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Edgar, reign of, 127; his laws, 128.
Edmund Ironside, reign of, 115, 135.
Edmunds, Mr., his "Place-Names" cited,
385.

Edric, King of Kent, 63.

Edric, Duke of Mercia, accused of trea-
chery, 115, 130, 135.

Edward the Confessor, reign of, 136;
charter of, 147.

Edward the Elder, reign of, 126, 185.
Edward the Martyr, short reign of, 128.
Edward I., his grant to the barons of
the Cinque Ports, 87; his hunting
seat at Newenden, 371.

Edwin, the brother of Athelstan, death
of, 127.

Egbert, King of Kent, 63; charter of, 142.
Egbert, King, conquests and reign of,

64, 79; his council at Kingston, 185.
Egerton not mentioned in Domesday,
227.

Eleanor, Queen of Henry II., 337; im-

prisoned by him, 345; released by her
son Richard, 348; informs him of
Longchamp's proceedings, 350.
Elfmar, the abbot, his treachery, 132.
Elliott, Mr., of Dymchurch, 11; on the
inclosure of Romney Marsh, 29; on
the course of the Limen or Rother,
217; on the coast road from Dover, 421.
Ellis, Sir Henry, his "Introduction to
Domesday" cited, 115, 117, 157, 164,
166, 170, 217, 220, 252, 256, 257, 261.
Elton, on the "Tenures of Kent," cited,
156, 178, 179, 213, 274.
Emma of Normandy, 130, 136.
Emperors, the five good, 20.
English the, their treatment by the
Normans, 211, 281.

Erconbert, King of Kent, destroys the
idol temples, 193.
Erlege, Thomas de, 355.
Ermenric, King of Kent, 54.

Essex, Henry of, a tenant of Saltwood,
342; his fate, note.

Ethelbald of Kent, his grant to Adisham,
405.

Ethelbald of Mercia grants exemption
from toll to a monastery in Thanet,
171.
Ethelbert, King of Kent, reign of, 63;
his conversion, 66; promulgation of
his laws, 184.

Ethelbert II. of Kent, 72, charter of,

73; his grant to Minster Abbey, 86.
Ethelbert and Ethelred, Kings, the elder
brothers of Alfred the Great, 81;
charter of Ethelbert, 85.

Ethelnoth, the reeve at Eastry, 124.

Ethelred, a thane, 85.

Ethelred the Unready, reign of, 128;
his charter, 144; his laws, 191.
Ethelswitha, the queen of Alfred, 96, 155.
Ethelwerd's "Chronicle" cited, 47.
Ethelwulf, King, his council at Canter-
bury, 185; partition of his states by
his will, 81.

Eustace, Earl of Boulogne, his affrays
with the people of Dover, 138, 139;
his lands in Domesday, 240.

Eustace, his grandson, in command in
Rochester Castle, 278.

Eustace, son of King Stephen, 330; his
violent character and death, 333.
Evermere, Hugh of, 247.
Eynesford, William de, 340.

Falcacius, a mercenary, takes Tunbridge
Castle, 363.

Faversham, the abbot of, mixed up in
the quarrel of the monks of Canter-
bury with Archbishop Baldwin, 349.
Fennings, Captain, on the tidal currents
in the Channel, 11.

Fiennes, John de, constable of Dover
Castle, 326.

Fitz Alwyn, Henry, epitaph on, 289.
Fitz-Aucher, Sir Thomas, the patron of
the Carmelites, 406.

Fitz-Dering, Norman, Sheriff of Kent,329.
Fitz-Pierre, Geoffrey, the justiciary, 355.
Fitz-Walter, Robert, excommunicated
by name by the Pope, 363.
Fitz-William, Eustace, complaint of, 381.
Flanders, Philip, earl of, his pilgrimage
to Canterbury, 344; has a grant of the
earldom of Kent, 345; resigns it, 345.
Flanders, Robert, earl of, his conven-
tions with Henry I., 281.
Fleming, Mr., his Tonbridge Castle"
cited, 277.

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Flemish weavers, settlement of, in Kent,
417.

Foss, Mr., his "Judges of England"
cited, 247.

Fraunceys, John, a justice of the peace
for Kent, A.D. 1378, 319.

Freeman, Mr., an assertion of his con-
troverted, 213.

French knights mentioned in Domesday,

255.

Fuller, on Tenterden steeple and the
Goodwin Sands, 304.

