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Bibliography BIBLIOGRAPHY Abbreviations are made according to the Council for British Archaeology’s Standard List of Abbreviated Titles of Current Series as at April 1991. Titles not covered in this list are abbreviated according to British Standard BS 4148:1985, with some minor exceptions. (———), 1851. ‘Antiquities and works of art exhibited’, Allen, J. R., 1885. ‘The crosses at Ilkley. Part III, Archaeol. J., VIII, 421–7 conclusion’, J. Brit. Archaeol. Ass., 1 ser., XLI, 333–58 (———), 1869–70. ‘The report’, Ass. Architect. Soc. Rep. Allen, J. R., 1887. Early Christian Symbolism in Great Pap., X, pt. 1, vii–x Britain and Ireland Before the Thirteenth Century (———), 1879–80. ‘The report’, ibid., XV, pt. 2, lxxi– (London); third part reprinted as Norman Sculpture and lxxx the Medieval Bestiaries (Felinfach, [1992]) (———), 1885–6. ‘The report’, ibid., XVIII, pt. 1, vi–xiv Allen, J. R., 1889. 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C., 1975. ‘The site of the Southwell Minster Michel, 966–1100 (Oxford) grammar school extension, 1971’, Trans. Thoroton Soc., Alexander, J. J. G., 1978. Insular Manuscripts, 6th to the LXXIX, 14 9th Century, A Survey of Manuscripts Illuminated in Anderson, O. S., 1934. The English Hundred-Names the British Isles, I (London) (Lund) Alexander, J. J. G., and Binski, P. (eds.), 1987. Age of Chivalry: art of Plantagenet England 1200–1400 Backhouse, J., Turner, D. H., and Webster, L. (eds.), (London) 1984. The Golden Age of Anglo-Saxon Art 966–1066 Alexander, J. S. (ed.), 1998. Southwell and Nottingham- (London) shire: medieval art, architecture, and industry, Brit. Bailey, R. N., 1980. Viking Age Sculpture in Northern Archaeol. Ass. Conference Trans., XXI (Leeds) England (London) 243 244 BIBLIOGRAPHY Bailey, R. N., 1996. England’s Earliest Sculptors, Publications Bede (eds. B. Colgrave and R. A. B. Mynors), 1969. of the Dictionary of Old English, 5 (Toronto) Bede’s Ecclesiastical History of the English People (Oxford) Bailey, R. N., 2010. Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture, Biddle, M., and Kjølbye-Biddle, B., 1992. ‘Repton IX, Cheshire and Lancashire (Oxford) and the Vikings’, Antiquity, LXVI, 36–51 Bailey, R. N., and Cramp, R., 1988. Corpus of Anglo- Biddle, M., and Kjølbye-Biddle, B., 2001. ‘Repton Saxon Stone Sculpture, II, Cumberland, Westmorland and and the “great heathen army”, 873–4’, in Graham- Lancashire-North-of-the-Sands (Oxford) Campbell, Hall, Jesch and Parsons 2001, 45–96 Bailey, T., 1853–5. The Annals of Nottinghamshire: a history Billson, P., 1994. Churches in Nottinghamshire (rev. edn., of the county of Nottingham, including the borough, 4 vols. Nottingham) (London) Bilson, J., 1909. ‘Blyth Priory’, Yorkshire Archaeol. J., XX, Barber, R., 1964. Henry Plantagenet: a biography (London) 447–51 Barber, S., 1892. ‘Shelton church, Nottinghamshire’, The Bischoff, B., 1976. ‘Turning-points in the history of Antiquary, XXVI (July 1892), 14–16 Latin exegesis in the early Irish church: 650–800’, in Barber, T. C. 1939. Byron and Where He Is Buried M. McNamara (ed.), Biblical Studies: the medieval Irish (Hucknall) contribution (Dublin), 74–160 [Barker, M. H.], 1835. Walks Around Nottingham by a Bishop, M. C., and Freeman, P. W. M., 1993. ‘Recent Wanderer (Nottingham) work at Osmanthorpe, Nottinghamshire’, Britannia, Barley, M. W., 1983. ‘An Anglo-Saxon carved stone from XXIV, 159–89 South Muskham, Nottinghamshire’, Trans. Thoroton Bishop, M. W., 1981. ‘Multiple estates in late Anglo-Saxon Soc., LXXXVII, 84 Nottinghamshire’, Trans. Thoroton Soc., LXXXV, 37–47 Barley, M. W., 1993. The Chiefest Grain (Nottingham) Bishop, M. W., 1984. ‘An Anglian cemetery at Cotgrave, Barley, M. W., and Train, K. S. S., 1972. ‘Introduction’, Nottinghamshire’, ibid., LXXXVIII, 106 in The Antiquities of Nottinghamshire, by Robert Thoroton. Bishop, M. W., 2000. ‘An archaeological resource Edited and Enlarged by John Throsby (facsimile reprint, assessment of Anglo-Saxon Nottinghamshire’, East Wakefield), v–xvi Midlands Archaeological Research Frameworks; available Barlow, F., 1963. The English Church, 1000–1066: a online at <http//www.le.ac.uk/archaeology/east_ constitutional history (London) midlands_research_frameworks.htm> Barlow, F., 