Page:Notes and Queries - Series 11 - Volume 10.djvu/323

 ii s. x. OCT. 17, 19U.] NOTES AND QUERIES.

317

Son of John of Westminster, Bt. Christ Church, matrio. 15 Xov., 1776, aged 17 ; second baronet, died 10 Feb., 1838, when, the baronetcy expired.

A. R. BAYLEY.

PERIODICALS PUBLISHED BY RELIGIOUS HOUSES (11 S. x. 250). In the Centenary number of The Downside Review (No. 97, vol. xxxiii.), published in June last, and edited by the Abbot of Downside, it is stated at p. 201 that, from the year 1880 to the present,

" the Review has appeared regularly, at a total cost to the Society fSt. Gregory's Society, started as the Gregorian Club 10 July, 1843] of 2,8801. (up to 1912) ; and its pages form an invaluable recoid of all that Downside has been and has done, both in every sphere of her own many-sided life and in the activities of her children throughout the world."

Thus the Review would appear to be con- nected with th.3 school rather than with the monastery. Similarly, The Ampleforth Jour- nal seems to be tin organ of St. Lawrence's College, Ampleforth, and not of the Abbey of St. Lawrence, to which the College is attached.

The Month is the organ of the English Province of the Society of Jesus. It was started many years ago, is still flourishing, and has a large sale.

The Poor Souls' Friend and St. Joseph's

Monitor is a magazine published by the


 * Bridgettine nuns of Syon Abbey, Chudleigh,

Devonshire, the only English pre-Reforma-

tion community of women which is still in

existence. A brief account of this com-

. munity will be found in The Downside

\ Review for 1908, at pp. 140-43.

There is a community of priests in the which, while still Anglican, published a magazine entitled The Lamp. This, ] , believe, is still continued, though the com- munity has submitted to the Roman See.

The late "Father Ignatius, O.S.B.," used

to publish a magazine from Llanthony Abbey,

but I am sorry to say I forget its name

HAKMATOPEGOS.

"ASCHENALD" (11 S. x. 49, 233). The

paragraph quoted from Leland appears to

, be the fictitious heading of a pedigree

drawn up soon after the Tudor perioc


 * began in 1485.

" Richard Aschenald " was suggested, it

seems to me, by the surname of Sir William

de Assenhull, who was patron of Kirk

a in 1430, and held two knights' fee*

of the Honor of Pontefract, in Cawthorne

Heaton and Mirfield, in 3 Henry VI., a hare of the lands of the great thane Sweyn, he son of Ailrie, in right of his wife Joan, sister and coheir of Sir Thomas de Burgh.

I may add that these De Burghs were not a Yorkshire family, as supposed, but pos- sessed, and had their name from, Burgh- Ireen, near Cambridge. In the little church [here are several monumental effigies of this 'amily. See a short paper on these by the Rev. C. R. Manning in Archceol. Journal, xxxiv. 121.

I have given a pedigree of the heirs cf Sweyn, son of Ailric, in Yorks. Archceo!. Journal, vii. 268. A. S. ELLIS.

Westminster.

COLLEGE OF CHEMISTRY, SCOTLAND (US. x. 268). A " college " in this connexion means a course of lectures. The Cale- donian Mercury of 22 Sept., 1720, contains an advertisement by Alexander Monro, Professor of Anatomy in the newly formed School of Medicine in Edinburgh University. He is to begin " his Colledge of Anatomy in all it's parts, with the Operations of Surgery and Bandages," on the first Monday of November.

No doubt the lists referred to are the class-rolls of other courses in the Edinburgh University Medical School. There were no extra-mural lectures at that date.

JOHN A. INGLIS.

Edinburgh.

THE DUKEDOM OF CLEVELAND (11 S. x. 249). The high authority of 'The Complete Peerage ' asserts definitely that on the death of the third holder of the title in 1774 " all his honours became extinct." The fact that

" by failure of issue a perpetual annuity of 8.000Z. per annum devolved on the Duke of Grafton "

may have tended to console the latter noble- man for not succeeding to any more of the honours derived through Barbara Castle- maine. S. A. GRUNDY-NEWMAN.

Walsall.

COLOUR AND SOUND (11 S. x. 231, 275). There are some very interesting observa- tions on this subject in connexion with the sinfonia in Haydn's ' Creation,' which repre- sents the rising of the sun, in the ' Life ' of Haydn, followed by that of Mozart, trans- lated from the French of L. A. C. Bombet (London, John Murray, 1817), p. 255, note. The writer of tho note gives lists of wind and stringed instruments, with what he thinks to be the corresponding colour to