Furnes, Thomas of, 353.

Gale, Dr., on Roman roads in Kent, 410.
Garulf, a King's thane, 85.
Gausfrid, bailiff of Wye, 383.

Geoffery, bishop of Coutances, 268; his
manors, 273.

Geoffery of Monmouth, his "Historia
Britonum," 39.

Gildas, on the state of Britain, 31, 38.
Giles, Dr., his translation of Six Old
English Chronicles, quoted, 21, 22.
Glanville, one of the earliest of English
law writers, 347.

Gloucester, Robert, earl of, his support
of his sister the Empress Maud, 327,
332; his death, 332.
Goda, the Countess, 211.
Godwin, bishop of Rochester, 132, 151,
268.

Godwin, a suffragan bishop, 124.

Godwin, Earl, history of, 135; charter
of, 144, 145.

Gostling, his notes on Somner's Anti-
quities of Canterbury, 291.
Gray, John de, bishop of Norwich, his
election as archbishop set aside by the
Pope, 357.

Gregory, Pope, his zeal for the conver-
sion of Britain, 66, 201.

Gregory VIII., Pope, befriends Arch-
bishop Baldwin, 349.

Grimaldi's "English Genealogies" cited,
286.

Guest, Dr., 24.

Guildford, Earl of, his leasehold pro-
perty in Romney Marsh, 177.
Guizot, his harsh opinion of the feudal
system, 273.

Gundulph, bishop of Rochester, his
grants from William Rufus, 278;
assists in building Rochester Castle,
279; his hospital at Chatham, 286.
Gunhilda, sister of Sweyn, murder of,
130.

Guthrum, the Dane, 92, 93.

Gybbon, Henry, captain of Rolvenden
hundred, 322.

Hadvisa, wife of King John, divorced
by him, 354.

Haimo, the Sheriff, lands of, 240.

Hales, John, first mayor of Tenterden,
309.

Halley, Dr., on the place of Cæsar's
landing, 9.

Hamper, Mr., on the churches of the
Weald, 401.

Harcherugge, Thomas, a justice of the
peace for Kent, A.D. 1378, 319.
Hardicanute, reign of, 136.

Hardy, Rt. Hon. Gathorne, M.P., the
present owner of the Seven Hundreds,
323.

Hardy, Mr. C. S., his manor of Chilham,
382.

Harty, Sir T. Duffus, his "Itinerary of
King John," 368.

Harlackenden, Martin, captain of 300
men, temp. Eliz., 322.

Harold, son of Godwin, 137; chosen
king, 140; his defeat and death, 211;
how mentioned in Domesday, 240.
Harold Hardrada, his invasion of Eng-
land, 140.

Harold Harefoot, reign of, 136.

Harris, Lord, his woods in Kent, 392.
Harris, Dr., on the place of Caesar's
landing, 9; on the legend of King
Lucius, 32; on the site of Anderida,
50 n.; on the word Weald, 60; on
Hasten's invasion, 94; on the origin
of shires, 102; on the Goodwin sands,
306; on the Roman roads, 408, 410.
Hasted, on the introduction of Christ-
ianity into Britain, 33; on the forti-
fications at Kennardington, 94; on
East and West Kent, 110; gives only
a modern description of the hundreds,
118; on Chilham, 382; on the Blean
woods, 391.

Hasten the Dane, 92; his ravages, 93,
94; his death, 95.

Hawkin's "Pleas of the Crown," cited,
284.

Heley, Richard, first mayor of Maid-
stone, 299.

Hengist and Horsa, story of, 39, 40, 41,
45.

Henry I., reign of, 280, 281; his charac-
ter, 281.

Henry, son of the Empress Maud, his
claim to the crown, 332; builds the
keep of Dover Castle, 333; his claim
allowed, ib.

Henry II., reign of, 337; his greediness
of territory, 338; his contest with
Becket, 341; his bad character, 344;
Fair Rosamond, 345; rebellion of his
sons, 346; his death, 347.

Henry, son of Henry II., his coronation,
338, 343; his death, 345.

Henshall, Rev. S., on servi, 258; on the
population of Kent, 261; on the pe-
culiar hundred of Wye, 236; his error
as to Somerden, 223; on Yalding,
255.

Heregyth, her will, 152.

Heryng, Nicholas, a justice of the peace
for Kent, A.D. 1378, 319, 320.
Hodges, Thomas Law, M.P., purchases
the Seven Hundreds from the Crown,
322.

