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6. View of Rochester Castle, 1722.
7. Crowland triangular Bridge,* 1721.

8. Whitehall Ruins, Ground Plot, 1718.

9. Ruins of King John's Palace at Clarendon. 1723. 10. Seal of the Church of Norwich.

11. Crosses-St. Guthlac's; Ednam; Ivy Cross; Willoughby on the Wold.

12. West View of Waltham Cross,+ 1721. 13. Blackston Cave, near Bewdley, 1721.

14. Hermitage at Dale Abbey.

15. Portrait of Sir Henry Spelman.

16. Monumental Brass of Bishop Smith, founder of Brazennose College.

17. Statue of Ailwin, Alderman of all England, founder of Ramsey Abbey.

18. Monument of King John in Worcester Cathedral. 19. View of Boston Church.

20 View of Colsterworth Church.

21. View of Holbeach Church.

22. Remnant of the Priory of Leominster, and the Black Friars, in Gloucester, 1722.

23. Gate House of Reading Abbey, and of Worcester College.

24. Ruins of St. Augustin's Church, Canterbury.

* The triangular Bridge of Crowland is mentioned in the time of King Edred, anno 948. It is too steep to be commonly rode over, and therefore horses and carriages go under it. The bridge is formed upon three segments of a circle meeting in one point, and it is said that each base stands in a different county. On one side sits an image of Ethelbald. King of Mercia, with a globe in his hand.

†The best view of this cross is that which was drawn by Dr. Stukeley and engraved at the expense of the Society of Antiquaries, in 1721; it is more correct than this view.

This Statue the author thinks is one of the most ancient pieces of English Sculpture that is now known. He holds in his right hand twe keys and a ragged staff.

25. Ruins of the same, with St. Gregory's and Ethelbert's

Chapels.

26. Ruins of Reading Abbey, 1721.

27. Remains of Feversham Abbey.

28. Remains of the Church of Kirsted Abbey, Lincolnshire. Ground plan of the same Gate-house of Tupholm Abbey.

29. St. Hugh's Shrine* in Lincoln Cathedral.

30. The High Altar of St. Alban's Abbey, 1720.

31. Back view of the same.

32. The White Friars in Gloucester.

33. Ground Plan of Glastonbury Abbey.

34. Orthography, Section, and Ground Flan of the Abbot of Glastonbury's Kitchen.

35. Inside of Joseph of Arimathea's Chapel in the Abbey

of Glastonbury.

36. Ruins of Glastonbury Abbey, 1723.

37. View of Glastonbury Abbey.

38. The Pictish Caves of Hawthornden in Scotland,

39. Caves of the Troglodites at Nottingham.

40. Grecian Antiquities at Athens.

41. The Roman Camp of Chlorus,† near Clarendon Park. 42. The Roman Camp called Oldbury Castle in Wiltshire. 43. Camalet Castle, and view from St. Roc's Hill.

This plate is re-engraved in Tovey's Anglia Judaica. Mr. Smart Lethieullier ascribed this shrine probably enough to the boy Hugh, crucified by the Jews in 1255, and canonized; but Dr. Tovey differs from him. Mr. Lethieullier's letter concerning it is printed in the first volume of the Archæologia.

†This camp was made or repaired by Constantius Chlorus, father of Constantine the Great. He lived at the neighbouring Sorbiodunum, was of British extraction, and the husband of Helena, a celebrated British Princess. This camp, therefore, properly written, is Chloridugives name to Clarendon Park, half a mile distant. It

num, and now

is a beautiful fortification of a round form upon a dry chalk hill.

44. View of Martinsall Hill and Montacute Hill, two Ro

man Camps.

