Mmubn000001 025262157.Pdf

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Mmubn000001 025262157.Pdf PDF hosted at the Radboud Repository of the Radboud University Nijmegen The following full text is a publisher's version. For additional information about this publication click this link. http://hdl.handle.net/2066/147623 Please be advised that this information was generated on 2021-09-27 and may be subject to change. THE POST-TR1DENTINE ENGLISH PRIMER THE POST-TRIDENTINE ENGLISH PRIMER Promotor: Professor T. A. Birrell THE POST-TRIDENTINE ENGLISH PRIMER Proefschrift ter verkrijging van de graad van doctor in de letteren aan de Katholieke Universiteit te Nijmegen, op gezag van de Rector Magnificus prof. dr. P. G. A. B. Wijdeveld volgens besluit van het College van Decanen in het openbaar te verdedigen op donderdag 7 juni 1979 des namiddags te 4.00 uur door JOANNES MARIA BLOM geboren te Nijmegen Krips Repro B. V., Meppel - 1979 CONTENTS Acknowledgements vii Abbreviations viii Introduction 1 Chapter I. The history of the Officium Beatae Mariae Virginis 2 Chapter II. The Tridentine primer in English 13 Chapter III. The place of the primer in England 34 Chapter IV. The printers and publishers of the primer 48 Chapter V. The hymn-translations and their translators 76 Chapter VI. The history of the manual from 1583 to 1800 112 Chapter VII. Other devotional works related to primer and manual 137 Chapter VIII. A hand-list of the Latin-English and English editions of the primer of the reformed Roman use and the editions of the manual during the period 1583-1800 163 Appendix to Chapter VIII. Hand-lists of the editions of The key of paradise, The office of the holy week and The evening office of the Church 190 Chapter IX. A catalogue of the English translations of Latin hymns in the editions of the primer from 1599 to 1800 197 Appendix to Chapter IX. A catalogue of hymn-translations in some other Roman Catholic devotional and liturgical works 239 Bibliography 252 Index of places, persons and institutions 277 V ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I wish to thank the authorities and staffs of the following libraries for permission to examine printed books and manuscripts in their possession, for their willingness to have microfilms made of books and manuscripts, and for the trouble they have taken over answer- ing my queries: The British Library; the Bodleian Library, Oxford; Cambridge University Library; St. Augustine’s Priory, Newton Abbot; Museum Plantin-Moretus, Antwerp; Trinity College, Cam­ bridge; Corpus Christi College, Cambridge; Pembroke College, Cambridge; Henry E. Huntington Library, California; Newberry Library, Chicago; Downside Abbey, Bath; Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington; Farm Street Church, London; Heythrop College, London; Lambeth Palace, London; Law Society’s Library, London; Brompton Oratory, London; the Catholic Record Society, London; Corpus Christi College, Oxford; St. John’s College, Oxford; Magdalen College, Oxford; St. Mary’s Abbey, Colwich; Hatfield House, Hatfield; the National Library of Ireland; the National Library of Scotland; Diocesan House Library, Liverpool; University of Texas, Austin; Algemeen Rijksarchief, Brussels; Koninklijke Bibliotheek, The Hague; University Library of Leyden; Berchmanianum, Nijmegen; Albertinum, Nijmegen and the Univer­ sity Library of Nijmegen. Thanks are also due to the following scholars who contributed to this book in a variety of.ways: Miss M. Pollard of Trinity College, Dublin; Mr. A. F. Allison; Mrs. S. Dean of the Newberry Library; Mr. K. Bishop of the Lancashire Record Office; the Very Reverend Bishop Foley of Lancashire; the Reverend B. Egon of Dun Mhuire, Killiney; Mr. M. J. Walsh of Heythrop College and Dr. D. M. Rogers of the Bodleian Library. I am indebted to Brother Richard Yeo of Downside Abbey for his help during my stay there, to Sister Mary Bede of St. Scholastica’s Abbey for her kind interest in my work and to Mr. Th. Dekker of Nijmegen for his willingness to discuss a number of hymn- translations with me. The Netherlands Organisation for the Advancement of Pure Research (Z.W.O.) and the British Council provided grants which enabled me to do part of my research in British libraries. Finally I would like to thank V. Kleerekoper, M. Smolders, M. Faber, M. Seuren, D. de Vaan, A. Kaarup Jensen and E. Moor- mann for secretarial work. Marieke Schlatmann made her own contribution to this book and I am particularly indebted to Ria Derks who was an invaluable help during the final stages of my research. I dedicate this book to my mother and to the memory of my father. vii ABBREVIATIONS A&R A. F. Allison and D. M. Rogers, “A catalogue of Catholic books in English printed abroad or secretly in England 1558-1640”, Biographical Studies III, nos. 3 and 4, 1956 Clancy Thomas H. Clancy, English Catholic books 1641-1700: A bibliography, Chicago 1974 CRS Catholic Record Society DNB L. Stephen and S. Lee (eds.), Dictionary of National Biography, London 1908-1937 Gillow J. Gillow, A literary and biographical history, or bibliographical dictionary o f the English Catholics. .. 