. Bulletin of the Essex Institute. Essex Institute; Natural history; genealogy. Fig. 62. Fig. 63. spaces between the tiles were thickly plastered though greatly out of repair, as gleams of light were coming through various chinks. Fig. 62 shows the appearance of this tile from within the roof, while the appearance from without is shown in fig. 63. This sketch is taken from the castle wall tower which is supposed to be nearly 400. Fig. 64. years old. The ridge is seen covered with ordinary semi- cylindrical tiles, while a single course of tiles next to the ridge shows the roof-tile used in the


. Bulletin of the Essex Institute. Essex Institute; Natural history; genealogy. Fig. 62. Fig. 63. spaces between the tiles were thickly plastered though greatly out of repair, as gleams of light were coming through various chinks. Fig. 62 shows the appearance of this tile from within the roof, while the appearance from without is shown in fig. 63. This sketch is taken from the castle wall tower which is supposed to be nearly 400. Fig. 64. years old. The ridge is seen covered with ordinary semi- cylindrical tiles, while a single course of tiles next to the ridge shows the roof-tile used in the form of an imbrex. All the interstices were thickly plastered. The tile was accounted the oldest form used in Nuremberg, and may be regarded as the normal tile. A recent form of tile, which may be looked upon as an extreme modification of. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Essex Institute. 1n. Salem, Mass. , Essex Institute


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