money," method of raising money, i. 189, 316, 431

Coates (John), clockmaker of London, ix. 510 Cobbett (Edward John), painter, b. 1815, d. 1899, iii. 301, 399, 431, 459

Cobbold (Rev. J. Spencer), his poem The Sensitive Plant,' xi. 249, 299 Cobbold family, viii. 211, 254 Cobden: a Bagman, with a Calico Millennium," particulars wanted, v. 291

Cobden (Richard), his statue in St. Pancras, iii. 508; iv. 32

Cocaes (Baron de), of Brazil, vii. 250

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Clopton (William) and Stratford-on-Avon, vii. Cochrane (Charles) as Juan de Vega," viii.

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Cockle (James), patentee of the anti-bilious pills, particulars of, v. 154, 190

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Cockney," as applied to Londoners, iii. 404 Cockney pronunciation, viii, 489; ix. 17, 54, 77 Coco-nut cup, viii. 330, 395, 436; ix. 15 Coddington (Rev. H.), d. 1845, his ancestry, vi. 41; 138

Coddington (William), his English dictionary, vii. 490

Coddington (William), of London, c. 1649, vi. 168, 200

Coddington family of Cheshire, vi. 188 Coffee-houses, London eighteenth century, vi, 29, 59, 84, 105, 125, 143, 162, 213, 258; vii. 27, 67, 97, 103, 145, 157, 185, 255, 464, 485; xii. 516 Coffee-houses, Taverns, and Inns in the eightenth century. See under London. "Coffer

as an architectural term, i. 193, 333 Coffin (Jonathan Pierrie), barrister, date of death wanted, ix 72

Coffin, effect of opening, i. 91, 113, 192, 295, 471;

ii. 275; ix. 530

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Cogan (Eliezer), Walthamstow schoolmaster, his history, v. 286

Cogan (Thomas), 1736-1818, physician and philosopher, vii. 83. "Coget

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course of the saying,

(? Coqet), x. 230, 318 Cogit amare iecure,' xii. 412 Coin, adventures of a, x. 2, 452, 493; xi. 38 Coinage, annals of the, vi. 36, 94; Bishop of Oxford's, ix. 33; French, and the Birmingham mint, xii. 76; "Imitations of the Regal Coinage," 1721-1798, xii. 163 "Coine," meaning of, vii. 91 Coins: ancient British, collected, v. 121; ancient Irish gold, v. 301; Charles II, vii. 71, 116; Coronation coin of Charles I, iv. 202; Crown piece of George III, anno regni lix," iv. 74; engraved, of the eighteenth century, ii. 529; farthings of Charles I, v. 195; halfguinea of George III, inscription, iv. 82, 109; miniatures and other coins hidden in, iii. 449; names engraved on, iii. 300; Rubbing down," ix. 388, 434; Sestertius of Vespasian, v. 301; sixpence of George II, inscription, iv. 109; Venetian, inscriptions on, c. 1450, i. 328 Col. du Géant, passage of, by Mrs. and Miss Campbell in 1822, ix. 446

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Colban (Earl of Fife), his mother and wife, vii.

490

Colby (Sir Thomas), his kinsmen, v. 180 Colby family, allusion in Ben Jonson's Epistle to a Friend,' iv. 103

Colchester, Suffolk contigents at Siege of, 1648, xi. 170

Colclough (John), duel with Mr. Alcock, 1808, viii. 384

Cold feet story, xi. 451, 493

Colds, germs brought to islanders, ii. 468; iii. 55, 118

Cole (Sir Henry) and the Albert memorial, viii. 149 "Cole " and cold" in place-names, xi. 404, 454, 497; xii. 56

Cole of Younge Hassel-charcoal from young hazel wood, vii. 91

Coleire (Rev. Richard) and Swift, vii. 353 Coleman (George), author of The Rodiad,' xi. 348, 397 Colenso (Bishop), Dr. Bateson's defence of, iii. 449, 484

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Colepeper (William), minor poet, x. 91 Coleridge (S. T.), Lyrical Ballads' reviewed by Southey, iv. 66; on Plato, a plank from the wreck of Paradise," 182; on Bully,' v. 69; immortality, 39; reference wanted, ix. 131; his portrait in Boston Museum, x. 148 Colet (Sir Henry), his civil offices, viii. 398, 438, Colla da Chrioch, A.D. 332, his biography, ii. 477

410

79

Collecting boxes, Christmas, clay balls as, v. 39, Collections of animals or birds, special names for, iii. 446

Collenbach (- -), his description in 1800 of Nelson and Lady Hamilton, iv. 129

Collet and Collett families, viii. 360, 398, 438 Colleton (John) of the Middle Temple, ix. 72 Colleton family of South Carolina, ix. 72 Collier (Jeremy), his Ecclesiastical History,' x. 28

Collier (William), M.P., 1713-15, theatrical manager, ii. 210

Collier family and Fielding, ii. 104 Collingwood (Alexander), information wanted of his wife's parentage, v. 320 Collingwood (Alexander) 1691, vi. 137

1

Dorothy Lawson,

Collingwood (Alexander), of Northumberland, 1556, his descendants, vi. 132 Collins (Arthur), compiler of the Peerage,' ii.

