The Parochial History of Cornwall, Volume 2 (of 4)
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  • Pabenham, John de, i. 370
  • Pacific Ocean, coral reefs in, iii. 108
  • Padestock, iii. 324
  • Paddistow, by Leland, iv. 284
  • Padestow, by Leland, iv. 260
  • Padstow church, i. 74.—Font in, iii. 178
  • —— harbour, ii. [253]—iii. 236, 382, 423
  • —— haven, i. 372, 373 bis, 376 bis, 381
  • —— parish, i. 377—ii. [79], [256] bis, [299]—iii. 175, 334 bis, 435.—Rev. William Rawlings, rector, ii. [400].—Etymology, iii. 176
  • Padstow parish, Hals lost. Tonkin, situation, boundaries, Leland’s account of the town, privileges derived from Athelstan, ancient names, value of benefice, St. Petroc born there, Fuller and Collier upon St. Petroc, church a vicarage, value, iii. 277. Patron, incumbent 278. Editor, named from St. Petroc, value of benefice, Whitaker’s conjecture that Mr. Prideaux lived on the site of St. Petroc’s monastery, character of him ibid. Carew’s account of the house, its erection and improvements, church 279. Prideaux monuments, town not large, harbour inconvenient, prospects of its improvement, Mr. William Rawlins brought a considerable trade, tithes split, several chapels, St. Sampson’s 280. Account of St. Sampson, a beautiful walk, St. Saviour’s chapel, origin of that name, domestic tragedy contained in a black letter pamphlet, trigonometrical survey, Stepper point 281. Time of high water, statistics, vicar, Geology by Dr. Boase, slate at Dinah’s Cave and Rock Ferry 282. Singular crystalline rock, Penniscen bay, Yealm bridge in Werrington 283
  • —— rock, i. 74, 94
  • —— town, iii. 331
  • Pagan army employed by the Christian Emperor of Rome, ii. [75]
  • —— inhabitants of Cornwall converted, iii. 304
  • Pagans, iii. 285
  • Page, i. 263
  • Paget, Rev. Mr. of St. Mewan, iii. 196.—Rev. Simon of Truro, iv. 76
  • Pagett, Rev. Mr. of Truro, iv. 71
  • Painter, i. 344—ii. [316]
  • —— of Antrim, i. 351
  • —— of Trelisick, ii. [99]
  • Paldys tin mine, ii. [131]
  • Paleolagi of Montferrat, ii. [369] bis
  • Paleolagus dynasty, account of, ii. [366]. Andronicus 1st and 2nd, John 1st and 2nd, quarrels of Theodore, Constantine, Demetrius, and Thomas, death of John 2nd, death of Andronicus, Demetrius possessed Silybria and aspired to the throne [366]. Thomas supported Constantine, dissensions of Demetrius and Thomas, Mohammed’s advantages therefrom, death of Constantine [367]. Thomas retires on the taking of Constantinople, Demetrius submits, his death and account of his two sons, Thomas’s pension from the pope, Gibbon’s contemptuous account of the family fate [368]. Refuted [369]
  • Paleolagus, Andrew, son of Demetrius, ii. [368]. Andronicus [366]. Camilio [365]. Camillo [369], [370] bis. Constantine [366] bis, [369]. Eighth of that name, and last Emperor [365]. Demetrius [366] bis. Dorothy [365]. Daughter of Theodore [374]. Her marriage and death [375]. Emmanuel [366] bis. Ferdinando [365], [369]. Son of Theodore [374]. Lost sight of [375]. Isidore, a monk [366]. John [365] bis, [369], [370]. Third son of Demetrius [369]. John 2nd [370]. Son of Theodore [374]. Lost sight of [375]. Manuel son of Demetrius [368]. Maria [365]. Daughter of Theodore [374]. Died unmarried [375]. Martha, wife of Theodore, jun., [375]. Michael [366]. Prosper [365], [369] bis. Theodore [365] bis, [366] bis, [369], [375]. His life by Mr. Arundell [365]. Birth, parentage, reasons for leaving Italy [370]. In England, and married in 1615, register of his marriage imperfect, his issue, did not settle at Landulph before 1622 with his family [372]. Connected with the Arundell or Lower family, probably lived at Clifton with Sir Nicholas Lower, his death [373]. Burial, discrepancy of dates, vault and coffin opened, appearance of the body [374]. His monument, its inscription, arms [365]. Account of his issue [374]. Theodore son of Theodore [374]. Died at sea [375]. Thomas [365], [366] bis, [369], [370]. His character from Khalcondylas by Recaut, and by Mahomet [368].—Constantine, iv. 148
  • Palestine, i. 130, 411—iii. 129.—Guy, Earl of Warwick’s journey to, iv. 113
  • Palfer castle, Normandy, iv. 141
  • Pallamaunter of Palamaunter family, iii. 269
  • —— manor, iii. 269
  • Pallamonter, i. 247
  • Pallas, i. 183
  • Pallephant, i. 159
  • Palmer, Roger, Earl of Castlemaine, ii. [11]. Rev. Mr. refused to subscribe the Act of Uniformity [220]. His prophecy [221]
  • Palmerias, Matthias, iv. 148
  • Pancras, St. Truro church dedicated to, iv. 8
  • —— church, London, iii. 148
  • —— street, Truro, iv. 76 bis, 80, 81
  • Panicum dactylon, iv. 180
  • Par, near St. Austell, ii. [18]
  • Paraguay, ii. [290]
  • Parc, i. 52
  • Paris, iv. 145.—Council of, ii. [90]. St. Sampson’s remains removed to [90]
  • —— Dr. i. 150, 151. William de 83.—Dr. instituted the Geological Society of Cornwall, iii. 95. His works 97. His life of Sir Humphrey Davy 95
  • Parishes, number of in Cornwall, iv. 166
  • Park, i. 367, 369. Account of 205
  • Park of Park, i. 207
  • —— Erisey, iii. 383
  • Parke, by Leland, iv. 258
  • Parker, i. 61 ter. Francis and Sir John 302. Sir Nicholas 125, 136. Arms 136.—Rev. James, iii. 96
  • —— of Burrington, Sir Nicholas, Governor of Pendennis castle, his arms and character, ii. [12]. Death, and burial in Budock church [13]
  • —— of Rathow, arms, ii. [12], [130]
  • Parkinge family, iv. 138. Heir of 139
  • Parkings, Francis, family and arms, iv. 140
  • Parliament, memoirs of, ii. [277]. Commons House of [38]. Camelford sends members to [403], [404]. Launceston sent two members to [432]. Favoured Mr. Peters, iii. 73
  • Parliament army injured Leskeard, iii. 26. Defeated 17
  • —— Roll, ii. [170]
  • Parliament street, Westminster, ii. [295]
  • —— wars, iii. 73
  • —— writ to Truro, iv. 74
  • Parmenter, Mr. of Ilfracombe, iii. 343
  • Parr, Queen Catherine, i. 16. Thomas 24
  • Parsons, John, iii. 260
  • Partridge, Cornish for, i. 243, 244, 245
  • Pascentius, i. 326
  • Pascoe, Captain, ii. [318]. Rev. Mr. [329], [330].—Erasmus, iii. 343. Thomas 89. Family 83
  • Pashley family, ii. [395]
  • Passiflora cærulea racemosa, iv. 182
  • Passio Christi, an ancient MS. in Cornish, observations upon, App. 5, iv. 190
  • Patagonia, Admiral Byron wrecked on the coast of, iii. 205
  • Patefond, William de, i. 246
  • Paternus, St. i. 321.—His history, iii. 336
  • Patras, a city of Achaia, ii. [367], [369]
  • Patrick, i. 295.—Mr. iv. 33 bis
  • —— St. i. 250—iii. 331 bis, 431.—Cleared all Ireland at once of serpents, ii. [298]. His meeting with St. German [65]
  • Patrick’s, St. church, Dublin, iv. 138, 147
  • Patten, Miss, iii. 279
  • Paul, the Apostle, iii. 284 bis.—St. i. 108, 122 ter., 198, 206—ii. [53]. His conversion [112]
  • —— Nicholas, iv. 77
  • —— parish, ii. [174]—iii. 78, 79, 84, 275. Church burnt by the Spaniards 91
  • Paul parish, Hals lost. Tonkin, situation, boundaries, iii. 283. St. Paulinus, Archbishop of York, memoir of, a vicarage, value of benefice, patron, impropriator, incumbent, earlier value 284. Editor, parish has not the prefix of St. ibid. Notice of St. Paul de Leon, parish feast, attached to Hailes abbey, dedication of that abbey by Richard, King of the Romans, relic presented to it by his son 285. Its value and history, church and monuments, Mousehole town 286. Destroyed by the Spaniards, the church burnt, register of the event, Spanish ball preserved, chapel at Mousehole, and on St. Clement’s island 287. Change of name from Porth Enys, Newlyn, Keigwin family, Godolphins at Treworveneth, Trungle 288. Chiowne and the Chinese wall, view from above Newlyn, new road, monument to commemorate the finding of a ring 289. Curious British ornaments, other similar ones, supposed to have been worn by the Druids, statistics, vicar, patron, Geology by Dr. Boase 290
  • Paul pier, iv. 23
  • —— St. de Leon, notice of, iii. 285.—Name explained, iv. 313
  • Paul’s, St. cathedral, London, iii. 167
  • —— St. church, Covent Garden, iii. 252
  • Paulet, Sir John, ii. [363].—Henry, last Duke of Bolton, iii. 47. Family 47, 123
  • Paulin parish, iii. 425
  • Paulinus, Bishop of Rochester, and first Archbishop of York, iii. 284 bis, 285. His history 284
  • Paulet, ii. [292]
  • Pawley, Jane, account of, iii. 8. Family 8 bis.—Mr. iv. 74
  • Pawton, ii. [362]—iii. 175 bis
  • Paxton, Richard, i. 283
  • Payne, John, of St. Ives, ii. [192]. John, mayor of St. Ives, his arms [198]
  • Paynter, i. 359, 360. Rev. C. H., 251. Francis 145, 148 bis. John 348. William 145.—Rev. Thomas, ii. [142]. Miss [300]. Family [228], [270].—Mr. iii. 441. Family 445
  • —— of Boskenna, Francis, i. 359
  • —— of St. Erth, i. 423
  • —— of Trelisick, i. 145. Arthur 348, 350. Francis 349, 350 bis, 351, 359. James 350, 359. Mary 359. William 350. Arms 349, 350
  • Paynter’s Consultation, i. 148
  • Payton, i. 405
  • Peace and taxes, commissioners for, John Rame, iv. 129. John Robins 117
  • Pearce, James, i. 112.—Family, iii. 60, 83.—Nicholas ter. iv. 3. Rev. Mr. of Tywardreth 109. Rev. Mr. of Broadoak 185
  • Pearce of Penryn, Mr. and Miss, iii. 445
  • Pears, John, iii. 6
  • Pearse, Rev. Thomas, ii. [92].—Mr. and Miss, iii. 9
  • —— of Helaton, Thomas, i. 303, 304 bis
  • Peck, ii. [428]
  • Peckwater hall, iii. 155
  • Pedenandre mine, iii. 382
  • Pederick, Little, church, i. 74
  • —— Little, parish, i. 404
  • Pederwin, Pedyrwyn, or St. Pederwin parish, i. 37, 457—iv. 69
  • —— north, parish 336; or Pedyrwyn, i. 107—iv. 59, 131
  • —— south, iii. 335; or Pederwyn, ii. [398], [417].—Pedyrwin, or Petherwin, iv. 50, 51, 52, 68, 69 bis
  • Pedyr hundred, i. 230, 245—ii. [253] bis—iii. 175
  • —— St. chapel at Treloye, i. 231
  • —— St. priory at Bodman, iv. 160
  • Pedyrick, Little, parish, ii. [253], [256]
  • Peel, Sir Robert, ii. [112]
  • Pegwill church, iii. 349
  • Pelagianism, ii. [65]. St. Dye opposed to [131]
  • Pelagians, ii. [63]. Of Britain [73]
  • Pelagius, i. 305—ii. [72], [74]. A Briton [63]. His doctrines [72]. Council at St. Albans to consider them, St. German preached against him [64]. His doctrine contrary to the law and prophets, Britons convinced of his errors [65]
  • —— first pope, ii. [90]
  • —— second pope, i. 393
  • Pelham, Bishop, iii. 275
  • Pellew, Admiral, iii. 96.—Cruised from Falmouth, ii. [18].—Family, iii. 94
  • Pelniddon, account of by Tonkin, i. 47
  • Peloponnesus, ii. [366]
  • Pelsew, i. 393, 403. Account of 402, 417
  • Pelton, i. 116 bis
  • Pelvellan described, iv. 37
  • Pelyn house described, and summer house at, ii. [391]
  • Pelynt manor, iii. 293
  • —— parish, ii. [394], [398]—iii. 39, 170—iv. 19, 23
  • Pelynt parish, Hals’s MS. lost. By Tonkin and Whitaker, situation, boundaries, ancient name, a vicarage, value, patron, incumbent, impropriation, manor of Plynt, iii. 291. By the Editor, ancient name ibid. Church spacious, monuments, burial-place of St. Juncus, Whitaker says the parish is dedicated to St. Nunn, St. David distinguished his followers by a leek 292. Church belonged to Newenham Abbey, value, Pelynt manor, Hale Barton and ancient remains upon it, Trelawn, its history by Bond 293, and that of its possessors, three generations of the Grey family annihilated by the civil wars, Trelawny family 294. Henry 5th’s partiality for Sir John, lines on Launceston gate, Cornish saying of the Godolphins, Trelawnys and Glanvilles, Lord Bonville built the house, rebuilt by Sir John Trelawny, and after a fire by Edward Trelawny, family portraits, chapel built by Bishop Trelawny 295. His history, the seven bishops committed to the Tower by James II. tried, and acquitted 296. Bishop Trelawny’s part in the Revolution, observation on the Duke of Marlborough, the bishop’s popularity in Cornwall 297. Cornwall disposed to rise in arms on his imprisonment, song upon it, universally sung at the time 298. Names of the seven bishops, statue of Cardinal Wolsey at Christ Church, Oxford, erected by Trelawny, his son Edward, governor of Jamaica, his judicious conduct there 299. History and fanaticism of Sir Harry Trelawny 300. Turned papist, priests arrived from Italy to celebrate masses for his soul, parish, statistics 301. Geology by Dr. Boase 302
  • —— Church town, iv. 32 ter.
  • —— vicarage, iv. 29
  • Pembre, Henry de la, ii. [119]
  • Pembro, by Leland, iv. 267
  • Pembroke college, Oxford, ii. [233], [286], [287], [377]—iii. 87, 88, 251
  • —— Jasper, Earl of, ii. [182]
  • Pembrokeshire, ii. [173]
  • Pen, word explained, iv. 317
  • —— Uchel Coit, iii. 25
  • Penalmick barton, iv. 2, 4
  • —— manor, iv. 2
  • —— of Penalmick family, iv. 2
  • Penaluna family, iii. 61
  • Penare, account of, i. 204
  • Penarth, i. 240.—Walter, iv. 77
  • Pencair, by Leland, iv. 264
  • Pencaranowe, iii. 326 ter., 327, 328
  • Pencarow, i. 368. Account of 374
  • —— of Pencarow, i. 369
  • —— village, i. 3
  • Pencoil, account of, ii. [89]
  • —— John de, ii. [89]
  • Pencoll, i. 387
  • Pencoose, account of, i. 391
  • Penda, King of the Mercians, ii. [284]—iii. 284—iv. 125
  • Pendanlase, iii. 431
  • Pendarves, account of, i. 160, 163
  • —— i. 135, 213, 302. Thomas 273, 276. Rev. Mr. 224.—Alexander, ii. [93]. Peter [143]. Samuel [93]. Miss [300]. Mr. [114]. Arms [93].—Edward W. W., iii. 367. Henry 284. Rev. Henry and Margaret 84. Sir William 382. Family 148 bis, 286, 343, 382.—Mr. iv. 2
  • —— of Pendarves, i. 160, 163, 400, 401. E. W. W. 163, 164, 401, 403. Rev. Thomas 161. William 160. Sir William 160, 163. Arms 161.—Family and Miss, ii. [93]
  • —— of Roscrow, Mary, i. 137.—Alexander, his character, Rev. John, Mary, ii. [98]. Miss [235], [239]. Arms [98].—Samuel, iii. 303. Family 133. Mrs. Bassett their heir 303.—Family, iv. 107
  • Pendeen, Dr. Borlase born at, iii. 51
  • —— cove, ii. [290]
  • Pendene, account of, by Hals, ii. [282]. By the Editor [284]
  • Pendenis castle, iv. 116; or Pendennis, iii. 136, 183, 217, 274. Sir N. Slanning, governor of 75
  • Pendennis, the former name of St. Ives parish, etymology, island, old fortification, and chapel upon, ii. [258]
  • —— castle, i. 104, 105, 268—ii. [1] bis, [5], [6], [17], [280]. Falmouth built for its supply [9]. Situation, rent to the crown, etymology, description, extent, repaired by Henry VIII. and Queen Elizabeth, has contained above 100 cannon, and some thousands of foot arms, Sir Nicholas Parker appointed governor [12]. Succeeded by Sir Nicholas Hals, who was succeeded by Sir Nicholas Slanning, and he by John Arundell, siege under him by the rebels, dreadful extremities, and surrender of the garrison, the last castle in the kingdom to yield, except Ragland in Wales [13]. Soldiers killed by eating too freely, Col. Fortescue succeeded to the command, and after him Capt. Fox, who was succeeded on the restoration by Lord Arundell, and he by the Earl of Bath [14]. The Killigrews lords of the land [17]. Not Ictis [20]. Its longitude [23]. Rev. W. Jackman, chaplain [31]. Governor and officers salaried by the crown [278]
  • Pender of Penzance, i. 148
  • Pendew, account of, i. 324
  • Pendinant, by Leland, iv. 271
  • Pendinas and its pharos, by Leland, iv. 268
  • Pendor, i. 148
  • Pendower beach, iv. 123
  • Pendragon, etymology, i. 326
  • Pendre, i. 143. John, and arms 143
  • Pendrea, i. 143 bis, 147—ii. [125].—In St. Burian, attorney-general Noye, born at, iii. 152
  • —— Mr. iii. 16
  • Pendrym manor, iii. 123
  • Penferm, Matthew, iv. 3
  • Penfon manor, ii. [232] bis—iii. 352
  • Penfoune, iii. 352
  • —— of Penfoune family, iii. 352
  • Penfusis, by Leland, iv. 271
  • Pengaer, iii. 225
  • Pengally, i. 61
  • Pengarswick, account of, i. 124
  • Pengelly, i. 119 bis, 127—ii. [89]
  • Pengover, iii. 173
  • Pengreap, ii. [133]
  • Penhale, i. 380, 387, 388.—In Egloskerry, iii. 137
  • Penhall manor, iii. 313
  • Penhallam, ii. [233]
  • Penhallinyk, ii. [140]
  • Penhallow, iii. 193
  • —— Miss, iii. 421
  • Penhalluwick, William, ii. [160]
  • Penhargard manor, ii. [153]
  • Penheale, i. 378. Account of 379
  • Penhele in Egloskerry manor, iv. 60
  • Penhell tenement, iii. 209
  • Penhellick, account of, i. 207, 208
  • —— Rev. Mr. ii. [118]
  • Penitentiaries, i. 232
  • Penkevil of Penkevil family, iii. 214
  • Penkevill, iii. 454. Tenement 209, 210. Account of 214
  • Penkivell manor, iii. 182, 208
  • —— arms, i. 297.—Family, ii. [336]
  • —— of Pensiquillis family, and Benjamin, i. 420
  • —— of Ressuna, Richard, i. 297
  • —— of Trematon, i. 297
  • —— St. Michael, parish, i. 116
  • Penknek, by Leland, iv. 277
  • Penkridge, deanery of, in Herts, held by Tregony Archbishop of Dublin, iv. 144
  • Penkwek, iii. 26, 27
  • Penlee point, iii. 375
  • Penleton bridge, i. 119
  • Penlyer, Mr. 296
  • Penmear manor, iii. 239
  • Penn, Captain, ii. [25]—iii. 85
  • Pennalerick, Miss, iii. 62
  • Pennalyky, William, iii. 324
  • Pennance, account of, i. 257
  • Pennans, account of, i. 255
  • Pennant, i. 178 bis, 184. Account of 383
  • Penneck family, ii. [217], [218]. Origin [217]. Anne, Catherine and Charles [218]. Rev. John [217]. Father and son [123], [218]. Family monuments [219]
  • Pennington, i. 304
  • Penniscen, iii. 283
  • Pennock, ii. [170]
  • Pennore or Penarth, account of, ii. [113]
  • Pennycumquick, houses at Falmouth so called, story of the name, the same by Mr. Wynn, ii. [20]
  • Penpell, i. 243
  • Penpoll, i. 247—iii. 343 bis, in St. Germans and Quethiock 359
  • Penpons, account of, ii. [336]
  • —— of Penpons, ii. [335]
  • Penqueen, i. 118
  • Penquite, ii. [91]
  • Penrey, iii. 305
  • Penrice, i. 43, 47. Etymology 43
  • Penrin, Mr. ii. [97]
  • Penrine, by Leland, iv. 271
  • Penrith, ii. [76]
  • Penros, account of, iii. 429
  • Penrose, i. 132, 346, 386—iv. 97
  • —— ii. [157]. Rev. John, his character [104]. Martha [30], [32]. Captain Thomas, his history [25]. Journal [26], 27, 28, presented with a medal by the King of Sweden [27]. His scuffle with Cornish seamen [29]. Trial, conviction, pardon, death, and issue [30].—John and Richard, iii. 324. William 324 bis. Mr. 112.—Admiral C. V. iv. 158. Notice of 158, 159
  • —— of Lefeock, Martha and Thomas, iii. 186
  • —— of Nance in St. Martin’s in Kerrier, iii. 188
  • —— of Penrose, Edward, and Richard, iii. 444. Miss 9 bis, 444, 445. Mr. 442, 443. His house and hospitality 443. Family 443, 445. Arms 443
  • —— of Tregethes, i. 364
  • —— manor, iii. 445. Account of 443. Possessors 445
  • Penryn, meaning of, iii. 327
  • —— borough, account of, ii. [94]. Corporation [8], [9]. Members for, F. Basset [243]. Sir William Lemon [229]. Richard Penwarne [75]
  • —— hundred, ii. [51], [92]
  • —— manor, i. 231—iii. 2 bis, 226.—Bishop of Exeter, Lord of, ii. [51]
  • —— parish, i. 138, 242, 379
  • —— river, iii. 231
  • —— town, ii. [2], [17], [69], [96], [100], [113], [140], [215]—iii. 62, 64.—Ships obliged to go up to, ii. [9]. United with Falmouth [99].—Road from Helston to, iii. 63
  • Penryn Penwid, iii. 431
  • Pensandes, by Leland, iv. 265
  • Pensants, by Leland, iv. 286
  • Pensiquillis, account of, i. 420
  • Penstruan, account of, i. 421
  • Pentavale Fenton, iii. 394. Its etymology 395
  • Pentavall, ii. [1]
  • Penter’s cross village, iii. 346
  • Pentewan, account of by Hals, i. 41
  • —— manor, iii. 190
  • —— quarry, iv. 104.—By Editor, i. 50. Streamworks 51
  • —— stone, iv. 104
  • Pentillie, account of, iii. 163. Fine house built there 166
  • —— castle, account of, iii. 346. Church aisle belonging to 346
  • Pentilly, i. 316. Account of 314
  • Pentine, Avice and Richard, ii. [398]
  • Pentire of Pentire family and heiress, iii. 193
  • —— of Pentire in Minvor and of Pentewan in Mevagissey, Jane, iii. 314 bis. Philip and family 314
  • —— of Petuan, i. 384
  • —— point, i. 381—iii. 240, 281. Its latitude and longitude 281
  • Pentnar, i. 419
  • Pentowen, by Leland, iv. 275
  • Pentuan, i. 49
  • —— manor, possessors of, iii. 193
  • Pentwan, account of, by Tonkin, i. 47
  • —— Lower, described, i. 47
  • Pentybers Rok, iv. 238
  • Penuans, i. 234
  • Penularick, Miss, iii. 60
  • Penvose head, iv. 94
  • Penwarne, i. 236
  • —— in Mawnan, i. 46—iii. 74 bis. Account of 75, 76. Sold 77
  • —— in Mevagissey manor, iii. 192. Its possessors 191, 193
  • —— i. 255.—Richard, ii. [9]. He procured copies of the letters of Sir Nicholas Hals [10].—Richard, iii. 324, 325
