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Anniversary Address
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 November 2011
Extract
In past years I have found that much of what I had to say about the Society overlapped with matters to which the Treasurer or the Secretary wished to refer in their reports. There are, however, this year a number of general matters which it will be useful for your President to mention. Before embarking on them there is one sad occurrence to which reference should be made. At the end of the Anniversary Meeting last year the Society's Gold Medal was presented to Professor Dorothy Garrod and those who were at the meeting will remember her charmingly elegant speech. It was very sad that she died so soon after. She was a great scholar and it did honour to the Society that she should receive so gracefully its recognition.
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- Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1969
References
page 200 note 1 Gunton, S., The History of the Church of Peterburgh, London, 1686, p. 29Google Scholar.
page 200 note 2 N.P.S., Series II, pl. 128.
page 200 note 3 Oxford, Bodl. MS. Barlow 22, see Madan, F., Craster, H. H. E. and Denholm-Young, N., A Summary Catalogue of Western Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford, ii, part ii, no. 6461Google Scholar.
page 200 note 4 Cambridge, Magdalene College MS. 10. The hymn occurs on ff. 250V, 251 of the Psalter of Robert de Lindeseye.
page 201 note 1 Brussels, Bibl. Royale MS. 9961–2, see Gheyn, J. van den, Le Psautier de Peterborough, 1907.Google Scholar See also James, M. R., A Peterborough Psalter Bestiary, Roxburghe Club, 1921, pp. 34, 35Google Scholar.
page 201 note 2 A list of these will be found in Delisle, L., Mélanges de Paléographie et de Bibliographie, Paris, 1880, pp. 198–200.Google Scholar They are to be found on ff. 100v–122v of the Brussels manuscript.
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201 note 4 f. 138, such phrases as ‘indignis precibus meis aures tue pietatis misericorditer inclinare digneris. Erraui sicut ouis que periit. require seruum tuum in domino et erue me de ore leonis’, etc.
201 note 5 f. 141 v. The following female saints are mentioned in this order: Petronilla, Tecla, Agatha, Agnes, Cecilia, Lucia, Scolastica, Katerina, Margareta, Milburga, Etheldreda, Edburga, Pega.
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page 201 note 7 Brit. Mus. Arundel MS. 155, ff. 171–82, eleventh century.
page 201 note 8 Brit. Mus. Harley MS. 863, ff. 112V–117, late eleventh century.
page 201 note 9 Brit. Mus. Cotton MS. Nero C. IV, ff. 134–42, mid twelfth century.
page 201 note 10 Paris, Bibl. Nationale fonds latin 1196 and 1203. There are many contents of English origin including an interesting memorial to St. Thomas of Lancaster on f. 426v (418v) and to the saints and relics at Christ Church Canterbury on f. 483 (475).