1534 to the present time, 5 Vols., London/New York 1885 GK III The current library catalogue of the British Library (i.e. the British Museum General Cata­ logue of Printed Books Photolithographic Edition to 1955, London 1960-1966; its two supplements: 1956-1965, London 1968 and 1966-1970, London 1971; and all the additions registered in the general catalogue kept in the Round Room of the British Library.) Hoskins E. Hoskins, Horae Beatae Mariae Virginis or Sarum and York Primers with kindred books, London 1901 (Gregg reprint 1969) NUC National Union Catalog Pre-1956 Imprints, Lon­ don/Chicago 1968- STC A. W. Pollard and G. R. Redgrave, A Short- Title Catalogue o f Books printed in England, Scotland and Ireland. And o f English books printed abroad. 1475-1640, London 1926, [Vol. II, 2nd ed., W. A. Jackson et al., London 1976. Since Vol. I of the new STC was not published when this book went to press, no attempt has been made to systematize all references to NSTC] Wing D. G. Wing, Short-Title Catalogue o f books printed in England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales, and British America, and o f English books printed in other countries, 1641-1700, New York 1945- 1951 (Vol. I, 2nd ed., New York 1972) INTRODUCTION When Richard Verstegen published the first English translation of the post-Tridentine Officium Beatae Mariae Virginis in 1599, he gave the English Roman Catholic community a book that would prove to be one of its most popular works of private devotion for more than two centuries. During the period 1599 to 1800 overforty editions of the English primer (as the translated Officium BMVwas called) were published. What is more, these editions represent a development: in the course of these two centuries in the history of the primer the book was revised many times and new translations were made of the material it contained. This study tries to approach the primer from a number of different angles. lts central place in the history of English Catholic devotional literature justifies a thorough investigation into its origin, the number of its editions and the translators and editors involved. Thanks to its great popularity its printing history takes on considerable significance: the primer forms part of the individual histories of many of the most important printing houses working for the English Roman Catholics in the 17th and 18th centuries. One aspect of the primer that will be given particular attention is the body of hymn-translations that the book contains. After Verste­ gen’s first translations of the hymns in 1599, new translations appeared in subsequent editions at fairly regular intervals during the two hundred years of our survey. The hymn-translations contained in the primer found their way into many other books of private devotion. This means that these hymns formed an indispensable part of the daily lives of countless people. Apart from their importance as popular literature, the various translations also serve as a mirror of the changing style of English literature over the period in question. In the course of this study the legal and political position of the primer will be discussed and in the final chapters reference will be made to other books of devotion in order to define the place of the Roman Catholic primer in the history of English devotional litera­ ture. l CHAPTER I The history of the Officium Beatae Mariae Virginis When Dr. William Allen and Father Robert Persons^. J. started organizing the English Counter-Reformation during the last decades of the sixteenth century, one of their plans was to provide the English Roman Catholics at home and abroad with an English translation of the Tridentine Officium Beatae Mariae Virginis.1 The first English translation of the book appeared in 1599. The English primers of the revised Roman rite, and the hymn-translations they contain, form the main subject of this study. However, it seems useful first of all to briefly go into the history of the Officium Beatae Mariae Virginis itself so as to provide the background against which the English primers can be discussed in more detail.2 It is not easy to give an exact answer to the question as to which elements constitute the book Officium Beatae Mariae Virginis. In the course of this study more will be said about the actual contents of a number of primers, but for the moment it suffices to say that the Officium BMV can be characterized as a book containing in any case the hours of the Virgin Mary (either from Purification to Advent only, or for the whole year), the seven penitential psalms, the litany of the Saints, the fifteen gradual psalms, the office for the dead, the commendations of souls and some “informative” elements such as the calendar.