  • —— of Penwarne in Mawnan, John bis iii. 77. Peter 76. His death 77. Richard 75, 325. Robert, bis, 75. Robert and Thomas 77. Family 75, 193. Arms 75, 77
  • —— of Penwarne in Mevagissey, Vivian, iii. 193. The heir, and family 191
  • Penwerris, i. 137
  • Penwinnick manor, iii. 382
  • Penwith hundred, i. 160, 228, 261, 344—ii. [118] bis, [141], [145], [146], [169], [214], [234], [257], [269], [272], [282], [358]—iii. 5, 30, 46, 78, 140, 242, 283, 306, 339, 380, 381, 425 bis, 428—iv. 52, 53 bis, 164 bis, 377.—Stone circles in, i. 141
  • Penwortha manor, iii. 314, 315. Account of 314
  • —— village, iii. 314 bis
  • Penwyne, account of, iii. 66
  • Penycuick, near Edinburgh, ii. [20]
  • Penydarran on the Taff, ii. [20]
  • Penzance, name explained, iv. 316
  • —— borough, corporation of, iii. 90
  • —— manor, iii. 91
  • —— market, iii. 385
  • —— town, i. 149—ii. [82], [120], [124] bis, [174], [214], [215] bis, [216], [266], [287], [352]—iii. 34, 55, 78, 275, 286, 287, 290, 342, 375—iv. 166.—Account of, iii. 81, 83, 91.—London newspapers at and post to, i. 59.—Burnt, rebuilt, incorporated, its jurisdiction, a coinage town, its market, fairs, it favoured the royalists, and was sacked by the parliament army, iii. 81. Custom house, arms, and form of writ 82. Dr. Borlase educated at 51.—Exceeds Truro in beauty and in trade, iv. 85. Mr. Thompson died at 109
  • Peran Arwothan, ii. [92]
  • —— Uthno, ii. [169]
  • —— well, ii. [2], [129]
  • Peransabulo, i. 289
  • Peransand, i. 198—ii. [93], [173], [315], [317]
  • —— church, iii. 176
  • Peranwell parish, iv. 1
  • Perceval, Mrs. i. 163, 400
  • Percivall, John, married Thomasine Bonaventure, lord mayor, and knighted, his death, iv. 134
  • Perer, Richard, ii. [209]
  • Pereth, ii. [76]
  • Perin in Cornwall, news from, ii. [100]
  • Perkin, Mr. iii. 87 bis
  • —— Warbeck took sanctuary at Beaulieu abbey, ii. [329]
  • Pernall, John, iv. 77
  • Perr river, i. 44, 45
  • Perran cove, iii. 309
  • —— St. ii. [113]—iii. 304, 309.—Visits St. Keverne, ii. [324].—His estimation, the supposed discoverer of tin, iii. 330. His history 331, 332. His miracles 313. His great age, his shrine and banner 332. His day 311
  • ——’s St. chapel or oratory, account of, iii. 329
  • ——’s St. college in Keverne, iii. 332
  • —— Arworthall church, iii. 304
  • Perran Arworthall parish, or St. Piran Arworthall, in Kerrier. Hals’s MS. lost. By Tonkin and Whitaker, manor of Arworthall, iii. 302. Quantities of tin upon it, chalybeate spring, Renaudin family 303. By the Editor, saint, church, Perran Well village, change of road, smelting-house, extensive use of arsenic, its sublimation from ores 304. Ironworks of Messrs. Fox, beautiful valley, impropriation, advowson, statistics 305. Geology by Dr. Boase 306
  • —— Arworthall, St. parish, iii. 224. In Kerrier 328
  • —— Arworthall village, iii. 303
  • —— Uthno manor, iii. 311
  • Perran Uthno parish, or Little Perran. Hals’s MS. lost. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, a rectory, value, patron, incumbent, iii. 306. Manor of Uthno 307. By Editor, church, its situation, memorial to Mr. Davies, the oath of deans rural ibid. Oracular well, emptied by a mine, good farmhouses, Goldsithney village, its chapel 308. Image of St. Perran or St. James, fair, transferred here from Sithney, displaying of a glove at fairs, destruction of the Lionesse country, and cove where Trevelyan was borne on shore 309. High tide in 1099, noticed by Stow, the Godwyn sands, Editor’s opinion of the tale, attempt to restore the land by incantation 310. Acton castle, Cudden point, view from it, children go there to seek a silver table, manor of Uthno, and of Lan Uthno, in St. Erth, feast, statistics 311. Population increased in consequence of mining and agriculture, Chapel an Crouse, bowling green, rector, Geology by Dr. Boase 312
  • Perran well, or St. Perran’s well, iii. 303, 304. Curious account of 308. Its virtues 329
  • —— well village, situation, iii. 304
  • —— Zabuloe parish, iii. 304, 386
  • Perran Zabuloe, Peransand, or Perran in the Sands. Hals’s MS. lost. By Tonkin and Whitaker, situation and boundaries, iii. 312. Ridiculous legend of St. Perran, his great age, patron of the tinners, tales told of him, fair, value of the benefice, patron, impropriation, incumbent, manor of Penhall and Halwyn, of Tywarnhaile, and of Tywarnhaile Tiers 313. Tywarnhaile house, Chapel Angarder, Penwortha manor, tin and lead upon it, Lambourne Wigan 314. Its history 315. Manor of Lambourn, its history 316. Creeg Mear, urns in it, conjectures respecting it 319. Castle Kaerkief, Whitaker’s opinion of it 320. Callestock Veor village, other entrenchments of no importance 321. Other two, Tresawsen, or Bosawson, the three barrows and four barrows, chapel in Callestock, Fenton Berram, manor of Fenton Gymps 322. Marghessen-foos village, practice of maids coming to market to offer themselves for hire, etymology of Marghessen-foos 323. Roman roads, Fenton Gymps family 324. Chywarton, Callestock-Ruol 325. Trevellance or Pencaranowe manor, its history, Reenwartha 326. Reen Wollas, Melingybridge 327. Manor of St. Piran, some tin on it, account of Piran round 328. By Editor, etymology ibid. Description of Piran round, the Guary Mir, “the Creation of the World,” and “Mount Calvary,” published by the Editor, St. Piran’s well supposed to cure diseases, encroachments of the sand, discovery and description of a chapel supposed to be St. Perran’s oratory 329. Defaced for relics, St. Perran esteemed the patron of all Cornwall, his day celebrated with great hilarity, a Perraner, St. Chiwidden, Dr. Butler’s Lives of the Saints 330. His history of St. Perran or St. Kiaran, went to Rome, was of the clan Osraig, died in Cornwall 331. Probably an active missionary, his banner the standard of Cornwall, his shrine, impropriation of tithes, incumbent 332. Chiverton, statistics, Geology by Dr. Boase 333
  • Perranbonse cove, ii. [360]
  • Perraner, iii. 330
  • Perre, Thomas, iii. 387
  • Perrin, Provost of Taunton, i. 86
  • Perron, St. Arworthal, ii. [17]
  • Perry, i. 236
  • Persia, iii. 187
  • Persius, iv. 87
  • Perthcolumb, account of, i. 364
  • Perthcothen, iii. 177
  • Perthsasnac, ii. [165]
  • Perthtowan, ii. [250]
  • Perwennack, i. 11
  • Pesaro in Italy, ii. [369], [370], [371], [373]. Theodore Paleolagus of [365]
  • Pesseme, Patrick, ii. [160]
  • Peter, Rev. John, ii. [117]
  • —— of Harlyn, Francis, iii. 176, 177. Gregory 175, 176 bis. John 76, 166, 176 bis. William 176 bis, 178 bis, 333. Mr. 178. Mr. erected a pier 179. Family 177
  • —— of Porthcuthan, or Perthcothen. Mr. iii. 177. Family 162
  • —— of Treater, John, ii. [336].—In Padstow, Thomas, iii. 176 bis
  • —— of Trenaran in Padstow, John, iii. 176 ter. Arms 176
  • —— St. i. 197, 198 bis—ii. [127].—Younger brother of St. Andrew, iv. 100
  • Peter’s spring, iii. 72
  • —— St. church, Rome, iv. 165
  • Peterborough, Thomas White, bishop of, one of the seven, iii. 299
  • Peters, i. 382. Hugh 420. Mr. 296.—Rev. Mr. ii. [218].—Rev. Charles of St. Maben, his learning and character, iii. 67, 68. His biography, his ancestor a royalist 67. Dined his poor parishioners, his controversy with Warburton, extracts from his meditations 68. Elizabeth 72. Rev. Hugh 67, 71, 72. His biography 72. Rev. Jonathan, of St. Clement’s, Dr. Joseph, of Truro 68. Rev. Thomas and William 71. Biographical notice of 72
  • Petersfield parish, iii. 206
  • Petherick, Little, parish, Hals’s MS. lost. By Tonkin, situation and boundaries, saint, a rectory, value, patron, incumbent, ancient name, iii. 334. By the Editor, present patron, church, and church town, Tregonnen village, St. Ida’s chapel ibid. Account of St. Ida, her husband a favourite of Charlemagne, another chapel on Trevelian farm, former name of the parish, statistics, rector, Geology by Dr. Boase 335
  • Petherick, Little, parish, iii. 277
  • Petherwin, North, i. 377
  • Petherwin, or Pederwin, South, parish, Hals’s MS. lost. By Tonkin and Whitaker, situation, boundaries, iii. 335. St. Peternus, three days dedicated to him, value of benefice, impropriation 336. By the Editor, church, its monuments and situation ib. Annual fairs, Trecroogo, Tregallen and Trethevy villages, Trebersey, Mr. Gedy an ancestor of the Editor, Tresmarrow, Tremeal 337. Death of Mrs. Archer, an epitaph, statistics, incumbent, Geology by Dr. Boase 338
  • Petnell, St. or Petronel, iv. 153 bis
  • Petre, Sir John, obtained church lands, was ancestor of Lord Petre, founded eight fellowships at Oxford, iii. 155. Sir John 293. Sir William 155. Lord Petre of Exeter, now of Essex 176
  • —— of Torbryan, Devon, John, iii. 155
  • Petroc, St. iii. 277, 278 bis. His life 227. His history, i. 95. His body stolen 98
  • —— St. church, iii. 408. Bodmin 277. The Cornish see 415. This is disputed by Mr. Whitaker 408. proved by extracts from a register kept there in a book containing the four Gospels 408
  • ——’s, St. monastery, iii. 309. At Padstow, destroyed by the Danes 281
  • —— St. priory, Bodmin, i. 116
  • Petrocstow, iii. 277
  • Pettigrew manor, ii. [57]
  • Petunia nyctaginiflora, iv. 182
  • —— Phœnicia, iv. 182
  • Petvin, John, iii. 313
  • Pevensey marsh, iii. 10
  • Pever, the heiress of, ii. [109]
  • Peverell, Sir Hugh, and Sir Thomas, i. 92
  • —— of Hatfield, Jane, wife of Randolph, and concubine of William the Conqueror, i. 367 ter. William her son 367
  • —— of park, i. 367. Richard Thomas, and arms 368
  • Peverell’s crosses, i. 368
  • Pewterers’ company send a deputy to try the Cornish tin, ii. [30]
  • Peyron, father, i. 192
  • Philack, i. 344
  • Philip and Mary, iii. 213, 294, 325
  • —— King of France invaded Normandy in Richard’s absence, ii. [177]
  • Philipps, i. 78
  • Philips, Jasper, iii. 339. Sir Jonathan 458. His servant 461
  • —— of Pendrea, Samuel and Sarah, ii. [352]
  • —— of Poughill, ii. [300]
  • Phillack, i. 355.—Parish, ii. [141], [145], [146] bis, [147]
  • Phillack, parish, Hals’s MS. lost. By Tonkin and Whitaker, situation boundaries, saint, a rectory, value, patron, incumbent, iii. 339. By the Editor, church, situation of village, danger from the sand, inundations of sand, hillocks of it ibid. Houses buried under it, Towan, extension of trade, improvement of the harbour, mining and smelting, Mr. Edwards 340. Rivalship with Mr. Harvey, both improved the harbour, bars in the mouths of all rivers, a causeway upon arches across the entrance of the main estuary 341. Castle Cayle, and Riviere at Theodore’s castle, Mr. Whitaker’s invention, new house at Riviere, Trevassack 342. Modern house on Bodrigy, Penpoll, Treglisson farm, copper works at Hoyle, smelting house at Angarrack, fine garden there, advowson 343. Incumbent, present rector and patron, parish feast and statistics, Geology by Dr. Boase, Sand hills, sand restrained by plants 344. Sometimes consolidated into sandstone. By Editor, copper lodes and elvan courses, Whele Alfred 345
  • Philleigh parish, ii. [265]
  • Philley parish, ii. [2], [275] bis, [279]—iii. 402, 403
  • Phillips, Matthew, i. 360, 362.—Rev. Jasper, ii. [146]. Mary [269]. Rev. William [386], [406]. His monument at Lanteglos [406]. Mr. [150], [386], [389]
  • —— of Carnequidden in Gulval, Henry and Jane, ii. [241]
  • —— of Landue, Thomas, ii. [400]
  • —— of Pendrea, Samuel, ii. [269], [352]. Sarah [352]
  • —— of Tredrea, Elizabeth, iii. 159
  • —— of Botreaux castle, T. J. iii. 236 bis
  • —— of Camelford, Charles, John, and Jonathan, i. 380. Sir Jonathan 134.—Rev. William 380.—Charles, ii. [399] bis. Jonathan, Rev. William, name [399].—Sir Jonathan and T. W. iii. 235
  • Phillipps, Rev. William and family, i. 3.—J. T., iii. 42
  • —— of Camelford and Newport family, iii. 42
  • —— of Landue in Lezant, Mr. iii. 235
  • —— of Trencares, Charles and Sir Jonathan, iv. 45. Rev. William 45, bis. Story of 46. Miss, Mr. and family property 45
  • Philological inquiries, ii. [103]
  • Philopatris, age of, ii. [76]
  • Philosophical Transactions, i. 149—iii. 250, 251, 378—iv. 146.—Account of a storm in, ii. [325]
  • Phœnician castles, ii. [423]
  • Phœnicians, ii. [3]—iii. 395—iv. 168.—Acquainted with Falmouth harbour, ii. [19]
  • Phœnix in her Flames, a tragedy, iv. 97
  • “Phraseologia, Latin and English,” iv. 87
  • Physalis edulis, iv. 183
  • Picardy, pronunciation in, ii. [127]
  • Pider hundred, i. 9, 209, 231, 232, 289, 386, 388, 407—ii. [253], [378], [384]—iii. 139, 267, 277, 312, 318, 334—iv. 137, 140, 160 bis, 162
  • Pidre, iv. 376.—Etymology, i. 9
  • Pig’s street, Penryn, iii. 62
  • Pilate, iii. 422
  • Pilchards, nature of, ii. [263]. Methods of fishing for [261]. Of preserving, oil from [263]. Caught by seine nets at St. Keverne [324]
  • Pillaton, or Pillton manor, iii. 345, 346
  • —— parish, i. 103, 104, 316—ii. [361], [364]—iii. 161, 371
  • Pillaton parish, Hals’s MS. lost. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, a rectory, value, patron, manor, iii. 345. By the Editor, Lysons on Pillaton and Hardenfast manors, Pentillie castle, church and its monuments, one to the Rev. Mr. Eliot, church, town small, Penter’s cross village, patron 346. Statistics, rector, Geology by Dr. Boase 347
  • Pinard, Arthur, ii. [423]
  • Pinaster fir, account of, iii. 11
  • Pincerna, etymology of, ii. [148]
  • —— Richard, ii. [148]. Simon [145], bis, [146] bis.—Simon, iii. 139. Heir 140 ter. Family 140
  • Pindar, iii. 34
  • —— Peter, iii. 220
  • Pineck parish, i. 414—ii. [142].—St. iv. 128
  • Pinneck, John, ii. [170]
  • Pinnock, St. parish, iii. 13, 260
  • Pinnock, St. parish, Hals’s MS. lost. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, a rectory, value, patron, incumbent, iii. 347. By the Editor, village, and manor of Trevillis, proprietors of land, advowson, statistics, rector, Geology by Dr. Boase 348
  • Pinock, ii. [157]
  • Pipe Rolls, ii. [423]
  • Piper, Hugh, and Sir Hugh Constables of Launceston castle, anecdote of Sir Hugh, ii. [421]. His monument in Launceston church [422].—Miss, iii. 136. Heiress and family 337
  • Piran bay, iii. 313
  • —— parish, iii. 324
  • —— round, iii. 328. Account of 329—iv. 78
  • —— Arworthall church, iv. 3
  • —— St. church lands, iii. 328
  • —— St. family, iii. 328
  • —— St. manor, account of, iii. 328
  • —— St. parish, iv. 2 ter. Mr. Reed’s smelting house in 4
  • —— St. in the Sands parish, iii. 267
  • —— St. in the Sands town, iii. 332
  • Piran’s, St. well, iii. 322
  • Piranes, St. in the Sands, by Leland, iv. 268
  • —— St. or Keverine, by Leland, iv. 270
  • Pirran in Treth parish, iii. 323
  • Piskies or fairies, i. 18
  • Pitleman, Ralph, ii. [427]
  • Pits’ writings on Britain, ii. [62]
  • Pits, iv. 145 bis, 148, de Illustribus Angliæ Scriptoribus 148
  • Pitt, Robert, i. 69. Thomas 69 bis. Thomas 1st Lord Camelford 69. His talents 71. Thomas 66, 67. His descent, enterprise in India, return with diamond, its sale to the Regent Orleans, its weight, his purchase of Boconnoc and the burgess tenures of Old Sarum, election for Old Sarum 68. Thomas 2nd Lord Camelford, his birth and christening, education, history, character 70. Death 71. William, Earl of Chatham 69.—Family, ii. [339], [376], [412]. Thomas [353], [354], [409], [410]. William [339]. Governor [353]. Mr. [410]. Pleased with Dr. Glynn’s invitations [154].—Thomas, iii. 450. Mr. 207. Governor 450.—Mr. iv. 44
  • —— of Boconnock, Thomas, ii. [405]
  • Pitz, Rev. Mr. ii. [258]—iv. 53
  • Pius 2nd, pope, iv. 146
  • Place of death, i. 9
  • Place or Plase, i. 28
  • Placentia, iii. 400
  • —— University, i. 311
  • Plague at St. Cuthbert, i. 292.—At St. Ives, ii. [271]
  • Plain-an-Guary, iii. 384
  • Plantagenet, Princess Elizabeth, i. 63. Princess Katherine 64.—Humphrey 4th son of King Henry 4th, ii. [260]. Margaret, Countess of Salisbury [91]. Richard Earl or Cornwall [155].—Richard, iii. 27
  • —— or Beaufort, Edmund, Edmund Marquis of Dorset, and Henry, ii. [260].—Margaret, iii. 65
  • —— civil wars, iii. 289
  • —— house of, ii. [110], [249]
  • Plantagenets, iii. 84, 246. Their times 8, 348—iv. 114
  • Plants of Cornwall, App. 3, iv. 180
  • Plase, ii. [40]. Account of [43]
  • Plassey, battle of, i. 390—iv. 11
  • Pleas of the crown, i. 119, 177
  • Plegmund, Archbishop, i. 95
  • Plengway village, Amphitheatre at, iii. 384
  • Plint, i. 316
  • Pliny, i. 192—ii. [408]—iii. 328
  • Plot’s, Dr. Natural History of Oxford, iii. 323
  • Plowden, William, iii. 38. Mr. 37. Family 38
  • Pluwent or Plynt, iii. 291
  • Plym river, ii. [2]
  • Plymouth breakwater, ii. [245]
  • —— castle, i. 105—ii. [10]
  • —— church, dedicated to St. Charles, ii. [20]
  • —— dockyard, high water at, iii. 375
  • —— harbour, iii. 101, 105, 108, 164, 375, 461.—Superior to Falmouth for large ships, ii. [18]
  • —— limestone, iv. 123 bis.—Burnt for manure, ii. [361]
  • —— reef or breakwater described, iii. 108. Compared with the great Egyptian pyramid 109
  • —— road, ii. [396]
  • —— sound, i. 189—ii. [45], [108] bis, [164], [375], [379], [380]. French and Spanish fleets in, ii. [245]
  • —— town, i. 113 bis—ii. [10], [224]—iii. 21, 45, 98, 109, 110, 121, 183, 189, 196, 253, 254, 283, 378, 399, 426—iv. 32, 115, 116, 123, 187, 188 ter.—Ruthven, governor of, i. 113.—Relief of, incompetent to sustain an attack, ii. [245]. Cornish miners marched to defend, open to attack but escaped it, Major Trelawny, governor of [67]. Engagement with Dutch fleet before [25].—Dr. Borlase educated at, iii. 51. Besieged by Charles’s troops, Earl of Stamford, governor 184.—General Trelawny, governor of, iv. 94. Siege of 185 ter.
  • Plympton, i. 170—iv. 185
  • —— priory, i. 27—ii. [339]—iii. 139 bis. Prior of 139 bis.—Godfrey, prior of, ii. [426]
  • Plynt parish, ii. [409]
  • Pochehelle, iii. 349
  • Poictiers, Archdeacon of, ii. [415]
  • —— Bishop of, St. Hilary, ii. [168], [169]. Died at [169]
  • —— Earl of, Richard, ii. [422]
  • Point, the, iii. 107, 108
  • Pol, St. de Leon, town, in Brittany, iii. 285
  • Polamonter, Nicholas, i. 234
  • Poland, i. 336
  • Polbenro, account of, iv. 36
  • Poldice mine, ii. [134]
  • Pole, Sir Courtenay and Penelope, ii. [379].—Rev. Reginald, iii. 440.—De la, Edmund, Earl of Suffolk, i. 86
  • —— Carew, Mrs. R., iii. 229
  • Polglase, account of, i. 399
  • Polgoda, ii. [173]
  • Polgooth mine, iii. 198. Account of 195, 197
  • Polgorran, account of, ii. [113]
  • Polgover, iii. 252—iv. 3
  • Poljew cove, ii. [129]
  • Polkerris harbour, iv. 109
  • Polkinghorne, Roger, iii. 83
  • Polkinhorn, iii. 387
  • Polkinhorne, account of, ii. [142]
  • —— Degary, i. 257.—Mr. ii. [157]. Rev. Mr. [258], [260]
  • —— of Polkinhorne, family, heir, and arms, iii. 142
  • Polland, Lewis, ii. [195]
  • Pollard, Peter, i. 216.—Christopher, iii. 358
  • —— of Treleigh, Hugh, John, John a tribute to, Margaret and family, iii. 383
  • Polleowe, iii. 326
  • Pollephant, i. 308
  • Pollrewen tower, iv. 229
  • Pollyfont or Pollifont manor, iii. 38, 39. In Lewannick 233 bis
  • Polman, ii. [41]
  • Polmanter downs, ii. [271]
  • Polmear cove, iv. 166
  • Polpear, iii. 7
  • Polpera or Polperro, iv. 23, 36, 38
  • Polperro harbour, ii. [400]
  • —— town, ii. [400] bis. Scenery beautiful [400], [401]
  • Polruan, ii. [411]—iv. 36.—Account of, ii. [411].—By Leland, iv. 279, 290.—Formerly a corporate borough, ii. [412]
  • Polruddon ruins, by Norden and Lysons, i. 46
  • Polskatho or Porthskatho, ii. [51]
  • Polston, bridge at, ii. [432].—Bridge, Charles 1st entered Cornwall by, iv. 185
  • Poltare, account of, iii. 88
  • Poltesca, iii. 424
  • Polton manor, ii. [253]
  • Polvellan, iii. 229. Etymology 230
  • Polventon, iv. 29
  • Polvessan, account of, iv. 133. The grounds in a fine state 35
  • Polvethan manor, ii. [400]
  • Polwhele, account of, i. 205
  • —— castle, iv. 229
  • —— i. 56 bis, 58, 205, 255. Degory 19, 293. Arms 205. Motto 206.—Family, ii. [337].—Rev. Richard of Manaccan and Newlyn, iii. 113, 271. Character of 112.—Rev. Richard came from Truro, iv. 86. Rev. Richard communicated to the Editor some missing portions of Hals’s MS. 184
  • —— of Newland, i. 105
  • —— of Penhellick, John and Robert, i. 207
  • —— of Polwhele, i. 207. Degory ibid. Drew 207 bis. John 206, 207. Richard 207. Rev. Rich., 208
  • —— of Treworgan, i. 396. John ibid.
