TRANSACTIONS OF THE DEVONSHIRE ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE, LITERATURE, AND ART.
Adams family, 204.
Address of the President, 33. Akeland of Akeland, 200.
Alphred, Bishop of Crediton, 204. Apples and Cider, 324.
Arrow Head of Flint at Cock's Tor, 71; at Princetown, ib.
Ash, Simon, alias Fraxinus, 204. Ashley, or Astley, 204.
Ashwood, John, 205; Rev. Bartholo- mew, 298.
Atwell, Hugh, 205.
Audley, Lord James, 205.
Babbage, Charles, 210. Babington, Gervais, 212. Badcock, Samuel, 213. Barrows, or Tumuli, 127. Battle of Brunanburg, 278. Beer, formerly Shipcombe, 195. Bell of Bronze, and Fibula, 74. Boundaries of Seaton Parish, 194-5. Bronze Bell, and Fibula, 74. Brunanburg, Battle of, 278. Brushfield, Dr. T. N., M.D., The Bibliography of the Rev. George Oliver, D.D., of Exeter. Portrait, 266; confusion of names, ib.; Geo. Oliver, born at Popplewick, and his works, 269; Geo. Oliver, of Exeter, and his works, 270; his portrait, 276.
Bye-Laws and Standing Orders, 20. Catalogue of Mosses, 374. Chalk Drawings, 147, 150. Charms and Superstitions, 119. Cider, and the Devonshire Colic, 324. Climate, 187.
Crayon Pictures, 147.
Dart River, and its Admirers, 317. Dartmoor Trackways, 351. Davidson, J. B., M. A., F. S. A., Seaton before the Conquest. Map, 193; Latin Deed and Saxon Boun- daries, 194; English explanation, 195; Horton Priory and Sher- borne, 196; description in Domes- day Book, 197.
Deer Horn Implement and Figure, 73. Devonshire Men at the Inner Temple.
By W. K. Willcocks, M. A., 246. Domesday Book and Clovelly, 313. Downes, Rev. W., B.A., F.G.S., Geo- logical Notes upon the Honiton District. Plate, 240; Red Marl of black colour at Combe Raleigh- Gault-Greensand and Red Marl not conformable; ib.; Honiton Tunnel-Woodward and Ussher cited, 241; Rhætic beds-fluvia- tile, and not marine erosion, 242; Culm river gravels Cretaceous- Exe river gravels non-Cretaceous, 244; glacial ages, submergences, drift, and geological time, 245. Drawings in chalk, crayon, or pastel, 147, 150; in water colour, 146, 155, 175. Earthquakes. By E. Parfitt, 281. Escot, and its Paintings, 176. Firearms and the Longbow, 337. Fleet-Fleote-Flveta-æt Fleote= Seaton, 193-6. Flint Implements, 70. Folk Lore, 118.
Fosseway in Danmonium, 351.
Gamlen, W. H., Obituary Notice of, 64.
Gault Beds near Honiton, 240.
Geography of Ptolemy, 352.
Geology of the Honiton District. Rev. W. Downes. Plate 240.
Geology, Submarine. A. R. Hunt,292. Greensand at Lyme, 240. Hawker, Rev. Treasurer (the late), Changes in travelling on the road between Exeter and Plymouth during the last sixty years, 450; the Defiance, Herald, and Sub- scription coaches, ib.; rate of tra- velling, 452; prejudice against railroads, 453; the Bath mail without coachman or guard, 484; another like instance, ib.; death of Harbridge, 455; sonnet on steam, ib.; atmospheric railway, 456. Hepatica of Devon. E. Parfitt, 414. Honeyditches, 277.
Honiton Tunnel, 241.
Hunt, A. R., M. A., F. L. S., F.G.S., Notes on the Submarine Geology of the English Channel off the south coast of Devon, Part IV., 292; list of rocks dredged up, 293; arkose granitoid specimen, 294; notes by Professor Bonney, 295. Hutchinson, P. O., Honeyditches.
Map, 277; Battle of Brunanburg, and the Saxon Chronicle, 278; two separate batches of earls slain, 279; Roman villa, 280.
Insects and their migrations, 335. Jordan, W. R. Hall, The Migration
of Insects, 335; the Gamma Moth, and Painted Lady, 336. Jungermannia of Devon. E. Parfitt, 414.