Recommended publications
  • Thames Valley Papists from Reformation to Emancipation 1534 - 1829
    Thames Valley Papists From Reformation to Emancipation 1534 - 1829 Tony Hadland Copyright © 1992 & 2004 by Tony Hadland All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means – electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise – without prior permission in writing from the publisher and author. The moral right of Tony Hadland to be identified as author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988. British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN 0 9547547 0 0 First edition published as a hardback by Tony Hadland in 1992. This new edition published in soft cover in April 2004 by The Mapledurham 1997 Trust, Mapledurham HOUSE, Reading, RG4 7TR. Pre-press and design by Tony Hadland E-mail: [email protected] Printed by Antony Rowe Limited, 2 Whittle Drive, Highfield Industrial Estate, Eastbourne, East Sussex, BN23 6QT. E-mail: [email protected] While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, neither the author nor the publisher can be held responsible for any loss or inconvenience arising from errors contained in this work. Feedback from readers on points of accuracy will be welcomed and should be e-mailed to [email protected] or mailed to the author via the publisher. Front cover: Mapledurham House, front elevation. Back cover: Mapledurham House, as seen from the Thames. A high gable end, clad in reflective oyster shells, indicated a safe house for Catholics.
    [Show full text]
  • WIN a ONE NIGHT STAY at the OXFORD MALMAISON | OXFORDSHIRE THAMES PATH | FAMILY FUN Always More to Discover
    WIN A ONE NIGHT STAY AT THE OXFORD MALMAISON | OXFORDSHIRE THAMES PATH | FAMILY FUN Always more to discover Tours & Exhibitions | Events | Afternoon Tea Birthplace of Sir Winston Churchill | World Heritage Site BUY ONE DAY, GET 12 MONTHS FREE ATerms precious and conditions apply.time, every time. Britain’sA precious time,Greatest every time.Palace. Britain’s Greatest Palace. www.blenheimpalace.com Contents 4 Oxford by the Locals Get an insight into Oxford from its locals. 8 72 Hours in the Cotswolds The perfect destination for a long weekend away. 12 The Oxfordshire Thames Path Take a walk along the Thames Path and enjoy the most striking riverside scenery in the county. 16 Film & TV Links Find out which famous films and television shows were filmed around the county. 19 Literary Links From Alice in Wonderland to Lord of the Rings, browse literary offerings and connections that Oxfordshire has created. 20 Cherwell the Impressive North See what North Oxfordshire has to offer visitors. 23 Traditions Time your visit to the county to experience at least one of these traditions! 24 Transport Train, coach, bus and airport information. 27 Food and Drink Our top picks of eateries in the county. 29 Shopping Shopping hotspots from around the county. 30 Family Fun Farm parks & wildlife, museums and family tours. 34 Country Houses and Gardens Explore the stories behind the people from country houses and gardens in Oxfordshire. 38 What’s On See what’s on in the county for 2017. 41 Accommodation, Tours Broughton Castle and Attraction Listings Welcome to Oxfordshire Connect with Experience Oxfordshire From the ancient University of Oxford to the rolling hills of the Cotswolds, there is so much rich history and culture for you to explore.