Holloway, Mr., on the site of An-
derida, 49; his "History of Rye"
cited, 249.

Holmesdale, Lady, her property at
Bethersden, 145.

Honorius, the emperor, gives independ-
ence to the British cities, 20, 38.
Honorius, the archbishop, 113.
Horn, William, a justice of the peace
for Kent, A. D. 1378, 319.
Horsa. See Hengist.

Horsfield, Mr., his "History of Sussex"
cited, 27, 46, 48, 411.

Horsley on the place of Caesar's landing,
9.

Hubert, archbishop of Canterbury, his
rivalry with King John, 354; his resi-
dence at Canterbury, p. 420; his
death, 356.

Hunnye, Edward, captain of Barnfield
hundred, 322.

Huntingdon, Henry of, his account of

the destruction of Andredscester, 47,
51; his mention of Kentish cities, 417.
Hussey, Rev. A., his "Churches of
Kent" cited, 33, 227, 275, 297, 401.
Hussey, Mr. R. C., on the place of
Cæsar's landing, 9; on Roman urns
found in the Weald, 25; on the site
of Anderida, 50.

Huton, Godfrey de, an ancient possessor
of Hurst, near Aldington, 253.

Ina, King, laws of, 77, 103, 162, 207.
Innocent III., Pope, his ambition, 354;
quarrel with King John, 359; their
reconciliation, 362; his death, 395.
Ipres, William de, his origin, 327; be-
comes Stephen's general, ib.; created
Earl of Kent, 329; founds Boxley
Abbey, 336; leaves England, and dies
in a monastery, ib.; his character, 330,
338.

Irling, a Northman, 137.
Isabella, queen of King John, 354.

Jeake on the word Dene, 87; his "Char-

ters of the Cinque Ports" cited, 244,
245, 246, 248, 249, 250, 303.

Johanna, wife of King John, divorced
by him, 354.

John, Prince, his crown of peacock's
feathers, 346.

John, reign of, 353; his grant of pri-
vileges to the Cinque Ports, 247; his
three coronations, 354; his letters to
the men of Kent, 358, 367; his visits
to Chilham, 359; his encampment on
Barham Downs, 360; his submission to

the Pope, 361; grant of Magna Charta,
362; war with the Barons, 362; his
ravages, 366; his death and character,
367; his rescript concerning the Ciren-
cester Seven Hundreds, 323; his
Itinerary in Kent, 368, 420; his pre-
sentation to Marden, 399; his letter
to the people of Sussex, 412; his rapid
travelling, 419.

John, Cardinal of St. Stephen, his advice

to the monks of St. Augustine's, 356.
St. John's, a member of Dover, 311.
Joseph of Arimathea said to have
preached in Britain, 31.

Judge, Mr. Stephen, discovers Roman
remains near Tenterden, 303.

Justus, bishop of Rochester, 67, 111, 113.
Juvenal, on the Rutupian oysters, 21.

Kasingham, See Casingham.
Kemble, Mr., on the Saxon conquest,
44; on the Mark, x, 57; on the Gá, 100;
on the institutions of Alfred, 104;
on the office of sheriff, 108; on an
Anglo-Saxon city, 172; on the witen-
agemot, 184; on forests, 372.
Kennett, Bishop, his "Parochial Anti-
quities" cited, 186, 382.

Kentish men, peculiar privileges of the,
264; letter of King John to, 358.
Kilburne, on the legend of King Lucius,
32; on the origin of shires, 103; on
"Kent and Christendom," 111; on
the origin of the Goodwin Sands, 303;
on Hawkhurst, 384.
Knatchbull-Hugessen, Mr.,M.P., his pro-
perty at Bircholt, 231.

Knocker, Mr., extract from his "Grand
Court of Shipway," 245.

Læti, the, 157.

Lambarde on the name Cantium or
Kent, 5; on Newenden, 48; on the
Weald, 56, 59; on the death of Sige-
bert, 69; on the river Stour, 83, note;
on shires, 102; on tithings, 118; on
classes of Anglo-Saxon freemen, 158;
on the twenty-two hundreds of Wye,
235; on the Goodwin Sands, 304; on
the Carmelite Friars, 406.