  • ——’s History of Cornwall, i. 288
  • Polybius, on Signals, the friend of Scipio Africanus, his general history, iii. 106
  • Polychronicon, author of, iv. 93
  • Polyenetes, or the Martyr, a tragedy, iv. 97
  • Polyfunt in Trewenn, iv. 68
  • Polygala speciosa, iv. 183
  • —— myrtifolia, iv. 183
  • Pomeray, i. 348
  • —— Henry de la, ii. [180], [183]. Took St. Michael’s mount [177]. Murdered a sergeant-at-arms, his stratagem for surprising Mount St. Michael [178]. Held it out, submitted, his death [180]; or Pomeroye, Henry de la, iii. 22, 78, 90
  • Pomeroy, Henry de, i. 295, 296. Henry 296 bis. Sir Henry 296. Sir Hugh 214. Joel 296 bis. Josceline, Ralph de, and Sir Roger 296. Thomas 214. Arms 297.—Rev. John, ii. [279], [339]. Mr. 43.—Family, iii. 90. John 260
  • Pomeroy of Bury Pomeroy, Devon, Sir Richard, iii. 148. Lords of Bury Pomeroy 90
  • —— of Tregony Pomeroy, i. 297 bis. Henry 297
  • Pomery, Rev. Mr. i. 403.—Rev. Joseph, iii. 348 bis.—Mr. iv. 160
  • Pomier, Lord, ii. [39]
  • Pondicherry, siege of, chief seat of French power in India, iv. 11
  • Ponsanmouth, iv. 3
  • Ponsmur, i. 256
  • Pontis Riale river, source of, iv. 237
  • Pontus, i. 388 bis
  • Pool mine, ii. [239]
  • Poole, account of by Hals, iii. 168. By Tonkin 170
  • Pooley, Rev. Mr. ii. [34].—Rev. Henry of Newlin, iii. 271, 275
  • Poor Knights of Windsor, Hugh Trevanion one of, ii. [52], [54]. Governor of [55]
  • —— rates at Helston, ii. [159]
  • Pope of Rome, i. 139, 146—ii. [371]. Urged Richard to the crusades [177]. Lodged Thomas Paleolagus, and allowed him a pension [368]. His protection of him [371].—Alexander the 4th, i. 176.—Boniface, ii. [288]. Gregory [290]. Gregory the Great [287]. St. Gregory [288].—Gregory 9th, i. 312. Innocent 3rd 110, 112. Innocent the 4th 176. Innocent the 5th 110. Leo the 9th 110 ter. Nicholas the 2nd 110. Pelagius the 2nd 393. Victor the 2nd 110 bis
  • —— Alexander, the poet, i. 58—iii. 53 ter. His letter to Dr. Borlase 53. Mr. his large fortune, and house called the Vatican 88
  • ——’s annates, ii. [59], [126]
  • —— inquisition into the value of benefices, iv. 185. See [Inquisition]
  • Popham, Sir Home and Captain, iii. 446
  • Population of Cornwall, App. II. iv. 178. Of all the parishes in Cornwall from the last parliamentary statements 177. For several years from 1700 to 1831, 178
  • —— return for Helston, ii. [161]
  • Porkellis, neighbourhood produced the best tin in Cornwall, ii. [140]
  • Porrown Berry, iii. 202
  • Port, Hugo de, iii. 115
  • Port Eliot, ii. [68], [70] bis—iii. 107
  • —— Isaac, i. 384, 385—iv. 47
  • —— Looe, iii. 249
  • —— Looe barton, iv. 25, 26, 37 bis
  • —— Prior, name changed, iii. 107
  • Portbend, high water at, iii. 98
  • Portbyhan, otherwise West Looe, iv. 28
  • Portello, lands of, iii. 294
  • Porter, i. 320.—Mr. and arms, iii. 66.—Charles, iv. 62. Rev. Charles of Warbstow 125
  • Porth, i. 29
  • Porth Alla, ii. [250], [324], [330] bis, [331]. The stream which discharges at [330]
  • —— chapel, i. 12
  • —— Enys, iii. 288. Name changed 286
  • —— Horne, i. 324—ii. [174], [200]
  • —— Kernow, iii. 32.—Shells at, i. 148
  • —— Prior, now Port Eliot, ii. [66]
  • —— Talland, iv. 24
  • —— Treth, ii. [239]
  • Portheran, ii. [41]
  • Porthguin, by Leland, iv. 259
  • Porthiley, iii. 129
  • Porthissek, by Leland, iv. 259
  • Porthleaven, iii. 444
  • Porthmear, i. 47
  • Porthmellin cove, iii. 192
  • Porthoustock, ii. [324]—iii. 259.—Extraordinary shoal of pilchards at, ii. [324]
  • —— rock, ii. [331]
  • Porthpean, i. 49
  • Porthskatho cove, ii. [58]
  • Porthwrinkle, iii. 439
  • Portionists, iv. 45
  • Portnadle bay, iv. 28
  • Porto Bello, iii. 218
  • Portreath, ii. [241], [250].—Harbour, iii. 390.—A safe harbour, used to exchange copper for coal, ii. [241]
  • Portsmouth, ii. [246]. Loss of the Mary Rose off [342]
  • —— castle, ii. [10]
  • —— harbour superior to Falmouth for large ships, ii. [18]
  • —— town, ii. [10]
  • Portuan borough, iv. 20, 21
  • —— manor, iv. 21
  • Portugal, ii. [227]—iii. 187, 423
  • Post, in Queen Elizabeth’s time, i. 59
  • Potatoes being introduced into Cornwall, iv. 50
  • Potstone, iv. 70
  • Pott, John, iii. 16
  • Poughill parish, ii. [340], [430]—iv. 12, 15
  • Poughill parish, Hals’s MS. lost. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, a vicarage, value, patron, incumbent, ancient name, impropriation, Pochehelle manor, iii. 349. By the Editor, small, its advantages, manor ibid. The charters, murder of Nicholas Radford 350. Flexbury and Bushill, impropriator of tithes, Stamford-hill and Sir B. Granville’s victory there, statistics, incumbent, patron, Geology by Dr. Boase 351
  • Poul pier, by Leland, iv. 290
  • Poulpirrhe, by Leland, iv. 279
  • Poulton manor, iii. 2
  • Poundstock parish, ii. [232]—iii. 114—iv. 15, 136
  • Poundstock parish, Hals’s MS. lost. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, value of benefice, impropriation, patron, incumbent, Trebarfoot, Penfoune, manor of Poundstock, iii. 352. By the Editor, situation of church, Tregoll, manors of Launcels, West Widemouth and Woolston, great tithes, advowson, statistics, Geology by Dr. Boase 353
  • Powder hundred, i. 41, 52, 202, 388, 393—iii. 24, 55, 180, 190 bis, 195, 198, 207, 210, 354, 391, 395, 402 ter., 403, 448, 450—iv. 70, 71, 75, 97, 102, 115, 116, 117.—Powdre, i. 242, 251, 294, 413—ii. [24], [36], [50], [88], [105], [275] bis, [298], [315], [352], [356], [390]—iv. 376
  • Powderham hundred, etymology, i. 15
  • Powell, David, i. 305
  • Powley, Hugh, iii. 6
  • Powvallet Coyt manor, ii. [38]
  • Poyctou, iv. 144
  • Poyntz, of Berkshire, William and William Stephen, ii. [385]
  • —— of Cowdray castle, Sussex, William Stephen, iii. 231.—Family, ii. [354]
  • Pradannack manor, iii. 258, 259
  • Praed, i. 346, 349. James 349, 350.—Family, ii. [241]. Humphrey Mackworth, M.P. [264]. His act for improving the fisheries at St. Ives [264].—Arabella and Catherine, iii. 10. Rev. Herbert 9. James and his marriage 11. Julia and Mary 10. William 9, 10. Character, marriage, &c. 10. Death 11. Colonel 8. Mr. 7, 8. His liberality 7. Mr. singular story of, and his death 9. Family, account of 8. Remark on 11. Name 9
  • Praed, of Trevethew, Florence and James, i. 357.—H. M., iii. 9 ter., 54, 93, 239. His character 9. Improved Trevethow and the plantations of Cornwall 11. Improved a valley 59. Rev. Herbert of Ludgvan, his son 54. James 444. Mary 239 bis. Miss 444. Mr. 85 bis.—Mr. iv. 58. Family 54
  • Prake, Mr. 110 years old, iv. 24
  • Pratt, Mr. i. 283
  • Preaching monks, i. 310
  • Precays, i. 417
  • Presbyterians, iv. 73.—Their rupture with Mr. Stephens, ii. [270]
  • Prest, Agnes, her history, i. 108. Place of her martyrdom 111
  • Prestwood family, ii. [91]. Thomas 196
  • Pretender’s army defeated at Preston, ii. [112]
  • Prewbody, ii. [337]
  • Priam, iii. 418 ter., 420
  • Price, Piercy, i. 275.—Winifred, ii. [93].—John, iii. 86 bis, 86, 87, 289 bis. Found a ring, and erected a monument in memory of it 289, 290. Rose 289. Sir Rose 85, 86. Story of 87. Lady 86. Mr. was of the expedition to Jamaica 85
  • —— of Trewardreva, Thomas, ii. [93]
  • Prideaux, in Luxilian, the Hearles settled at, ii. [99]
  • —— castle, iii. 56
  • —— i. 74, 76, 117, 266, 289 bis, 294, 299, 349, 385. Adiston 160. Edmund 399. Matthew 349. William 160.—Dean, ii. [78]. His “Connections” and remarks upon [76].—Notice of him, iii. 278. His house 281. Edmund 278. Family 238. Possess part of the tithes of Padstow 280
  • —— of Boswithgye, Peter, i. 43
  • —— of Devon, Sir Edmund, i. 259
  • —— of Fewborough, i. 17—ii. [335]
  • —— of Gunlyn, i. 243, 244
  • —— of Netherton, Devon, Sir Edmund, and arms, ii. [242].—Sir John, iii. 278. Family 237—iv. 137
  • Prideaux of Orchardton, Sir John, i. 346, 347
  • —— of Padstow, i. 172.—Had a staircase from Stowe, ii. [351].—Rev. Charles, iii. 279. Edmund 3. Nicholas, his character, built his house at Padstow 279. Mr. 56. Family, and arms 279. Monuments 280
  • —— of Plase house, Edward, i. 17
  • —— of Prideaux, Roger, Thomas, bis, family, and arms, iii. 56
  • —— manor, iii. 57 bis. Account of 56
  • Prince’s “Worthies of Devon,” i. 144, 346, 348—ii. [61]—iii. 184, 222—iv. 15
  • Prince of Wales, iii. 222
  • Prior park, i. 57, 58.—A house at Truro built of stone from, ii. [33]
  • Prior’s cross, i. 368
  • Priory of Bodmin, i. 73. Its dissolution, and value of its revenues 74
  • Prisk, i. 237
  • Probus church, iii. 180—iv. 135
  • —— and Grace Fair, iii. 364
  • —— parish, iii. 180, 182, 188, 243, 269, 448, 450, 451—iv. 156; or St. Probus, ii. [2], [305], [353] bis
  • Probus parish, Hals’s MS. lost. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, value of benefice, impropriation, patron, impropriator, incumbent, manor of Moresk, Trehane, iii. 354. Carvean, Trewother, manor of Trelowthes, Trewithgy, Trevorva 355. Proverb upon it, Trewithan, manor of Wolveden or Golden 356. Ruin of the Tregians, Camden’s mention of it 357. Tonkin descended from them, list of their forfeited estates 358. The place where Cuthbert Mayne was found is still shewn, Tregian twenty years in prison, his son suffered a second loss of property 360. In consequence of the gunpowder plot, retired to Spain, the Marquis of St. Angelo, Talbot, Tredenham 361. Curvoza 362. By the Editor, church and monuments, Mr. Thomas Hawkins introduced inoculation into Cornwall, church tower ibid. Compared with others, church was collegiate, a fair, Prince Charles visited most gentlemen in the west of Cornwall, Mr. Williams went up to congratulate the King on his Restoration 363. Name of the fair, the saints Probus and Grace, skeletons found in the chancel wall, Whitaker’s memoranda, parish feast, etymology of Carvean 364. Of Trewithgy, Trenowith, and Treworgy, manor of Probus, fortification in Golden 365. Supposed by Whitaker to be a Roman camp, Caer Voza, a British. Trehane, the two Dr. Stackhouses 366. Trewithan, its beauty, Mr. Williams fond of ringing bells, peal at Kenwyn church for the amusement of the inhabitants of Truro 367. Hawkins family, persecution of Mr. Tregion, more victims to religious opinions suffered under Elizabeth than Mary 368. Tregion’s connections, and especially his wealth incitements to his ruin, his own imprudence the ultimate means 369. Editor’s remarks on the transaction, and on the tyranny of the Tudor monarchs, statistics, incumbent, Geology by Dr. Boase 370. Interesting varieties of rock formerly to be seen on the road to Grampound, the road now turned 371
  • Probus town, i. 242 bis, 251, 294, 393, 420. Tower at 48
  • —— St. and his skeleton, iii. 364
  • —— St. vicarage, iii. 182. The vicar 181 quat., 189
  • —— Groguth, iii. 354
  • Proclamation for the apprehension of Rogers and Street, i. 279
  • Prophets, ii. [65]
  • Prospect, Cornish word for, ii. [200]
  • Protestants persecuted in Germany, iii. 67
  • Prothasius, St. i. 99
  • Prouse, ii. [54].—Digory, iii. 358
  • Prout, arms, iii. 66
  • Prowse, Mrs. Elizabeth, i. 8
  • Pryce, Dr. William, iii. 323 bis.—His Archæologia Cornu Britannica, ii. [255]—iii. 390. His Mineralogia Cornubiensis ibid. His Vocabulary 362
  • Prye, William, i. 215
  • Prynne’s records, i. 251
  • Psalms, book of, iii. 262
  • Psoralia aculeata, iv. 182
  • —— pinnata, iv. 182
  • —— spicata, iv. 182
  • Ptolemy, i. 256—ii. [172], [199].—The Geographer, iii. 24 bis, 25 bis, 395—iv. 39. His geography 8
  • Puddicombe, Rev. S. ii. [397].—Rev. Stephen of Morval, iii. 253
  • Puntner, harbour at, i. 48
  • Purification, feast of, iii. 324
  • Putta, Bishop of Devon, iii. 415
  • Pyder hundred, i. 115, 212, 404—ii. [89]
  • Pyderick, Little, parish, i. 212
  • Pye, i. 62.—Family, line upon, and arms, iii. 449
  • Pylos, ii. [368]
  • Pyn, Herbert de, iii. 117
  • Pyne family, iii. 117
  • Pynnock, St. parish, i. 112—ii. [291]
  • Pyrenees, iv. 159
  • Pyrrhus’s saying after a hard earned victory, ii. [342]
  • Quaker’s meeting, ii. [35]
  • Quakers, iv. 73
  • Quaram, Rev. Mr. rector of Falmouth, iv. 72
  • Quarm, Rev. Mr. ii. [4]
  • Quarme, Robert and Walter, i. 422. Arms ibid.
  • —— of Creed, Robert, i. 236
  • —— of Nancar, Rev. Walter, i. 256. Arms ibid.
  • Quarrier in Leskeard, iii. 21
  • Queen’s college, Oxford, ii. [139], [239]
  • Question, Mr. iv. 118
  • Quethiock parish, i. 409—ii. [361]
  • Quethiock parish, Hals’s MS. lost. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, iii. 371. Impropriation, value of benefice, patron, and incumbent 372. By the Editor, ancient name, Trehunsey manor, Trehunest village, antiquity of the church, monuments, appropriation of tithes, once a college, its foundation deed printed ibid. The rector, now its sole representative, a former chapel, statistics, vicar, patron, Geology by Dr. Boase 373
  • Quick, Anthony, James, John, iv. 55
  • Quincy, Rev. S. i. 366
  • Quiril, Peter, Bishop of Exeter, i. 300—ii. [412]
  • Radcliffe observatory, S. P. Rigand, director of, ii. [376]
  • Raddon, Richard de, ii. [427]
  • Raddona, Richard de, iv. 77, 82
  • Radford, Nicholas, iii. 350
  • Radnor, Earl of, i. 383—iii. 170.— Robarts, Earl of, ii. [377], [380]. John [379], [380]. Arms [380].—Last earl, iii. 193. Henry 381
  • Raile, John, iii. 387
  • Railway, i. 48.—Railways in Redruth, iii. 390
  • Rainton rectory, i. 130
  • Raith and Raithow, etymology of, ii. [394]
  • Ralegh, Piers de, Walter de, iii. 269
  • Raleigh, Sir Walter, i. 390—ii. [7], [21], [56], [342]
  • Ralph, i. 344. John 352 bis. Rev. John 351, 352, 366. Loveday 352 bis. Mary 352.—John, iii. 2
  • Ram or Rame head, i. 343—ii. [106]—iv. 32.—Description of, iii. 375
  • Rame, Joanna de, iii. 374 bis, 438 bis. Arms 374
  • —— manor, account of, iii. 374, 375
  • —— parish, iii. 101, 108, 110
  • Rame parish, Hals’s MS. lost. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, a rectory, value, patron, incumbent, manor of Rame, iii. 374. By the Editor, church peculiarly situated, monuments, manor and barton of Rame, Rame head, its appearance, and that of the Lizard, St. Michael’s chapel, description of the head, boundary of Plymouth harbour, its latitude and longitude, and establishment of the port, Edystone lighthouse 375. Its latitude and longitude, former danger of the rocks, description of the first lighthouse, remarkable storm, lighthouse disappeared, improved construction of the second 376. Generosity of Louis XIV. fire, terrible accident 377. Erection of the third lighthouse, Bond’s description 378. Inscription, Cawsand village, and bay, statistics, rector, and patron 379. Geology by Dr. Boase 380
  • Rame place, iii. 375
  • Randall, Thomas, steward of Helston, ii. [160]
  • Randill, Jonathan, iii. 260
  • Randolph of Withiel, iv. 161
  • Randyl family, and arms, ii. [353]
  • —— of Tregenno, Richard, i. 421. His arms 421
  • Raphel manor, ii. [400]
  • Rascow island, iv. 230
  • Rashleigh, i. 43, 74, 106, 255. Charles, constructs Seaforth harbour 47. Establishes fishery 48. Origin and history of the family, and arms 43.—Family, ii. [91], [294]. Philip [295]. Philip endowed a hospital at Fowey [43]. Made a fortune by privateering [44]. Purchased the manor of Fowey, his ancestors represented it in parliament [46]. Philip, a zealous naturalist, has published two volumes [47]. William [46], [91], [92]. Mr. 397.—Miss, iii. 443. Family 57.—Jonathan, iv. 101. Philip 140. Mr. 114. Family 99 bis, 131, 137 bis
  • Rashleigh of Disporth, Charles, i. 260, 423
  • —— of Menabelly, Rachel, i. 257, 259—William, ii. [294], [295]. Mr. [400].—William, iii. 290. Miss 367. Mr. 88. Family 57.—Jonathan and Jonathan, ii. [107]. Jonathan and his son [ibid.] Jonathan [109]. Rev. Jonathan [108]. John and John [107]. Philip [109]. Philip, collector of Cornish minerals, has published specimens, constructed a curious grotto, his marriage and death [108]. William [108], [109] ter. Family [107], [109]. One of them sitting in almost every parliament of George II. and III. [107]
  • —— of Penquite, Coleman and John, iii. 57
  • —— house in Ranelagh parish, Devon, iv. 101
  • Rat island, iv. 230, 266
  • Ratcliffe of Franklyn, Devon, Joshua and his daughter, iii. 76
  • Ravenna in Italy, ii. [75] bis
  • Ravenscroft of Cheshire, arms, i. 374
  • Rawe, R. J., iii. 387
  • —— of Pennant, John, i. 383
  • Rawle, i. 263—ii. [274]. Mr. 273
  • Rawlegh’s “Relicta Nomen Viri,” iv. 155
  • Rawlinge, Mr. iii. 82
  • Rawlings, Thomas, built a house, and William, notice of, iii. 280.—Thomas, iv. 143
  • —— of Padstow, Thomas, i. 235, 310.—Thomas, ii. [256].—Rev. William, iii. 282. Mr. 178
  • Rawlins, Rev. William, jun., ii. [273]
  • Rawlinson, Mary, and T. H. of Lancaster, iii. 137
  • Rawlyn, John, iii. 358
  • Ray, the botanist, iii. 173
  • Raynwood, John, iii. 211
  • Reading, iii. 10
  • Rebellion, story of the great, i. 44. History of Flammock’s 86
  • Red Cross street, London, iv. 86
  • Red sea, place of banishment for exorcised spirits, iii. 48
  • Redevers, Earl Baldwin de, ii. [427]
  • Redgate, i. 179 bis. 180 bis
  • Redinge, i. 206
  • Rediver mills, iv. 47
  • Redman, Richard, Bishop of Exeter, ii. [189]—iii. 147
  • Redruth manor, possessors of, iii. 381
  • —— parish, i. 160, 208, 238, 239—ii. [129], [239] bis, [272], [284]—iii. 5, 7—iv. 5
  • Redruth parish, Hals’s MS. lost. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, etymology, a rectory, value, patron, iii. 380. Manor, town, Carew brief in Penwith hundred, town now considerable, large corn market, had two weekly markets in the reign of Edward III., proceeding of Mr. Buller, town chiefly one street 381. Old chapel, landed proprietors, manors of Treruff and Tollgus 382. Treleigh manor, Tonkin’s tribute to Mr. Pollard, Park Erisey, the barton of Treleigh produces tin and copper, the owner imposed upon 383. Plain an Guary, church beyond the town, glebe, value of benefice 384. By the Editor, situation and description of church, St. Uny, advowson, new chapel, Tavistock abbey ibid. Life of St. Rumon, by Leland and Butler, etymological conjecture, copper works and slate, handsome shops, and good market, quantity of shoes, &c. brought from Penzance 385. Market much crowded, new market place, Lord Dunstanville’s clock and bell tower, village of Plengwary, Amphitheatre adjacent to, etymology, the village called Little Redruth, parish muster book 386. Great scarcity in 1697, the Flammock insurrection, manor and honor of Tehidy, Cornish, Saxon and Norman acre, difference between the common and statute acre 388. Extent of Tehidy, notice of Lord Dunstanville’s death, meetings to commemorate his virtues, monument to be erected on Cambre 389. Landed proprietors, Dr. Pryce, railways from Portreath harbour, statistics, incumbent, patron, Geology by Dr. Boase, important mining district 390
  • Redruth town, iii. 381. Road to Marazion from 308.—From Truro, ii. [304]
  • —— Little, village, iii. 386
  • Reed, Thomas, iv. 3, 4 bis. His ancestors 4
  • Reenwartha, iii. 328. Account of 326
  • Reenwollas, iii. 327 bis
  • Refishoc manor, iii. 195, 196
  • Reform Act, i. 391—iii. 29.—Change produced by, i. 390.—Remarks on, iii. 272
  • Reformation, iii. 264, 279, 363
  • Refry, Henry, iii. 387
  • Regent street, iii. 205
  • Reginald, Earl of Cornwall, ii. [427] ter., [428]
  • Regulus an abbot, iv. 105
  • Reid, i. 259
  • Rekellythye, iii. 324
  • Relics of antiquity dug up near Camelford, ii. [402], [403]
  • Religious ceremonies of the Britons, i. 193
  • Relistion mine, ii. [144]
  • Remfry, Henry, iii. 383. Richard 382
  • Renaudin, David, John, family, and arms, iii. 303
  • —— of Arworthal, David, iii. 225 bis
  • Rendall of Lostwithiel, Elizabeth and Walter, iii. 328
  • —— of Pelynt, family, iii. 328
  • Renfry, Sondry and Thomas, iii. 387
  • Rennie, John, the engineer, iii. 378
  • Renphry, his son, sold Trewithan, iv. 140
  • Reperend Brygge, iv. 255
  • Reschell, iii. 111
  • Rescorla, i. 49
  • Reskimer, by Leland, iv. 270
  • —— iii. 169.—Heir of, iv. 156
  • Reskymer, account of, iii. 133
  • —— family, ii. [358]—iii. 126, 135, 423.—Arms, iv. 96
  • —— of Reskymer, John, iii. 133. Sir John 133, 147. John and four daughters, Richard, Roger and arms 133. Mr. 147 bis
  • Resogan, Bennet, and John, sen. iii. 325. John, jun., 325, 326
  • —— of St. Stephen’s in Brannel, iii. 325
  • Resparva, i. 386
  • Respiration, Dr. Mayne upon, iii. 250
  • Restoration, iii. 73
  • Restormal, iii. 28
  • Restormalle castle, iv. 229
  • Restormel, i. 338—iv. 81. By Leland 277
  • —— castle, ii. [38].—Account of [392]
  • —— hill, ii. [393]
  • —— house, ii. [393]
  • Restowrick, i. 310
  • Restrongar creek, ii. [24]
  • —— passage, ii. [17]
  • Restonget creek, iii. 224
  • —— manor, iii. 230, 231. Account of 226
  • —— passage, iii. 226
  • —— village, iii. 226
  • Resurra in St. Minver, ii. [336]
  • Resurrans, i. 214. 215 bis
  • Retallock, iii. 143
  • —— barrow, account of, i. 220
  • Retollock of Trewerre, i. 391
  • Revell, Richard, ii. [180]
  • Revenge, man of war, destroyed in a glorious victory, ii. [342], [344]
  • Rewley abbey, ii. [138], [139].—Near Oxford, iv. 4 bis. Edmund Earl of Cornwall’s charter to 4
  • Reynolds, i. 61 ter., 85. Admiral Carthew, his death 205.—Sir Joshua, ii. [306]. Admiral, lost at sea [389]. Mr. [241]. Family [142].—Mr. iii. 354
  • Rhé, isle of, iii. 183
  • Rheese, ii. [173]
  • Rhodes, Rev. George, i. 354.—Miss, ii. [227]. Family [100]
  • —— isle of, i. 411
  • Rhys ap Tudor, iv. 8
  • Rialobran, iii. 80
  • Rialton, Godolphin Lord, i. 123, 126, 234
  • Rice, i. 237
  • Rich, Lady Lucy, and Robert Earl of Warwick, ii. [379]
  • Richan, iii. 402
  • Richard, Duke of Gloucester, made sheriff of Cornwall, ii. [185]
  • —— 1st, King, i. 54—ii. [118], [177] bis, [178], [180] quat., [341], [409]—iii. 27 bis, 78, 132, 202, 393—iv. 71, 100 bis, 102 bis, 112.—Cœur de Lion, i. 254—ii. [249]—iii. 7.—Taken prisoner, ii. [178]. Ransomed, returned home, raised an army, and defeated John [179]
  • —— 2nd, ii. [59], [62], [93], [176], [181], [294], [341], [394], [422], [431]—iii. 27 bis, 60, 65, 111, 129 bis, 148, 269, 303, 436—iv. 22, 36, 99, 101
  • —— 3rd, ii. [43], [108] bis, [115], [185], [231]—iii. 101, 102 ter., 142, 184, 203, 393. Slain at the battle of Bosworth 108 bis, 185
  • —— King of the Romans, i. 36, 253, 414—ii. [109], [211] bis, [392], [403]—iii. 448—iv. 4 ter.—Earl of Cornwall, ii. [8], [156]—iii. 15, 19, 28, 169, 268, 285, 448. Notice of 28. Arms 169
  • —— St. King of the West Saxons, and his death, iv. 126
  • —— of Shrewsbury, ii. [186], [187] bis
  • Richardia, Æthiopica, iv. 182
  • Richards, William, iii. 153
  • Richardson, i. 383
  • Richmond, Earl of, ii. [108] bis—iii. 101, 102. Edmund of Hadham 65
  • Ridgeway, Earl of Londonderry, i. 69.—John, ii. [70]
  • Rigaud, S. P., ii. [376]
  • Rillaton manor, iv. 7
  • Rimo, ii. [50]
  • Rinden, i. 117
  • Ringwood of Bradock, Miss, iv. 139
  • Risdon’s History of Devon, i. 133.—Manuscript, ii. [341]
  • Risdon of Babeleigh Giles, iv. 157
  • —— of Badleigh, Giles, i. 223
  • Rist church, i. 148
  • Rivers in Cornwall, list of, iv. 223. Their sources 237
  • Rivers, Thomas, i. 177
  • —— Richard Woodvill, Earl of, i. 194
  • Riviere, iii. 342 ter.