    [Show full text]
  • Catholic Archives 2002 to Completion - Hence 'Introductory Notes'
    Catholic Archives i 2002 Number 22 THE JOURNAL OF The Catholic Archives Society CATHOLIC ARCHIVES NO 22 CONTENTS 2002 Introductory Notes New CAS Patrons 3 Birmingham Archdiocesan Archives J. SHARP 6 From Sight to Sound: Archival Evidence for English Catholic Music T.E. MUIR 10 The Archives of the Catholic Lay Societies II R. GARD 26 Dominican Congregation of St Catherine of Siena of Newcastle Natal S Africa Sr. E MURPHY O.P. 35 Oakford Domincans in England Sr. C. BROKAMP O.P. 40 The Congregation of the Sisters of St Anne Sr E. HUDSON S.S.A. 47 Archives of Holy Cross Abbey, Whitland, SA34 OGX, Wales, Cistercian Nuns Sr J. MOOR OSCO 52 Homily Idelivered at Hornby, July 15th 2001, on the occasion of the 150 Anniversary of the death of John Lingard P. PHILIPPS 54 Book Reviews 57 The Catholic Archives Society Conference, 2001 64 1 Introductory Notes Traditionally this page has been entitled 'Editorial notes'. Un­ fortunately the Editor has been unable to see Catholic Archives 2002 to completion - hence 'Introductory Notes'. Last year, Father Foster pointed out that he was presenting the first part of Father Joseph Fleming's study on archival theory and standards and promised the second part this year. This has been held over once again, this time not for reasons of space but for reasons of time. With the Editor unavailable, it was not possible for others to edit in such a way as to synchronise with the first part before sending the draft journal to the printers. Catholic Archives 2002 offers T.
    [Show full text]
  • Visitor Attraction Trends England 2003 Presents the Findings of the Survey of Visits to Visitor Attractions Undertaken in England by Visitbritain
    Visitor Attraction Trends England 2003 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS VisitBritain would like to thank all representatives and operators in the attraction sector who provided information for the national survey on which this report is based. No part of this publication may be reproduced for commercial purp oses without previous written consent of VisitBritain. Extracts may be quoted if the source is acknowledged. Statistics in this report are given in good faith on the basis of information provided by proprietors of attractions. VisitBritain regrets it can not guarantee the accuracy of the information contained in this report nor accept responsibility for error or misrepresentation. Published by VisitBritain (incorporated under the 1969 Development of Tourism Act as the British Tourist Authority) © 2004 Bri tish Tourist Authority (trading as VisitBritain) Cover images © www.britainonview.com From left to right: Alnwick Castle, Legoland Windsor, Kent and East Sussex Railway, Royal Academy of Arts, Penshurst Place VisitBritain is grateful to English Heritage and the MLA for their financial support for the 2003 survey. ISBN 0 7095 8022 3 September 2004 VISITOR ATTR ACTION TRENDS ENGLAND 2003 2 CONTENTS CONTENTS A KEY FINDINGS 4 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND 12 1.1 Research objectives 12 1.2 Survey method 13 1.3 Population, sample and response rate 13 1.4 Guide to the tables 15 2 ENGLAND VISIT TRENDS 2002 -2003 17 2.1 England visit trends 2002 -2003 by attraction category 17 2.2 England visit trends 2002 -2003 by admission type 18 2.3 England visit trends
    [Show full text]
  • THE RIVER THAMES a Complete Guide to Boating Holidays on the UK’S Most Famous River the River Thames a COMPLETE GUIDE
    THE RIVER THAMES A complete guide to boating holidays on the UK’s most famous river The River Thames A COMPLETE GUIDE And there’s even more! Over 70 pages of inspiration There’s so much to see and do on the Thames, we simply can’t fit everything in to one guide. 6 - 7 Benson or Chertsey? WINING AND DINING So, to discover even more and Which base to choose 56 - 59 Eating out to find further details about the 60 Gastropubs sights and attractions already SO MUCH TO SEE AND DISCOVER 61 - 63 Fine dining featured here, visit us at 8 - 11 Oxford leboat.co.uk/thames 12 - 15 Windsor & Eton THE PRACTICALITIES OF BOATING 16 - 19 Houses & gardens 64 - 65 Our boats 20 - 21 Cliveden 66 - 67 Mooring and marinas 22 - 23 Hampton Court 68 - 69 Locks 24 - 27 Small towns and villages 70 - 71 Our illustrated map – plan your trip 28 - 29 The Runnymede memorials 72 Fuel, water and waste 30 - 33 London 73 Rules and boating etiquette 74 River conditions SOMETHING FOR EVERY INTEREST 34 - 35 Did you know? 36 - 41 Family fun 42 - 43 Birdlife 44 - 45 Parks 46 - 47 Shopping Where memories are made… 48 - 49 Horse racing & horse riding With over 40 years of experience, Le Boat prides itself on the range and 50 - 51 Fishing quality of our boats and the service we provide – it’s what sets us apart The Thames at your fingertips 52 - 53 Golf from the rest and ensures you enjoy a comfortable and hassle free Download our app to explore the 54 - 55 Something for him break.
