The church bells of Kent: their inscriptions, founders, uses, and traditions . Fig. 17. Fig. 18. this foundry are well known and distinguished as RoyalArms bells. Evidence given in Dr. Ravens Church Bellsof Cambridge and in the Church Bells of Herts leaves,I think, little room for doubt that they are the handiwork of oneI. Danyell, who flourished about the middle of the fifteenth F 34 ChronoIoQ-ical Account. century. There are several of them which bear the initialsI, D,, but none in Kent, I must now leave this set of stamps for a time and try backhalf a century, and take up the sequel of the
The church bells of Kent: their inscriptions, founders, uses, and traditions . Fig. 17. Fig. 18. this foundry are well known and distinguished as RoyalArms bells. Evidence given in Dr. Ravens Church Bellsof Cambridge and in the Church Bells of Herts leaves,I think, little room for doubt that they are the handiwork of oneI. Danyell, who flourished about the middle of the fifteenth F 34 ChronoIoQ-ical Account. century. There are several of them which bear the initialsI, D,, but none in Kent, I must now leave this set of stamps for a time and try backhalf a century, and take up the sequel of the stamps used byWilliam Burford before mentioned. He was succeeded in1392 by his son Robert, and to this latter I have no hesitationin ascribing- the following group of bells in Kent St. Martin, Canterbury ... ... 3rd Cowden FrindsburyHartlipNoningtonSt. Marys 3rd3rd5th2nd3rd to which may be added the former 3rd at Langley, recentlyrecast or replaced by a modern bell. These are all blackletter bells, but the capitals are those used by the elderBurford, and they have either th
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectbells, bookyear1887