CONTENTS.

PARENTALIA: or, Memoirs of the Rev. Dr. Samuel Pegge, compiled by his Son[Page ix-lviii]
Appendix to the Parentalia:
Description of Whittington Church[lix]
Description of Whittington Rectory[lxii]
Description of The Revolution House at Whittington[ibid.]
Origin of the Revolution in 1688[lxiv]
Celebration of the Jubilee in 1788[lxv]
Stanzas by the Rev. P. Cunningham[lxxi]
Ode for the Revolution Jubilee[lxxiii]
Extracts from Letters of Dr. Pegge to Mr. Gough[lxxiv]
Memoirs of Samuel Pegge, Esq. by the Editor[lxxvii]
Appendix of Epistolary Correspondence[lxxxiii]
Hospitium Domini Regis:
or, The History of the Royal Household.
Introduction[Page 1]
William I.[6]
William Rufus[18]
Henry I.[24]
Stephen[38]
Henry II. (Plantagenet)[48]
Richard I.[63]
Henry IV.[68]
Edward IV.[69]
Extracts from the Liber Niger[71]
Knights and Esquires of the Body[73]
Gentleman Usher[74]
Great Chamberlain of England[76]
Knights of Household[77]
Esquires of the Body[79]
Yeomen of the Crown[84]
A Barber for the King's most high and dread Person[86]
Henxmen[88]
Master of Henxmen[89]
Squires of Household[91]
Kings of Arms, Heralds, and Pursuivants[95]
Serjeants of Arms[97]
Minstrels[99]
A Wayte[101]
Clerk of the Crown in Chancery[103]
Supporters, Crests, and Cognizances, of the Kings of England[104]
Regal Titles[109]
On the Virtues of the Royal Touch[111]
Ceremonies for Healing, for King's Evil[154]
Ceremonies for blessing Cramp-Rings[164]
Stemmata Magnatum: Origin of the Titles of some of the English Nobility[173]
English Armorial Bearings[201]
Origin and Derivation of remarkable Surnames[208]
Symbola Scotica: Mottoes, &c. of Scottish Families[213]
Dissertation on Coaches and Sedan Chairs[269]
Dissertation on the Hammer Cloth[304]
Articles of Dress.—Gloves[305]
Ermine—Gentlewomen's Apparel[312]
Apparel for the Heads of Gentlewomen[313]
Mourning[314]
Beard, &c.[316]
Origin of the Name of the City of Westminster[320]
Memoranda relative to the Society of the Temple in London, written in 1760[323]
Dissertation on the Use of Simnel Bread, and the Derivation of the Word Simnel[329]
Historical Essay on the Origin of "Thirteen Pence Half-penny," as Hangman's Wages[331]
Custom observed by the Lord Lieutenants of Ireland[349]