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TILLIE'S ANNOTATED CATALOGUE. Second Containing many Valuable and Rare Books, and including a Humorous Sketch by Sir Walter Scott (not in his Works). Price Sixpence, post free. Also PENNY CATALOGUE of Cheap Useful Works, and American Book List.--19, George Street, Edinburgh.

Reading, Berks WM. SMITH, 97, London Street, has a MISCEL

LANEOUS STOCK OF SEVERAL THOUSAND VOLUMES, MANY WORTH THE ATTENTION OF BOOK-BUYERS. Catalogues issued at intervals, and sent post free. Names and addresses of Book-Worms" solicited. List of Wants" attended to.

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VALU

VALUABLE CHINA, however damaged, can be restored, so as to defy detection.-LITCHFIELD'S, 30, Hanway Street, Oxford Street, London,

W. Telephone No. 3,795.

Antiquities and Curiosities, including Ancient Greek and Roman

Glass, many beautifully iridescent; Greek and Roman Pottery and Vases; Egyptian Antiquities; also Coins and Medals of all kinds.-W. S. LINCOLN & SON, 69, New Oxford Street, London.

NEW EDITION, One Shilling, Post Free.

CANCER AND SIMPLE TUMOURS Dispersed by ELECTRICITY, by G. EDGELOW, M.D. LONDON: HENRY RENSHAW, 356, STRAND, W.C.

J. SALISBURY Messrs. TRUANTER

fully requests BOOK BUYERS to send for his CATALOGUE of MUSIC, TOPOGRAPHICAL and MISCELLANEOUS Second-hand BOOKS. No. 7 now ready.-4, PATERNOSTER Row, E.C.

FAMILY PEDIGREES.

A well-known Genealogist undertakes the compiling of Family

Pedigrees, Searches in the Probate Courts, Public Record Offices, British Museum Library, Bodleian Library, Oxford, Parish Registers, and other sources of authentic information in London or the country.-Address, "GENEALOGIST," 99, Elgin Road, St. Peter's Park, W.

AMES THIN, Bookseller, 55, South Bridge, Edinburgh, will be pleased to send his Catalogues of Standard and Useful Books, selected from his great stock in all departments of Literature, post free on application.

W.

WEBBER, IPSWICH.-NEW CATALOGUES now ready. . 1. Old Fiction. 2nd contains Bacon's Annalls of Ipswich, 1654 (£3 35.)— New Posthumous Work of late George Borrow, &c. Posted free.

Now Ready, Part 11. Demy 8vo., pp. 192, wrapper, 7s. 6d.

SHROPSHIRE

FOLK-LORE:

A SHEAF OF GLEANINGS.

Edited by CHARLOTTE SOPHIA BURNE, from the Collections
of GEORGINA F. JACKSON.

LONDON: TRÜBNER & CO., LUDGATE HILL.

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atalogues, post free, containing CURIOUS, ANTIQUARIAN, TOPOGRAPHICAL, and many SCARCE and RARE BOOKS.-THOMAS SUTTON & SON, 87-91, Oxford-street, Manchester.

Dedicated by Special Permission to Her Most Gracious Majesty the Queen.

THE

history of Hampton Court Palace

IN

TUDOR TIMES.

Illustrated with 130 Autotype Etchings, Engravings, Maps and Plans. By ERNEST LAW, B.A.,

Barrister-at-Law.

Author of the "Historical Catalogue of the Pictures at Hampton Court," "A New Guide to Hampton Court," &c.

I vol. quarto, 400 pages, in large type on superfine toned paper. Price £1 5s.

This work gives a detailed narrative of events at Hampton Court from the earliest times, with anecdotes of Cardinal Wolsey, Henry VIII., Catherine of Arragon, Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour, Catherine Howard, Catherine Parr, Edward VI., The Protector Somerset, Queen Mary, King Philip, Queen Elizabeth, the Earl of Leicester, &c. An account is also given of the Architectural and Antiquarian features of the Palace, and of many hitherto unexplored and unidentified nooks.

