FOOTNOTES:
[1] Though it is also derived from one Dr. Omerus, who lived on the spot in the thirteenth century.
[2] The above paintings are illustrated in Dart’s “History of Canterbury,” 1726, and in “Archæologia Cantiana,” vol. xviii.
[3] Diocesan Histories: “Canterbury,” by R.C. Jenkins, M.A. 1880.
TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
- Full page photographs in the original text were sometimes placed so as to split paragraphs. These have been moved to immediately before or after the paragraph that was split.
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