Page:Folk-lore - A Quarterly Review. Volume 13, 1902.djvu/620

 40 INDEX OF AECH.^.OLOGICAL PAPERS

Talbot (C. H. . Amesburj- church, reasons for thinking it was not the church of the priory. Wilts. ArcJi. (ind Nat. Hist. Soc. xxxi. 9-29.

Taylok (Hexry}. Four recent discoveries of Eoman remains in Chester. Proc. Soc. Antiq. 2nd S. xviii. 91-98.

Temple (Sir Richard). Historic constellations of Hampstead. Hampstead Antiq. and Hist. Soc. 1899, 66-79.

Thomas (N. W.). Animal superstitions and totemisna. Folk-Lore, xi. 227-267.

Horse's heads, weather cocks, etc. Folk-Lore, si. 322-323.

Notebooks and MSS. Folk-Lore, xi. 437.

Cropping animals' ears. Folk-Lore, xi. 457.

Thomas (Ven. Archdeacon). On a bronze seal found in Merioneth- shire. Proc. Soc. Antiq. 2nd S. xviii. 69-70.

Thompson (E. Skeffington\ First foot in Lancashii-e. Folk-Lore, xi. 220.

Tomlinson (William Weaver). Jean Bart's descent on the coast of Northumberland in 1691. Arch. ^Fliana, xxii. 12-19.

Tregelles (J. Allen). Some church chests in East Hertfordshire, East Herts Arch. Soc. i. 153-158.

Trotter (Coutts). Extracts from the diary of Mr. James Strange, commanding an expedition sent by the East Indian Company to the north-west coast of America in 1786 ; with a vocabulary of the language of Nutka sound. Anthrop. L}st. N.S. iii. App. 50-62.

Troup (Mrs. Frances B.) and Eev. J. Ingle Dredge. Biographical sketch of the Rev. Christopher Jelinger, M.A., with biblio- graphical notes. Devon Assoc, xxxii. 249-270.

Ussher (W. a. E.). The Devonian, carboniferous, and new red rocks of west Somerset, Devon and Cornwall. Somerset Arch, and Nat. Hist. Soc. xlvi. 1-64.

Vane (Hon. and Rev. G. H. F.). On licenses to eat flesh found in parish registers. Shrops. Arch. Soc. 2nd S. xii. 48-56.

Venkataswami (M. N.\ Hindu notes. Folk-Lore, xi. 218-219.

W. (L.). Giants in pageants. Folk-Lore, xi. 105.

W. ( W. C). The chapel at Havering atte Bower. Essex Arch. Soc. viii. 105-106.

Wadmore rj. F.). Knight hospitallers in Kent. Arch. Cant. xxiv. 128-1.88.

Wallace (Thomas . Archaeological notes from Moray town, Dalcross, Inverness-shire. Proc. Soc. Antiq. Scotl. xxxiv. 215-218.