    [Show full text]
  • News Release
    NEWS RELEASE FOURTH STREET AT CONSTITUTION AVENUE NW WASHINGTON DC 20565 . 737-4215/842-6353 EXHBITION FACT SHEET Title; THE TREASURE HOUSES OF BRITAIN: FIVE HUNDRED YEARS OF PRIVATE PATRONAGE AND ART COLLECTING Patrons: Their Royal Highnesses The Prince and Princess of Wales Dates; November 3, 1985 through March 16, 1986, exactly one week later than previously announced. (This exhibition will not travel. Loans from houses open to view are expected to remain in place until the late summer of 1985 and to be returned before many of the houses open for their visitors in the spring of 1986.) Credits; This exhibition is made possible by a generous grant from the Ford Motor Company. The exhibition was organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, in collaboration v\n.th the British Council and is supported by indemnities from Her Majesty's Treasury and the U.S. Federal Council on the Arts and Humanities. Further British assistance was supplied by the National Trust and the Historic Houses Association. History of the exhibition; The suggestion that the National Gallery of Art consider holding a major exhibition devoted to British art was made by the British Council in 1979. J. Carter Brown, Director of the National Gallery, responded with the idea of an exhibition on the British Country House as a "vessel of civilization," bringing together works of art illustrating the extraordinary achievement of collecting and patronage throughout Britain over the past five hundred years. As this concept carried with it the additional, contemporary advantage of stimulating greater interest in and support of those houses open to public viewing, it was enthusiastically endorsed by the late Lord Howard of Henderskelfe, then-Chairman of the Historic Houses Association, Julian Andrews, Director of the Fine Arts Department of the British Council, and Lord Gibson, Chairman of the National Trust.
    [Show full text]
  • Buildings and Institutions
    BLHA Speakers List 23/12/2013 In Topic/Speaker sequence Speaker title edition ed date society BUILDINGS AND INSTITUTIONS Valerie Alasia History of Henley workhouse 108 2014 Jan Goring & Streatley Barbara Askew The Windsor Fire Restoration 111 2015 Jan Wargrave Jane Burrell The history of Speen church 114 2016 Jan Newbury 2015 John Chapman Purley Magna 112 May Purley Berkshire connections with the Foundling 2015 Gillian Clark Hospital 113 Sept Dils Symposium Ann Done Girdler - The house 114 2016 Jan Swallowfield 2013 Leslie Grout St Georges Chapel Windsor 107 Sept Wargrave Sue Hester The London open-air Sanatorium 112 2015 Sandhurst Brian Kemp Reading Abbey's Royal Connections 112 2015 Reading Brian Kemp The royal abbey of Reading 114 2016 Jan Purley 2013 Lindsay Kerr Bramshill House 107 Sept Sandhurst 2013 Dr David Lewis The mediaeval hospital of St Peter in Windsor 106 May Sandhurst Air Marshal 2013 McFadyn Windsor Castle 106 May Hungerford Corey Stanley Mapledurham watermill 108 2014 Jan Goring & Streatley 2014 Mark Stevens History of Broadmoor Hospital 110 Sept Wargrave Cory Stirling Mapledurham House and Mill 111 2015 Jan Twyford 2013 Alan Turton Basing House 107 Sept Sandhurst Peter van 2014 Went Reading Blue Coat School 110 Sept Reading Ben Viljoen Repton at Purley Magna 112 2015 Purley Peter van 2014 Went Reading Bluecoat School 109 May Reading Rupert Kings, Knights and Monks - the history of 2013 Willoughby Reading Abbey 106 May Pangbourne Liz Wooley 19th Century lodging houses 114 2016 Jan Goring Gap COMPANIES AND ORGANISATIONS
    [Show full text]
  • Mapledurham (October 2017) • Economic History • P
    VCH Oxfordshire • Texts in Progress • Mapledurham (October 2017) • Economic History • p. 1 VCH Oxfordshire Texts in Progress MAPLEDURHAM Economic History Mapledurham’s economy was long based on mixed farming, supplemented by woodland exploitation and a limited amount of craft activity. There was much early inclosure, especially in the centre and north of the parish, though vestiges of the medieval open-field system survived until the 18th century. Local towns provided ready markets, and the leading tenant farmers prospered in the 16th to 18th century. As elsewhere, early 19th-century agrarian buoyancy was reversed in the 1870s, and by the 1940s several farms were in a poor condition. From the later 20th century the Mapledurham Estate, the main landowner, diversified into leisure and tourism, creating two golf courses and holding open days and other events. The Agricultural Landscape In 1587 the parish’s open fields (covering c.25 per cent of the total area) lay mainly in its low- lying southern part, immediately north of a band of Thames-side meadows. The open-field system was first documented in the late 12th century1 but was probably of considerably earlier origin, and several field-names suggest late Anglo-Saxon collective farming practices, notably a meadow called ‘Churlegrave’ (the ceorls’ grove) on Chazey manor, and a ditch called ‘Aldefeld’ or old field, both mentioned in the late 12th century. 