Kitson, R., Obituary Notice of, 64. Lake, W. C., M. D., Sequel to Com- parative Meteorology of Torquay, Teignmouth, and Sidmouth, 286; comparisons of Stations, Castle College with Rocombe, 287; Ro- combe with Babbacombe, Bitton, and Woodway, 288; and Sid- mouth, 289; summary, ib.; Table of means of observations, 291. List of Members, 459. List, Classified, 470.
Long-bow and Firearms, 337. Marsh-Dunn, R. M., Obituary Notice of, 66.
Meteorological Observations, 186. Migration of Insects. W. R. H. Jordan, 335.
Moss on Dead Trees, 371.
Mosses of Devon. E. Parfitt, 367. Moths and Butterflies, 335. Nonconformity in the neighbourhood of Seaton, 298. Obituary Notices, 64.
Officers of the Association, 5.
Oliver, Dr., D.D., of Exeter, 266. Ormerod, G. Wareing, M.A., F.G.S.,
On the Substitution of Firearms for the Long-bow, 337; military stores at Chagford, 338; Appendix,
Paintings in oil, 134; in water colour, 146, 155, 175.
Parfitt, E., On Earthquakes in Devon- shire, Supplement, 281.
Parfitt, E., The Moss Flora of Devon, 367. Peat moss, 368; compressed peat for fuel, 369; peat for stables, ib.; peat as charcoal, 370; mosses, parasites on trees, 371; number of moss species in Devon 302 at the present time, and 34 varieties, and 73 of hepaticæ, 372. Discussion on tropical heat, 373. Catalogue, 374. Devon Hepatica-71 species in Devon, 414. Catalogue, 415. Peat Moss in Britain, 368. Pengelly, W., F. R.S., &c. Prince's Worthies of Devon, and the Dic- tionary of National Biography. Part I., 199. Ackland of Cullum John, 200; Adams, Alphred, Ash, Ashley, 204; Ashwood, Atwell, Audley, 205; Avery, Babbage, 210; Babington, 212; Badcock, and concluding observations, 213. Pengelly, W., Notes on Slips con- nected with Devonshire. Part VIII., 313; Clovelly, and Domes- day Book, ib.; Villanus, Villa, Villein, &c., 315; the Dart, the English Rhine, 317; Teign Bridge, 320; Woollacombe Sands, 323. Pengelly, W., Notes on Notices of the Geology and Palæontology of Devonshire, Part XII. The Cliffs from Hartland to Clovelly, 425; Antiquity of Man, 426; Brixham Cavern, 429; Oreston Caverns, 431; Mac Enery cross-questioned, 432; Brent Tor a Volcano, 434; Kent's Cavern, 437, 440; Neolithic period, 438; the Breccia Implements, 441; what broke up the Crystalline Sta- lagmite, 443; Breccia Fossils re- deposited in the Cave-earth, 445; the supposed Human Fibula of the Victoria Cave, 446; Stalagmite Chronometers, 447; limits of Geo- logical Time, 448. Pencil Drawings, 155. Places and Times of Meeting, 6. Plymouth, Siege accounts of. R. N. Worth, F.G.S., 215. Poictiers, Battle of, 207.
Poltimore Park, 159. President's Address, 33. Prince's Worthies, &c., Part I. By W. Pengelly, F. R. S., 199. Property of the Association, 30. Provincialisms, 77. Rainfall, &c., 187.
Raised Beach on Plymouth Hoe, 67. Red Marl and Cretaceous Beds near Honiton not conformable, 241. Report of the Council, 25. Report of the Treasurer, 29. Report, Tenth, on Scientific Memo- randa, 67.
Report, Eighth, on Verbal Provin- cialisms, 77.
Report, Eighth, on Devonshire Folk Lore, 118.
Report, Seventh, on Barrows, 127. Report, Sixth, on Works of Art, 132. Report, Fourth, 2nd Series, on Cli- mate, 187.
Rhætic Beds near Honiton, 242. Rivers of Danmonium, 355. Rules, 17.
Scientific Memoranda, 67.
Seaton before the Conquest, and Map. By J. B. Davidson, 193. Seaton, Early Nonconformity in the neighbourhood of. By E. Win- deatt, 298.
Siege Accounts of Plymouth. By R. N. Worth, 215.
Slips lapsus pennæ, 313.