351

247, 339

Collins (M.), poet, and asylum at Islington, i.
Collins (Mr. and Mrs. G. D.), memorial at
Wisbech, v 146

Collins (Sir R. H.). d. 1908, xi. 331
Collins (William), his Epistle to Sir Thomas
Hanmer and Ode to Evening,' ix. 208; his
'Proposals for a History of the Revival of
Learning,' 210; his epitaph, 210
Colloquialisms of the 17th century, xii. 131,

176

"Colly my cow!" origin of the exclamation, i. 91, 172

Colman (George), Westminster scholar, his wife, x. 230, 258

Colman (George). his poem, 'A Newcastle Apothecary, x. 59

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Colquhoun Club, x. 323

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vi. 112

Colton (Witting), Westminster scholar, c. 1710, Conductor's baton, first appearance of, xi. 167, i. 14

Colton family, i. 14

Columbaria, vii. 269, 317

Columbia Market, Hackney, ix. 468

Columbus (Christopher) and the Chosen People, vii. 309

Columbus medallion designed by A. O. Ameis, iv. 16

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Colvil (Samuel), his The Whigg's Supplication, or the Scots Hudibras,' 1657, xii. 253. 419 Colville (John, 7th Lord), precise date of death wanted, v. 293

Comacchio, descriptions of the fisheries at, ii. 210, 257, 334

"Comaunde," military meaning of the word,

1786, ii. 89

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Combe House, Herefordshire, its position and owners, viii. 510; ix. 38, 94 Combe (William), and The Diaboliad,' iii. 48, Comber family of Chichester and of Shermanbury, ix. 217, 255, 296

99

Comeau (Rev. P.), appointed vicar of Baddesley Ensor by ballot, viii. 429

'Comic Aldrich,' Oxford skit, 1866, the illustrator of, ii. 228

Comic Natural History, x. 92 "Comlies"-blankets, viii. 231, 277, 318 Commandant," English, at Brussels, 1815-16,

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iii. 412

Commendam," use of the word, 1563, iii. 29 Commerce, a history of, Spain, France, and the British Isles in the Middle Ages, i. 50 Committee notice, renderings in Latin elegiacs, iv. 73, 167, 220

Committee of Ways and Means, institution of,

xi. 348, 455, 538

Common Garden Covent Garden, so called, c. 1686, ii. 89, 157, 217

Common law and dogs, xi. 44, 89
"Common or garden," origin of phrase, viii.
392, 459

Commons, the House of, custom of bowing to
the vacant chair, i. 328
Commonwealth marriages and burials in the
Aldeburgh Register Book, x. 81, 104, 124, 142,

175

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Congreves, forerunners of wooden matches, xii. Coningsby (R—s), of Salop, his identity, vi. 64, Conolly (Capt. Arthur), story of his martyrdom, Conjugal squabbles, verses on, ix. 53, 93, 136 Conquest (George) [rightly, John T.], his ii. 189, 235 Conquest (Dr. John Tricker or Trickey), version version of the Bible, c. 1850, iii. 478 of the Bible, iv. 27

Conscription in Bardsey Island, ii. 189, 277 Conserve of roses, recipes for, iv. 104, 171 Considine (Capt. Wm.), 69th regiment, memConstable (John), painter, his mother, vi. 132, orial at Chester, v. 261

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11, 30, 80

Consumption," meaning of, in 17th century, i. 489; ii. 35, 217

Contraband difficulties in the eighteenth century, ii. 281

Contractions, Latin, in parish accounts, 1627, i.

