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Domesday Book was an item of great interest to the antiquarian movement of the 18th century. This was the age of the county history, with many accounts of the English shires being published at this time, and Domesday Book, as a property record of early date that happened to be arranged by county, was a major source for the medieval history of all the counties encompassed by the survey.
John Swinnerton Phillimore (26 February 1873 – 16 November 1926) was a British classical scholar, translator, and poet.. Born at Boconnoc in Cornwall, [1] Phillimore was, like his father, Augustus Phillimore before him, and four brothers, educated at Westminster School (1886-91), where he was a Queen's Scholar, before going on to read Literae Humaniores at Christ Church, Oxford, where he was ...
Phillimore is the surname of: People: Augustus Phillimore (1822–1897), Royal Navy admiral; Claud Phillimore, 4th Baron Phillimore (1911–1994), English architect; Egerton Phillimore (1856–1937), British scholar of Welsh literature and language; Greville Phillimore (1821–1884), British Anglican priest and hymnal compiler
Annales Cambriae: page view from MS. A. The Annales Cambriae (Latin for Annals of Wales) is the title given to a complex of Latin chronicles compiled or derived from diverse sources at St David's in Dyfed, Wales.
HIC ANNOTANTUR TENENTES TERRAS IN DERBYSCIRE ["Here are noted (those) holding lands in Derbyshire"]: i Rex Willelmus ii Eps de Cestre iii Abbatia de Bertone iv Hugo comes v Rogeri pictauensis
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The Harleian genealogies are a collection of Old Welsh genealogies preserved in British Library, Harley MS 3859.Part of the Harleian Library, the manuscript, which also contains the Annales Cambriae (Recension A) and a version of the Historia Brittonum, has been dated to c. 1100, although a date of c.1200 is also possible.
South Lancashire (Inter Ripam et Mersam) in the Domesday Book. The Domesday Book of 1086 AD identifies King William the Conqueror's tenants-in-chief for historic Lancashire within Cestrescire and Eurvicscire (). [1]