  • Roach, in France, taken by the English, ii. [177]
  • Roach parish, i. 41, 212, 218, 310—ii. [1], [93]—iii. 195, 442, 448—iv. 137, 160
  • Roach or Roche, parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, etymology, ancient name, antiquity of the parish and town, value of benefice, patron, incumbent, land tax, ancient chapel, iii. 391. Description of its remains, a pool supposed to ebb and flow 392. The story from whence its name of St. Gundred’s well is derived, Treroach or Tregarreck, Tremoderet en Hell, ruins of Holywell 393. Hains Burrow, Avoh Bicken, every parish in Cornwall formerly had a beacon, Colefreth, ruins of a chapel at, well near Pentavale Fenton 394. Etymology 395. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, saint, his history ibid. Parish named before he was born, a rectory, its value, patron, incumbent, society for purchasing advowsons, Tregarick manor, etymology 396. By Whitaker on the name, hermitage in the rock 397. By the Editor, the rock and tower conspicuous, Lysons says the cell was dedicated to St. Michael, Mr. Whitaker draws on his fancy 398. Lysons’s view and description of the hermitage, incumbents 399. Observations on the society for purchasing advowsons, parish could not be dedicated to St. Roche, history of St. Roche, his miraculous cure from the plague 400. Pimples called after him, statistics, incumbent, patron, Geology by Dr. Boase, the rock compared with St. Mewan beacon 401
  • —— rock, i. 189—ii. [283]—iii. 265
  • —— St. church tower, ii. [386]
  • —— St. curacy, ii. [389]
  • —— St. parish, ii. [384]
  • Road, Truro, i. 227
  • Roadstead near St. Ives, ii. [260]
  • Robartes, i. 384. Lady Essex 378, 379. Seized with small pox a month after her marriage 379. Francis 297. Henry Earl of Radnor 293. John Earl of Radnor 19, 297, 378, 279. Lord 113, 116. Sir Richard 293—ii. [9].—Family, iii. 258.—John, ancestor of Charles Bodville, Earl of Radnor, John mayor of Truro, iv. 73. John Lord, Baron of Truro 74. Lord 161, 185, 187. Family acquired great wealth at Truro, engaged in mercantile pursuits there for three generations, rose to eminence and acquired the earldom of Radnor temp. James 1st 88
  • Robarts, i. 74.—Frances, ii. [379]. Francis, Henry and John, origin of the family [381].—Family, iii. 57.—Robert, Viscount Bodmin, ii. [379] bis. Esteemed by Charles 2nd [380]. John Lord Robarts Earl of Falmouth, afterwards Earl of Radnor [379], [380], [382]. Earl of Radnor [377]. Charles Bodville 2nd Earl [380]. Henry 3rd Earl [380], [381]. John 1st Earl [379], [380], [381], [382]. John 4th Earl [381]. Richard Lord Truro [380], [383]. His arms [380]
  • —— of Lanhidiock family, iii. 193, 197
  • —— of Truro, Richard, iii. 234. Family 348
  • Roben, John, iii. 387
  • Robert, son of Ankitil, ii. [427]
  • —— Duke of Normandy, iii. 462
  • —— son of William the Conqueror, ii. [211] bis
  • Roberts, Sir Richard, i. 19 bis.—Richard, ii. [375]. Family [170], [397].—Francis, iii. 170. Family 178
  • —— of Coran, Hon. John, i. 419
  • —— of Truro, ii. [93]
  • Robins, i. 53—ii. [151].—John, iii. 260.—Benjamin, his Mathematical Works, iv. 10. Stephen and Miss 156. Family 162
  • —— of Penryn, James and Thomasine, iii. 134
  • —— of Tregenno, i. 421. Stephen 421
  • —— Verian family, John, iv. 116. Arms 117
  • Robinson, i. 302. George 303.—Family, ii. [217], [358]. George [358]. William [160] bis.—George and his heirs, iii. 419. P. V. 419, 424. Rev. William of Ruan Major 419. Miss 75. Mr. 419, 421, 424. Family 423
  • —— of Cadgwith, George Thomas, his melancholy death, iii. 421. Arms 422
  • —— of Nanceloe, or Nansloe, ii. [139]. Rev. William ibid.—iii. 419
  • —— of Treveneage, Mr. killed by a bull, ii. [221]
  • Robyns, Mr. iii. 88
  • Roche, St. iii. 395, 397, 398—iv. 139.—His history by Hals, iii. 395, 400. By Editor 400. His death, ib. Supposed to preside over certain complaints 401
  • Roche parish, iii. 55, 450
  • Rochelle, iii. 183
  • Rochester, St. Just, Bishop of, ii. [282], [287].—St. Justus and St. Paulinus, Bishops of, iii. 284
  • Rock, story of one turning round, i. 187
  • —— ferry in St. Minver, iii. 275, 282, 283
  • —— island, ii. [1]
  • Rocks near Land’s End dangerous, iii. 430
  • Rodd family, ii. [228], [229]. Miss [227]. Mr. [134].—Mr. iii. 8
  • —— of Herefordshire, Capt. Francis, ii. [228]
  • —— of Trebartha, Rev. Edward, ii. [228]. Edward, D.D. [281]. Col. Francis [228]. F. H. [ib.] bis, [229]. Jane, Adm. Sir J. T. and Harriet [228]. Mr. [99]
  • —— of Trebather, Francis, i. 359. Francis Hearle 360
  • Rodda, Miss, ii. [82]
  • Roderick, King of Wales and Cornwall, iii. 80
  • Rodolph 2nd Emperor of Germany, ii. [371]
  • Rogate parish, Sussex, iii. 205, 206
  • Rogers, Anne, i. 270 ter., 271, 274. Rev. Edward 242. John 273.—Brian, iii. 76. Rev. John 137. Rev. John, Rector of Mawnan 77, 445. His taste, &c., 445. Nicholas 387. Peter 76. Family 75. Arms 76
  • —— of Antron, Captain John, iii. 445. Improved that place 446
  • —— of Cannington family, iii. 76
  • —— of Helston and Penrose, Hugh, John, and John, M.P. the latter added to his estates, iii. 445—Of Penrose, near Helston, i. 228.—John, ii. [128], [243]. Mr. [117].—John and Mrs. iii. 88
  • —— of Skewis, i. 267. Henry 267, 284, 285, 286, 287 bis. His character 267. Turns his sister-in-law out from Skewis house, resists the Sheriff, several men killed 268. Escapes to Salisbury, taken, convicted, and executed 269. His trial for the murder of Carpenter 270. Defence 272. Trial for the murder of Woolston 274. Of Willis 276. Seen in prison 281. Print of him, with his history 282. Newspaper reports of the trial 283. His wife 271, 272, 273. His son 280. Editor’s conversation with 280
  • Rogers of Treasson, afterwards of Penrose, John, iii. 47. Rev. J., 54. Family 47
  • Rogroci, and Lestriake in Germow and Brake, iii. 360
  • Rollandus, i. 98
  • Rolle, i. 151. Sir Henry 2.—Family, Robert, ii. [313]. Samuel [313] ter. Lord [87].—Dennis, iv. 136. Family 41
  • —— of Stephenton, Henry, iv. 40.—Of Stevenston, John, ii. [343].—Mr. iii. 117. Family 254
  • Rolles family, iii. 117 bis
  • Rollo, Duke of Normandy, ii. [344], [347]
  • Rolls family, ii. [416]
  • Roman army, i. 335
  • —— calends, iii. 258
  • —— camp, iii. 319—iv. 78
  • —— Catholics, persecution of, iii. 368
  • —— coins, iv. 30.—Found at Camelford, ii. [403]
  • —— Emperor; i. 195
  • —— fort in Probus, iii. 365
  • —— idols, iv. 101
  • —— invasion, iii. 162
  • —— legions, i. 335
  • —— martyrology, iv. 96
  • —— road, iii. 324—iv. 12; or way 15.—From Lincolnshire to Bath, and through Somersetshire to the west, iii. 324
  • —— saturnalia, ii. [164]
  • —— territories in Gaul, i. 335 bis
  • —— work at Berry park, iv. 31. On West Looe Down 29, 30, 31
  • Romans, i. 256, 295, 334 ter., 335 bis—iii. 395.—Encamped in various parts of Cornwall, ii. [19]. Their castles [423].—Directed their roads to the nearest and best fords, iv. 30
  • —— Richard, King of the, i. 36, 253, 414—ii. [109], [211] bis, [392], [403]—iii. 285, 448—iv. 4 ter. and Earl of Cornwall, ii. [8], [156]—iii. 15, 19, 28, 169, 268, 285, 448 bis
  • Rome, i. 197 quat., 198 bis, 206, 334, 335, 393—ii. [369]—iii. 284, 331, 400, 431, 434 bis—iv. 126 bis, 146, 148. St. Gorian beheaded at 112. Indulgences from, for building Bideford bridge 341. Thomas Paleologus arrives at 368. Foreigners prohibited from living at 371. Greek college founded there 370, 371. Scotch college 371. Jubilee of 1601 at 371
  • —— artists of, iv. 169
  • —— church of, iii. 357, 368—iv. 165
  • —— Emperor of, ii. [75]
  • —— St. John Lateran, church at, iv. 165
  • —— Lateran, gate of, iv. 165
  • —— papal, tower of, i. 312
  • —— see of, iii. 150
  • Romney, Kent, ii. [202], [210]. A Cinque port [38]
  • —— marsh, iii. 10
  • Romulus, i. 333
  • Roofs, security for, iii. 243
  • Roper, Edward, iii. 37. Elizabeth 140
  • —— of St. Winow, iv. 156
  • Roscarnon, ii. [24]
  • Roscarrack, account of, i. 384
  • —— family, ii. [357]
  • —— of Roscarrack, i. 384. Charles, John, bis, and Richard 384
  • —— burial place, i. 385
  • Roscarrock, Mr. i. 214.—Thomas and Mr. iii. 314. Family 193, 240
  • —— of Croan, i. 371
  • Roscorla, account of, i. 44
  • —— George de, i. 44 bis
  • —— of Roscorla in St. Austell, William, iii. 188
  • Roscrow in Mabe, iii. 125.—Account of, ii. [93], [98]
  • —— family, ii. [93]
  • —— of Penryn, Julian, i. 144, 145
  • —— of Roscrow, i. 145.—Family and arms, ii. [337]
  • Roscruge family, and etymology of the name, i. 39
  • Rose, no wild ones in the southern hemisphere, iii. 173
  • Roseath manor, iv. 3
  • Rosecadwell, possessors of, iii. 88
  • Rosecorla, i. 420
  • Rosecossa, account of, ii. [279]
  • —— Sir John, ii. [279]
  • Rosecradock, i. 196, 381.—In St. Clear, iii. 172
  • Rosehill, iii. 88
  • Rosemadons, i. 145
  • Rosemodens, manor of, in Buryan, St. Hilary, Paul, and Guinear, iii. 360
  • Rosemodris, i. 150
  • Rosemorron, account of, ii. [124]
  • Rosemullion head, iii. 177
  • Rosesilian, ii. [398]
  • Roseteague, ii. [56], [57]
  • Roseundle, account of, i. 44
  • Rosevithney, account of, iii. 47
  • Roseworth, account of, ii. [317]
  • Rosillian, i. 53, 54
  • Roskuroh, account of, i. 383
  • Roskymer family, ii. [128]
  • Rosland, ii. [50] bis
  • Rosmeran, i. 136
  • Rosminver, iii. 237
  • Rosmodrevy, i. 141 bis
  • Rosogan, James and John, ii. [192]—John, iii. 333
  • —— of St. Stephens, Elizabeth, i. 400. John 399 ter. Arms 400
  • Ross, Dr. John, Bishop of Exeter, ii. [224]—iii. 300.—Solomon de, ii. [336]
  • Rosswick manor, ii. [358]
  • Rosteage, account of by Hals, ii. [54]. By Tonkin [56]
  • Roswarne, i. 162, 164
  • —— De, i. 162 bis
  • Rother, Jane, i. 357
  • Rouen, Archbishop of, appointed Regent by Richard 1st, ii. [178]
  • Rough Tor, i. 131, 132, 201, 307, 310
  • Round table, ii. [308]
  • Rous, Sir Anthony, Recorder of Launceston, ii. [423].—John, iv. 145
  • —— of Halton, Anthony, i. 313 bis. Francis 315. Arms 313
  • Rouse, Henry, i. 215.—Captain, Governor of St. Mawe’s castle for Cromwell, ii. [277]. Lines upon him [278]. Robert of Wootton converted part of a barn at St. Mawe’s castle into a Presbyterian meeting-house, his marriage [278]
  • Rovier, iii. 342
  • Rowe, Rev. John, ii. [432]. Rev. William [252]. Mr. [139], [157].—Family, iii. 215 bis, 239
  • Rowle, Roger, iii. 185. William 386
  • Royal society, iii. 52, 53, 378
  • Royalists concealed in a vault, i. 143
  • Ruan castle, account of, iii. 403
  • —— St. iii. 419
  • —— Lanihorne manor belonged to the Archdekne family, iv. 121
  • —— or Lanyhorne parish, i. 294— ii. [2], [356]—iii. 40, 385—iv. 115, 117 bis, 121
  • Ruan Lanihorne parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, etymology, ancient name, value of benefice, iii. 402. Patron, incumbent, land tax, Tregago, its etymology 403. By Tonkin, situation and boundaries, value of benefice, Lanyhorne castle ibid. Situation and description of it, pulled down, turned into a little town, trade by shipping 404. A rectory, value, patron, two incumbents 405. By the Editor, situation of the church, the creek stopped up, the castle, Arcedekne family ibid. Manors of Lanihorne and Elerchy, Treviles, Mr. Whitaker’s account of this parish, memoir of him, his death 406. Memorial, Editor’s character of him, and of his writings, his defence of Mary Queen of Scots 407. His error respecting the ancient cathedral of Cornwall, has printed two volumes on the subject, containing invective against Dr. Borlase and others, extracts made by Mr. Forschall from a MS. in the British Museum, description of the volume 408. The extracts in Saxon 409. List of the Bishops of Cornwall and of Devonshire 415. See tranferred to Exeter, reason of Edward the elder for endowing the Bishoprick of Crediton, statistics, Geology by Dr. Boase 416
  • Ruan Major, or St. Ruan Major parish, ii. [116], [358]—iii. 128, 257, 385, 421, 423 bis. Rectory 258
  • Ruan Major parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, barton of Erisey, iii. 16. Family, story of Mrs. Erisey leaving her husband and taking her daughter with her, his distress compared with Hector’s on parting with Andromache 417. Translation of Hector’s address to Andromache, Hals’s deduction from it of Homer’s and Hector’s opinion upon marriage, dexterity of another, Mr. Erisey admired by James 1st, who objected to his name 418. Parish existing before Wolsey’s Inquisition, value, patron, land tax 419. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, name, a rectory, value, patron, incumbent. By the Editor, family, and barton of Erisey, advowson ibid. Hals’s specimen of Homer, the same passage from Pope, statistics, incumbent, patron, Geology by Dr. Boase 420
  • Ruan Minor parish, ii. [116], [319], [358]—iii. 128, 385, 416, 419
  • Ruan Minor parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, patron, incumbent, Cadgwith, Mr. Robinson’s encounter with a bull, iii. 421. He died in three or four days, opinions of his neighbours, our Saviour’s judgment, Meneage comprehended in Lizard, etymology of Lizard and the dangerous nature of the coast 422. By Tonkin, boundaries, patron, incumbent, value 423. By the Editor, Cadgwith cove, succession of property in the parish ibid. Singular claim belonging to the rector, statistics, incumbent, patron, Geology by Dr. Boase, Geology of the Lizard district in the “Transactions of the Cornish Geological Society” 424
  • Rudall, Rev. Edward, i. 111
  • Rudyard, John, built the 2nd lighthouse at Eddystone, iii. 376, 377, 378
  • Ruffo, Roger, iv. 27
  • Rugeham, iii. 350
  • Rume parish, ii. [252]
  • Rumor, St. iii. 384 bis, 459. His life 385
  • Runawartha, iii. 326
  • Rundle, i. 136
  • Rupe de, or Roach, Ralph, iii. 393. Family 391, 392, 393
  • Rupert, Prince, arrived in Cornwall, and accompanied the King, iv. 186
  • Rupibus, Peter de, i. 130
  • Rushes, planted as a fence against the sand, ii. [150]
  • Russell, John, Lord, i. 301.—Lost an eye at the siege of Montrueil, sent to oppose the Cornish rebels, iii. 196. Meets them 197. Rev. John 275. Mr. 11
  • —— of Exeter, Mr. made a fortune by the Lisbon trade, ii. [19]
  • Ruthes chapel, i. 218
  • Ruthven, governor of Plymouth, i. 113
  • Rutland, ii. [89]
  • —— Henry, Earl of, i. 9
  • Ruydacus, Bishop of Cornwall, iii. 415
  • Ryalton manor, i. 209, 234, 246, 250—iv. 138, 139. Account of 231
  • Ryalton mansion house, i. 74, 233
  • Rycaut’s history, ii. [368]
  • Rye, Naval armaments defeated by Fowey, ii. [45]
  • Rysbank, i. 169
  • Ryvier castle, by Leland, iv. 265
  • Sabina Popeia, i. 329
  • Saccombe of Trewinnow, i. 257
  • Sadler, Captain, i. 270
  • Saigar, iii. 331
  • St. Alban’s, battle of, iii. 294
  • St. Asaph, William Lloyd, Bishop of, one of the seven, iii. 299
  • Saint Aubyn. See [Seynt Aubyn]
  • St. Barbe, Francis, iii. 224
  • St. Clare, Sophia, a novel, iii. 34
  • St. George, Clarence and Sir Richard, iii. 61
  • St. John family, iii. 270
  • St. Martin, Aldred de, iv. 77, 83
  • St. Maur, William, ii. [189]
  • St. Pierre, Eustace, ii. [158]
  • Saints, Sieur D. T.’s Book of, i. 214
  • Salamanca university, i. 311
  • Salamis, iii. 216
  • Salem in America, iii. 72 ter.
  • Salian Way, i. 393
  • Salisbury, rebels march through, i. 87. Henry Rogers escapes to, and is there apprehended 269, 282
  • —— Bishop of, John Coldwell, ii. [7]. Lionel Woodvill [194]
  • —— Earl of, i. 168.—Cecil, ii. [66]. Robert Cecil [213]. Montacute [91]. Nevill, Richard [182]. Plantagenet, Margaret, Countess [91]
  • —— plain, a nucleus of three chalky ridges, iii. 10
  • Salmatius, i. 192
  • Salmenica, castle of, ii. [368]
  • Salmon of the Alan and Val, i. 74
  • Salmon, John, ii. [192]
  • ——’s Survey of England, iv. 8
  • Saltash, the Tamara of the Britons, iv. 40
  • —— borough, John Lemon, M.P. for, iii. 229
  • —— passage, iv. 185, 188
  • —— river, i. 32
  • —— town, i. 77, 103, 113, 203—ii. [59], [76], [79], [254]—iii. 110, 380
  • Salter, George, iii. 350. William of Devonshire 211, 215
  • Salterne of Penheale, i. 379
  • Saltren, John. iii. 276 bis
  • Salvia cardinalis, iv. 182
  • —— grahami, iv. 182
  • —— involucrata, iv. 182
  • Sammes’s Britannia, i. 120
  • Sampford Courtenay, i. 170
  • Sampson, the Jewish Hercules, iii. 280
  • —— the younger, Archbishop of Dole, iii. 336
  • —— Benjamin, his gunpowder manufactory and elegant residence, iii. 305. Martin 16
  • —— island, iv. 174. Extent of 175
  • —— St. ii. [231]. Hals’s uninteresting history of, Giant church dedicated to [90].—His history, iii. 281
  • —— St. chapel, Padstow, iii. 280
  • Sampson’s, St. or Glant parish, ii. [89] bis, [90] bis, see [Glant]
  • —— St. de South-hill church, ii. [231]
  • San or Saint explained, iv. 312
  • Sancred, or Sancreed parish, iii. 242, 283
  • —— St. iii. 425
  • Sancreed parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, ancient name, value of benefice, land tax, rich lodes of tin, iii. 425. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, name ibid. A vicarage, value, patron 426. By the Editor, church and monuments, one to Mrs. Bird, memoir of her, impropriation and patronage, consecrated well, St. Euny’s chapel, Hals’s dissertation on Creeds ibid. Pronounced Sancrist, Drift, Tregonnebris, late vicar, statistics, present vicar, patron, Geology by Dr. Boase 427
  • Sancrit, iii. 78
  • Sancroft, William, Archbishop of Canterbury, committed to the tower, iii. 296, 299
  • Sanctuary manor, iv. 17
  • Sand, inundated great part of Cornwall, ii. [149]. Difficulty of burning the calcareous to lime [150].—Encroachments of, iii. 340. Confined by roots of plants 344.—Important for manure, iv. 17
  • —— place, iii. 252
  • Sandal, John, i. 251
  • Sander’s land, i. 187
  • Sanders, Mr. iv. 74
  • Sandford, i. 317
  • Sandhill, account of, i. 158
  • Sands, John, i. 24.—Lord, and Hester his daughter, iii. 145
  • Sandwich, i. 169.—A Cinque port, ii. [38]
  • —— Edward Montagu, Earl of, iii. 104
  • Sandys, Sir Edwin, Edwin Archbishop of York, arms, iii. 158.—Rev. William, tutor to Lord de Dunstanville, ii. [244].—Rev. William, iii. 10, 238, 239 bis, 240. Called the Cardinal, monument to 239. William 241
  • —— of Hedbury, Worcestershire, Margaret and Sir William, iii. 158. William 158, 159. Sir William 158. Family 156. The Editor, their heir 159. Arms 158.—Edwyn, Lord, iv. 57
  • —— of Helston, Mary, Mr. ii. [218].—Of St. Minver, Mr. iv. 104
  • —— of Lanarth, Rev. Sampson, William, ii. [327]
  • —— of Ombersley, ii. [327]
  • —— of the Vine, Basingstoke, Hants, Edwin, iii. 159. Elizabeth 158. Henry 157 quat., 158 ter., 158, 159. Hester 157 ter., 158 ter., 159 bis. Margaret, William Lord 158.—Edwyn, Lord, raised a regiment of foot, and another of horse for Charles 1st, his death, iv. 58. William Lord 57 bis
  • —— of the Vine peerage, petition for, iv. 58
  • Saneret parish, ii. [282]
  • Sanns, John and Sampson, ii. [320]
  • Sans, word explained, iv. 317
  • Santy, Edmund, iii. 324
  • Saplyn, William, i. 215 bis
  • Saracens, i. 414—ii. [37]
  • Sarah, i. 414
  • Sargeaux of Court, family, ii. [394], [395]. Alice [395] bis. Richard [394] ter. Richard, jun. and Richard Sheriff of Cornwall [394]. Sir Richard, [ib.] ter. Arms [395]
  • Sarum, borough, ii. [162].—Old, burgage tenures purchased by governor Pitt, and his election for, i. 68
  • “Satyrs of Juvenal and Persius,” notes on, iv. 87
  • Saunder’s hill, iii. 280
  • Saviour’s, St. chapel, Padstow, iii. 281
  • Sawah, iii. 33
  • Sawle, Joseph, i. 43—iii. 200—Family, iv. 101
  • —— of Penrice, Joseph and Mary, i. 222.—Mr. iii. 279
  • Saxifraga sarmentosa, iv. 182
  • Saxon camp, iv. 78
  • —— Chronicle, ii. [403]—iii. 310
  • —— fort, iii. 322
  • —— kings, tradition of seven dining together, ii. [284]
  • —— saint, iv. 125
  • —— times, iii. 264
  • —— victory at Camelford, iii. 322
  • Saxons, i. 195, 305, 334 quat., 326, 337 bis, 338, 342 bis, 404—ii. [127]—iii. 284, 365 bis.—Landed at Perthsasnac, ii. [165]. Their castles [423]. Battle with the Britons [403].—Defeated by St. David, iii. 293.—Their settlement in Cornwall, iv. 125
  • Say, William, Lord, ii. [379]
  • Sayer family, iii. 212, 215
  • Scandinavians, i. 341—ii. [248]
  • Scawen, i. 392.—Family, ii. [67]. Arms [68].—Thomas, iii. 318, 319. Sir William 268, 271, 317. Mr. 271, 355. William, his observations on the Cornish MS. Passio Christi, App. V. iv. 190. His dissertation on the Cornish tongue 193 to 221
  • —— of Millinike, William, ii. [67]
  • Scawn, i. 20
  • Schobells, ii. [281]
  • Sciffo, Phavorino and Hortulana, i. 175
  • Scilly Islands or Isles, i. 139, 198, 199—ii. [213], [237], [283] ter.—iii. 429, 430 bis, 431, 433.—Governor and gunners pensioned, ii. [278]. Sir John Grenville, governor [345]. Lighthouse on St. Agnes [358].—Etymology, iii. 430 bis. Reduced by Athelstan 322. Garrison at 289.—List of, iv. 230
  • Scilly Islands, by the Editor, unnoticed by Hals and Tonkin, frequented by the ancients for tin, called the ancient Cassiterides by mistake, fable of the Lioness country, exaggerated opinion of the ancients, Scilly isles mistaken by them for England, iv. 168. Monastery, grant to Tavistock abbey and its confirmation 169. A second 170. Letter from Edward 3rd, his camp in Enmoor, only two monks resident, agreement for their exchange for secular priests, tithes impropriated, St. Nicholas convent on Trescow island, remains visible, St. Nicholas the patron of mariners 171; and of infants, miracle working by his relics, the islands important in the Civil Wars, patriotism of the cavaliers, system of annual leasing injurious to the islands 172. Now let on lives with condition of improving the harbour, expectations formed from Mr. Smith, Lighthouse on St. Agnes, suggestion for one on the Wolf 173. Wrecks formerly much more frequent than now, loss of the Victory, Geology, rocks insignificant, no legendary history or peculiarity of manners, their names, speculations upon them 174. Vigilance in the customs, produce, resort of ships, Dr. Borlase on their druidical antiquities, population, improvement of police and justice 175. Appointment of magistrates, situation of St. Agnes lighthouse, high water 176
  • Scipio Africanus, iii. 106.—His remark on the fall of Carthage, ii. [426]
  • Scobell, i. 45 bis, 46, 255. Barbara 259 bis. Francis 44, 417, 418. Francis, M.P., 416. Mary 259. Richard 44, 259 bis. Arms 44.—Francis, iii. 381. Mr. and family 88
  • —— of Menagwins, Mary and Richard, i. 257.—In St. Austell, ii. [217] bis
  • —— of Rosillian, Henry, i. 53
  • —— of St. Austell, i. 53
  • Scobhall of Devon, arms, i. 44
  • Scornier, account of, ii. [134]
  • Scotland, i. 336—iv. 75.—Union with, i. 126.—St. German travelled through and preached there, ii. [65]. The Eliots originated from [66]. The Duke of Braciano came to [371]
  • —— church of, iii. 300
  • Scots, King, ii. [371]
  • —— wars, iv. 75
  • Scott, Sir Walter, a quotation from, ii. [214]. He has given popularity to the word foray [165]
  • Scottish tongue, iii. 114
  • Scripture, Jewish, contains no reference to a future existence, book of Job excepted, iii. 69
  • Scrope, Elizabeth and Sir Richard, ii. [185].—Richard and William, Lords of Bolton castle, iii. 129. Arms ibid. 130. Their contest with Carmynow for them 129
  • Scrope and Grosvenor Roll, iii. 138
  • Scylley Isles, by Leland, iv. 266, 285
  • Sea trout, iii. 442
  • Seaborn, Anne and Mr. of Bristol, ii. [270]
  • Seaford, relics at, iii. 33
  • Seaforth, i. 47
  • Searell, Allen, i. 2
  • Searle family and arms, i. 37.—Mr. iv. 98
  • Seaton river, iii. 118, 119
  • Seawen, i. 397
  • Sebaste, i. 52
  • Sebert, King of the East Angles, ii. [284]
  • Seccombe of Pelsew, William, and arms, i. 417
  • Sechell, Rev. Mr. of St. Just and Sancreed, iii. 427
  • Segar, William, ii. [192]
  • Selborne, and its vicar, Mr. White, iii. 206
  • Selby abbey, ii. [75]
  • Selybria in Greece, ii. [366]
  • Senan, St. an Irishman, his life by Dr. Butler, friend of St. David, founded a monastery, was a bishop, died the same day as St. David, notice of him, iii. 431. His day 431, and 434
  • Senate of Rome, i. 334
  • Seneca, iv. 87
  • Seneschale family, ii. [139]
  • —— of Holland, Bernard, John de, and Luke, ii. [93]
  • Sennan, St. a Persian, exposed to wild beasts, and at last killed by gladiators, iii. 434
  • —— St. parish, i. 198—ii. [282]
  • Sennen, Sennon or Sennor parish, i. 138, 139—iii. 30, 78
  • Sennen parish, or St. Sennen, by Hals, situation, boundaries, name, ancient name, value, land tax, painted images hid in the wall, inscription on font, iii. 428. Penros, Trevear, parish yields little wheat, but plenty of barley, Chapel Carne Braye 429. Dangerous rocks, spire thrown down, erected by the Romans, or by King Athelstan, and Marogeth Arvowed 430. Penryn-Penwid, Land’s End 431. By Tonkin, St. Sennan, daughter church to Burian. By the Editor, most western parish in England ibid. No granite on the cliff except near Land’s End, magnificent scene, Longships, light-house upon, communication interrupted sometimes for three months, latitude and longitude of Land’s End, church conspicuous, built of granite, monuments, inn 432. Its appropriate inscriptions, Mean village, tradition and prophecy attached to a flat rock here, Whitsand bay, things said to have landed here, parish fertile, variety of measures, difference of the mile in England and Ireland 433. English and Irish acre, history of St. Sennen, another St. Senan, his Life by Dr. Butler 434. Parish feast, statistics, Geology by Dr. Boase, sand in Whitsand bay, drifted as far as Sennen green 435
  • Senns, i. 214
  • Sepulchre of our Saviour, ii. [414]
  • Sereod, Sir Thomas, M.P. for Cornwall, iii. 165
  • Sergeaulx, Sir Richard and his heirs, iii. 65.—Richard, iv. 21 and 22. Sir Richard and three Misses 22. Family 21
  • Sergiopolis, iv. 100
  • Sergius, St. iv. 111. His history, the place of his martyrdom named Sergiopolis 100
  • —— and Bacchus, Saints, Abbey at Angiers, iii. 232 bis—iv. 100, 105
  • Sergreaulx, i. 264. Alice 262 quat. Richard 264. Sir Richard 262.—Sir Richard, ii. [181]. Family [ibid.] [182]
  • Serischall, Bartholomew, Margery and arms, iii. 225
  • Seriseaux, Richard de, ii. [398]
  • —— arms, iii. 225
  • Serjeant, Rev. John, i. 381
  • Serjeaux family, iii. 258
  • Serman, St. iv. 14
  • Serpeknol, iv. 153
  • Serpents, petrified, invariably wanted a head, ii. [298]
  • Sescombe of St. Kevorne, i. 313
  • Seven Oaks, Kent, iv. 87 bis
  • Seven years’ war, ii. [32], [245]
  • Severn channel, iv. 15
  • —— river, iii. 298
  • —— sea, iii. 331
  • Seville, i. 161
  • —— Bishop of, i. 82
  • Seviock, iii. 374
  • Seymour, Lord Hugh, cruised from Falmouth, ii. [18]
  • —— Charles Duke of Somerset, and Lady Elizabeth 460. Colonel H. iii. 231.—Edward, Duke of Somerset and protector, iv. 107
  • —— of Bury Pomeroye, Sir Edward, i. 416
  • Seyne fishing for pilchards, ii. [262]
  • Seyntaubyn, or Seynt Aubyn, i. 136, 261, 317, 318, 319, 414. Mr. 265. Sir John, Bart. 121, 261 bis, 266 ter., 268, 271, 277, 350, 417, 418. His address to the parish of Crowan on the outrage at Skewis 284. Charity schools endowed by 288. Thomas 261. Family monuments in Crowan church 288—ii. [160] bis. Ann 5. Catherine 199. Geoffrey, Sheriff of Cornwall, Sir Guy 181, 183, 395. John 213, quin., 354. Sir John 5, 176, 199 bis, 213, 214, 243. Margaret 243. Margery 354.—St. Aubin, or St. Aubyn, Francis, iii. 80. John 83. Rev. R. T. of Ruan Minor 424. Miss 133. Mr. a pupil of Dr. Borlase 53.—Sir John, iv. 73, 139. Mr. 22. Family 107
  • —— of Clanawar, Colonel John, i. 113
  • —— of Clowance, i. 261, 262, 263. Geoffrey 265. Sir Guy 261, 262, 263, 265. John 262 bis. Sir John 262 ter., 263, 265. Thomas 262 bis. Arms 262.—Geoffrey, ii. [385]. John [122].—John, iii. 81, 317. Sir John 317, 318, 319. Thomas 211. Mr. 65.—Of Clowans, Colonel John, iv. 188
  • —— of Crowan, i. 360
  • —— of Trekininge, Sir John, i. 216
  • Shaftesbury, ii. [26]
  • —— Anthony Ashley Cooper, Earl of, ii. [379]
  • Shakespeare, iv. 119
  • Shakspeare of Pendarves, John, iii. 311
  • Shannon river, iii. 434
  • Shapcott, of Elton, Thomas, i. 170
  • Shapter, Rev. Mr. ii. [106]
  • Sharp Tor, or Sharpy Torry, i. 189, ter.—iii. 45.—Description of, i. 187
  • Sheen Priory, Richmond, ii. [190]
  • Sheepshanks, Rev. Mr. ii. [105]. His character [104]
  • Shell work, extraordinary, i. 147
  • Shepard, Elizabeth, i. 222
  • Shepherds, iii. 273. Origin of the name 272
  • Sherborne manor, ii. [7]
  • Sheriff of Cornwall violently resisted in the execution of his duty by Henry Rogers at Skewis, i. 268
  • —— Thady, iv. 116
  • Sheviock barton, iii. 436
  • —— manor, ii. [362]—iii. 437
  • —— parish, i. 32—ii. [250]. Or Shevyock [59]
  • Sheviock parish, by Hals, situation and boundaries, value of benefice, land tax, endowment of the church, Dawnay family, iii. 436. By Tonkin, a rectory, value, patron, incumbent, Sheviock manor 437. By the Editor, church old, splendid monuments 438. Tale of the building of the church and a barn, advowson, Crofthole village, its situation, Porth Wrinkle 439. Trethel, statistics, rector, Geology by Dr. Boase 440
  • Shillingham, iii. 464. Account of 463
  • —— of Shillingham family, iii. 463
  • Shipmoney, iii. 144 bis, 152
  • Shipwreck, extraordinary, ii. [320]
  • Shoreham, i. 258
  • Short, Charles, of Devon, ii. [218]
  • Shovel, Sir Cloudesley, iv. 174
  • Shrewsbury, ii. [76]. St. Chad, patron of [391]
  • —— Richard of, i. 88
  • Shropshire, the Cornwalls twenty-two times sheriffs of, iii. 449
  • Shuckburgh, Richard, i. 355.—Sir George. His Tables, iv. 145
  • —— of Shuckburgh, i. 355
  • Sibthorpe, i. 358
  • Sibthorpia Europæa, iv. 180
  • Siddenham, South, ii. [430]
  • Sidenham, Cuthbert and Humphrey, iv. 77
  • Sidney, Sir Philip, Sir Beville Grenville was his rival, ii. [348]
  • Sigdon, ii. [71]
  • Sigebert, King of the East Angles, ii. [284]
  • Signals, from Maker church, iii. 106. Remarks on ibid.