Somerville, A., On the probable Vol- canic origin of the Breccias at the base of the Trias in South Devon, &c., 285.
Table showing Places and Times of Meeting, 6.
Teign Bridge, 320. Tokens, 69.
Torre Abbey, and its Pictures, 173. Trackways on Dartmoor, 351, 361. Travelling Sixty Years Ago, 450. Treasurer's Report, 29. Tunnel near Honiton, 241. Ugbrook Park, 133.
Water-colour Drawings, 146, 155, 175. Weymouth, R. F., M.A., D. Lit., Pre- sident. Presidential Address, 33; dialects, and sound of vowels, 34; sound of u, and his work on Early English Pronunciation, 35; the aspirate, 38; v for f, z for s, 39; force of letter r, 42; Mr. Elworthy and Dr. Murray, 45; old Norse dialect, 46; past tense in ed, 47; prefix ge, ye, y, i, and a, 48; change of end, ande, inde,
into ing, 49; her for she, thee for thou, 50; je and moi, French, 51; use of that, 53; sound of how, now, cow, 58; the use of tother, 61; changes in language, 62. Willcocks, W. K., M. A., Devonshire Men at the Inner Temple, 1547- 1660, 246. Apprenticii ad Legem, 246; Apprenticii ad Barros, 247; Inns of Court-Thavie's Inn, 248; Inns of Chancery, 250; "Called to the Bar," ib.; Book of the Admittances, 251; List of Benchers, 252; Machyn's Diary, 253. Willcocks, F., M.D., Notes on the Devonshire Colic, and its connection with Cider, 324. Lead poisoning, 325; apple growing not ancient, 326; not in Devon till the six- teenth century, ib.; cider anti- scorbutic, 327; writings of Dr. Musgrave, 328; of Dr. Huxham, 329; and Sir George Baker, 331; lead cider presses, 332. Wilson, Surgeon-Genl. John, Obitu- ary Notice of, 65.
Windeatt, E., Early Nonconformity in the Neighbourhood of Seaton, 298. Persecutions, 300; Mr. Ash- wood's writings, 301; Monmouth's rebellion, ib.; revolution of 1688, 306; the cause at Beer, 307; at Colyton, 308; at Honiton, 310; at Powderham, 311; old Noncon- formist register at Honiton, ib.; Mr. Ball and Mr. Walrond at Honiton, 312.
Worth, R. N., F.G.S., The Siege Accounts of Plymouth, 215. Money received for the safety of Plymouth, 216; private loans or subscriptions, 217; statement of expenditure, 219; payment of moneys, 220; Mount Batten fortified, 221; Maudlyn works strengthened, 225; Cornet Rolles captures five horses, 227; Capt. Ellingsworth redeemed out of Lydford prison, 232; indepen- dent accounts, 236; for clothing, 237 ammunition, 238. Worth, R. N., Notes on the Ancient
Recorded Topography of Devon, Map, 345. Site of Tamare, 346; Domesday Book, ib.; Totnes, a district, 350; trackways on Dart. moor, 351, 361; Fosseway, 352; geography of Ptolemy, ib.; of the chorographer of Ravenna, 356; Statio Deventia, 359; Peutingerian table, 362; Moridunum, 364.
Page 120, line 14, for "abou" read "about."
4, dele "buried in Harberton Church, 1641." 14, dele "Bableigh."
16, add "buried in Harberton Church, 1641." 25, for "Prutterton" read "Prutteston."
9, for "Brydemtton" read " Brydgemtton." 1, for "Lupton" read "Lucton."
34, for "Lupton" read "Lucton." 264, lines 1 and 2, for "Salerne" read "Saverie." 269, line 6, for "Bryde" read "Byrde.'
6 from bottom, after "end" insert “and."
5 from bottom, for "parallel of longitude" read "meridian." 8, for "msilead" read "mislead.'
3 from bottom, for "portion" read "position."
15, for "has" read "have.”
6 from bottom, for "other rivulets" read "others, rivulets." 5 from bottom & sequel, for "Blackstone" read "Blakistone." 21, for "1658" read "1653."
3, for "uncleus" read "nucleus."
THE ANNUAL MEETING IN 1886.
THE ANNUAL MEETING AT ST. MARY CHURCH
ON TUESDAY, JULY 27TH, 1886.
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