2 In the Middle Ages the two manors had mainly separate open fields, presumably because the pre-Conquest division into two estates occurred before the field system was fully formed. Gurney manor’s fields included Hen, Wheatlands, King’s Hill, and West fields, and Chazey’s Ham, Ridge, Gallows and Lye fields, the last located ‘above the hill’.3 Some other open-field land, meadow and pasture was shared, and Broad mead was divided into lots.4 Intercommoning generated 1 Cooke, Early History, 65–6.
    [Show full text]
  • Build on a Strong Spiritual Foundation Within the Parish
    CAVERSHAM THAMESIDE AND MAPLEDURHAM : CONTENTS Contents 2 INTRODUCTION 13 DESCRIPTION OF THE PARISH 2 Context and Location 13 Demographic Information 3 Bishop’s Statement of Need 14 Transport Links 4 Pastoral Organisation 14 Issues and Concerns 4 Wider Context 15 THE WORSHIPPING COMMUNITY 5 THE PARISH MISSION 15 Christian Churches in 6 Events and Reasons for Caversham Celebration 16 Other Faiths 7 Strengths and Struggles 16 The Churches 7 Our Ministry Team 17 Worship 9 DESCRIBING THE ROLE 17 Life of the Church – Groups 9 The Parish Vision for the and Events Future 18 Organisation 10 PERSON SPECIFICATION 19 ADMINISTRATION AND FINANCE 11 SUPPORT WE WILL OFFER 19 Parish Administration 11 Financial Support 19 Finance, Giving and Stewardship 11 Parish Structure 20 Local Trusts 12 THE RECTORY 20 Other Buildings 21 INTERESTED? 1 CAVERSHAM THAMESIDE AND MAPLEDURHAM : INTRODUCTION Introduction Context and Location aversham is a large suburb of Reading in Berkshire, attached to it C administratively but separated from it geographically by the River Thames and by a distinctive village atmosphere which sets it apart from other suburbs of Reading. The Parish consists of three churches: St Peter near the historic centre of Caversham, St John the Baptist in Lower Caversham, and St Margaret A rare unwelcome visitor to St Margaret’s Church in Mapledurham. There are approximately 20,000 parishioners. The geographical area covered comprises much of Caversham and also a large area of more rural land to the west and north, including the village of Mapledurham. There are two other neighbouring parishes taking in the rest of Caversham.
    [Show full text]
  • ISIS and THAMESIS Hours on the River from Oxford to Henley by Alfred J Church, 1880
    14/09/2020 Isis & Thamesis by Alfred J Church 1880 ISIS AND THAMESIS Hours on the River from Oxford to Henley by Alfred J Church, 1880 The text has been copied exactly. Headings have been added and also links to Where Thames Smooth Waters Glide (WTSWG) Note that only a few of those WTSWG pages are linked here. That site is a guide to the Thames going UPSTREAM wherea Alfred Church looked at it going DOWNSTREAM In some parts of the Thames Valley, in the neighbourhood, for instance, of Henley, the parishes are so arranged that, even when the main part of their acreage is remote from the river, they have some access to it. This seems to point to a day when roads were few, ill constructed, and unsafe, and when the larger rivers were the most frequented highways of the country. They continued indeed, with the aid of canals, to be the chief channels of goods traffic till far on in the first half of this century. Then came the railways, outbidding them with superior speed and convenience. For a time, which may be roughly stated as some seven or eight years on either side of the division of the century, [ 1842 - 1858 ] the Thames, for it is of the Thames only that I speak, was almost deserted. In my own boyhood and youth I spent much time upon the river,and I can recall days when the solitude so dear to an angler - and it was as an angler that I haunted the most ‘fishy’ of English rivers - was rarely broken by a passing boat.