1979. The English Church, 1000–1066: a history Björkman, E., 1910. Nordische Personennamen in England of the later Anglo-Saxon church (London) in alt- und frühmittelenglischer Zeit (Halle) Battiscombe, C. F. (ed.), 1956. The Relics of Saint Blagg, T. C., 2002. Roman Architectural Ornament in Cuthbert (Oxford) Britain, Brit. Archaeol. Rep. Brit. Ser., 329 (Oxford) Baxter, S., 2007. The Earls of Mercia: lordship and power in Blagg, T. M., 1897a. ‘Some little-known Notts. books: late Anglo-Saxon England (Oxford) II, Esdaile’s “Rutland Monuments”’, Nottinghamshire Baylay, A. M. Y., 1903. ‘Hoveringham’, Trans. Thoroton Derbyshire Notes Queries, V, 89–92 Soc., VII, 32–6 Blagg, T. M., 1897b. ‘Some little-known Notts. books: Baylay, A. M. Y., 1913. ‘Rolleston’, ibid., XVII, 49–55 III, Esdaile’s “History of Bingham”’, ibid., V, 105–8, Beardsmore, J. H., 1909. History of Hucknall Torkard 118–21 (Mansfield) Blagg, T. M., 1900. ‘Elston chapel’, Trans. Thoroton Soc., Beckett, J., 1997a. Nottingham: an illustrated history IV, 31–2 (Manchester) Blagg, T. M., 1922. ‘William Stevenson’, ibid., XXVI, 71–6 Beckett, J. (ed.), 1997b. The Thoroton Society of Blair, J., 2002. ‘A handlist of Anglo-Saxon saints’, in A. Nottinghamshire: a commemoration of its first 100 years Thacker and R. Sharpe (eds.), Local Saints and Local (Nottingham) Churches in the Early Medieval West (Oxford), 495–566 Beckett, J. (ed.), 2003a. Nottinghamshire Past: essays in Blair, J., 2005. The Church in Anglo-Saxon Society (Oxford) honour of Adrian Henstock (Nottingham) Blake, E. O. (ed.), 1962. Liber Eliensis, Camden Society, Beckett, J., 2003b. ‘Edward Trollope, the archbishop’s 3 ser., 92 (London) palace, and the founding of the diocese of Southwell in Blank, E., 1970. A Guide to Leicestershire Archaeology from 1884’, in Beckett 2003a, 137–54 the earliest times to the end of the Middle Ages (Leicester) Beckett, J. (ed.), 2006a. A Centenary History of Nottingham Blatherwick, D. P., 1932. ‘Cornelius Brown: the (Chichester) Nottinghamshire historian’, The Nottinghamshire Mag- Beckett, J., 2006b. ‘Leisure, recreation and entertainment’, azine, I, no. 2, 114–16 in Beckett 2006a, 385–417 Bloxam, M. H., 1829. The Principles of Gothic Architecture Beckett, J., 2009. ‘The Thoroton Society and the Victoria elucidated by question and answer (London); 2 edn., 1836 County History’, Trans. Thoroton Soc., CXIII, 119–36 Bloxam, M. H., 1838. The Principles of Gothic Ecclesiastical Beckwith, J. G., 1972. Ivory Carvings in Early Medieval Architecture … (3 edn., London); later editions published England (London) in 1841, 1843, 1844, 1845, 1846, 1849, 1859, 1882 BIBLIOGRAPHY 245 Boase, T. S. R., 1953. English Art 1100–1216 (Oxford) Browne, G. F., 1884–8. In ‘Proceedings ... May 10, 1886’, Bonner, G., Rollason, D., and Stancliffe, C. (eds.), Cambridge Antiq. Soc. Rep. Comm., VI, lxxii–lxxiii 1989. St Cuthbert, His Cult and His Community to AD Browne, G. F., 1885. ‘“Scandinavian” or “Danish” 1200 (Woodbridge) sculptured stones found in London; and their bearing Bonser, G. G., 1904. ‘Skegby’, Trans. Thoroton Soc., VIII, on the supposed “Scandinavian” or “Danish” origin 1–3 of other English sculptured stones’, Archaeol. J., XLII, Bonser, G. G., 1908. ‘Kirkby-in-Ashfield’, ibid., XII, 251–9 131–8 Browne, G. F., 1885–6. ‘On sculptured “memorials of Borrodale, B., 1994. Owthorpe. A brief history of St the dead” of pre-Norman type, – (1) coped stones, (2) Margaret’s church and the village (church guide) flat stones, (3) standing stones, (4) pillars, (5) crosses’, Bourke, C. (ed.), 1995. From the Isles of the North: early Ass. Architect. Soc. Rep. Pap., XVIII, pt. 2, 122–9 medieval art in Ireland and Britain (Belfast) Browne, G. F., 1886. ‘On the pre-Norman sculptured Bramley J., 1948. A Short History of the Religious Houses in stones of Derbyshire’, J. Derbyshire Archaeol. Natur. Hist. Nottinghamshire to the Time of the Dissolution (Notting- Soc., VIII, 164–84 ham) Browne, G. F., 1887. ‘On basket-work figures of men Brand, K., (n.d.). T. C. Hine, Architect of Victorian represented on sculptured stones’, Archaeologia, L, 287– Nottingham, ‘Get to know Nottingham’: Nottingham 94 Civic Society Pamphlet, 6 (Nottingham) Browne, G.
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