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LONDON: GEORGE BELL & SONS, 4, YORK STREET, COVENT GARDEN.

Full Catalogues sent, post free to all parts of the World, on application.

3s. 6d. or 5s. per Volume (with exceptions).

A Complete Set in 661 Volumes, price £146 14s.

BOHN'S LIBRARIES,

Containing Standard Works of European Literature in the English Language, on

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With Dictionaries and other Books of Reference, comprising in all Translations from the

TOPOGRAPHY,

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LONDON: GEORGE BELL & SONS, 4, YORK STREET, COVENT GARDEN.

TO BE PUBLISHED BY WILFRED EDMUNDS, " DERBYSHIRE TIMES" OFFICE, CHESTERFIeld.

THE GENEALOGICAL AND MANORIAL HISTORY

OF THE

County of Derby,

BY

JOHN PYM YEATMAN,

Of 6, King's Bench Walk, Temple, London, Barrister-at-Law, formerly of Emanuel College, Cambridge, and F.R.H.S., &c.

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Author of "The Early Genealogical History of the House of Arundel;" "The History of the
Common Law of Great Britain and Gaul;" "An Introduction to the Study of Early English
History; ""The Mayor's Court Act, 1857; An Introduction to the History of the House of
Glanville;" "A Treatise on the Law of Trades Marks;" "The Origin of the Nations of Wes-
tern Europe;" "The Records of Chesterfield;
"A Treatise on the Law of Ancient Demesne,"
&c., &c.

Price for the whole work, 10 GUINEAS if paid in advance.
Large Paper Copies 2 Guineas extra.

To be published in parts of about 100 Pages folio each, price Half-a-Guinea, or on Large Paper 2s. 6d. extra; each part can be purchased separately, or in Volumes, price 24 Guineas, on Large Paper 3 Guineas. Each Volume will be complete in itself, and will contain Five or more parts, with full indices, the whole work to be complete (if possible) in Four or Five Volumes; the subscription price will not be increased whatever the extent of the work.

THE first part to be published during the present summer; only a limited number of separate parts will be sold; none until all subscribers' copies are distributed; and only a small edition will be printed.

The work will commence with the Hundred of Scarsdale, and after giving a history of its successive Lords, will contain that of the different Parishes and Manors, commencing with the History of the Barony of Ralf Fitz Hubert.

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The General History, with an introduction, will complete the work; the publication of this part is delayed in order to include all discoveries made during its progress. The work will be embellished with illustrations of Castles, Ancient Manor Houses, Tombs, Crosses, with some Modern Mansions and many plates of Coat Armour. The idea of this work may be gathered, with the author's motive for its publication, from his Essay on the law of Ancient Demesne recently issued explanatory of his edition of the Chesterfield Records. It is, in fact, a continuation of The History of the House of Arundel," or rather without having been written with such a design that work is an historical introduction to the present. Nearly all the great families, whose histories are there specially detailed, held estates in the County of Derby, and were the ancestry of many of the present and past Derbyshire families. The author has large collections of documents and facts which he could not include in the General History, relating amongst others to the families of Albini, Alfreton, Avenel, Bellers, Bassett, Brito, Chandos, Cheyney, Cockayne, Deincourt, Ferrars, Foljambe, Fitz Hubert, Gernon, Gresley, Harcourt, Heriz, Hardwick, Howard, Meynel, Manners, Montgomery, Mowbray, Newburgh, Rye, Roger of Poicteau, Roger de Busli, Stafford, Savage, Stuteville, Talbot, Vernon and Walkelin.

WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR, NOW ON SALE.

The History of the House of Arundel,

One Volume, folio large paper copies bound in Morocco, price Six Guineas; small paper copies bound in cloth, Four Guineas.

MITCHELL & HUGHES, 140, WARDOUR STREET, W.C.

