. Cathedral antiquities . epresent the local appropriation of the place, which is a kitchengarden belonging to the deanery.] Plate viii. View of the East End of the Church, which shows the greateastern window, the panelling beneath, the parapet, corbel table, &c. allsupposed to have been built by Silkstede, Hunton, and Courteney : thewindow with two mullions and tracery, belongs to Langtons chapel. Plate ix. South Transept, §c. [Here also the artist has very properlyomitted the local, but irrelevant objects of culinary plants and gardenwalls: he has also omitted a tall pan-tile roof, which obs


. Cathedral antiquities . epresent the local appropriation of the place, which is a kitchengarden belonging to the deanery.] Plate viii. View of the East End of the Church, which shows the greateastern window, the panelling beneath, the parapet, corbel table, &c. allsupposed to have been built by Silkstede, Hunton, and Courteney : thewindow with two mullions and tracery, belongs to Langtons chapel. Plate ix. South Transept, §c. [Here also the artist has very properlyomitted the local, but irrelevant objects of culinary plants and gardenwalls: he has also omitted a tall pan-tile roof, which obscures the fourbottom windows of the transept, and has represented the three arches, at thewest end of the chapter-house, as open.] This view displays the arcade onthe north side of the chapter-house: the whole face of the southern tran-sept, with the peculiar panelling of the gable: also a long extent of thesouth side of the nave, and its aile : the tower, part of the upper story ofthe presbytery, and its south CATMEBRAJL. ANTigmJITIES


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1810, booksubjectchurcharchitecture