45. View of the Roman Wall of Silchester, and of the Hunting Tower in the Roman Camp near Littlebury.

46. The Roman Pharos in Dover Castle.*

47. Ground Plan and Section of the same.

48. The Old Church and Roman Pharos in Dover Castle. St. Martin's Church, Canterbury.

49. Three Roman Inscriptions found in Portugal, Bath, and Chichester.

50. Geometrical Ground Plot of the Roman Amphitheatre at Dorchester.

51. Side view of the same.

51. View of the same from the Entrance.

52. View of the same from the south-west.

53. The present appearance of the same, 1723.

54. Roman Gates-Worth Gate at Canterbury and Newport Gate at Lincoln,

55. The Roman Building at Leicester, commonly called the Temple of Janus.

* This building was admirably contrived for its purpose. The base is octagonal without, and square within; but the sides of the square and octagon are equal, viz. 15 Roman feet, which reduces the wall to the thickness of 10 feet. In this manner it was carried up to the top, which was much higher than here represented, but it retires inward continually from all sides. Upon four of these sides there are narrow windows, handsomely turned with a semicircular arch of Roman brick, six feet high. The door is on the east side, about six feet wide, with an arch well turned, and made of a course of Roman brick and stone, alternately, 14 feet high. It is supposed the inside was entirely filled up with a staircase. The height left of this building is 40 feet, and it might have been 20 feet higher originally, and the whole number of windows eight. The last use made of this tower was to hold a ring of bells, which Sir George Rooke begged of Queen Anne to remove to Portsmouth. After that the Office of Ordnance, under the pretext of economy, took away the lead that covered it, and left this rare piece of art and masonry to struggle with the sea, the air, and the weather.

56. Map of Roman-Britain, according to the Itinerary of Antoninus.

57. Ichnography of London in the time of the Romans. of Garionerum, now Borough Castle, near

58.

59.

Yarmouth.

of Camboritum, now Chesterford.

60. South Prospect of Newbury, Spine..

61. Ichnography of Vindoma, now Silchester.* - of Cunetio, now Marlborough.

62.

63. South Prospect of Marlborough.

64. View of Great Bedwin and Wansdike.

65. Ichnography of Sorbiodunum, now Old Sarum. 66. Prospect of Old Sarum.

67. View of Salisbury from Harnham Hill.

68. Prospect of Verlucio, now Hedington. 69. Prospect of the Devizes.

70. Ground Plan of the City of Bath.

71. View of Bath.

72. Ichnography of Ischalis, now Ilchester, with a Roman

British Coin of Antoninus Pius found here.

78. Ground Plan of Exeter.

74. View of Exeter.

75. Prospect of Moridunum, now Seaton.

76. View of Lyme.

77. Ichnography of Durnovaria, now Dorchester.

78. Prospect of Dorchester, from the Amphitheatre.

79. East View of Southampton, and Prospect from Portsmouth.

80. Portchester and View in the Port.

81. Ground Plan of Chichester, the Roman Mantantonis. 82. Distant View of Portsmouth, Gosport, Isle of Wight, &c. and Prospect of Chichester.

* The learned Professor Ward gave the most particular account of this place, in No. 490, of the Philosophical Transactions, illustrated with a plan.

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83. South View of Winchester.

84. Prospect of Staines, the Roman Pontes.

85. Ichnography of Ariconium, now Kenchester.

86.

87.

88.

89.

of Derventio, now Little Derby.

of Agelocum now Littlebury.
of Lindum, now Lincoln.

of Banovallum, now Horncastle.

90. Prospect of Ad Pontem, by Bridgford.

91.

of Margidunum, by Willoughby.

92. Ichnography of Rata Coritanorum, now Leicester. of Benonis, now Highcross.

93.

94. View of Tripontium, and Dovebridge.

95. Ichnography of Verolanium, now Verulam.
96. Ground Plan of Canterbury, 1722.
97. Richborough Castle.

98. View of Folkston.

99. View of Lemanus Portus, now Limne.

100. The Great Conjunction of the five Planets, in the

year 1722.

101. Total Eclipse of the Sun in 1721.

List of Plates in the second volume of Itinerarium Curiosum.

The Plates numbered from 1 to 46 are described in the first volume, and properly belong to it.

Frontispiece-Head of Dr. Stukeley.

Headpiece to p. 1, representing a Gold Coin of
Julius Cæsar, struck by his Mint Master, Publius
Sulpicius Rufus.

1. Monument of Littlebury in Holbeach Church.

2. Holbeach Cross.*

3. Boston Cross, with its Ichnography.

* This Cross was taken down in the year 1688.

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