Lambert, Archbishop of Canterbury, his
treatment by Offa, 75, 185.
Lanfranc, Archbishop of Canterbury,
233; his advice to William II., 277;
death, 278; his foundations in Kent,
279.
Langton, Simon de, his demands made
to King John, 358; becomes the Chan-
cellor of Louis the Dauphin, 365,

Langton, Stephen, appointed Archbishop
of Canterbury, 358; allowed to return
to England, 361; Rochester Castle
restored to him, 362; his collegiate
church, 406; his death, 248, 418.
Lappenberg, his History of England'
cited, 42, 81, 96, 128, 134, 135, 162,
169, 211, 261.

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Larking, Rev. L. B., on ancient measure-
ments of land, 89; on the Surrenden
charters, 145; on the villani and bor-
darii, 157; on the servi, 160, 258; on
the twenty-two hundreds of Wye,
235; on the adoption of the Domesday
Survey by the men of the four laths,
265; on the Seven Hundreds, 315.
Leicester, Robert, Earl of, Chilham
Castle delivered to, 355.

Leofwine, his suit for land at Snodland,
151, 268.

Leofwine the Red, charter granted to,
144, 145.

Lewin, Mr., on the place of Cæsar's
landing, 10, 13; his theory considered
the most probable, 16; on the Castra
of the Littus Saxonicum, 40, 244; on
the departure of the Romans, 38, note;
on the etymology of Anderida, 53.
Leyburn, Roger de, his fee farm of the
Seven Hundreds, 318.

Loke, the Northern principle of evil,
65.
London, Gilbert, bishop of, an enemy of
Becket, 343.

Londoners, the, repulse the Danes, 129;
drive out the Empress Maud, 330, 331;
favour the Barons against King John,
362; their claim to Stonar, 364.
Longchamp, bishop of Ely, 350; his ty
rannical proceedings, 351; driven from
England, 352.

Lothen, a Northman, 137.
Lothere, king of Kent, 63.
Louis VII. of France, divorces Eleanor
of Aquitaine, 337; protects Becket,
342; supports Henry's sons, 344.
Louis the Dauphin, invited by the
barons, invades England, 364; his
chancellor, Simon Langton, 365; be-
sieges Dover in vain, 366; distrusted
by the barons, 366.
Love, Alexander, captain of Rolvenden
hundred, 322.

Lower, Mr., on the site of Anderida, 52;
on the iron-works in the Weald, 208;
his "Contributions to Literature
cited, 211; on "dene," 377; his
"Chronicles of Battel Abbey" cited,
383, 387, 396, 402.

Lucius, King, legend of, 31; alleged
palace at Chilham, 32 note; buildings
ascribed to him, 34.

Lucy, Richard de, an opponent of
Becket, founds the first church to his
memory, 399.

Lyfing the Bishop, witness to a charter,
145.

Lynde, John, first mayor of Canterbury,
291.

Lyttleton, Lord, his "History of Henry
II." cited, 325, 326, 338, 343, 344, 349.
Macaulay, Lord, his unfavourable opinion
of the ancient Britons, 3, 24; his scep-
ticism as to early Saxon history, 41;
on the Danes, 80; on Dunstan and his
associates, 202; on distinctions of
caste, 262, 264; on King John, 367;
on pilgrimages, 415.

Mackeson, Mr., 298; on the Geology of
the Weald, 423.

Mackintosh, Sir James, on the character
of Alfred the Great, 98; on that of
Dunstan, 196; on the semi-servile
class, 262; on the reign of John, 367.
Madox on the tenure of towns under the
early sovereigns, 313.

Magminot, Wakelyn, constable of Dover
Castle, 328.

Magnavil, Geoffrey, created earl of Essex,
283.

Magnus, King of Norway, 137.

Makenade, William, a justice of the
peace for Kent, A.D. 1578, 319.
Malmesbury, William of, on the legend
of Joseph of Arimathea, 31; on Vor-
tigern, 39; on King Offa, 75; on Al-
fred, 92; on the queen of Edward the
Confessor, 137; on Stephen, 328.
Mandeville, Geoffrey de, his pannage for
hogs, 254.

Manning and Bray's "History of Sur-
rey" cited, 229, 403, 411.

Manwood. Sir Roger, his definition of a
forest, 56.

Maplesden, George, captain of Marden
hundred, 322.

Markham on the Wealdish grounds, 12.
Marshall, William, constable of Dover
Castle, 323.

Martin, Mr. Wykeham, his "History of
Leeds Castle," cited, 252, 318.
Maseres, Baron, on the original meaning
of the word Manor, 273.
Matilda, wife of King Stephen, her
efforts on behalf of her husband, 330,
331; her favour to Faversham Abbey,
334; her death, 333.

