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VII. Observations on the Monumental Effigy of De Mauley, formerly in the Minster at York: by Sir Samuel Rush Meyrick, K.H., LL.D., F.S.A.: in a Letter to Albert Way, Esq. M.A., Director

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 June 2012

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Extract

When we were discussing the meaning of the phrase double maille, I earnestly advised you, when you next visited York, to examine the monumental effigy of De Mauley, in the north aisle of the chancel of the Minster. I repeated this counsel to my friends George Shaw, Esq., architect, and Thomas William King, Esq., Rouge Dragon Pursuivant at Arms, as they were about to proceed to that city. My surprise was great on being informed by both that no such figure could be found, and that the attendants in the cathedral did not seem to know anything about it.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1846

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References

page 239 note a These parts are shaded in the Engraving.—EDIT.

page 243 note b This sum, according to the price of wheat, equalled £820, the same according to what was the annual stipend of a curate, and still more according to the prices in husbandry. See Fleetwood's Chronicon Preciosum.

page 244 note c The Chronicle of Lanercost, published by the Bannatyne Club, mentions his death, with that of Lord Clifford, at p. 226.

page 246 note d All this is from the publication, in 1837, by the Record Commission, edited by Sir Francis Palgrave.

page 247 note e From a contemporary Manuscript in the Cottonian Library at the British Museum, marked Caligula A. XVIII., published in 1828.

page 247 note f These are expressed in a copy of this roll in MS. Coll. Arm. No. 165 by figures which look as if intended for vipers' nests.

page 247 note g Evidently intended for Sir Edmund.

page 247 note h Here occurs a drawing nearly similar to that noticed before.