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468

Conty "-half-sovereign, viii. 50, 99 Conundrum, I sit on a rock, when I'm raising the wind, xii. 53

Compass, curious seventeenth-cenutry, viii. 309, Convex and conic lights, c. 1700, v. 125

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Conway (James), the policeman poet," x. 110

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"Cony bags "blanket sacks, viii. 231, 277, 318 Conybeare (William Daniel), Dean of Llandaff, X. 230 Cook (Ann), d. 1821, her biography, i. 30, 135 Cook (Captain), discoverer, his statue. in Sydney, v. 177; memorials to, viii. 132, 176, 198, 218, 297, 335, 472; his crew; coco-nut cup, 330, 395, 436

Cook ("Cicero") the learned 391

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scout," viii. Cook (Holofernes), at Cambridge University in 1586, x. 251

Cook (Captain James), his ship the Endeavour, xii. 403, 428, 512

Cook (Thomas Ivie), m. 1789, viii. 367
Cook (W.), water-colour artist, ix. 491, 534
Cooke (Charles), bookseller, his history, v. 210
Cooke (G. A.) and his country itineraries, viii.
393, 436, 456, 498; ix. 15

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Cooke (G. F.), tragedian, his mother, i. 110, 218 Cooke (Maj.-Gen. H. F.), Kangaroo Cooke," x. 94, 156

Cooke (John), Winchester scholar, ix. 421
Cooke family of Cranbrook, xii. 371
Cooke family of Ireland, vi. 170
Cookery words used in 1742, iii. 228

Cooper (Samuel), painter, an ancestor of Whistler (?), v. 70

Cooper (Samuel), miniature-painter, and John
Hoskins, ix. 1

Cooper (W. Cooper), Fellow of the Society of
Antiquaries, 1838, ii. 469; iii. 35
Coorg State :

strange tale of Princess Gouramma, v. 264, 296; vi. 26 Cope (Sir John), portrait of, viii. 487 Cope (William), died 1715, place of education wanted, v. 294

Copley (Arthur) at the Earl of Shrewsbury's funeral, 1560, ii. 268, 372

Copley (J. S.), his portrait of Mrs. Fort, i. 348,

418

Copley (Sir Joseph and Lady) of Sprotborough,

iii. 449, 487

Copley (Thomas), British settler in America, x.

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Corisande, "la belle Corisande," i. 40 Cork, freedom of the City of, 1820-1850, list wanted, vii. 88 Cork harbour, Prince Rupert's Fort, viii. 169; ix. 48

Cork, heart attacks warded off by, iii. 449 Corker (Abbot James (Maurus) ), his "Stafford House," 1703, xii. 512

Corker or Corcor, surname, viii. 449 Cormack (or Cormick), his school at Putney, vii, 331

Cormorants for fishing purposes on the Thames, vi. 40

"Corne Powder "Gunpowder made in grains, vii. 91

Cornelisz (Lucas), artist, his works, iii. 447
Cornelys (Mme.), portrait of, x. 208
Cornhill, fires during the eighteenth century,
Cornish acres in Domesday, vii. 392, 437, 471;
xii. 356, 395

ii. 461

Cornish biographers and bibliographers, v. 88 Cornish and Devonian priests executed, vi. 56,

171

Cornish Polytechnic, xi. 370, 415

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Cornish tin-miners: flashing the tin," ix. 469 Cornutus," meaning of the word, xii. 19 Cornwaleys family, early settlers in America, ix. 462

Cornwall (Duke of), the title: incident relating to, viii. 26

Cornwall, Borrow's notes for his proposed book on, v. 237

Cornwall, Roman milestones in, iv. 245, 341 Cornwallis (Caroline Frances), 1786-1858, and the series Small Books on Great Subjects,' iii. 169, 278, 339

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Cornwallis (Lady), described as grumpy,"

xii. 493

Coromandel screens, meaning of the term, iii.

383

Coronation mugs, earliest manufacture of, i. 370, 448, 476

Coronations and the Apocrypha, vii. 408, 477 Coroner of the City of London and treasuretrove, i. 483; ii. 51, 91, 157

Coronets used by foreign nobility, xii. 173
Corpe family, its history, iv. 302
Corporate seals, the custody of, ii. 148, 238
Corporations and Mayors, mock, of 18th and
19th centuries, xii, 150, 193, 236, 318
Corpse arrested for debt, instances, iv. 28, 109,

202

Corpse, the legal process of arresting a, iii. 444, 489

Corpse roads and funerals, iv. 260
Corpse visited by released soul, v. 205
Corpus Christi and Liège abbess, a legend, iii.

507

Corrall family, xii. 335

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Correi, meaning of the term, i. 409, 458 Correll," 1677, meaning of the word, ii. 488 Correspondence clubs, ix. 320, 360

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Correspondence Schools," the establishment of, vi. 251, 303

Correspondents, notices to, v. 28, 56, 84, 112, 140, 168, 196, 224, 252, 280, 308, 336 "Corri-fister or corry, use of the term in Lowland Scotch, vi. 251, 278

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Corry or corri-fister," use of the term in
Lowland Scotch, vi. 251, 278

Corsica British regiments in, viii, 10, 35, 59,
75--War-dogs, 392

6

Corsom, or Corson, author of Two Months in
the Conferedate States,' x. 79
Corwen. See Curwen.