Maud, the Empress, her character, 325;
her war with Stephen, 328; is driven
from London, 330; withdraws to Nor-
mandy, 332.

Maunsell, Provost of Beverley, 421.
Mellitus, bishop of London. 67, 111.
Montfort, Hugh de, the holder of Tepin-
dene, 221; a vassal of the Archbishop
of Canterbury, 234; also of Battel
Abbey, 235; his lands in Domesday,
240.

Mull and twelve others burnt by the
Kentish men, 103.

Munn, Mr., of Tenterden, 290.

Mylles, John, captain of Barkeley hun-
dred, 322.

Napoleon, the Emperor, on the place of
Caesar's landing, 11.

Nennius on the story of Vortigern, 40, 45.
Nevill, Hugh, the chief forester, 350;
faithful to King John, 359.
Normans, their invasion of England, 210;

their treatment of the vanquished, 211,
281; conduct of their clergy, 282.
Northmen (or Danes), their first des-
cent on the Isle of Sheppy, 79; their
ravages in Kent, 81, 94, 129, 133;
massacre of some by order of Ethelred,
129.

Norwood, Mr. J. D., of Ashford, Editor
of Robinson's Gavelkind, 178.

Octa, King of Kent, 54.

Odo, archbishop of Canterbury, 194.
Odo, bishop of Baieux, made earl of
Kent, 242; manors granted to, 220,
224, 228, 229, 234; his oppressive con-
duct, 234; was he correctly styled Lord
Warden, 242; his parks, 252; revolts
against William II., 277; his death, 278.
Offa, King of Mercia, his conquest of
Kent, 63, 75; his treatment of Arch-
bishop Lambert, 75, 185; his charter
to Christ Church, 76, 86; his death
and burial, 75, note.

Olaf, the son of Sweyn, 133.
Olave, King of Norway, 129.

Oswini of Kent, his grant to the See of
Rochester, 208.

Oswulf, ealdorman of East Kent, 107.
Ow, Earl of, 229, 234.

Palgrave, Sir Francis, his "History of
England" cited, 189, 241.

St. Paul, said to have founded the
British Church, 31.

Paulinus, bishop of Rochester, 113.

Pearson, Mr. C. H., remarks on forests,
55; on Weald and Wold, 60; on the
ecclesiastical division of England,
113; on castles, 251; on land inclosed
in Kent, 256; on the Goodwin Sands,
307; on the forests after the Norman
conquest. 372; on Canterbury pilgrims,
415; on Kentish traffic, 417.

Pecham, Hugh de, complaint against. 381.
Peckham, James de, a justice of the
peace for Kent, A.D. 1378, 320.
Pembroke, Anne, countess of, a female
sheriff, 284.

St. Peter, said to have founded the
British Church, 30.

St. Peter, Ghent, Abbey of, its grant of
Lewisham, 146, 239.

Petlesden, Thomas, his bequest to Ten-
terden steeple, 303.

Pevensey, William of Normandy lands
at, 141; a member of Hastings, 310.
Philip II., King of France, 350.
Philipott on Newenden, 49, 221; on
tithings, 118; on the origin of Ten-
terden, 300.

Picot, Ralph, sheriff of Kent, 337.
Pimpe, the family of, 221.

Plantagenet, Geoffrey, father of Henry
II., 325.

Plegmund, the Archbishop, a councillor
of Alfred, 113.

Pluckley, William de, 145.

Pomponia Græcina, probably a Christian,

31.

Punnaunt, Alan, a royal commissioner,
temp. Hen. III., 248.

Ralph, archbishop of Canterbury, 280.
Ramsden, George, captain of Barkeley
hundred, 322.

Raymond, steward for Battel Abbey,
384.

Reginald, sub-prior of Christ Church,
Canterbury, his election as archbishop
set aside, 357.

Richard I., reign of, 347; the greater
part spent abroad, 347; relinquishes
at Canterbury all claims to the sove-
reignty of Scotland, 350; his death,
352; his ransom, 417.

Richard of Cirencester, his description
of Britain under the Romans, 21.
Richard of Dover, 359.

Richard, natural son of King John, 359.
Robert of Normandy, 280.

Roberts, Walter, his certificate of the

muster of the Seven Hundreds, 322.
Robertson, Canon, his "Becket" cited,
339.

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