  • Silly, William, i. 223.—Mrs. ii. [136].—Elizabeth and Joseph, iii. 66
  • —— of Minver and St. Wenn, John, iii. 237. Family 66. Arms 237
  • —— of Trevella, Hender, iii. 237. William 237, 238
  • Sillye, heir of, iv. 111
  • Siloam, tower of, iii. 422
  • Silvester, Pope, i. 237
  • Simmons, George, iii. 215
  • Simon’s, St. and St. Jude’s day, ii. [140]
  • Simon Ward or St. Breward parish, i. 62, 131—iv. 97
  • Simpson, John, iii. 206
  • Sion Abbey, ii. [176]. Middlesex 209, 212 bis
  • Sirius, its parallax ascertained by Dr. Maskelyne, ii. [222]
  • Sisters, the nine, iv. 2
  • Sithian, St. Bertin, Abbot of, iv. 157
  • Sithney parish, ii. [136], [141], [155], [156], [160]. St. John’s hospital at [157]—iii. 419, 421.—Its governor, iv. 1.—Near Helston, singular tale of a fair removed from, iii. 309
  • Sithney parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, ancient name, value of benefice, patron, incumbent, impropriator, land tax, St. John’s hospital, a deficiency in the MS. iii. 441. Trout, royalty of the river, Trevelle’s tenure 442. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, name ibid. A vicarage, value, patron, incumbent, impropriation, Penrose manor, its situation, Loo Pool, its trout, sandbank, used as a bridge, its danger, Mr. Penrose’s house, name of the river 443. The bar, the fish of the pool 444. By the Editor, distance of the church from Breage church, divided by a valley, attempt to make a harbour of Porthleaven ibid. Has failed, Penrose, improvements expected, Antron 445. Trevarnoe, St. John’s hospital, stone pointing out its site, impropriation of the tithes, present and a former incumbent 446. Parish feast, statistics, Geology by Dr. Boase, form of the parish, Whele Vor 447
  • Sixtus 5th, Pope, ii. [371] bis
  • Skelton, ii. [186]
  • Skewish, Great, iv. 141
  • —— Miss, iii. 147.—Collan and family, iv. 2
  • Skewys, i. 267 bis, 272, 303
  • —— of Skewys, John, i. 303
  • Skidmore, Thomas, ii. [196]
  • Skinden, account of, ii. [338]
  • Skippon, Major General, i. 114 bis—iv. 188. His men distressed on their march, and charged by the King’s troops ibid. Commissioner for the parliament army 189
  • Skyburiow, Miss, iii. 134
  • Slade of Lanewa, George, i. 418
  • —— of Trevennen, Simon, iii. 202 bis, and William 202
  • Slancombe Dawney, i. 64
  • Slannen, i. 347, 370
  • Slanning, Sir Nicholas of Marstow, Devon, governor of Pendennis castle. Killed at the battle of Bristol against the rebels, and the marriage of his widow, ii. [13].—Sir Nicholas, Bart. iii. 76. Sir Nicholas of Marystow, Devon 75, 76. Arms 76
  • Slapton, college of, Devon, iii. 352
  • Slate from Drillavale quarry, the best in England, iv. 45
  • Sloane’s, Sir Hans, MSS. iii. 154
  • Slugg, John, ii. [189]
  • Small, i. 317
  • Smeaton, Mr. ii. [264]. Built the present Eddystone lighthouse [378] quat., [432]
  • Smith, i. 78, 117.—Walter, ii. [70].—William, Bishop of Litchfield, afterwards of Lincoln, iii. 141—i. 218.—Mr. has taken a lease of the Scilly isles, iv. 173. Name 128
  • —— of Crantock, Sir James, i. 250. Sir William 249. Arms 250
  • —— of Devon, George and Grace, ii. [347]
  • —— of Exon, i. 250. Sir James 348
  • —— of Kent, John, ii. [379]
  • —— of Mitchell Morton family, ii. [416]
  • —— of Trelizicke, i. 348
  • —— of Trethewoll, i. 408
  • ——’s, ii. [154]
  • Smithfield, execution in, ii. [192]
  • Smithick or Smithike, British name of Falmouth, ii. [20]. Changed [8]. Town and custom-house built [9]
  • Smithson, Sir Hugh, Duke of Northumberland, iii. 460
  • Smyrna, iii. 187.—Rev. E. Nankivell, chaplain to the factory at, iv. 5
  • Smyth, Rev. T. S. i. 49.—Rev. John, curate of St. Just, notice of, ii. [286]. Monument, inscription, and cenotaph [287]
  • Snell, Rev. Mr. of Menheniot, iii. 168
  • —— of Whilley, Elizabeth, iii. 160
  • Soaprock, account of, ii. [360]
  • Sobieski, John, the preserver of Christendom, ii. [351]
  • Society, Antiquarian, ii. [224]
  • —— for propagating the Gospel, iii. 73
  • —— Royal, ii. [224]
  • Solenny, Hostulus De, iv. 25, 26 quat. John 26 ter.
  • Solinus, i. 199
  • Solomon, Duke of Cornwall, i. 294
  • Somaster of Painsford, Devon, John and Marianne, ii. [304]
  • Somers, Lord, iii. 15
  • Somerset, Duke of, i. 169 quat.—ii. [182].—Charles Seymour, iii. 460. John 65.—Edward Seymour, Protector, iv. 107
  • Somersetshire, i. 113—ii. [110], [190], [293]. Romantic scenery of [88].—Insurgents enter, i. 86.—King Charles in, marched out of, iv. 185. The Trevelyans sheriffs of 114
  • Sondry, Thomas, iii. 387
  • Sophocles, ii. [103], [165]
  • Sound, the English fleet sailed for, ii. [27]
  • South Downs, iii. 10
  • —— Saxons, Cissa, King of, ii. [284]
  • —— Sea islands, iv. 45
  • Southallington manor, i. 64
  • Southampton, ii. [76]
  • Southernay, i. 108
  • Southey’s lines upon St. Keyne’s well, ii. [295]
  • Southill parish, i. 151 bis—ii. [309] bis—iii. 43—iv. 6, 7
  • Southill parish. See [Hill, South]
  • South Teign, i. 170
  • Sowle, i. 47
  • Spain, i. 161 ter.—ii. [107]—iii. 187, 361—iv. 86.—Coast of, iii. 218.—Tobacco sold cheap in, ii. [43]. War with [245]. Her fleet [ibid.] Appeared in Plymouth Sound [246]. Officers lost returning from [325].—Elizabeth’s wars with, iii. 105.—Trade of Looe with, iv. 35
  • Spaniards, ii. [6].—Invasion of Britain by, their name hated at Mousehole, iii. 287.—And French, sea-fight with, iv. 21
  • Spanish galleons, Sir Richard Grenville sent in the Revenge to intercept, ii. [344]
  • —— galleys, five, burnt Penzance, iii. 81, 91
  • —— merchants murdered, ii. [6]
  • —— pieces, ii. [6]
  • —— vessel wrecked, iii. 311
  • —— wars, story of, ii. [6]
  • Spark of Plymouth, i. 370
  • Sparks family, ii. [357]
  • Speaker of the House of Commons, ii. [68].—Speakers, Hakewell’s Catalogue of, iv. 44
  • Speccott, i. 221. Sir John 381 bis. Arms 379.—Family, ii. [398], [400].—Mr. iii. 449. His death 450
  • —— of Penheale, John, i. 378 bis. Hon. John 378, 379. Seized with small pox the day after his marriage 379. His death and will ibid.—John and Colonel, ii. [399].—Of Penheel, John, iii. 38
  • Speed, i. 217—iii. 111, 441—iv. 101; and Dugdale’s Monast. Anglic. i. 247—ii. [62], [96]—iv. 101
  • Spelman’s Glossary, iii. 389
  • Spencer of Lancaster, i. 263
  • Spernon, i. 127
  • Sperrack of Trigantan, i. 258
  • Spettigue, Rev. Edward of Michaelstow, iii. 223.—John, iv. 62
  • Spigurnel, Henry, iii. 2
  • Spinster’s town, iv. 140
  • Spour family, ii. [227], [229]. Henry, Miss, and arms [227]
  • Spoure of Trebartha, Edmund, and Mary, ii. [396].—Family, i. 302, 303
  • Spry, Edward, iii. 378. Sir. J. T. and Admiral 446. Miss 66. Family 194, 449. Line upon 449
  • —— or Sprye of Tregony, Peter and his daughter, iii. 77. Miss 75
  • Sprye, A. G. i. 28. Rev. William 106. Arms and etymology of name 28.—Samuel Thomas, M.P. for Bodmin, ii. [35]. Admiral [34].—Family, i. 29, 61 ter.—ii. [54], [300]
  • —— of Blissland, i. 28
  • Spur, Mr. ii. [120]
  • Spye, derivation of name, i. 28
  • Squire, Arthur, ii. [377]
  • Stabback, Rev. Thomas, i. 293.—Rev. Samuel of Sancreed, iii. 427
  • Stackenoe, iv. 1
  • Stackhouse, Mrs. i. 400. Edward William 401. Rev. Thomas, author of the History of the Bible 400. John 163 ter., 400 bis. William 400. Dr. William 163, 400 bis.—John, iii. 367 bis. Thomas of Beenham, Berks 366. His works ibid. Rev. Dr. William, rector of St. Erme ibid. bis. William 367 bis
  • Stadyon, ii. [139]
  • Stafford, Baron of, ii. [230]. Baronial family [231]
  • —— county, ii. [89]
  • —— Humphrey, i. 64.—Edmund, Bishop of Exeter, iii. 446. Family 117
  • Stainton, Henry De, iii. 2
  • Stamford, Earl of, governor of Plymouth, iii. 183. Defeated 351
  • —— hill, iii. 351
  • —— creek, iii. 256
  • Stanbury, iii. 255
  • —— family, iii. 350
  • —— of Stanbury, Richard or John, Bishop of Hereford, family and their property, iii. 255
  • Stancomb Dawney, iii. 436
  • Stanhope, i. 61. Hon. and Rev. H., 149
  • Stannaries, laws relating to, i. 365.—Records of, iii. 57.—Earl of Radnor, Lord Warden of, ii. [380].—John Thomas, Vice Warden of, iv. 91
  • Starford, William, i. 108
  • Stawel, Edward Lord, H. B. Legge, Lord, H. S. B. Legge, Lord, and Mary, iii. 206
  • Stawell, John, ii. [196]
  • Steam boats, discovery anticipated, iv. 91
  • —— engine, the first used in Cornwall, i. 127
  • Stebens, Rev. R. S. of South Petherwin, iii. 338
  • Stephen, King, ii. [87]—iii. 433, 456 bis, 463—iv. 81, 82, 140
  • —— prior of Launceston, ii. [419]
  • —— St. the protomartyr, iii. 450, 456
  • —— St. by Leland, iv. 292
  • —— St. cum Tresmore, ii. [430]
  • —— ’s, St. abbey, dissolution of, iv. 68
  • —— St. altar in Dublin cathedral, iv. 146
  • —— St. chapel in Dublin cathedral, iv. 147
  • —— St. church, iii. 458
  • —— St. college, by Launceston, i. 112—iv. 185.—Prior of, i. 378 bis
  • —— St. collegiate church, suppressed, ii. [419]. Ralph, Dean of [426]. Prior of [422]
  • —— St. parish, i. 103, 128, 140, 251, 310—iii. 195, 207, 335, 354 bis, 395—iv. 152
  • Stephen’s, St. by Leland, iv. 281
  • —— St. in Brannel church, iii. 198. The advowson 202
  • ——’s St. in Brannel or Branwell parish, i. 310—ii. [109], [110], [353]—iv. 54
  • Stephen’s, St. in Brannel parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, value of benefice, consolidation with St. Denis, and Carhayes, endowment, patron, incumbent, land tax, court, iii. 448. Bodenike, the love adventures of Mr. Tanner and Mrs. Windham 449. By Tonkin, situation and boundaries, dedication, daughter to Carhayes, value, patron, incumbent 450. Manor of Brannel 451. Whitaker, singular constitution of the parish, manor of Carhayes supposed a royal one 451. Name and appearance of the house confirm the supposition 452. St. Denis parochiated, Carhayes not mentioned in Pope Nicholas’s valor 453. By Editor, church stands high, lofty tower, potatoe cultivation, monument in church to Dr. Hugh Wolrige with epitaph, statistics, fluctuation in mining, china clay, Geology by Dr. Boase 454. China stone and clay, quantities exported from Cornwall 455
  • —— St. by Launceston parish, ii. [361], [417], [419], [420]—iii. 466
  • Stephen’s, St. near Launceston parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, collegiate church, converted into a priory, iii. 456. Impropriated all the benefices annexed to it, land tax, fairs, a friary 457. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, value of benefice 457. By Editor, early history indistinct, college changed into a monastery, St. Thomas’s church, etymology of Launceston, the church seated high with a lofty tower, inscription to Viscount Newhaven, Sir Jonathan Phillips 458. Barton of Carnedon, modern history of the parish, borough of Newport, its constitution, Werrington 459. Its deer park 460. Fairs, Sarah Coat, aged 104. Statistics, incumbent, Geology by Dr. Boase 461
  • ——’s, St. by Launceston, prior of, iv. 51, 59, 63 bis, 68
  • —— St. in Lesnewith, iv. 63
  • —— St. in Penwith, iv. 50, 51 quat.
  • —— St. by Saltash parish, i. 199, 203—ii. [8], [110].—Sheet of Hals’s MS. relating to, communicated to the Editor, iv. 184
  • Stephen’s, St. near Saltash, parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, iii. 461. Ancient name, value of benefice, castle, honour, and manor, of Trematon, their history 462. Shillingham, etymology, Buller family, treachery of a domestic chaplain 463. Fentongollan reluctantly sold to raise the amount of a fine 464. Earth, Wyvillecomb 465. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, a vicarge, its value, &c. ibid. By the Editor 466. Statistics, Geology by Dr. Boase 470
  • —— St. point, i. 381, 386
  • —— St. rectory, i. 72
  • Stephens family, i. 84 bis, 121 bis—ii. [43], [77], [80], [269]—iv. 67.—Rev. Edward, ii. [338]. Samuel [215]. Mr. [134], [259].—Rev. Darell, of Little Petherick, iii. 335. Rev. D. of Maker 109. John 48, 387. Rev. Mr. 240. Mrs. 8.—Nicholas, iv. 77
  • —— of Culverhouse near Exeter, Richard, iv. 67
  • —— of St. Ives, John, i. 353, 354, 392, 399 bis, 403. Samuel 403.—Family escaped the plague, ii. [271]. Anne, Augustus, Harriet [270]. John [269] ter., [270] bis, Maria [270]. Samuel [270] quin.
  • —— of Tregenna, Samuel, i. 392, 403.—Mr. ii. [354].—In St. Ives, Rev. J. iii. 54. Samuel 440
  • —— of Tregorne, Mr. iii. 311
  • Stepney, iii. 188
  • Stepper point, iii. 281, 282
  • Sternhold, Thomas, i. 96—iii. 238
  • Stevens family, iii. 192
  • Steward, Lord, ii. [68]
  • Stidio, Bishop of Cornwall, ii. [60], [61]—iii. 415
  • Stithian parish, i. 221, 236.—Stithians, ii. [129], [140].—Stithyans or St. Stithians, iii. 59, 305, 380
  • —— St. iv. 2
  • ——’s St. church, iv. 4
  • Stithian’s, St. parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, ancient name, mother church to Peranwell, value of benefice, patron, incumbent, land tax, impropriation, saint, iv. 1. Penaluricke barton and manor, Tretheage, the nine maids, tin 2. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, saint, a vicarage ibid. Patron, impropriation, incumbent, manor of Tretheage 3. By Editor, church and tower, manors of Kennal and Roseeth, barton of Tretheage ibid. Penalurick, Treweek, Tresavren, Trevales, the church, charter of Edmund Earl of Cornwall 4. Value of the benefice, late vicar, statistics, present vicar, Geology by Dr. Boase 5
  • Stithiany, ii. [136]
  • Stock, D. J. E. his Life of Dr. Beddoes, iii. 251
  • Stoke, i. 266.—Meaning of, iv. 7
  • —— Climsland, i. 151, 153 bis—ii. [229], [230], [309]—iii. 40, 43
  • —— Climsland, or Stow Climsland manor, iv. 6, 7, 11
  • Stoke Climsland parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, manor, writ, Hengiston downs, tin works, part of Cari Bollock, iv. 6. Manor of Rileaton, writ, benefice, patron, incumbent, land tax. By Tonkin and Whitaker, situation and boundaries, value, patron, incumbent, manor of Climsland 7. Cary Bullock park, etymology 8. By the Editor, manor of Stoke Climsland, and Climsland prior, Carybullock, Whiteford, Mr. Call, memoir of 9. Afterwards Sir John, Sir W. P. Call, manor of Climsland prior, advowson 11. Statistics, rector, Geology by Dr. Boase 12
  • —— Damerel, i. 266
  • —— Damerell parish, iv. 39
  • —— Gabriel church, i. 367
  • —— Gabriel vicarage, i. 130
  • Stone, advowson, iii. 115
  • —— of Bundbury, Wilts, James, i. 259
  • Stonehouse, west, now Mount Edgecombe, iii. 107
  • Stones, circles of, i. 141
  • Storm which destroyed Eddystone lighthouse, iii. 376.—At Gwenap, ii. [132]
  • Stourton, Lord, iii. 357. His daughter 369
  • Stow’s History of England, iii. 310
  • Stowe, in Bucks, carvings from Stowe in Cornwall, transferred to, ii. [346], [351]
  • —— in Kilkhampton, ii. [340]. Etymology [232]. The Grenvilles resided there for many generations [344]. Mansion built by John, Earl of Bath [346], [351]. The noblest house in the west of England [346]. Demolished, materials sold, wainscot of the chapel sold to Lord Cobham, and transferred to Stowe, Bucks [346], [351]. Magnificence and situation [346]. The carving of the chapel by Mr. Chuke, [ib.] Built at the national expence, almost all the gentlemen’s seats in Cornwall embellished from [351].—Staircase from, iii. 279. Spoils of 351
  • Stowell, Sir John, ii. [233].—William, iii. 358
  • Stradling, Ann, iii. 316. Edmund 316 bis
  • —— of Dunlevy, Edmund, iii. 211
  • Strange, Nicholas, i. 246
  • Strathan, or Stratton hundred, iii. 22, 114, 254, 349
  • Straton, i. 60
  • Stratone, iv. 1
  • Stratton hundred, i. 133—ii. [232] [340], 402, 413—iv. 12, 15, 39, 40, 131, 152 bis.—Bailiffry of, ii. [416]
  • —— manor, ii. [427]—iv. 15, 16 bis
  • —— parish, ii. [273], [340], [413], [416], [429], [430]—iii. 114, 274, 349, 352. Roman road through 324.—Battle at, ii. [349].—Victory, i. 113
  • Stratton parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, value of benefice, iv. 12. Patron, land tax, market, Thurlebere, battle in the rebellion, Sir B. Grenville unhorsed 13. Chudleigh taken prisoner, royal party victorious, with a loss of 200, took 17 guns, subsequent fertility of the field, Sir Ralph Hopton and his ancestry 14. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, Roman way, value of benefice, a vicarage, patron, manor 15. Its value 16. By Editor, former road through Stratton and Binomy manors, manor of Efford, church and tower ibid. Great age of Elizabeth Cornish, the tithes, manor of Sanctuary changed for the honour of Wallingford, Bude, jetty, canal efficacy of shell-sand as manure, boats used with wheels, Fulton’s improvement of canal navigation 17. A watering place, Launcells house, G. B. Kingdon, Esq. instance of longevity, bells, height of Hennacleve cliff 18. Statistics, vicar, Geology by Dr. Boase 19
  • Straughan, Colonel, challenged the King’s army, his troop led by himself, iv. 186. Challenge accepted, his orders, and charge, took some of the King’s horses 187
  • Street, John, accomplice with Rogers, convicted and executed, i. 269. His trial for the murder of Carpenter 272. For that of Woolston 276
  • —— Nowan, iii. 288
  • Stretch of Devon, Lord of Pinhoe, iv. 43
  • Strettoun, by Leland, iv. 258
  • Stribble hill, i. 223
  • Strode, Richard, ii. [231]
  • Stroote, i. 348
  • Stukeley, i. 141
  • Styria, iii. 186
  • Subterranean vault at Trove, i. 143
  • “Sudeley Castle, History of,” iii. 160
  • Suffolk, ii. [66]
  • —— Duke of, iv. 107.—Henry Grey, ii. [294] bis
  • —— Earl of, iii. 154.—Edmund de la Pole, i. 86
  • Sulpicius, St. iii. 122
  • Sumaster, ii. [71]
  • Summercourt, i. 388 bis
  • Sunderland, Earl of, i. 84 bis, 126. Charles Spencer 127
  • —— man of war, ii. [32]—iii. 186
  • Surat, ii. [227]—iii. 188
  • Surrey, iii. 10
  • —— Thomas Holland, Duke of, iii. 27
  • Surrius’s book, i. 214
  • Surtecote, Angero de, iv. 27
  • Survey of Cornwall, iii. 437—iv. 68, 100, 139, 156. Of the Duchy of Cornwall 6
  • Sussex county, iii. 206 bis. Weald of 10
  • Sutherland, i. 349, 350, 359
  • Sutton, Rev. Henry, ii. [409].—Rev. William of St. Michael Carhayes, and St. Stephen’s in Brannel, iii. 450
  • Swallock, i. 131
  • Swannacot manor, iv. 136
  • Swanpool, i. 137, 138
  • Swansea, i. 364—ii. [241]
  • —— coal sent to Cornwall, iii. 340
  • Sweden, King of, ii. [27]. Bestows medals on English officers [ibid.]