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Courts of Record, list of, xii. 334, 396

Cousin (Gilbert), 1506-1572, Erasmus's secre-
tary, viii. 447

Cory (William), his verses, Minnermus in Cousins, marriage of, vi. 312; vii. 16
Church,' ix. 311, 339

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Costar family, vii. 70

Costume, identification of, xii. 291, 339, 399
Coteries, some mid-Victorian, x. 321, 417
Cotes (John), M.P. Lichfield, 1708-15, iii. 90, 176
Cotes of Cotes (Laetitia), second wife of Ian
Gideon Looten, x. 469

Cotes of Cotes: Looten monument in West-
minster Abbey, xi. 77

Cotes (I.), painter, vii. 8, 53, 174
Cotesmore (Thomas), priest, sixteenth century,
particulars wanted, v. 292, 334
"Cotte "workman's or peasant's overall, i.
429, 478; ii, 115
Cotter (Rev. George Sackville), d. 1831, x. 251,

296

Cotterill family, their connexion with the Continent, i. 229, 336

Cottingham (Lewis N.), his

museum of

medieval art, vii. 105
Cotton (Charles), his Compleat Gamester,'
1687, ii. 514

Cotton (Adm. Sir Charles), b. 1753, x. 371, 417
Cotton (Henry), Dean of Lismore, x. 371
Cotton (John), his sermon at Southampton in
1630, xi. 130 (corrigendum 260), 358
Cotton family of Warbleton, Hants, ix. 488;

x. 36

"Coul Goppagh "=Dr. Robert Gordon, ix. 408,

474

Coulon (Joseph), m. 1745, ix. 68

Coulson (Col. W. L. Blenkinsopp), memorial to,

at Newcastle-on-Tyne, v. 145 Count Eat Bath c. 1790, vi. 130 Countless Stones, Aylesford, wanted, v. 318

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bibliography

Counts of the Holy Roman Empire," viii.
148, 212, 273, 333
County feasts, ix. 29, 76

Court" in French place-names, ii. 249, 318,
339

Court Leet, 1922, appointments made at, xii. 51
Court, Peculiar, of Snaith, marriage licences,
i. 50

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Couvade," xi. 148, 218, 237, 279, 319

Covent Garden, Claude Duval not buried in
St. Paul's Church, iv. 15

Covent Garden called Common Garden, c. 1686,
ii. 89, 157, 217

Covent Garden market, early painting of, vii. 249; pictures of, viii. 348, 417

Covent Garden Theatre green-room in 1853, picture of, iii. 507

Coventry (British frigate), action with French frigate Bellone in 1782, vii. 47, 94, 117

Coventry churchwardens' accounts, 1561-1716, iii. 289, 366

Coventry Street, Leicester Square, Nos. 10, 11, 12, iii. 473

Coverlo, place close to Venetian territory, i.
328; ii. 33, 94

Covill (Edwin Dodd), memorial fountain at
Newcastle-on-Tyne, iv. 207

Covill, surname, viii. 132, 197

Cowan (Margaret Grant), d. 1789, viii. 266
Cowap surname, its etymology, v. 206, 247, 272
Cowley (Abraham), 1618-1667, poet, his portrait,
vii. 107; quotation from, 459; and Lord Falk-
land, ix. 305
Cowper (Judith), her poems, x. 95

Cowper (W.), translation of Greek epigram, iv.
130; his Sephus,' v. 258; his summer-house
at Olney, vi. 304; his letter to Joseph John-
son, xi. 403

Cowper, pronunciation of name, viii. 110, 179,

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Cox (David), b. 1686, his biography, xii. 132, 178
Coxe (Thomas), his travels in Switzerland, 1689-
1692, iii. 242

Covet' (Peter Julius) and Shakespeare, xi. 365;
Knight of the Garter, 413

Crabbe (Isabella), stated to be mother of
Vesalius, x. 349

Cradle Alley, Drury Lane, vii. 457
Cragg family, arms of, v. 130

Craggs and Nicholson families, their relation-
ship, iv. 220, 310; v. 21, 130

Cramahé (Hector Theophilus), supposed húsband of Margaret Hamilton, v. 289, 327 Cranmer (Bishop), place of his execution, vii. 90 Cranmer (Samuel) of London, burial recorded in Astwood parish register, xi. 510 Cranstoun (Hon. George), d. 1788, viii 266 Cranstoun (Capt. Wm. Hy.), vii. 251, 275, 478 in" Craspesiorum," derivation of word, vii. 430,

Court of Pie Poudre at Tenby, 1922, xi. 147 Court Rolls of Whippingham, Isle of Wight, iii. 385

Court of St. James, first use of term diplomacy, v. 265, 324

494

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