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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
From Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift
>
Scholars and Antiquaries
> Writers on Monastic and Cathedral Antiquities
Bakers collections: his
History of St. Johns College, Cambridge
Old English Studies: Sir Henry Spelman
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume IX. From Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift.
XIII.
Scholars and Antiquaries
.
§ 27. Writers on Monastic and Cathedral Antiquities.
In monastic antiquities, the writings of Dugdale and Tanner stand pre-eminent among the books of this period, as does Dugdales
St. Pauls
among works devoted to particular ecclesiastical foundations. With these may be mentioned Simon Guntons
History of the Church of Peterborough
(1686) and James Benthams
History of Ely Cathedral
(1771). Browne Williss
History of the Mitred Abbies
(1718), and
Survey of the Cathedrals
were useful, if not particularly accurate, compilations.
65
Among the more ancient monuments of antiquity, Stonehenge, from the latitude it afforded for ingenious speculation, formed the subject of various theories. Aubrey, in his oftquoted but never printed
Monumenta Britannica,
assigns to it a druidical origin. In 1655, Inigo Jones, in his monograph on the subject, sought to trace a Roman original; while Walter Charleton, in
Chorea Gigantum
(1663), endeavoured to restore it to the Danes, and William Stukeley, in 1740, produced his
Stonehenge, a temple restord to the British Druids.
66
Roman antiquities attracted comparatively small attention, though such books as William Burtons
Commentary on Antoninus, his Itinerary
(1658), and John Horsleys
Britannia Romana
(1732), with the writings of Thomas and Roger Gale, Nathaniel Salmon, Alexander Gordon, and others, suffice to show that the study was not entirely neglected.
67
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Bakers collections: his
History of St. Johns College, Cambridge
Old English Studies: Sir Henry Spelman
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