  • Sweet, i. 417.—Rev. Charles, iii. 38
  • —— of Kentisbury, Rev. Charles 381
  • Swift, Jonathan, Dean of St. Patrick’s, i. 58.—Restored Archbishop Tregury’s tomb, iv. 141, 144, 147
  • Swimmer, Robert, ii. [70]
  • Swiss cantons, had a custom of trying after execution, iii. 186
  • Swithin, St. ii. [403]
  • Switzerland, iii. 231
  • Sydemon, Bishop of Devon, iii. 415
  • Sydenham, Devon, iii. 126
  • Sydney Sussex college, Cambridge, iv. 136 bis
  • Sylea island, iv. 230
  • Symmonds, Rev. John, ii. [116]
  • Symonds, Rev. Mr. i. 353, 354
  • Symons, William, i. 105, 107.—Rev. Mr. ii. [116].—Rev. J. T. of Trevalga, iv. 67. Family 62
  • —— of Halt, i. 162
  • Symonward, iv. 49
  • Symphorian, two saints of the name, iv. 117, 120
  • —— by Leland, iv. 258
  • Symphrogia, St. iv. 117
  • Syriac, St. iv. 111, 112
  • Syrian castles, ii. [423]
  • Sythany, i. 261
  • Sythney, hospital of the Knights of St. John at, iii. 78
  • Syth’s, St. ii. [405]
  • “Tables of the Greek Language,” iv. 87
  • Tacabere, i. 133, 134 bis
  • Tacitus, i. 256—iii. 162
  • Tagus, i. 372
  • Talbot, William, iv. 28. Family 145
  • Talcare, i. 20—iv. 24
  • Talgrogan, i. 17
  • Talland, ii. [430] bis. Tallant [398]. Talland, Tallant, or Tallend parish, iii. 65, 249, 291, 294
  • Talland parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, value of benefice, land tax, etymology, iv. 19. West Looe, borough and town 20. Killygarth barton and manor 21. Hendarsike 22. Trenake 23. By Tonkin and Whitaker, situation, boundaries, a vicarage, value, impropriation, patron, incumbent, Polpera ibid. Porth Tallant, manor, etymology, the church, story of Mr. Murth and his French miller 24. By the Editor, additions from Bond relating to West Looe, in the hamlet of Lemain, barton of Port Looe, Lammana, description of the chapel 25. Grants relating to the monastery 26, 27. Midmain rock, Horestone rock, Portnadle bay, corporation of West Looe 28. West Looe down, Giant’s hedge, St. Winnow down 29. Romans directed their roads to Fords, Causey from Leskeard to Looe 30. Two circular encampments, described, Berry park 31. Prospects, five barrows, grave discovered, a celt found 32. Some in the British Museum, gold chain and brass instruments found, Polvellan 33. Inclosure of the down desirable 34. Property in it, lettings 35. Trade of Looe, church, Beville monument, Polbenro, beauty of the road from Fowey to Looe, Killigarth manor, Kilmenawth, or Kelmenorth, hamlet of Lemaine, extract from an old record 36. Portlooe, Looe island, Polvellan, Greek inscription, Admiral Wager 37. Killygarth, Polperro, advowson, statistics, incumbent, impropriation, Geology by Dr. Boase 38
  • Talland town, iv. 36
  • Tallard, Marshall, ii. [307] bis
  • Tallat, Captain, iii. 187
  • Talmeneth, by Leland, iv. 264
  • Tamalanc, i. 2
  • Tamar river, i. 107, 113, 133 bis, 266, 310—ii. [362], [364], [413], [418] bis, [432]—iii. 1, 40, 45, 104, 114, 121, 166, 254 bis, 298, 301, 456, 457, 461—iv. 6, 7, 15, 39 bis, 40 ter., 70, 152, 185.—Romantic, iii. 42. Its banks 460.—The country adjacent to, may be proud of Mr. Call, iv. 9
  • Tamara, the Roman, iv. 40
  • —— by Leland, iv. 291
  • Tamarix Gallica, iv. 180
  • Tamarton, i. 107
  • —— chapel, Devon, iv. 39
  • —— hundred, Devon, iv. 39
  • —— parish, iv. 131, 152 bis
  • Tamarton parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, name, Tamar river, mentioned by Ptolemy, ancient name of the parish, church recent, land tax, manor, iv. 39. Line of a Saxon poet on Athelstan’s victory 40. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, name, value of benefice, a rectory, incumbent, patron ibid. Manor 41. By Editor, Lysons on the descents of property, manor of Hornacott, Ogbere, Vacye, villages of Alvacot, Headon, and Venton, statistics, ib. Incumbent, and Geology by Dr. Boase 42
  • Tamarton parish, Devon, iv. 39
  • —— north, manor, iv. 41
  • Tamerton, i. 241—ii. [430]
  • Tamerworth harbour, iii. 104, 105
  • Tamesworth haven, i. 32
  • Tanis, parish of, ii. [208]
  • Tanner, i. 146, 153 ter., 159.—Bishop 200—ii. [201], [246]—iii. 233, 448, 449—iv. 104, 112.—His Notitia Monastica, i. 134, 146, 250, 251, 300—ii. [209]—iv. 102, 104. App. 10. 319 to 336.—John, iii. 202, 372, 450. Love story of 449. Rev. Mr. 199. Rev. Mr. of St. Stephen’s in Branel 448. Family 198
  • —— of Carvinike, Anthony, i. 386
  • —— of Court and Boderick, i. 387
  • —— of Cullumpton, George, ii. [110]
  • Taperell, John, iii. 16
  • Tapestry at Trewinard, i. 358
  • Tarr, Rev. Mr. ii. [251]
  • Tarsus, iii. 284
  • Tassagard, iv. 146
  • Tathius, St. notice of, ii. [44]
  • Taunton, ii. [27], [76], [190], [191].—Insurgents march to, i. 86
  • —— Richard of Truro, lent Hals’s MS. to the Editor, the son of W. E. iii. 18. Richard 407. Family 18
  • Tavistock, i. 158, 159
  • —— Abbey, in Devon, ii. [274]—iii. 372, 384, 385, 459, 460—iv. 6, 64, 169, 171.—Abbot of, ii. [365]—iii. 459 bis.—Livignus, ii. [60]. Osbert [426]
  • —— market, i. 79
  • —— river, source of, iv. 237
  • Tawlaght, iv. 146
  • Taxatio Benefic. of Pope Nicholas, iii. 5, 24, 40, 112, 277, 291, 306 bis, 334, 336, 339, 345, 352, 372, 374, 384, 396, 437, 442, 443, 457 bis—iv. 15, 23, 40, 44, 62, 66, 76, 95, 112, 118, 129, 140, 153, 162
  • —— Eccles. ii. [394] bis—iv. 159
  • Taxation of Pope Nicholas, iv. 46.—To the Pope’s Annats, ii. [116]
  • Taylder of St. Mabe, Joan, and Thomas her father, iii. 76
  • Taylor, i. 32
  • Teague, Mr. i. 254
  • Teath, St. parish, i. 375, 382—ii. [401], or Tethe, iv. 95 bis, 99, 137
  • Teath, St. parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, name, saint, his history, iv. 42. Ancient name, value of benefice, land tax, Bodanan, the Cheyney family, their monuments and arms in the church 43. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, saint, a vicarage, value, patron, impropriator 44. By the Editor, Lysons gives the descent of property, Tregordock manor, Drillavale Quarry, Treveares, Captain Bligh of the Bounty 45. Church, age, situation, roads, anecdotes of Mr. Phillips, value of benefice 46. Statistics, vicar, patron, Geology by Dr. Boase, Treburget mine 47
  • Tedda, i. 2
  • Tees river, i. 290
  • Tegleston, i. 1
  • Tehidy, ii. [241].—Manor, iii. 380 bis, and Honor 384, 388, 389 bis, 390
  • Temple bar, iii. 142
  • —— Rev. Mr. character of, ii. [104]
  • —— manor, iv. 48
  • —— moors, ii. [36]—iv. 46, 48
  • —— parish, i. 21, 60, 167—iv. 128, 129
  • Temple parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, name, Knights Templars, ancient name, value of benefice, iv. 48. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, value of benefice 49. By Editor, church founded by the Templars ibid. Potatoes cultivated, parish attached to the manor of Treleigh, patronage, incumbent, statistics, Geology by Dr. Boase 50
  • Temporibus, John de, iii. 313
  • Tencreek, account of, i. 254.—A singular tree there, iii. 169
  • —— of Tencreek, i. 254, 347 bis, 396. Arms 255
  • —— of Treworgan, i. 206
  • Terceira islands, a battle with the Spaniards off, ii. [344]
  • Terence, notes on, iv. 87
  • Tereza, St. iii. 150
  • Terrill, Sheriff of Cornwall, ii. [186]
  • Testa, Abbess of Wimborne, iv. 126
  • Teth, St. i. 322—iv. 66
  • Teucrium latifolia, iv. 183
  • —— frutescens, iv. 183
  • Teuthey, by Leland, iv. 279
  • Teutonic ears, name of Winifred not soft enough for, iv. 127
  • Tew, St. i. 174
  • Tewan, i. 11
  • Tewardevi, iv. 93
  • Tewington manor, by Hals, i. 41. Antiquity, court leet, etymology 45. By Tonkin, etymology 46. Possessors, and quarry at 47
  • Tewkesbury abbey, i. 288.—Gloucestershire, iv. 140
  • —— battle of, ii. [260]. Sir John Grenville left for dead on the field [345]
  • Teynham, Lord, iii. 140
  • Thamar river, iv. 233
  • Thames river, iii. 10, 63, 310. High water in 98
  • Thanks, i. 37
  • Thaumaturgus, Gregory, i. 388
  • Theliaus, St. history of, i. 321
  • —— St. church, i. 321
  • Theocritus, by Warton, ii. [266]
  • Theodore, iv. 8
  • Thesdon, a Prince of Cornwall, iii. 342
  • Thesdon’s castle, iii. 342
  • Thessalonica, principality of, sale of the city to the Venetians, ii. [366]
  • Thetford, ii. [76]
  • Thica Vosa, an intrenchment, ii. [113]
  • Thick, Reginald de, i. 383
  • Thomas the Rhymer, ii. [308]
  • Thomas, Henry, i. 277. J. 10. John 19.—Mr. ii. [414].—John and Richard took the name of Pendarves, two brothers took that of Carnsew, another of Roscrow, and another of Caweth, the arms of all, ii. [337].—Andrew, John, his father, and John, iii. 326. John, built a house at Chiverton 333. William changed his name to Carnsew 61. Miss 333. Family 125. Arms 326.—John, iv. 109 bis. John acquired a fortune at Truro 90. Rev. Samuel of Truro 76. Miss 117
  • —— of Glamorganshire, in Wales, Howell and family, iii. 326
  • —— of Tregamena in Verian, iii. 202
  • —— of Treon, i. 136
  • —— St. Apostle and martyr, iv. 50. His day 2
  • —— St. Aquinas, i. 312
  • —— St. à Becket, i. 158, or of Canterbury, ii. [73], [96] bis, [156]—iv. 1, 50
  • —— St. church, iii. 458
  • —— St. parish, St. i. 377—ii. [417], [420]—iii. 335, 456, 457, 458 bis
  • Thomas, St. parish by Hals, situation, boundaries, name, antiquity, value of benefice, iv. 50. By Tonkin, boundaries, shape, river Kensey 51. By Editor, church small, stands on the site of Launceston priory, its remains, well, statistics ibid.—Incumbent, Geology by Dr. Boase 52
  • Thomas’s, St. street, iv. 51
  • Thompson, James, i. 58.—John, ii. [192].—Henry and Rev. J. T., iv. 109
  • Thoms, i. 94 bis.—Mr. family name changed, and arms, iii. 125
  • Thomy, Robert, iii. 125
  • Thomye, Robert, iii. 143
  • Thorlibear manor, ii. [416]
  • Thornbury in Devon, iii. 450
  • Three Barrows, ii. [317]
  • Thriades, book of the, i. 338
  • Throckmorton, Clement, i. 16
  • Throwley, Sir Nicholas, ii. [395]
  • Thunbergia, Coccinea, iv. 183
  • Thunderbolt at St. Michael’s Mount, ii. [199]
  • Thundering Legion, miracle of, ii. [76]
  • Thunderstorm, ii. [157]
  • Thuraken, a Turkish General, ii. [367] bis
  • Thurigny and Grenville, Robert Fitz Hamon, Lord of, ii. [344], [347]
  • Thurlebear family, iii. 270
  • Thurlebere, account of, iv. 13
  • —— de, John, family and heiress, iv. 13
  • Thynne, Henry Frederick, Lord Carteret heir of the Grenville property, and Lord George present possessor of the title and estates, ii. [346]
  • Tiber river, iv. 148
  • Tiberius, Emperor, i. 197
  • Tide, high, hours of at various ports, iii. 98. Nine hours and half flowing from Land’s End to London 99. Extraordinary in 1099, 310
  • Tidiford village, ii. [362]. Trade at, limestone burnt at [362]
  • Tidlaton, ii. [427]
  • Ties, Henry de, ii. [130]
  • Tilbury, army at, i. 161
  • Tillie, Stephen, i. 270, 271 bis, 274.—Sir James, iii. 163, 346. His extraordinary will 163, 166. Other particulars of him, his arms destroyed 166. J. W., 346. Count 166
  • Tillie, manor, iv. 55
  • Tilly, James, i. 315. Sir James assumed the arms of Count Tilly, deprived of them 314. Directions for his funeral 315
  • —— of Pentilly, James, iii. 44
  • Timothy, Epistle to, i. 198, 206
  • Tin, fetched by the Greeks from Falmouth harbour, ii. [3]. Mode of selling in Cornwall [318]
  • —— smelting-house at Treloweth, i. 365. Lamb tin preferred abroad 365
  • —— stream, of Luxilian, iii. 58
  • —— works in Stoke Climsland parish, iv. 6
  • Tincombe, Mr. iv. 4
  • Tindall’s Bible, i. 314
  • Tinmouth, John of, iii. 331
  • Tinners, St. Perran the patron of, iii. 313
  • Tinney Hall, manor, iii. 38
  • Tintagel, by Leland, iv. 284
  • —— castle, by Leland, iv. 259
  • Tintagell castle, i. 381—ii. [308], [402].—Seat of the Dukes of Cornwall, and birth-place of King Arthur, i. 339. See [Dundagell]
  • —— parish, ii. [401]—iii. 22—iv. 44, 66.—King Arthur’s castle in, curious rock, iii. 180. See [Dundagell]
  • Tintagell parish. See [Dundagell]
  • Tinten manor, iv. 97
  • Tippet or Tebbot of Callestock Veor, John and family, iii. 321
  • —— of St. Wen, family, iii. 321
  • Tippett, John, iii. 341
  • Titanium, a metal discovered in Manaccan parish, iii. 113
  • Titus, Emperor, i. 198
  • Tiverton, i. 170
  • —— school, iii. 258
  • Toby, i. 282
  • Todi in Tuscany, ii. [125]
  • Todscad, i. 212
  • Tol Peder-Penwith, iii. 35, 36. Scenery, accident at 35
  • Tolcarne, ii. [48]—iii. 232.—Account of, ii. [278]
  • —— or minster, an alien priory, iv. 101
  • Tolgoath, i. 415
  • Tollays in Redruth and St. Just, iii. 359
  • Toller, Mr. ii. [43]
  • Tollgus manor, iii. 382, 383. Etymology 382. House 383
  • Tolskiddy, i. 213
  • Tolverne manor, ii. [275], [276], bis, [278] bis. Henry 8th said to have passed two nights at [280]
  • Tom, Great, of Oxford, inscription upon, iii. 241
  • Tombstone at Gunwall, ii. [128]
  • Tomm, i. 78
  • Toms, Miss, iii. 176
  • Tonacomb, iii. 255
  • Tonkin, Mr. i. 296. James 10. Thomas 8, 9, 10. Rev. Uriah 147. Particulars of the family, and monumental inscriptions 12. Arms 9. Arms and motto 13.—Hugh, iii. 325. John, his character and adoption of Sir Humphrey Davy 94.—Thomas the historian of Cornwall, ii. [75], [76], [104], [199], [238], [239], [251], [256], [295], [297], [354] bis, [381], [383], [399], [405], [411].—iii. 17, 20, 32, 38, 57, 62, 63, 66, 90, 120, 135, 177 bis, 192 bis, 205, 214, 223, 228, 231 bis, 238 bis, 243, 245, 261, 274, 302, 313, 314, 318 bis, 320, 322, 323, 325, 328, 366 bis, 386, 405, 406, 434, 451.—iv. 24, 25, 62, 65, 76 bis, 78, 120 ter., 165.—His Parochial history, iii. 96.—His notion of a Danish camp controverted, iv. 78, 80, 81. Does not notice the Scilly Isles 168. His etymology of Elerky 119, 120. Whitaker’s remarks on it 119.—Rev. Uriah, iii. 7, 94. Vicar of Lelant 88. Character of 94. Family 94
  • —— of Newlyn, iii. 429
  • —— of Penwenick, Michael, iii. 315 bis. His arms 315
  • —— of Trelevan, Mr. iii. 193
  • —— of Trenance, near Porthoustock, Mr. ii. [326]
  • —— of Trevannance, Thomas, iii. 358
  • Tonkyn, Miss, ii. [255]
  • —— of St. Agnes, i. 234
  • —— of Hendre, John, i. 234
  • —— of Trevownas, i. 396
  • —— of Trewawnance Julian, i. 399. Thomas 399, 400
  • Tonsen, i. 254
  • Tooke, John, ii. [195]
  • Tor Point, iii. 121. Road to Leskeard from 439
  • Torbay, King William’s landing at, ii. [112]. English fleet anchored in [247]
  • Torleh, John, iii. 387
  • Torr, Mr. iii. 321
  • Tory administration, ii. [245]
  • Tothill, William, ii. [195]
  • Totness in Devon, iii. 102, 103
  • Tottysdone, ii. [429]
  • Touche family, ii. [415]
  • Touchet, James, Lord Audley, i. 86
  • Toup, Jonathan, ii. [284]. An eminent scholar, his father lecturer of St. Ives, his education, &c. and principal works [265]. Death and monument [266].—Rev. Jonathan, iii. 123 bis. Monument to 123
  • Towan, i. 234—iii. 340, 345
  • Towednack parish, ii. [260], [271], [358]—iii. 5 bis, 7, 13, 46—iv. 164
  • Towednack parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, antiquity, iv. 52. Value of benefice, patron, incumbent, impropriation, land tax, Castle-an-Dunes, Trecragan 53. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, name, daughter to Lelant, ib. By Editor, saint, soil ibid. Produces much tin, also some whetstone, Editor’s manor, court rolls complete, foundation of the walls of Amellibrea, Cornish tenures 54. Copyholds extinct, record of a manor court, the homage, oath, charge 55. Matters to be presented 56. A petition from the widow of Colonel Humphrey Noye to Charles 2nd, for the title of Sandys of the Vine 57. Unsuccessful, impropriation, feast, statistics 58. Geology by Dr Boase 59
  • Tower, i. 29
  • —— of London, i. 134—iii. 154, 298, 350—iv. 83.—Sir John Eliot committed to, ii. [66]. Perkin Warbeck ditto [190], [191].—Sir Richard Vyvyan conveyed to, iii. 136, 217. His daughter born there 136. The Bishops committed to 296. Mr. Buller sent to 464
  • Towington, iii. 195
  • Townsend, Francis, Windsor Herald, ii. [375]
  • “Tractatus de Corde,” &c. iv. 98
  • Tracy family, iii. 286
  • Tracye, Thomas de, ii. [119]
  • Tradescantia crassula, iv. 183
  • Tragedies of Seneca, notes on, iv. 87
  • Trajan, Emperor, i. 206
  • Transubstantiation, Cornish doctrine against, i. 109. Berengarius against, Romish doctrine triumphant 110
  • Travelling a century ago, anecdote of, iv. 91
  • Travers, Mr. i. 324
  • Tre Yeo, ii. [416]
  • Treago, account of, i. 248
  • —— of Treago, i. 248. Arms 249
  • Trearick, Prebend of, i. 383
  • Trearike, Lord of, i. 382
  • Trease of Blissland, etymology, i. 61
  • Treassow, account of, iii. 47. A perturbed spirit banished from 48
  • Treasurer of England, Lord High, William Scrope, Earl of Wiltshire, iii. 129
  • Trebant water, iv. 29
  • Trebarfoot, iii. 352
  • —— of Trebarfoot, family, iii. 352
  • Trebartha, account of by Editor, ii. [228]. Monuments to its possessors [229]
  • Trebatha, account of, ii. [226]
  • Trebeigh manor in St. Ives, iv. 50
  • Trebell village, ii. [385]
  • Trebennen borough, i. 323 ter.
  • Treberrick in St. Michael Carhays, account of, iii. 202
  • Trebersey family, iii. 337
  • Trebigh, i. 410. Account of 411
  • Trebilliock, two brothers, ii. [255]
  • Trebizond, empire of, ii. [368]
  • Treblithike, iii. 65
  • Treburget, iv. 47
  • Trebursus, ii. [428]
  • Treby of Trebigh, Hon. George, Lord Chief Justice, and arms, i. 412
  • Trecan, iii. 448.—Account of, ii. [397]
  • Trecarrell, iii. 438
  • —— family and arms, iii. 40, 41
  • —— of Trecarrell, Sir H. iii. 44. Built Launceston church 42; and re-built Linkinhorne church 45
  • —— manor, iii. 40, 41. Account of, and monuments to its possessors 43
  • Trecragen castle, iv. 53
  • —— hall, iv. 53
  • Trecroben, iii. 7
  • —— hill, iii. 7. Account of 11
  • Trecroogo village, iii. 337
  • Tredawl, i. 25
  • Tredeathy, account of, iii. 66
  • Tredenham, Sir Joseph, i. 44.—Family, i. 305, 414—iii. 381
  • —— of Lambesso, i. 207
  • —— of Tredenham, i. 417.—In Probus, family and Sir Joseph, ii. [217].—Sir Joseph, family, iii. 361; and their property 362. Arms 361 bis
  • —— of Tregonan, i. 418. John 416, 418. Sir John and Mary 418. Sir Joseph, ter. and Sir William 416
  • —— manor, iii. 361
  • Tredevy, by Leland, iv. 258
  • Tredidon barton, iii. 459
  • —— of Tredidon, family, iii. 459
  • Tredine castle, by Leland, iv. 265
  • Tredinham family, ii. [276] bis, [281]. Sir Joseph [170]. Governor of St. Mawe’s castle [277]. Patron of St. Just [278]
  • Tredinick, i. 116, 117. Etymology 117
  • —— Christopher and his arms, i. 116
  • —— of St. Breock, arms, iv. 95
  • Tredrea, the Editor’s place in Cornwall, iii. 307—iv. 143.—Account of, i. 360
  • —— of Tredrea, i. 360, 365
  • Tredreath town, iii. 6, 8
  • Tree, singular one at Tencreek, iii. 169
  • Treegoodwill, ii. [405]
  • Treen manor, iv. 166
  • Trees, subterranean, ii. [207]
  • Trefelens of Trefelens, William, iii. 326
  • Trefey family, iii. 44
  • Treffrey in Lanhidrock, account of, ii. [380]
  • —— in Linkinhorne, ii. [380]
  • —— of Fowey, family, ii. [380]
  • Treffreye, i. 383.—John, defended Fowey against the French, ii. [40]. His seat at Plase and history [43]. John, Sheriff of Cornwall, Sir John, William and arms, these cut in Fowey church [ibid.]