"This is a large folio volume, of some 400 pages, giving an account of the origin not only of the Arundels, but of the families of Montgomery, Albini, Fitzalan, and Howard, and is based mainly on the early Rotuli Curiæ Regis and other rolls. In his researches through these early

The

documents, as Mr. Yeatman tells us, he has been able to correct many erroneous statements relative to the pedigree of the Lords Arundel of Wardour, during the reign of Edward I., which have been given in Sir R. C. Hoare's 'History of Wilts,' Lyson's 'Cornwall,' and other works. author has been enabled to trace the pedigree of the family to his own satisfaction, step by step, back to the time of the conquest of Normandy by Rollo the Dane, and to deduce it, not from the House of Montgomery, but directly from the House of Albini, which succeeded to the inheritance of the ancient Honor of Arundel. During the progress of the work, the author obtained unrestricted access to the very valuable collection of MSS. belonging to the Earl of Egmont, and to the collection of twelfth-century records belonging to the Duke of Rutland, at Belvoir Castle, and also was allowed to inspect and copy private records bearing on the subject in the possession of Lord Arundel himself at Wardour, and those in the hands of other noblemen. The work is one of especial interest to residents in Wiltshire and in Cornwall, in which latter county the Arundels until the middle of the last century were among the largest holders of broad acres and manors. It exhibits a vast amount of research, and it has the advantage of a copious index of names and places."-Antiquarian Magazine.

The Author has had the gratification to receive permission to publish the following very generous criticism of the First Part of this Work from the pen of Mr. THOMAS HELSBY, the learned Editor of the last edition of Ormerod's History of Cheshire, who writes :

"I have had the pleasure and profit just lately of perusing an admirable book of the kind (Mr. Pym Yeatman's recent work on the Earls of Arundel), which contains a great amount of entirely original matter, with all doubtful points acutely raised, and well-almost intensely-argued, showing the zeal and pains which have backed up the learned Author's judicial powers and natural acumen. Of course, like all other history, this one of a family which represents in the aggregate a vast extent of Norman and English territory, it is of a tentative character, but the valuable historical and genealogical matter is purified from the ordinary dross of such productions by having had the advantage of passing through a mind evidently thoroughly capable of reducing it into that state best suited for the critical reader; although repetitions may be found numerous enough in works of this kind, they have their use in constantly keeping before the mind of the reader facts and arguments that less tenacious and ordinary minds would let slip."

And the following from Sir BERNARD Burke, Ulster, King at Arms, with reference to the whole book :—

"What a wondrous store of information you have laid up for genealogists in your grand 'History of the House of Arundel.' I am, at every leisure moment, poring over its contents."

The Drigin of the Nations of Western Europe.

Price 6s.

BURNS & OATES, LONDON.

"Everyone must own the clearness of style, the cogency of argument, the wealth of illustration in the way of learning, the depth of thought, and the perfect independence with which this History of England is sifted. To many, perhaps most people, the criticism on the Aryan Theory, etc., will seem like an unpleasant revelation, but we strongly suspect it will be found far from easy to answer this book."-The Metropolitan, 30th August, 1879.

A Treatise on the Law of Ancient Demesne.

Written in illustration of the Records of Chesterfield.
Price 3s. 6d.

WILFRED EDMUNDS, CHESTERFIELD.

From Dr. CHARLES Cox's criticism of the "Records of Chesterfield" (Journal of the Derbyshire Archæological Society, 1885):

"The work of transcribing, translating, and editing these archives was entrusted to the capable pen of Mr. Pym Yeatman, and most ably has he done his task. The introduction is helpful and original, its only fault being its brevity."

The work has been most ably done by Mr. Yeatman than whom no one could have been found more competent for the task, and he has preceded the body of the work, by a masterly, able, and valuable historical preface, which adds immensely to its value."-The Reliquary, April, 1885.

EXTRACTS FROM THE PRESS RELATING TO

An Introduction to the Study of Early English History.

