Page:Notes and Queries - Series 9 - General Index.djvu/69

 NINTH SERIES.

61

Centenarians, ii. 209, 296 ; iii. 186 ; vii. 86, 314 ;

viii. 132 ; xi. 287

Centipedes, local names, vii. 266, 395 Centorie lands, derivation of the word, v. 332 Centrifugal railway, early example, x. 366 ; xi. 174,

337

Centum, use of the word, v. 433 Centuries, beginnings and ends of, iii. 225 ; v. 41,

84; xii. 125 ; living in three, vii. 86, 314; viii. 132 Century, twentieth, its advent, v. 1, 41; lines on, 84 Century, incident, remarkable, vii. 105 Cerebos, Limited, on Cerebos salt, v. 440 Cerebos salt, meaning of the term, v. 356, 440 Cerney Manor, Cirencester, accounts and prints of,

ix. 448, 517 Cervantes : on the stage, i. 327, 398 ; ' Iconography

of Don Quixote,' iii. 50; and Burns, iv. 144 ;

'Don Quixote' in English literature, xii. 147 Cervetri, its locality, x. 489 ; xi. 16 Cespititious, its derivation and early use, iv. 126 Cetinje, origin of the name, iii. 167 Cetu, a ghost-word, v. 412

Cetywayo, its spelling and pronunciation, iii. 406 Chacma, zoological term, v. 394 Chad well (W.), M.P. St. Michael, Cornwall, 1640-4,

v. 247

Chad well family, xii. 172 Chad wick (A.) on Barbadian registers, x. 28 Chadwick (Sir E.) on open spaces, v. 286 Chaffers (William), his < Marks and Monograms on

European and Oriental Pottery,' v. 12 Chafy (W. K. W.) on passage in Chaucer, vi. 468 Chain, gold, temp. Charles II., x. 827 Chain-mail in the British army, vi. 488 ; viii. 131, 233,

Chains, Corporation, viii. 344, 446

Chair, St. Augustine's, iv. 379 ; Plantagenet, in York

Minster, vi. 150, 233, 294, 333 Chair, use of the word in the flint-glass trade, ix. 365,

473; x. 116

Chairs, ancient, viii. 282, 393 Chairs, Windsor, made at High Wycombe, iii. 349,

456 ; iv. 12, 57

Chal, Romany word, iii. 108, 373, 475 'Chaldee MS.,' its authors, i. 166, 272, 419 Chalice as a race cup, viii. 162, 272, 394 Chalices of wood prohibited, ix. 89, 214 Chalk on the door, old saying, i. 408 ; ii. 37 Chalking under a pot, meaning of the expression, viii.

184

Challinor (John), Recorder of London 1508-10, v. 267 Challowe family and arms, i. 209 Chalmers (Sir George), d. 1791, portrait painter, x. 227 Chalmers (Dr. T.), his ministry at Kilmany, xi. 25, 72 Chalmers baronetcy, i. 47, 136

Chamberlain, diplomatist employed by Canning, i. 287 Chamberlain (Joseph) and Lord Rosebery compared.

ix. 186

Chamberlaine (William), his biography, ii. 348 Chamberlen (Hugh) the younger, date of his death,

viii. 522

Chambers (G.) on list of book sales, vi. 213 Chambers (George), his death, x. 520 Chambers's Encyclopaedia,' error in, x,ii. 125 Chambers's ' Index of Next of Kin,' &c., i. 268

1 Chambers's Journal,' its history, ix. 3, 24, 95

Champigny, a carriage, ix. 229

Champion (King's), history of the office, ix. 503 j story of, xii. 135, 254

Champneys (B.) on quotation attributed to Coventry Patmore, x. 11

Chancellor of England, his precedence when not a peer, i. 488 ; ii. 137

Chancery, Six Clerks and others in, ii. 69, 233 ; iii. 135 ; xii. 154, 277, 335, 375 ; records of London Inns of, xii. 13

Chancery : chancery platform, use of the phrase, viii. 106

Chandos (Duke of), his marriage, xi. 445

Chandrapida, King of Kashmira, story of, viii. 119

Change, adjectival, viii. 462

Channel Island names anciently associated with Corn* wall, x. 185

< Chant of Achilles,' its publication, iii. 188, 272, 371

Chantilly, Charles Potter's porcelain manufactory at, xii. 325

Chantry on bridge at Wakefield, xii. 43, 111, 217

Chapels, episcopal, in London, v. 452

Chaperon, applied to a male, xii. 245, 370, 431

Chaplains, earliest mention of, viii. 463 ; ix. 93

Chaplains, women, in convents, x. 324

Chapman (George), date of his death, iv. 226, 314

Chapman (John), Marshal of Queen's Bench Prison, i. 308, 376

Chapman (M.) on survival of paganism, viii. 463

Chapman family, ix. 187, 354

Chapter-house, pulpit in, x. 347, 437

Character and climate, iv. 439

'Character of Drunkennesse, ' by John Locke, circa, 1650, v. 267

Characterie in 'H.E.D.,' iv. 344, 400

Characters, eighteenth-century, xii. 348

Charade, "My first is followed by a bird," iii. 187, 237, 296, 331, 473 ; iv. 52, 76. See also Riddles.

Charing Cross, derivation of the name, ii. 405 ; iii. 405

Charitable Corporation, its history, i. 127, 334

Charity-fair, use and meaning of the word, vi. 184

Charles I., George worn by, ii. 263, 354 ; iii. 16, 73 ; memorial rings, ii. 448 ; iii. 174, 418 ; genuine relics, ii. 513 ; iii. 130, 314 ; iv. 55 ; notes on anniversary of his execution, iii. 25, 411 ; his de- collation, iii. 124, 316, 394 ; his death attributed to Jesuits, iii. 25, 411, 478 ; iv. 56, 93, 174 ; supposed portrait of, iv. 169 ; portrait prefixed to his ' Large Declaration,' 1639, ix. 328; picture by Edward Bower, 1648, 187 ; his journey to Scotland, x. 246 ; in Madrid, xi. 184, 257 ; and the Episcopate, xi. 489 ; xii. 73

Charles II,, miniature portrait with skull, iii. 427 ; and Rebecca Wallace, viii. 363 ; on weight of fish, ix. 308 ; his hiding-places in West Dorset, x. 141, 236, 293, 475 ; Londoners of the time of, xi. 298 ; his statue removed from Soho Square, xii. 336, 391, 514 ; prophecy circa, 469

Charles III. of Spain at Petworth, i. 346 ; ii. 74

Charles V. on the different European tongues, viii. 523 ; ix. 152, 254 ; portrait ascribed to H. S. Beham, x. 348

Charles Edward (Prince), his ride through Maccles- field, xii. 169, 314