  • Treffry family, ii. [36]. Thomas fortified his house [46]. Mr. Sheriff of Cornwall [186]. Mr. [279].—Elizabeth, iii. 71. John 72. Miss 67.—Miss, iv. 24
  • Trefilis, iii. 402
  • Trefreke, account of, i. 383
  • Trefrew village, ii. [405]
  • Trefrize manor, iii. 44
  • Trefronick, i. 20
  • Trefry, John, iii. 347
  • Trefusis, i. 125, 225, 226. James 240. Otho de 348—ii. [32]. John, his lines on Captain Rouse [278]. Rev. John [231]. R. G. W. Lord Clinton [313] bis, [314] bis.—Catherine, iii. 41. Francis 228. Mary 41. Nicholas 40 bis, 41. Otho 318. Robert 224. Miss 60. Mr. 230. Lord Clinton ibid. Family 40, 107, 117, 230, 254, 390. Arms 318.—Family, iv. 62
  • —— of Landew, family, ii. [399]
  • —— of Trefusis, i. 65, 240. George William 151.—Richard, ii. [304].—Bridget, Francis, iii. 62. Robert 327, 282. Samuel 227. Mr. 382. Family and arms 227
  • —— manor, iii. 382. Account of 226. House 227. Situation 231
  • Trefyns, account of, ii. [130], [131]
  • Tregaga or Tresaga family, iii. 209
  • —— house in Ruan Lanyhorne, iii. 209
  • Tregagle, Mr. ii. [332] bis, [335]
  • —— of Trevorder in St. Breock, tale of one, family, and arms, iii. 265
  • Tregago or Trejago, account of, iii. 403
  • —— castle, &c. house, iii. 403
  • —— or Trejago, i. 117.—Jane, John de, and Stephen, iii. 211. Family 208 bis, 214
  • —— of Tregago, family, built the castle, iii. 403
  • Tregallen village, iii. 337
  • Tregalravean, account of, ii. [56]
  • Tregameer, i. 140
  • Tregamynyon, account of, iii. 242
  • Treganetha, iv. 140
  • Tregantle, iii. 438
  • Treganyan of Treganyan, family, iii. 215
  • —— tenement, iii. 209, 215. Etymology 212
  • Tregaraan, ii. [51]
  • Tregaradue, ii. [50]
  • Tregarden, ii. [109]
  • Tregare, ii. [50], [275]
  • Tregarick of Tregarick, Matilda, Mr. and family, iii. 397
  • —— manor, account of by Hals, iii. 396. By Whitaker 397
  • Tregarne manor, ii. [320]
  • Tregarrick, iv. 29
  • Tregarthen family, ii. [114]
  • Tregarthin of Court, in Brand, family, iii. 198
  • Tregarthyn family, ancient and powerful, Catherine, ii. [109]. Jane, Joan, and her epitaph [110]. John [109] bis, [110]. Margaret [109], [110]. Mary [ibid.] Thomas [109] bis, [110]. Arms [110]
  • Tregaseal, i. 141
  • Tregavethan manor in Kenwin, iii. 192
  • Tregavethick village, ii. [399]
  • Tregavethnan manor, account of by Hals and by Tonkin, ii. [316]
  • Tregavithick manor, account of, ii. [400]
  • Tregaza, account of, i. 394
  • Tregea, of St. Agnes, John, iii. 315. William 326. Capt. William 315
  • —— of Lambrigan, William, ii. [353]
  • Tregeagle, i. 18, 19. John 19.—John, ii. [338]
  • —— of Trevorden, John, iii. 76
  • Tregean, Francis, ii. [354]
  • Tregear manor, iii. 2 bis
  • Tregeare, account of, i. 263, 264
  • —— of Tregeare, i. 263, 264. Richard 263. Arms 263, 264. Etymology 264
  • —— manor, ii. [56], [336]. Account of [51], [377]. Geran’s parish, part of it [54]. Purchased by Kempe [57]
  • Tregedick family, ii. [316]
  • Tregelly manor, iii. 170
  • Tregembo, ii. [217], [218]
  • Tregena, Mr. ii. [255]
  • Tregenhawke, account of, ii. [252]
  • Tregenna, near St. Ives, ii. [215].—Mr. Stephens’s house at, i. 403 bis—ii. [270]. Beautiful prospect from a hill near [272].—Rev. John of Roach and Mawgan in Pider, iii. 139, 396 bis, 399. Miss, Mr. and family 406.—Rev. Mr. of Whitstone, iv. 152
  • —— village, ii. [357]
  • Tregenno, account of, i. 421
  • Tregenyn, i. 408
  • Tregethes, i. 364
  • Tregew, account of its possessors, ii. [30]
  • Tregheney Brygge, iv. 255
  • Tregheny castle, iv. 228
  • Tregian, account of, i. 420
  • —— family, i. 234, 248.—Francis, ii. [353]—iii. 243, 269, 355. His history 357 to 360. List of his lost estates 358. Francis the son 383. His history 360. Persecution 368. Adventure 369. Jane 358. Mr. 357 ter. The unfortunate Mr. 405. Their posterity existing in Spain 361. Arms 357.—Francis, iv. 118. Margaret 72
  • Tregian of Golden, i. 420
  • —— of Walvedon, Miss, iii. 102, 103
  • Tregillas, John, i. 10
  • Tregion, Francis, ii. [305]
  • —— or Tregyn in St. Ewe, iii. 358
  • Treglaston, iii. 350
  • Tregleah, account of, i. 372
  • Treglisson family, iii. 343
  • Treglith, iv. 62
  • Tregof, ii. [427]
  • Tregoll village, iii. 353
  • Tregonan, i. 418. Account of 416
  • Tregone tenement, iii. 223
  • Tregonell, account of, i. 247
  • —— of Middleton, John, i. 247, 248. Sir John 248
  • —— of Tregonell, i. 247. Arms ibid.
  • Tregoney or Tregony parish, iv. 115, 166
  • Tregonissy, i. 49
  • Tregonnan, in St. Ewe, iii. 361
  • Tregonnebris, occupiers of, iii. 427
  • Tregonnen village, iii. 334
  • Tregonning hill, i. 128 bis
  • Tregony borough, account of, i. 295. Arms 296.—Members for, Charles Trevanion, iii. 200. William Trevanion 205
  • —— branch of Fale river, iii. 405
  • —— bridge, i. 245, 299—iii. 207
  • —— castle, i. 296, 299—ii. [2]
  • —— church, i. 74
  • —— manor, i. 296
  • —— parish, i. 242
  • —— priory, i. 299, 300
  • —— town, ii. [17], [180]—iii. 404, 451. German school at 67
  • —— by Leland, iv. 272, 289
  • —— Medan, i. 294 bis, 297
  • —— Pomeroy, i. 297 bis
  • Tregoos chapel, i. 218
  • Tregordock manor, iv. 44
  • Tregorick, i. 49
  • Tregors, Andrew de, iii. 372
  • Tregose, ii. [320].—Miss, iii. 421—iv. 24
  • Tregoss moor, i. 230.—Moors, iv. 26
  • Tregothick, i. 125
  • Tregothnan, i. 140—ii. [33], [308] bis—iv. 167
  • —— of Tregothnan, Johanna. John, and family, iii. 212
  • Tregothnan manor, iii. 208, 209, 464. And tenement 209, 215. Gates and houses of 209. New house at 212. Account of ibid. Description 221. Carried to the Boscawens 213
  • Tregou village, ii. [399]
  • Tregoweth of Crantock, Margaret, iii. 177
  • Tregoze, i. 39—ii. [130]—Arms, i. 39
  • Tregtheney-Pomerey castle, iv. 228
  • Tregullan village, ii. [385]
  • Tregumbo, account of, ii. [170]
  • Tregurtha, ii. [218]. Abounds in mines [219]
  • Tregury, now Tregotha, iv. 143 bis
  • —— Michael de, Archbishop of Dublin, iv. 138, 141, 143, 145. Governor of Caen University 138, 144, 145 bis. His life 144. Ware’s mention of him 145. Buried at St. Patrick’s, Dublin 138. Tomb 141. Epitaph 138. Death 146. Will 147. Works 148. Family, last heir male and three coheirs 143
  • Tregwerys, or Trewerys in Probus, iii. 360
  • Tregyon family, iii. 404
  • Trehane barton, iii. 354, 355, 366, 367, bis.—Account of, i. 397
  • —— of Trehane family, iii. 354. Arms 355
  • Trehanick in St. Teath, iii. 212
  • Trehavarike, account of, ii. [335]
  • —— of Trehavarike family, ii. [335]
  • Trehawke family, ii. [399].—Mr. a miser, iii. 19. Family and monuments to 20
  • —— of Leskeard, Mrs. iv. 97
  • —— of Trehawke, arms, iii. 169
  • —— iii. 168, or Trehavock, account of 169
  • Trehunest village, iii. 372
  • Trehunsey manor, iii. 372
  • Treiagu, John de, iv. 96
  • Treice, Mr. ii. [87]
  • Treise, Sir Christopher, i. 321.—Family and heir, iv. 60
  • Treiwall, ii. [208]
  • Trejago castle, ii. [2]
  • —— creek, ii. [2]
  • —— Jene, John de, and Stephen, iii. 211. Family 214
  • Trekininge, account of, i. 219, 223
  • —— Vean, account of, i. 225
  • Trekynin, Jenkyn, iii. 318
  • Trelagoe village and manor, i. 3
  • Treland Vean, account of, ii. [320]
  • —— Vear, account of, ii. [320]
  • Trelask manor, iii. 37, 38 bis
  • Trelauder of Hengar, family and heir, iv. 94
  • Trelaun by Leland, iv. 280
  • Trelawder of Hengar, or St. Mabyn family, gentlemen of blood and arms, their marriages and heir, arms the same as Tredinick’s, iv. 95
  • Trelawn, iii. 293. History of by Bond, and house built at 295. Masses performed at 301
  • —— mill, iv. 29
  • —— wood, iv. 29
  • Trelawney in Pelynt, the Hearles settled at, ii. [99]
  • —— family, i. 23. Jane 221. John 65. Sir John 221. W. S., 158. Arms 23.—Family, ii. [255], [309]. Anna [235]. Charles [77] bis. Edward [ibid.] Rev. Heal [394]. Sir John, Sir Beville Grenville’s letter to [349]. Sir Jonathan [55], [235]
  • —— of Coldrynike, Jonathan and Major John, ii. [67]
  • —— of Lamellin, Sir John, ii. [411]
  • —— of Poble, Kent, ii. [7]
  • —— of Poole, ii. [67]. John [411], [412]. Sir Jonathan [16]—iii. 133. Sir Jonathan 168. Family now of Trelawen 170. Arms 169
  • —— of Trelawne, ii. [67]
  • Trelawny barton in Altarnun, account of, i. 22.—The cradle of the family, iii. 294
  • —— ii. [151], [397]. Rev. E., [229]. Edward, Dean of Exeter [238] bis. Hele and Mr. [230].—Edward, governor of Jamaica, iii. 295 bis, 300. Rebuilt his house 295. Notice of 299. Monument to and epitaph upon 292. Sir Harry the Roman Catholic Bishop, memoir of 300. Henry 297. Sir John, memoir of, couplet upon, rebuilt his house 295. Sir Jonathan, Bishop of Bristol, Exeter, and Winchester 248, 295 bis, 296. Memoir of, one of the seven Bishops sent to the tower 296. Letitia 297. Rebecca 248, 249, 297. Sir William 219. Governor of Jamaica 300. Sir W. L. S., 301. Family 293. Name 294. Arms 295. Monument 292. Saying relating to the family 295.—Major-General Charles, governor of Plymouth, iv. 94. Sir Jonathan 34, 139. Sir William 37. Rev. Mr. of St. Tudy 93. Arms 96
  • Trelawny of Coldrinick, John, iv. 94
  • —— of the Lawn, Jane, and Sir John, i. 225
  • —— of Menhynyet, iii. 168
  • —— of Trelawny, i. 65
  • Treleage manor, etymology of, ii. [319]
  • Trelean, account of, i. 420
  • Treleare, the Editor’s farm, ii. [308]
  • Trelegar, ii. [54], [57]. Account, of [55]
  • Treleigh in Redruth, iii. 359. Manor 383, 384. Account of 383
  • Trelevan, iii. 125, 191. Manor 192 bis, 194. Occupiers of 192
  • Trelevant, of St. Agnes, Hector, iii. 243
  • Trelewick, account of, i. 420
  • Treligan, i. 27.—Account of, ii. [54]
  • Trelil, ii. [139]
  • Trelisick, i. 418. Account of 350, 359, 417. House 359.—Account of and house built at, ii. [32].—Or Trelizike in St. Earth, iii. 318, 423
  • Trelisike, account of, i. 348.—Or Trelizik, iii. 125
  • Trelogas, account of, ii. [300]
  • Trelowarren, account of, iii. 133, 137
  • Treloweth, i. 365. Smelting house at ibid.
  • Trelowith manor, iii. 355
  • Trelowthes manor, iii. 355
  • Treloye chapel, i. 231
  • Treluddera, Treluddero, or Treludra, iii. 267, 268, 272—iv. 141—Rights of, ii. [271]
  • Treluddro in Newlyn, iii. 319
  • Treludra Pippen, iii. 268—iv. 141
  • Trelugan manor, ii. [363]
  • Treluick, account of, i. 417
  • Trelven, i. 174
  • Trelynike, account of, i. 379
  • Tremabe, description of, i. 177
  • Tremada, account of, i. 319
  • Tremagenna, ii. [405]
  • Tremain, by Leland, iv. 270
  • Tremaine church, iv. 60
  • —— Rev. H. H. ii. [99].—William, his garden, iii. 343
  • —— parish, iv. 61, 64, 124, 125, 127
  • Tremaine, or Tremean parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, name, endowment, impropriation, land tax, chapel of ease to Egloskerry, iv. 59. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries 59. Name, daughter to Egloskerry 60. By Editor, manor of Tremaine, church, its name, patron, impropriation, saint, his feast, statistics 60. Geology by Dr. Boase 61
  • Tremanheer of Penzance, i. 162
  • Tremarastall, ii. [169], [170]
  • Trematon, i. 199, 203—ii. [70].—iv. 81. By Leland 291
  • —— castle, i. 296, 297—ii. [42]
  • —— manor, i. 296, 297—iii. 462 bis. History of 462
  • Tremayne in Mabe, account of, iii. 60
  • —— in St. Colomb, Major, iii. 61
  • —— in St. Martyn’s, iii. 61, 63. Account of 124, 126
  • —— Rev. Charles, i. 398. Rev. H. H., 423, 424. His character 423. John 422. John, H., 423, 424. His character 423. Lewis 420, 423. Mr. 417. Serjeant 424.—Mr. ii. [134].—Arthur, Degory, Edmund, Edmund, iii. 61. John, John, John 60. J. H., 230. Rev. Nicholas, Peres de, Peros, Richard 60. Richard Roger 61. Thomas, Thomas, Thomas 60. Rev. Dr. of Menheniet 171. Miss 102. Mr. 192, 194. Family 60, 197. Estates increased 60
  • —— of Collacomb, i. 416
  • —— of Croan, H. H. and J. H. i., 377
  • —— of St. Ewe, Sampson, senior, i. 419.—Or of Heligan or Halligan, in St. Ewe, J. H., iii. 240. Lewis 191, 196. Mr. 193 bis. Family 61, 63, 126, 240.—Of Halliggon, Sir John, Col. Lewis, Rev. W. and Mr. i. 416. Of Heligan, Rev. H. H., 260, 359. John 260, 419 bis. Sir John and Col. Lewis 419
  • —— of St. Ive, i. 45
  • —— of Sydenham, i. 201—iii. 126
  • —— of Tremayne family, and Miss, iii. 126
  • —— manor, iv. 60
  • —— parish in East hundred, iii. 61
  • —— vicarage, i. 378
  • Trembath in Madern, iii. 33, 56
  • Trembetha, account of, iii. 7
  • Trembleth, account of, i. 405 bis
  • —— chapel, i. 405
  • —— heir of, iii. 140
  • —— of Trembleth, arms, iii. 405. Burying place ibid.
  • Tremblethick, i. 405
  • Trembraze in Leskeard, iii. 209
  • —— Rev. Mr. of St. Michael Penkivell, iii. 209
  • Tremeal, iii. 337 bis. House rebuilt 338
  • Tremearne, Rev. John, iii. 287
  • Tremeen, iv. 97
  • Tremenheere, Captain H. P. character of, iii. 88. John, endowed a chapel at Penzance 93. Mr. 82. Family 94. Have adorned the new church at Penzance 93
  • Tremere, account of, ii. [384]
  • —— of Tremere family, ii. [384]. Alice, John, and arms [385]
  • Tremertoun, by Leland, iv. 281
  • Tremiloret, iii. 59
  • Tremle, William, iii. 115
  • Tremoderet en Hell, iii. 393
  • Tremogh family, iii. 62
  • —— etymology, iii. 62. Road near 63
  • Tremolesworth, i. 370
  • Tremolla in Northill Linkinborne and Liskeard, iii. 359
  • Tremoore village, ii. [385]
  • Tremough, account of, iii. 60, 62
  • Tremper bridge, i. 235
  • Tremporth river, i. 249. Account of its haven and bridge ibid.
  • Tremyton castle, iv. 229
  • Trenake, iv. 23
  • Trenalt, i. 159
  • Trenance, i. 41 bis, or Trenants, iv. 160. Account of 161 bis
  • —— Lyttleton, ii. [383].—Littleton, iv. 161.—Family, ii. [383]—iv. 161
  • —— of Black Haye, John and three daughters, and arms, iv. 161
  • Trenant, i. 320. Account of 321. Sold 320
  • Trenaran, account of, i. 44
  • Trenarran, i. 49
  • Trenawick, i. 54
  • Trenchard of Collacomb, Isabel, iii. 60
  • Trenchicot, ii. [427]
  • Trencreek, i. 207. Account of 256
  • —— Miss, iii. 75
  • —— of Trencreek, Robert, i. 293. Arms 256
  • Trenear, possessors, iii. 88
  • Trenegles, i. 197
  • Treneglos church, iv. 62
  • —— parish, iv. 59, 64 bis, 124, 125 bis, 127
  • Treneglos parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, name, value of benefice, patron, incumbent, land tax, Warbstow consolidated with it, iv. 61. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, etymology, ib. Impropriation, value of benefice, incumbent 62. By Editor, Tonkin’s etymology right, manor of Downeckney by Lysons, impropriation, patronage, statistics ibid. Incumbent, Geology by Dr. Boase 63
  • Trenere, cellar at, ii. [138]
  • Trenethick, ii. [139]
  • Trenewan village, ii. [399]
  • Trenewith, by Leland, iv. 264
  • Trengone, took the name of Nance, ii. [337]
  • Trengove, account of, iv. 128
  • —— family, iii. 382—iv. 128, 129. Or nanc, John 129, 130. Arms 129
  • —— of Trengove in Warlegan, family, ii. [238]
  • Trengreen, i. 54
  • Trengwainton, iii. 289. Possessors 85
  • Trenhayle, account of, i. 347
  • —— George and Loveday, i. 357
  • —— of Trenhayle, i. 347
  • Trenheale, Rev. Reginald of Newlin, iii. 267
  • Trenhorne village, iii. 38
  • Trenithick or Trenithicke, account of, ii. [136], [137]
  • Trenorren, etymology by Tonkin, i. 47
  • Trenouth, i. 221
  • —— family, iii. 208
  • —— of Fentongollan, Johanna and Ralph, iii. 397
  • Trenoweth, i. 213
  • —— of Bodrigan, Sir Henry, iii. 102
  • —— of St. Colomb, Major, Miss, iii. 147. Family buried in St. Colomb church ibid.
  • —— of Trenoweth, Catherine, iii. 211. John, John 211, 214. Margaret 211 bis. Maud 211. Philippa 211, 214. Family 213, 214
  • —— lands, iii. 147
  • Trenowith, i. 117.—Arms, the family changed their name to Bodrigan, ii. [107].—Family, iv. 71
  • —— manor, i. 406. See [Trewithgy]
  • Trenowth, arms, iv. 72
  • Trenwith, account of, ii. [259], [261]
  • —— of Trenwith, i. 125—ii. [259], [260]. Thomas and arms [259]
  • —— manor, iv. 52, 164
  • Treonike, i. 18
  • Trequanors, ii. [203], [211]
  • Treranell, account of, i. 405
  • Treravall, i. 406
  • Trereardrene, i. 12
  • Trereen, Dinas, iii. 30, 34.—Described, iv. 165 bis.—Walk to church from, iii. 32
  • Trereife, iii. 85
  • Trerice manor, i. 20, 395—iii. 270. Sir John Arundell removed to 274.—Cause of his removal, ii. [184]
  • Treridern, i. 321
  • Treroach, Trecarrek or Tregarreck, iii. 391. Possessors 393
  • Treruff manor, iii. 382
  • Trerule fool, ii. [79]
  • Tresaddarne, i. 219
  • Tresahar, i. 161.—Mr. ii. [11]
  • Tresassen, iv. 29
  • Tresaster, i. 221
  • Tresavren barton, iv. 4
  • Tresawsen or Tresawsan, iii. 322. Account of 182
  • Trescaw in Breage, ii. [217]
  • Trescobays, i. 136.—In Budock, iii. 248
  • Trescow island, iv. 171, 172, 174. Extent of 175
  • Tresilian, i. 10, 148—iii. 274
  • —— or Tresillian bridge, i. 387—ii. [2], [17]—iii. 207—iv. 76
  • —— Sir Robert, Chief Justice, ii. [294].—Killed, iv. 16
  • —— of Bodilly, Thomas, ii. [137]
  • —— of Roughtra, family, ii. [137]
  • —— of Tresilian, Robert, Lord Chief Justice, iii. 269
  • —— or Tresulian, iii. 270. Manor 269
  • —— river, iii. 180, 423
  • Tresimple, account of, i. 205
  • Tresinny, i. 3
  • Tresithany chapel, i. 218
  • Tresithney, Thomas, iii. 181. Heir of 140
  • Treskeaw, i. 119
  • Treskewis, Dame, iii. 60
  • Tresmarrow, possessors of, iii. 337
  • Tresmere parish, iv. 59, 60, 61 bis
  • Tresmere parish, by Hals, a vicarage, situation, boundaries, value of benefice, endowment, impropriation, land tax, iv. 63. By Tonkin, situation, ib. Boundaries, etymology, value of benefice, impropriation, curate’s stipend withheld 64. By Editor, belonged to Launceston priory, churches served by monks, allusion to the “Last Minstrel” ibid. Councils ordained that each parish should have a resident priest, provision for them, distinction between vicar and perpetual curate, remark on Tonkin’s statement, impropriator, patron, statistics, Geology by Dr. Boase 65
  • Tresmore manor, iv. 129
  • Tresmorrow, ii. [418]
  • Tresona, i. 160
  • Tresongar, account of, i. 383
  • Tresore, iii. 77
  • Tresparret Downs, ii. [88], [275]
  • Trespearn village, ii. [377]
  • Tress, ii. [151]
  • Tressmare, ii. [430]
  • Tresuggan, account of, i. 225
  • Tresuran, i. 213
  • Treswithan, i. 162, 163
  • Trethac, i. 174
  • Trethake, Matthew de, iii. 134
  • Trethay, iii. 402
  • Tretheage barton, iv. 2, 3. Described 4
  • —— manor, iv. 2. Description and history of 3
  • Trethergye, i. 49
  • Tretheris, ruins of an ancient chapel at, i. 18
  • Tretheves manor, account of, ii. [358]
  • Trethevye, Cromlech at, i. 193. Description of 194
  • Trethewoll, account of, i. 408
  • Trethewy village, iii. 337
  • Trethil, iii. 440
  • Trethinick, Ralph de, i. 246
  • Trethurfe manor, account of, ii. [353], [354]
  • —— of Trethurfe family, and John, ii. [353]. Reginald [354]. Arms [353]
  • Trethym, i. 2, 25
  • Trethyn castle, iv. 228
  • Trethyrfe, Jane and Thomas, ii. [100]
  • —— of Trethyrfe, John, i. 65
  • Treu-es-coit manor, iii. 64
  • Treuren, by Leland, iv. 289
  • Treuris, ii. [427] bis
  • Trevadlack village, iii. 38
  • Trevailer, account of, ii. [124]
  • Trevalaboth, ii. [203], [211]
  • Trevales, iv. 4
  • Trevalga, i. 322—ii. [28], [235]
  • —— or Trevalgar parish, iii. 22, 232
  • Trevalga parish, by Hals, a rectory, situation, boundaries, antiquity, value of benefice, a rectory, patrons, iv. 66. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, a rectory, and its value ibid. Manor of Trevalga 67. By Editor, description of the parish church, near the cliff, named from the manor, patrons, rector, statistics ibid. Geology by Dr. Boase 68
  • Trevallock, i. 140
  • Trevance, account of, ii. [255]
  • Trevanion, possessors of, iii. 199. House described 201, 202
  • —— i. 43, 113. Joan and Sir William 65.—John, M.P. for Cornwall, and rhyme on his election, ii. [351]. Richard [110] ter. Mr. [118]. Sir H. Bodrigan’s defence against him, shares Bodrigan’s property [115]. Newnham manor given to him [318]. Mr. [414]. Sir Nicholas [56]. Of St. German’s [162]. Mr. [230]. Nicholas, Richard, and Richard, iv. 116
  • —— of Carhayes, i. 298.—John, ii. [304].—Charles, iv. 156. Mr. 45.—Or Trevenion, John, iii. 141, 226. William ibid. Family 355
  • —— of Crego, Charles, i. 297. Attempts to make the Val navigable 298
  • —— of Crogith, i. 299
  • —— of Tregarthyn, i. 397.—Charles, ii. [414]
  • —— of Trelegon, Anne and Hugh, i. 302.—Or Treligan, Hugh, iii. 191
  • —— of Trevanion and Carhayes, Amey, Charles, iii. 199. Charles 200 bis, 202. Sir Charles 199, 200, 201. Hugh, Hugh, Hugh 199. Sir Hugh, his sword 206. John 141. John 199. John 200. John and John improved Trevanion 201. John, a letter from 204. Colonel John 200, 201. Colonel John, his death 204. J. T. P. B., 205 bis. Richard 201. William 199, 201, 205 bis. Sir William, Sir William 199. Mr. and Rev. Mr. 200. Family 199, 203. Sided with Henry 7th 204. Arms 200. Monuments 206
  • —— of Trevorter, ii. [304]. Alice [ibid.] John [304] bis. John and Mary [ibid.]
  • —— of Trevoster, Alice and John, iii. 213
  • Trevannance barton, i. 8. Etymology 8 and 9. Possessors 9. House taken down 10
  • —— harbour, i. 11
  • Trevannion family, ii. [395]
  • —— of Caryhaes, i. 43.—Of Caryhays, ii. [54], [55], [110]. Charles [111] ter.