"This is a most original work, overflowing with learning, and marked throughout with a complete mastery over the most minute details of this extensive subject. By far the most interesting portion of the work is the patient research shewn by the author into the origin of the English language, and his dissertation on our Saxon literature, laws, and customs. Some of the most dangerous errors of Drs. Marsh and Latham are freely exposed, and with success; with like freedom and success the historical errors of Mr. Freeman, Lord Macaulay, and Sir Edward Creasey are brought home to their several authors."-Evening Standard, Nov. 12, 1874.

GEORGE REDWAY, 15, YORK STREET, COVENT GARDEN.

CLARENDON PRESS LIST O

Demy 8vo., Cloth, 215.

The Work Mystery Plays:

Being the Plays performed by the Crafts or Mysteries of York on Corpus Christi Day in the Fourteenth, Fifteenth, and Sixteenth Centuries.

Edited from Lord Ashburnham's Unique MSS., by Miss L. TOULMIN SMITH.

2 vols. Demy 8vo., Cloth, 245.

TYPES "YPES OF ETHICAL HISTORY. By JAMES MARTINEAU, D.D., LL.D., Principal of Manchester New College, London.

"A more important contribution to the Science of Ethics has not been made by any living writer."St. James's Gazette.

of Latin, Oxford.

Crown 8vo., Cloth, 7s. 6d.

and SUBJECTS connected with LATIN

LITERATURE and SCHOLARSHIP. By HENRY NETTLESHIP, M.A., Professor "Gives a vivid impression of Professor Nettleship's wide range in Latin Scholarship."-Athenæum. Extra fcap. 8vo., ornamental vellum, gilt top, 35.

SELE

ELECT POEMS OF THOMAS GRAY. Edited, with a Sketch of his Life, by EDMUND GOSSE, Clark University Lecturer in English Literature, Cambridge. The same in stiff covers for School Use, Is. 6d.

In 2 vols. Demy 8vo., with numerous Illustrations, 30s.

THE
HE ANCIENT COPTIC CHURCHES OF EGYPT. BY ALFRED
J. BUTLER, M.A., F.S.A., Fellow of Brasenose College, Oxford.

The aim of this book is to make a systematic beginning on the whole subject of the Christian antiquities of Egypt. Vol. I. deals principally with the Architectural Features of the Coptic Churches and Monasteries. Vol. II. treats in detail of the Ritual and Ecclesiastical Antiquities of the Copts-the altar, church furniture, vestments, sacraments, rites and ceremonies, legends, &c. A chapter is also devoted to Coptic books, language, and literature. Both volumes are profusely illustrated.

Just published, Crown 8vo., Cloth, price 5s.

SHAKES the Principles of Scientific Criticism. By R. G. MOULTON, M. A., lace Scholar

HAKESPEARE AS A DRAMATIC ARTIST: A Popular Illus

of Christ's College, Cambridge, University (Extension) Lecturer in Literature.

This work represents the substance of courses of Shakespeare lectures delivered in various towns of England and Wales in connection with the University Extension Movement. In its present form the book is addressed both to the general reader and to students; the greater part of it being taken up with a popular treatment of leading plays ("The Merchant of Venice," Richard III.," "Macbeth," "Julius Cæsar," and “ King Lear"), while a few chapters are devoted to presenting criticism as a new science.

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AN

By Professor SKEAT, M.A.
Demy 4to., Cloth. £2 4s.

OF THE ENGLISH

ETYMOLOGICAL DICTIONARY

LANGUAGE. By W. W. SKEAT, M.A., Professor of Anglo-Saxon, Cambridge. Second Edition, Just Published. Crown 8vo., Cloth, 5s. 6d. CONCISE ETYMOLOGICAL DICTIONARY OF THE A ENGLISH LANGUAGE. By the same Author.

SPE

Extra fcap. 8vo., Cloth, 7s. 6d.

PECIMENS OF ENGLISH LITERATURE, from the " mans Crede" to the "Shepheardes Calendar" (A.D. 1394 to A.D. 1579). Introduction, Notes, and Glossarial Index.

Plough

With

London: HENRY FROWDE, Clarendon Press Warehouse, Amen Corner, E.C.

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