Page:Notes and Queries - Series 11 - Volume 7.djvu/343

 ii s. vii. apkil 26, wis.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 335 xecently at Minehead a brass hand which had been made and used for this purpose. My specimen—now serving me as a paper- weight—measures 6 in. by 3& in., and has a heart 1J in. by 1J in. cut out of the palm. In their representative processions the Chinese also carry long silver rods tipped sometimes with an emblematic hand; and among the Indians of North America—as also among Orientals—the figure of a hand is a sacred emblem. On the ruins of Uxmal in Mexico the sign of a red hand is frequent, and one of the early explorers of extinct Mexico observed that the same conspicuous mark — im- pressed in red paint by the naked hand— stared us in the face in all the ruined buildings of the country." Harold Bayley. The Sanctity of Royalty (11 S. vii. 249).—I have come across the following instances of a queen's residence in a monas- tery :— Tynemouth (Benedictine, a cell of St. Albans).—In 1303 Margaret, the second wife of Edward I., stayed for some months at Tynemouth Priory (' Northumberland County History,' viii. 84, and references there given). Her visit does not seem to have caused any protest or punishment, for in 1322 Isabella, wife of Edward II., spent some time there (Brand, ' History of Newcastle-upon-Tyne,' ii. 91). Brand quotes as follows from the Wardrobe Accounts of 15-16 Edward II. :— " Thome de Holm scutifero hospicii Domini Kegis moranti in prioratu de Tynemouth una cum aliis scutiferis de hospicio Domini Regis in municione ejusdem prioratus racione more Doraine Regine ibidem pro expens'oris sui per 16 dies 26 die Septembris pro primo computato, percipi- «ndo id. ob. per diem 6*." Durham (Benedictine).— " Anno gratia? Mccc tricesimo tercio, feria quinta, in ebdomada Paschae, venit Hex [Edward III.] Dunelmum, et in Prioris camera bospitatur. Feria vero quarta sequenti supervenit Regina Philippa uno die de Knarsburgb. usque Dunelmum : et ignorans consuetudinem ecclesire Dunelmensis, per portam Abbathia? ad cameram Prioris de- scendebat, et ibi cum Rege ccenabat. Et cum, ccena facta, cubasset, intimatum est Regi per monachum qucndam, quomodo sanctus Cuth- bertus mulierum praesentiani non amabat. Ad prseceptum igitur Regis surrexit Regina : et in tunica sola, cooperta clamide, per portam quam intravit rediit, et sic ad Cast rum per Likyate se transtuht: rogans Sanctum ne quod ignoranter fecerat vindicaret."—Raine, ' Histories Dunel- mensis Scriptores Tres,' Suttees Soc, p. 117 ; xlvii. This last instance is particularly in- structive, as it shows that the normal custom was for the queen to stay in the monastery, but also that a particular sanctity might override custom. M. H. Dodds. Bibliography of Chartularies (11 S. vii. 286).—Before any list of printed Char- tularies appears in ' N. & Q.' I venture to suggest that intending contributors should consult Dr. Gross's' Sources and Literature of English History,' and that only additions to those mentioned by him should be given. Section 57 of this invaluable work includes references to a great number of Char- tularies published in separate form and in local histories, &c, while in other parts of the book are some mentioned which appear in general works. Thus the Gloucestershire Chartularies so far printed are all recorded by Gross, and it seems useless to take up valuable space in ' N. & Q.' with repeating these. A fist of monastic Chartularies known to exist at the time was printed in Collectanea Topog. et Genealogica, vols, i.-ii. (1834-5); and Sims also gave a list at pp. 14- 28 of his ' Manual for the Genealogist' (1856). ' A Calendar and Description of the Monastic and other Chartularies in the Public Record Office ' was included in the Deputy-Keeper's Report, 1847, iApp. II., pp. 135-66. The excellent ' Index to the Charters and Rolls in the Department of Manuscripts, British Museum,' vols, i.-ii., published 1900-12, which comprises all charters, &c, in the Department on 1 Jan., 1901, should also be consulted. Vol. ii. includes an invaluable index to documents relating to religious houses. Roland Austin. Public Library, Gloucester. Fire-Ritual (US. vi. 489 ; vii. 33, 233). —I remember seeing fires lit on La (pro- nounced law) Bealltaine, or May Day, about forty years ago at Templeglantine, co. Limerick, with the object of protecting cattle from sickness and blight throughout the year. Two adjacent furze bushes were set ablaze, and were fed by other bushes (previously cut for the purpose) while the cattle were being driven between them, the animals being struck with a blazing bush as they passed, after which they were sprinkled with holy water. As late as 1898 I saw bonfires fit on the 1st of May in Achill Island, and not on St. John's Eve (23 June), to which date the fighting of these fires is said to have been transferred
 * The Chronicle of Robert de Graystanes,' cap.