- Abbey, of Ardennes, [225]
- --Bec, [106]
- --Bernay, [119]
- --Bonport, [284]
- --Cormeilles, [145]
- --Ducler, [1]
- --Jumieges, [17]
- --Preaux, [145]
- --St. Evroul, [146]
- --St. Georges de Bocherville, [3]
- --St. Stephen, at Caen, [192]
- --St. Taurinus, [74]
- --Trinity at Caen, [182].
- Academy of Druids, at Bayeux, [227].
- Academy of Sciences, at Caen, [214].
- Agnes Sorel, buried at Jumieges, [34]
- --her statue destroyed by the Huguenots, [34]
- --her tomb destroyed at the revolution, [34]
- --inscription upon, [35].
- Amphitheatre, Roman, found near Lisieux, [140].
- Amyot, Mr. his paper on the Bayeux tapestry, [238].
- Andelys, origin of the name, [52]
- --history of, [53]
- --seat of an early monastery, [53]
- --great house at, [55]
- --birth-place of Poussin, [57].
- Andromeda polifolia, found near Jumieges, [18].
- Anselm, archbishop of Canterbury, a monk at Bec, [110].
- Aqueduct, Roman, remains of, at Vieux, [222].
- Archbishops of Rouen, their palace at Gaillon, [290].
- Arches, trefoil-headed, early specimen of, at Jumieges, [33].
- Ardennes, abbey of, near Caen, [225].
- Arlette, mother of the Conqueror, native of Falaise, [268].
- Arnulf, bishop of Lisieux, [135].
- Arthur, Prince, knighted at Gournay, [43].
- Asselin, forbids the interment of the Conqueror, [200].
- Audinus, bishop of Evreux, authorizes Henry Ist to burn the city, [67].
- Augustodurum, probably the site of, at Vieux, [223].
B.
- Bailiffs, first established in Normandy under Philip Augustus, [232].
- Baiocco of Naples, named after Bayeux, [261].
- Bas-relief, in the church of St. Georges de Bocherville, [9].
- Baudius, professor of law for a short time at Caen, [216].
- Bayeux, seat of an academy of Druids, [227]
- --Roman relics found near, but no Druidic, [228]
- --a Roman station, [228]
- --probably the Næomagus Viducassium, [228]
- --its ancient name, [229]
- --its importance under the early French kings, [229]
- --its history, [231]
- --the place where the Norman princes were educated, [231]
- --castle, [233]
- --situation, population, and trade, [234]
- --tapestry, [235]
- --cathedral, [244].
- Bayeux, Roman, probably destroyed by the Saxons, [229].
- Bec, abbey of, its present state, [106]
- --former income and patronage, [107]
- --church described by Du Plessis, [107]
- --founded by Hellouin, [108]
- --history, [108]
- --seminary for eminent men, [114].
- Belenus, worshipped near Bayeux, [228].
- Berengarius, his tenets impugned by Lanfranc, [105]
- --of Brionne, [117].
- Bernay, abbey of, [119]
- --church, [121]
- --burial-ground, [122]
- --population and trade, [123]
- --costume of the females, [124].
- Bernieres, church of, [299].
- Blanche, wife of Charles the Bel, confined in Château Gaillard, [63].
- Bochart, one of the founders of the academy at Caen, [214].
- Boileau, his eulogium on Malherbe, [215].
- Bonport, abbey of, [284].
- Borghese, Princess of, original letter by, [151].
- Bouillon, Duke of, Lord of Evreux, at the revolution, [83].
- Bourg-Achard, seat of an abbey, dedicated to St. Eustatius, [96]
- --leaden font, [97].
- Bourg-Theroude, [104].
- Bourgueville, his antiquities of Caen, [164]
- --present at the exhumation of the Conqueror's remains, 303.
- Boy, bishop, annually elected at Caen, [261].
- Bretteville l'Orgueilleuse, church of, [226].
- Brionne, situation of, [116]
- --seat of the council which condemned the tenets of Berengarius, [117]
- --castle, [116].
- Brito, his account of the siege of Gournay, [41]
- --of Château Gaillard, [60]
- --of the murder of the French garrison of Evreux, [82]
- --of Caen, [166].
- Broglie, church of, [125].
- Bruce, David, a resident in Château Gaillard, [63].
- Buck-wheat, much cultivated in Lower Normandy, [158]
- --etymology of its French name, [158].
C.
- Caen, arrival at, [153]
- --distant view of, [159]
- --trade and population, [159]
- --situation, [160]
- --grand cours, [161]
- --costume of females, [161]
- --house-rent, [162]
- --foundation, [165]
- --described by Brito, [166]
- --etymology of the name, [166]
- --fortifications, [167]
- --Château de Calix, [168]
- --castle, [170]
- --chapel in the castle, [171]
- --hospital, [173]
- --royal abbeys, [182]
- --college, [193]
- --palace, [205]
- --museum, [210]
- --library, [210]
- --universities, [211]
- --men of eminence, [214]
- --academy, [214]
- --Malherbe, [215]
- --history, [217]
- --neighborhood abundant in fossil remains, [217]
- --seen from the road leading to La Délivrande, [295].