    [Show full text]
  • News Release
    NEWS RELEASE FOURTH STRFFT AT CONSTITUTION AVENUE NW WASHINGTON DC 20565 . 737-4215/842-6353 Revised: July 1985 EXHIBITION FACT SHEET Title: THE TREASURE HOUSES OF BRITAIN: FIVE HUNDRED YEARS OF PRIVATE PATRONAGE AND ART COLLECTING Patrons; Their Royal Highnesses The Prince and Princess of Wales Dates: November 3, 1985 through March. 16, 1986. (This exhibition will not travel. Most loans from houses open to view are expected to remain in place until the late suitmer of 1985 and to be returned before many of the houses open for their visitors in the spring of 1986.) Credits: This exhibition is made possible by a generous grant from the Ford Motor Company. The exhibition was organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, in collaboration with the British Council and is supported by indemnities from Her Majesty's Treasury and the U.S. Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities. Further British assistance was supplied by the National Trust and the Historic Houses Association. British Airways has been designated the official carrier of the exhibition. History of the exhibition; The idea that the National Gallery of Art consider holding a major exhibition devoted to British art evolved in discussions with the British Council in 1979. J. Carter Brown, Director of the National Gallery of Art, proposed an exhibition on the British country house as a "vessel of civilization," bringing together works of art illustrating the extraordinary achievement of collecting and patronage throughout Britain over the past five hundred years. As this concept carried with it the additional, contemporary advantage of stimulating greater interest in and support of those houses open to public viewing, it was enthusiastically endorsed by the late Lord Howard of Henderskelfe, then-Chairman of the Historic Houses Association, Julian Andrews, Director of the Fine Arts Department of the British Council, and Lord Gibson, Chairman of the National Trust.
    [Show full text]
  • The Evolution of a Fold Thrust Belt; Zagros
    33777 GAMagMarch2017.qxp_mag41.qxd06/03/201714:51Page1 | The evolution of a fold thrust belt; Zagros Mountains of Iran | New perspectives on dinosaur diversity and extinction | | Crustal thinning - what happens when a continent breaks up | Conserving Rocks! - How did that come about? | | A 2 - day excursion to tthe South Devon Coast | Glasgow City Centre; BuildingStones - a guided walk | Paramoudra and Flint Nodules (2): The Cretaceous Reef | Pebbles in Essex & Beyond | Goring Gap aboard the Caversham Princess | London Pavement Geology | Lamplugh’s monoglacial issue - evidence from the Holderness Coast | 33777 GA Mag March 2017.qxp_mag41.qxd 06/03/2017 14:51 Page 2 Magazine of the Published by: Geologists’ Association The Geologists’ Association. Volume 16, No 1 March, 2017 Four issues per year. ISSN 1476-7600 The GEOLOGISTS’ ASSOCIATION does not accept any responsibility for views and opinions expressed by Production team: LIAM GALLAGHER, John Crocker, Nikki individual authors in this magazine. Edwards & John Cosgrove. Printed by City Print (Milton Keynes) Ltd CONTENTS 3 From the President The Geologists’ Association 4 Report from Council 6 Evening Lecture Report December, 2016: The Founded in 1858 The Geologists’ Association serves the evolution of a fold thrust belt; Zagros Mountains of interests of both professional and amateur geologists, as Iran: Prof. John Cosgrove By: Dr. David Brook, OBE well as making geology available to a wider public. It is a 8 Evening Lecture Report January, 2017: New national organisation based in London, but is represented perspectives on dinosaur diversity and extinction: by local and affiliated groups around the country. The GA holds monthly lecture meetings, publishes a journal and Prof.
    [Show full text]