The monumental remains of noble and eminent persons : comprising the sepulchral antiquities of Great Britain . Britannico-Hibernica, and many of his archiepiscopalordinances and letters are printed in the Concilia. Besidesthese, there are Divinarum Sententiarum Librorum Biblie adcertos titulos redacte Collectarium, a sort of digested con-cordance to the Bible, printed at Paris, in 1513; and a treatiseentitled, Perspectiva communis, first printed at Nuremberg,in 1542, and again at Cologne, in 1592. It was afterwardstranslated into Italian, with some additions, by Gallucci, andprinted at Venice,


The monumental remains of noble and eminent persons : comprising the sepulchral antiquities of Great Britain . Britannico-Hibernica, and many of his archiepiscopalordinances and letters are printed in the Concilia. Besidesthese, there are Divinarum Sententiarum Librorum Biblie adcertos titulos redacte Collectarium, a sort of digested con-cordance to the Bible, printed at Paris, in 1513; and a treatiseentitled, Perspectiva communis, first printed at Nuremberg,in 1542, and again at Cologne, in 1592. It was afterwardstranslated into Italian, with some additions, by Gallucci, andprinted at Venice, we believe, in 1593. He died in 1492, according to a MS. register of the churchof Canterbury, quoted by Wharton in his Anglia Sacra, atMortlake; but as most other writers have it, at Canterbury: nor 3 JOHN PECKHAM, ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY. are the ecclesiastical authorities altogether agreed as to theexact day of his decease. All, however, coincide in saying,that he was buried in his own cathedral, nor is there theslightest reason to doubt that the monument now given wasthe one erected to his memory. 4. Published* May 13Z6. tyZTardwy 8c -Pall Mall East, London, PROOF MARGARET PLANTAGENET, COUNTESS OF —1541. MONUMENT AT CHRIST-CHURCH, IN HAMPSHIRE. Margaret Plantagenet, daughter of George Duke of Clarence,grand-daughter on her mothers side to Richard Neville, Earl ofWarwick, and niece to King Edward the Fourth, was born atFarleigh Castle, in Wiltshire, and according to the Chronicle ofTewkesbury, quoted by Dugdale, on the fourteenth day of August1473*. She was married to Sir Richard Pole Knight, a personof high character, and of respectable birth, his father being SirGeoffrey Pole, a knight of an old family in Wales. Sir RichardPole distinguished himself by his valour in the Scottish warsduring the reign of Henry the Seventh, and was elected Knightof the Garter, and appointed chamberlain to Prince Arthur,being present in that capacity at the marriage o


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Keywords: ., bookcentury, booksubjectnobility, booksubjectsepulchralmonuments