- Caen-stone, large quarries of, [224]
- --formerly much used in England, [225].
- Cambre, [296].
- Cambremer, Canon of, tale respecting, at Bayeux, [255].
- Cannon, first used in France, at the siege of Pont Audemer, [91].
- Canons, four statues of, at Evreux, [70].
- Castle, of Bayeux, [234]
- --Brionne, [116]
- --Caen, [170]
- --Creully, [264]
- --Falaise, [266]
- --Gisors, [45]
- --Montfort, [93]
- --Neufmarché, [44].
- Cathedral of Bayeux, founded by St. Exuperius, [244]
- --history, [244]
- --described, [246]
- --crypt, [253]
- --stripped of its relics, [257]
- --revenue, [261]
- --right of mintage, [261].
- Cathedral of Evreux, often destroyed, [67]
- --its present state, [69]
- --little injured by the Huguenots, [71]
- --founded by St. Taurinus, [71].
- Cathedral of Lisieux, now the parish church of St. Peter, [129]
- --described, [129]
- --remarkable tomb in, [133].
- Cauchon, Peter, bishop of Lisieux, president at the trial of Joan of Arc, [132].
- Cecily, daughter of the Conqueror, abbess at Caen, [191].
- Chapel, subterranean, in Bayeux cathedral, [253]
- --in the castle at Caen, [171]
- --in the castle at Falaise, [269]
- --of St. Adrian, [281]
- --of La Délivrande, [298].
- Chapel in the castle at Caen, built fronting the east, [171].
- Chapels, stone-roofed, in Ireland, of Norman origin, [176].
- Charles the Bad, born in the Château de Navarre, [86].
- Charters, of the abbey of St. Georges de Bocherville, [4].
- Château de Navarre, [86].
- Château Gaillard, its situation, [58]
- --described, [59]
- --account of, by Brito [60]
- --history, [61].
- Château de Calix, at Caen, [168].
- Chesnut-timber, formerly much used in Normandy, [226].
- Church, of the abbey of Bec, [107]
- --Bernieres, [299]
- --Bernay, [121]
- --Bretteville l'Orgueilleuse, [226]
- --Broglie, [125]
- --Creully, [264]
- --Ducler, [1]
- --Ecouis, [64]
- --Falaise, [276]
- --Gisors, [50]
- --Gournay, [43]
- --Jumieges, [26]
- --St. Peter's at ditto, [32]
- --Louviers, [287]
- --Moulineaux, [102]
- --Pont Audemer, [91]
- --Pont-de-l'Arche, [285]
- --St. Germain de Blancherbe, [224]
- --St. Gervais, at Falaise, [277]
- --St. Georges de Bocherville, [7]
- --St. Giles, at Evreux, [78]
- --St. James, at Lisieux, [137]
- --St. John, at Caen, [180]
- --St. Michael, at ditto, [181]
- --St. Nicholas, at ditto, [175]
- --St. Peter, at ditto, [177]
- --St. Stephen's abbey, at ditto, [194]
- --Trinity, at ditto, [182]
- --Trinity at Falaise, [276]
- --Vernon, [291].
- Cider, the common beverage, in Normandy, [156]
- --first introduced by the Normans, [157].
- Cocherel, [87].
- Coins, golden, struck at Bayeux, under the first French kings, [229].
- Colline des deux amans, priory of, [283].
- Cormeilles, abbey of, [215].
- Corneille, buried at Andelys, [58].
- Costume, at Bernay, [124]
- --at Caen, [161].
- Coupe gorge, colony established at, by Napoléon, [155].
- Creully, castle, [264]
- --church, [264].
- Crocodile fossil, found near Caen, [217].
- Croissanville, [158].
D.
- Dalechamps, native of Caen, [215].
- D'Amboise, Cardinal, built the palace at Gaillon, [290].
- Darnétal, [38].
- De Boissy, bishop of Bayeux, his epitaph, [254].
- De la Rue, Abbé, professor of history at Caen, [213]
- --is preparing an account of Caen, [217]
- --his paper on the Bayeux tapestry, [236].
- Douce, Mr., his illustration of the sculpture at St. Georges de Bocherville, [14].
- Douvre, [297].
- Dubois Louis,
- --his discoveries among the ruins of Old Lisieux, [140]
- --preserved the original M.S. of Ordericus Vitalis, [149]
- --is preparing the history of Lisieux, [149].
- Ducarel, his description of a pavement in the palace at Caen, [206].
- Ducler, convent, [1]
- --parish church, [2].
- Du Perron, cardinal, bishop of Evreux, [73].
- Du Plessis, his opinion as to Turold on the Bayeux tapestry, [104]
- --description of the abbey church of Bec, [107].
E.
- Ecouis, church of, burial-place of John and Enguerrand de Marigny, [64]
- --singular epitaph, [66].
- Epitaph, enigmatical at Ecouis, [66]
- --of John de Boissy, [254]
- --on the exterior of Bayeux cathedral, [255].
- Evreux, destroyed by Henry Ist, [67]
- --cathedral, [67]
- --abbey of St. Taurinus, [74]
- --history, [80]
- --present appearance, [84].
- Evreux, Old, a Roman station, [79].
F.