  • —— of Trelegar, ii. [54], [57]
  • —— of Treligan, ii. [54]. Hugh [51], [54], [55] ter. His lawsuit [51]
  • Trevanthions family, ii. [128]
  • Trevarnoe, occupiers of, iii. 446
  • Trevartea, Onesa, iii. 60
  • Trevarthen, account of, ii. [218]
  • Trevarthian, Miss and Mr. iii. 423
  • Trevascus, account of, i. 114
  • Trevasens, account of, i. 113
  • Trevassack, iii. 342
  • Treveale family, iii. 442
  • Treveally, John, i. 119
  • Trevear, account of, iii. 429
  • Treveares, iv. 45
  • Trevedarne in Buryan, iii. 134
  • Treveeg, account of, ii. [86]
  • Trevega, iv. 157
  • Treveleck, account of, i. 254
  • Trevelga parish, iv. 42
  • Trevelisick Wartha, i. 417
  • —— Wollas, i. 417
  • Trevella, William de, iii. 442 bis
  • Trevellance or Trefelens, ii. [326], [327]. Account of [326]
  • Trevellans, alias Nicholas, alias Williams, John and Nicholas, iii. 318
  • Trevelles, i. 8—iii. 326. In St. Agnes 327
  • Trevellick, account of, i. 257
  • Trevellva, account of, iii. 237
  • Trevelver, iii. 240
  • Trevelyan, iv. 114
  • —— family, iii. 117, 126, 215, 309 bis. Wonderful tale of their ancestor 309, 310. Heiress 215.—Lord Chief Justice, iv. 114, and family 114 ter.
  • —— of Nettlecombe, Somersetshire, Sir John, iii. 307, 311. Family 307, 238
  • Trevemper bridge, iii. 275
  • Trevena barton, iv. 20
  • Treveneage 170, 217 bis. Account of 170. Abounds in mines 219
  • Trevener, Rev. John, i. 260
  • Treveniel, ii. [229]
  • Trevenin tenement, iii. 223
  • Trevenion barton, ii. [114]
  • Trevenna, i. 340
  • Trevennen, account of, ii. [113]
  • Trevenner, Mr. ii. [414]
  • Trevenny parish, iv. 120
  • Trevenor family, ii. [357]
  • Trevenson, ii. [241] bis
  • Treveor, account of by Tonkin, ii. [113]. By the Editor [114]
  • Treveor of Treveor, Sir Henry, ii. [113]
  • Treverbyn manor, i. 42. Etymology ibid.
  • —— of Treverbyn, i. 41, 42. Hugh and Katherine 43. Walter 43, 44. Sir Walter 44
  • —— burying place, i. 42
  • Treveres, account of, ii. [279]
  • Trevernon, iii. 239
  • Trevery, ii. [126]—iii. 127
  • Treveryan, iv. 109
  • Trevethen of Porthcothen, iii. 177
  • Trevethey stone, i. 194. Etymology 195
  • Trevethow, iii. 9. Account of 11
  • Trevia, ii. [405]
  • Treviderow manor, iii. 250
  • Trevidror, i. 148
  • Trevilan farm, chapel at, iii. 335
  • Treviles or Trefilies, iv. 117
  • Trevilian bridge, iii. 189
  • —— Mr. of Devon, ii. [251]. Chief Justice 153—iv. 36.—Family, iii. 216
  • —— manor, iv. 124
  • —— river, i. 202
  • Trevilion, Mr. ii. [261], [269]
  • Trevill of Plymouth, i. 348
  • Treville family, ii. [252], [397]. Richard [252]. William de [156]
  • Trevillian, i. 36—iii. 125. Sir John 306. Mr. 116, 124, 128. Mrs. 421
  • —— of Basill, i. 198, 199, 200. Sir John, anecdote of 200. Peter 198, 199. Arms 198
  • —— of Nettlecomb, John, i. 198 bis, 200
  • —— of Somersetshire family, iv. 39
  • Trevillis village, iii. 348
  • Trevilload, i. 348
  • Trevillon, account of, i. 400
  • Trevingy, Reginald, iii. 387
  • Trevisa, Charles, iii. 163. John translated the Bible and other books 163
  • —— John, his King Arthur, i. 337
  • —— of Crockaddon, James, i. 313. John, translator of the Bible, and arms 314
  • ——’s and Tindall’s translation of the Bible, i. 121
  • Trevisick, i. 11, 418
  • Trevithick, account of, i. 223, 234, 416
  • —— Richard improver of steam engine, i. 164
  • Trevocar Winoe, iv. 155
  • Trevor, Captain Tudor, R.N. ii. [32]—iii. 186. Judge 144
  • Trevorder, account of, i. 117
  • —— Bickin, i. 117
  • Trevorick, ii. [255]
  • Trevorike, account of, ii. [255]
  • Trevorter, account of, ii. [304]
  • Trevorva, etymology, &c., iii. 355
  • —— of Trevorva, family and heir, iii. 356
  • Trevosa barton, account of, iii. 175
  • —— head in St. Merryn, iii. 241, 282. Interesting 180. Latitude and longitude 281
  • —— manor, iii. 75, 175. Possessors of 178
  • Trevygham, iii. 22
  • Trevyrick, iii. 269
  • Trewalda, ii. [145]
  • Trewan, i. 227
  • Trewane, account of, ii. [338]
  • Trewaras head, i. 129
  • Trewardevi, i. 236. Account of 237
  • Trewardreath, ii. [391]
  • Trewardreth, by Leland, iv. 289
  • Trewardreva, in Constantine, iii. 427
  • Trewardruth priory, i. 307
  • Trewedeneck, by Leland, iv. 272
  • Treweeke barton, iv. 4, 136
  • —— Rev. George, ii. [250].—Of Illogan and St. Minver, iii. 239, 241. Rev. Mr. 396. Of Roach 391, 399
  • Treween, i. 25
  • Treweere, account of, i. 391
  • Trewen manor, account of, ii. [397]
  • Trewen parish, by Hals, a vicarage, situation, boundaries, etymology, impropriation, land tax, fair, Polyvant, iv. 68. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, name, name by Whitaker 69. By Editor, belonged to St. German’s priory, an appendix to South Petherwin, impropriation, and patronage, statistics ibid. Geology by Dr. Boase 70
  • Trewenethick in St. Agnes, Bartholomew, and Joan de, iii. 315
  • Trewenn, i. 21. Account of 320
  • —— parish, i. 377—iii. 335, 457
  • Trewenter, ii. [427]
  • Trewer manor, account of, ii. [397]
  • Trewergy, i. 318. Account of 321
  • Trewerne, Rev. Mr. of Withiel, iv. 161
  • Trewhele, account of, i. 391
  • Trewheler, i. 387
  • Trewhella, Christopher and John, iv. 55
  • Trewhelow, James, iv. 55
  • Trewhythenick, account of, i. 207
  • —— copper mill, i. 364 bis
  • —— arms, i. 207
  • Trewin, William, ii. [160]
  • Trewinard, i. 125, 344, 360. Account of 344, 349, 356. Etymology 350—iii. 112.—House improved by Mr. C. Hawkins, i. 358.—In St. Earth, iii. 367
  • —— by Leland, iv. 267
  • —— chapel, i. 345
  • —— i. 118, 136 bis, 301. Joseph 137. Arms 136.—Rev. Mr. ii. [80], [127].—Rev. James of St. Martin’s in Meneage, iii. 124, 126, 128. Rev. Mr. of Mawnan 75
  • —— of Trewinard, i. 344, 350, 351. Deiphobus, killed a man, obtained the royal pardon by conveying all his estates to Sir Reginald Mohun 345. Was tried and convicted 346. Lived on small stipend from Sir Reginald ibid. Tradition of the murder 356. A descendant of Trewinard living lately in the Strand ibid. Rev. James, and Sir James 350. John M.P. arrested for debt 344, 356. Martin 345, 350. William 350. Arms 346
  • Trewince, ii. [5], [54]. Account of [57], or Trefynns [133]
  • Trewiney, iii. 194
  • Trewinn parish, iv. 50, 51
  • Trewinneck, iv. 96
  • Trewinnow, i. 257
  • Trewinnock, i. 404
  • Trewint, i. 25.—In Lesnewith, iii. 132. Account of 170
  • Trewish, i. 196
  • Trewithan, iii. 356—iv. 139. Account of 367
  • Trewithenike, account of, i. 243 bis. House improved 245
  • Trewithgy, Trenoweth, or Treworgy, in Probus, iii. 355, 358, 365
  • Trewithian, ii. [55] bis. Account of [54]. Its possessors [58]
  • Trewolla family, built a pier at Mevagissey, iii. 192.—John, ii. [111] ter. Family and arms [110]
  • —— or Trewoolla of Trewoolla, or Trewolla in St. Goran, iii. 191, 192 bis
  • Trewollea, ii. [230]
  • Trewoofe manor, i. 142
  • —— of Trewoofe, i. 142, and arms 142
  • Trewoola account of, ii. [110]
  • Trewoolla, arms of, i. 206
  • Trewoon in Budock, iii. 61
  • Trewoone manor, account of, iii. 196, 197
  • Treworder, i. 367
  • Treworell, ii. [430]
  • Treworgan, i. 207. Account of 396, 403
  • —— Vean, account of, i. 396
  • Treworgy, ii. [87]. See [Trewithgy]
  • —— parish, ii. [391]
  • Treworgye, i. 316. Described 177
  • Trework, George of Penzance, ii. [218]
  • Treworock, i. 418. Described 177
  • Treworrell village, iii. 22
  • Trewortha Vean, occupants of, iii. 188
  • Treworthen, John, i. 241
  • —— of Treworthen, Sir John, Sir Otho, and Walter, family and arms, iii. 269
  • —— manor, iii. 269
  • Treworthgy, ii. [429]
  • Treworthy, account of, iii. 383
  • Treworveneth, iii. 288
  • Trewother, iii. 355
  • Trewothike, account of, i. 39
  • Trewred manor, iv. 70
  • Trewren, i. 260. Arms 237.—Rev. Richard of Withiel, iv. 162, 163 bis. His wife and two daughters 163
  • —— of Drift, Mr. and family, iii. 427
  • —— of Tredreva in Constantine, iv. 163
  • —— of Trewardreva, i. 237, 241—iv. 3.—Catherine, i. 376. John 237. Rev. Richard 376
  • Trewret barton, iv. 70
  • Trigantan, i. 258
  • Trigg, Rev. Mr. of Warliggon, iv. 128
  • —— hundred, i. 129, 153—ii. [151], [332], [394]—iii. 64, 237—iv. 42, 44, 48, 49, 93, 95
  • —— Major hundred, or Trigmajorshire, i. 60, 377—ii. [86], [232], [273], [274], [402]—iv. 12 bis, 15, 50, 101, 131.—Divided into Strathan and Lesnewith, iii. 22
  • Trigminorshire, i. 367, 382—ii. [49], [274] bis, [402] ter.—iv. 66, 93.—Why so called, i. 60
  • Trigonometrical survey, i. 149—ii. [359]—iii. 98, 281, 432—iv. 31
  • Trinity in Lanlivery, ii. [393]
  • —— Chantry in St. Colomb Major, i. 214
  • —— chapel at Restormel, i. 338
  • —— college, Cambridge, iii. 95, 188
  • —— college, Dublin, library of, iv. 147
  • —— college, Oxford, iii. 86, 258
  • —— house, iii. 378.—Corporation, character of, ii. [359]
  • Trink, iii. 7
  • Trion, St. i. 341
  • Tripcony, i. 136.—John, ii. [119] bis, [120]. Mr. [110], [414]. Arms [124]
  • Trist, Miss, i. 401.—Rev. Jeremiah, iv. 122. Rev. S. P. J., 122, 123 ter.
  • Triste, i. 164
  • Tristram, Sir, ii. [308]
  • Trivalis castle, King Richard confined at, ii. [178]
  • Troad, Thomas, iii. 256, 350
  • Trojan war, i. 342
  • Trout, disquisition on the relative merits of, iii. 442
  • Trove, i. 142
  • Trowall or Truth well, ii. [219]
  • Trowbridge, of Trowbridge in Devon, Catherine and John, ii. [339]
  • Trowell farm, ii. [83]—iii. 47
  • Trowis, German, i. 192
  • Trowse, i. 348
  • Troy, iii. 418, 420.—Chronicles, and wars of, abridged, iv. 141
  • Troyes, Lupus Bishop of, ii. [64]
  • Truan, account of, i. 221
  • Trubody, ii. [36].—Charles, i. 44
  • —— of Treworock, i. 177, 178
  • Trungle, iii. 288
  • Trewrew castle, iv. 228
  • Truro, Baron, ii. [380]
  • —— borough, corporation of, ii. [81]. M.P. for, Colonel John Lemon [ibid.]—John Lemon, iii. 229—iv. 33.—Kelland Courtenay, ii. [385].—Henry Vincent, iii. 191
  • —— bridge, iii. 207
  • —— church, Mr. Lemon buried at, ii. [85]
  • —— manor, ii. [31]
  • —— and Tregrewe manor, in Themwyn and Truro, iii. 359
  • —— parish, ii. [298], [301], [302], [315]
  • Truro parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, sea flows to the walls, two manors at the conquest, iv. 70. Value of benefice, incorporation, patron, incumbent, land tax, arms of King John in the church windows, also the Prince of Wales’s plume 71. Manor and royalty attached to the rectory, erection of the church, no tower or steeple, benefice chiefly consists of voluntary subscriptions 72. Question of its expediency, monument to John Robartes, and to three brothers, Dominican chapel, nunnery of Clares called Anhell, town a coinage town, charter of Elizabeth 73. Constitution and arms of the borough, form of writ, birthplace of Lord Robarts, fairs and cheap markets, Custom House, chief inhabitants, wealth, and fine buildings, Captain Upcott 74. By Tonkin and Whitaker, situation and boundaries, Tonkin’s etymology from Camden, rejected by Whitaker, a rectory, value, patron 75. Incumbent, site of the town, from Leland, two brooks, the three streets and three churches, coinage, the town a borough, the castle, small creek, Tonkin’s commentary on this description, and Whitaker’s on his 76. View from the castle, no remains of it, incorporation, seal, principal burgesses, mayor is also mayor of Falmouth 77. By Whitaker, town named from the castle, which belonged to the Earls of Cornwall, nothing but the mount or keep remaining, gave origin to the town 78. Seated on the westerly current, etymology, supposed rise and progress of the town 79. New way to Kenwin church, new bridge, anticipated act of parliament for improvements, church first dedicated to St. Pancras, now to St. Mary 80. Architecture of the church, castle later than the conquest, built by one of the Norman Earls, town in possession of Richard de Lacy a century after the conquest 81. Privileged as a borough, charter lost, but confirmed by Reginald Fitzroy Earl of Cornwall 82. The seal, the charter 83. Confirmed by Henry II. the mayor still mayor also of Falmouth, town has superiority over Falmouth harbour 84. By Editor, Truro allowed to be the first town in Cornwall, leads in all county concerns, the school and its masters, Dr. Jane, Dean of Gloucester 85. Epigram upon, Truro has produced Mr. Polwhele and Sir Hussey Vivian, and in the 16th century the learned Farnaby 86. His death, and works, Boyle’s character of him 87. Several families have made large fortunes there, the Robarteses Earls of Radnor, the Vincents 88. Mr. Gregor, Mr. Lemon, Mr. Coster, Mr. Daniel, Mr. Vivian, Mr. Hussey 89. Mr. Thomas, Samuel Foote, tragedy in his mother’s family of which he published a narrative, the two Landers, a monument to one 90. Mr. Charles Warrick invented and used the paddle wheel for boats, modern changes, specimen 91. Statistics, rector, Geology by Dr. Boase 92
  • Truro river, i. 202—ii. [33]
  • —— new road, iii. A 89.—Road from Redruth, ii. [304]
  • —— school, ii. [355]
  • —— town, i. 58 bis, 77, 84, 177—ii. [2], [17], [34], [84], [304], [318], [354], [379], [381], [388]—iii. 16, 18, 38, 189, 196, 324 bis, 367—iv. 30, 167. A coinage town, ii. [301]. Ferry to [212]. Passage from Falmouth to [226]. Road to Falmouth from [304].—Road to Helston from, iv. 4.—Ships obliged to go up to, ii. [9]. The old part is in Kenwyn parish [317]. Assizes removed to [431]. People of [85]. Road through to Falmouth [104].—A family of, iii. 213
  • Truru, by Leland, iv. 272
  • Truthan, account of, i. 396, 403
  • Truthon, i. 398 bis
  • Try, ii. [124]
  • Trywardreth river, source of, iv. 237
  • Tubb, Agnes and Charles, ii. [395]. Family [ibid.]—iii. 129 bis
  • Tubby, i. 276 bis, 277 quat.
  • Tuckfield, John, ii. [296]
  • Tudor, Mary, iii. 369. House of 370.—Race of, ii. [381]
  • —— times, ii. [114]—iii. 8
  • Tudy, St. i. 129, 131
  • —— St. manor, iv. 97
  • —— St. parish, iv. 44
  • Tudy, St. parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, saint, antiquity, value of benefice, incumbent, land tax, history of St. Udith, reproved for her fine dress, her answer, iv. 93. Hengar, Penvose, Dameliock castle 94. The castle defaced, Billing family 95. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, value of benefice, patron, incumbents ibid. Tinten manor, Tynten family 96. By Editor, splendid monuments in the church, one to Mr. A. Nicoll, St. Editha, died early at Wilton, was very self-denying, Canute’s opinion of her ibid. The opening of her tomb convinced him, patrons of the benefice, present incumbent, soil, face of the land, the manor, and those of Tinten and Kellygreen, Tremeer, Sir William Lower’s works 97. Those of Dr. Lower his brother, description of Hengar and the scenery around, statistics, and Geology by Dr. Boase 98
  • Tue, St. i. 251, 294
  • Tunbridge, ii. [295]
  • —— castle, ii. [424]
  • Tunnel rock, iii. 36
  • Turbervill, James, Bishop of Exeter, i. 108, 109
  • Turks, i. 130, 411 bis—iv. 148.—War with, ii. [371]. Subdued Constantinople [365]. Conspired with Demetrius Paleolagus [366]
  • Turner, Francis, Bishop of Ely, iii. 299
  • Turner’s wear, ii. [1], [17] bis
  • Turvey, ii. [292]
  • Tutbury castle, Staffordshire, ii. [89]
  • Twickenham, Pope’s grotto at, iii. 53
  • Twysden, Judge, ii. [5]
  • Tybesta, i. 253, 256, 258, 297. Described 253
  • —— chapel, i. 253
  • —— manor, iii. 195
  • Tyburn, ii. [191]
  • Tye family, iii. 90
  • Tyer family, iii. 84
  • Tyes, Sir Henry le, Lord T. (or de Tiers), iii. 314
  • Tyhiddy, ii. [235] bis, [239] ter. Account of by Hals [235]. By Tonkin [238], [239]. By the Editor [240]
  • Tyhiddy downs, ii. [235]
  • Tyncombe, Mr. ii. [43].—Rev. Mr. iv. 110
  • Tyndall’s Bible, iii. 163 bis
  • Tyne river, i. 2.90
  • Tyngmouth river, source of, iv. 237
  • Tynnyherne, ii. [430]
  • Tyntagell castle, iv. 228
  • Tynten, John de, ter. and family, iv. 96
  • Typpet of St. Colomb, Matthew, Richard, and arms, iv. 139
  • Tywardreath, or Tywardreth monastery, iii. 7—ii. [9]
  • Tywardreth, or Tywardreath parish, i. 52, 167—ii. [36], [44], [88], [89] bis, [92], [390]—iii. 55, 56
  • —— by Leland, iv. 275
  • Tywardreth parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, antiquity, value of benefice, patron, incumbent, impropriation, and land tax, the priory alien, iv. 99. History of the saints Sergius and Bacchus, founders of the abbey, dedicated to St. Andrew, his history 100. Alien priories suppressed, this an exception, its revenues at the general dissolution, account of Menabilly 101. Castle Dore 102. By Tonkin, situation, late incumbent, value of benefice, manor, belonged time of Henry IV. to the Champernowns, given by the conqueror to Robert, Earl of Morton, Leland’s description of the town, &c., 102. By the Editor, antiquity of the church and its tower, interior decorations, alteration of churches, the different purposes to which they are now destined, the monastery has disappeared 103. Description from the foundations, which could be discovered by digging 104. Charter, the convent seal, St. Andrew’s relics brought to Abernethy in Scotland, now St. Andrew’s, priory suppressed with other alien houses, but re-established, correspondence between Thomas Cromwell and the last prior 105. Preserved at Wardour, its nature 106. History of the manor, Menabilly, Rashleigh family 107. Mr. Rashleigh’s collection of minerals, and published account of them, with a geological plate, representing a stream-work, destroyed soon after, his grotto and death 108. Polkerris, improvements in, Kilmarth, Treveryan, statistics, vicar, patron 109. Geology by Dr. Boase, mines of Lanescot, and Fowey consols 110
  • —— priory, ii. [45], [113]—iii. 56, 232 quat.—iv. 62, 64, 127.—The manor taken from, ii. [46]; or abbey, its founder, dedicated to St. Andrew, not suppressed, iv. 101. Communication respecting it in the Gentleman’s Magazine, suppressed, but re-established 105. Extracts from its calendar 106.—Prior of, i. 41, 42, 52, 414—ii. [36], [38], [89]—iii. 195—iv. 63 bis, 64; or abbot 99 bis. List of the priors 106.—Curious letter to one, ii. [47]
  • Tywarnhaile manor, i. 12—iii. 316, 327. Account of 313. House 314
  • —— Tier’s manor, iii. 313 bis, 314, 316, 327. Account of 314
  • Tywarnhayle, ii. [130]
  • Tywednick parish, ii. [257] bis, [258] bis
  • Tywidneck, iv. 164
  • Tywoodreth river, source of, iv. 237
  • Udith, or Udye, St. her history, disputation with Bishop Ethelwold about female attire, iv. 93. Her brother Edward the martyr, her death, built St. Denis’s church at Wilton, called the younger, her aunt was another St. Udith 94
  • Udnow Parva, iii. 306
  • Udy, i. 61
  • —— St. iv. 42
  • Udye, St. parish, i. 60—iii. 64, 222
  • Uffa, Lieutenant of Devonshire, iii. 415
  • Ugbere, or Ogbere tenement, iv. 41
  • Ulette, St. i. 341
  • Ulex nanus, iv. 54
  • Ulster, king of arms, iv. 144
  • Umphravill, Mr. ii. [146].—Alicia, and John, her husband, iii. 140. Family, ib.
  • Underhill, Thomas, ii. [192]
  • Union, Scotch, i. 126
  • United Kingdom, various measures in, iii. 433
  • —— States, iii. 89
  • Universal history, ii. [368]
  • Unwena, Bishop of Dorchester, iv. 137
  • Uny, St. iii. 5 bis, 7 ter., 384 bis. Buried at Lelant 7.—Or Unan, name explained, iv. 313
  • Uny, Lelant parish, iii. 5
  • Upcott, George and Jonathan, i. 45.—Joseph of Morval, iv. 187. William of Truro, ib. Captain William, memoir of 74
  • Upton barton overwhelmed in sand, ii. [149]
  • —— Nicholas, iii. 437—iv. 71.—His MS. of heraldry, i. 170, 338—ii. [107]—iv. 71.—Family, iii. 38 bis, 148—iv. 156
  • —— of Upton and Colombton, iv. 156
  • —— of St. Winow, heir of, iv. 156
  • —— de re Militari, iv. 141
  • Urban, Mr. iii. 143
  • Urchuarth, Miss, i. 244
  • Urlick, Mr. and Mr. iii. 88
  • Urns, found at Dance-Meyns, i. 141. At Trembleth 405
  • Urny, St. iii. 461
  • Uro, R. iv. 79
  • Ursan of Richardock, i. 330 bis, 331, 332
  • Ursula, St. story and picture of, i. 195
  • Ursula’s, St. tomb, i. 195
  • Ushant, ii. [246]
  • Usher’s, Archbishop, iii. 331, 332.—Brit. Eccles. Antiq. &c. i. 83, 321.—“De Christ. Eccles.” &c. iii. 257.—His account of St. Kebius, ii. [338]
  • Ustick, i. 144, 371, 376 bis. Oliver 145.—Family, iii. 216.—Stephen, iv. 4
  • —— of Bideford, Michael, i. 375
  • —— of Botallock, ii. [285] bis
  • —— of Lea, Oliver, i. 376
  • —— of Pendavy, Richard, i. 376
  • —— of Pendevey, Mrs. iv. 163
  • —— of Penzance, Mr. ii. [34]
  • Usticke, Rev. Mr. iii. 77. Miss 85
  • Uter Pendragon, King, i. 326, 339, 342—iv. 94.—His history, i. 326. Death 332. Arms 326
  • Uthno manor, iii. 307 bis
  • Uxellodunum, iii. 25 bis.—Mentioned by Cæsar, ii. [237]
  • Uzella, iii. 24 bis, 25, 26
  • —— river, iii. 24
  • Vabe, La, or St. parish, see [Mabe]
  • Vacye tenement, iv. 41
  • Val river, i. 74, 294, 297. Attempts of Mr. Trevanion to make it navigable 298
  • Valancey bridge, ii. [50]
  • Vale river, i. 242, 253, 256, 258—ii. [1] ter., [17], [24], [298]—iii. 402 bis
  • —— Royal abbey, Cheshire, iii. 232
  • Valemouth, ii. [1]
  • Valerian, Emperor, i. 88
  • Valerianus, Emperor, iii. 434
  • Valgenow, ii. [1]
  • Valle, abbey de, i. 300 bis
  • Valletort, Valitort, or Valletorta, i. 36. Joan, ib. Reginald de 42. Roger de Lord of Trematon castle 296.—Jane de, ii. [8]. Joan de [109]. Reginald de [119].—Joan de, iii. 448.—Roger de, iv. 41, 77, 82
  • Valmune, ii. [1]
  • Valor Beneficiorum, ii. [30], [34], [86], [89], [232], [273]—iv. 185
  • —— Ecclesiasticus, ii. [412]—iii. 253, 278, 453 ter.—iv. 4, 5, 69
  • Valuba, supposed to be Falmouth, ii. [20]
  • Valubia, i. 28
  • Van Tromp defeated by Blake, and his subsequent victory, ii. [25].—His death [27]
  • Vandals, i. 334
  • Vandower, taken by the English, ii. [177]
  • Vane, Sir Henry, i. 314
  • Vann family, iv. 121
  • Vanstort, ii. [153]
  • Varfull, account of, iii. 44
  • Vasnoom, Rev. Mr. ii. [384]
  • Vatican at Penzance, iii. 89
  • Vaughan, Rev. Thomas, i. 300.—John, iii. 185. Mr. 166
  • —— of Ottery, John, i. 39. Arms 39
  • —— of Trewothick and Ottery, i. 371
  • Vaultershome, iii. 107
  • Vaux of Northamptonshire, family, iii. 404, 405
  • Vaye, St. manor, iii. 222
  • Vaynfleet, Oller, iv. 55
  • Veal, Mr. ii. [150].—Family, iv. 54
  • Veale family, and George, ii. [124]. Rev. Mr. [124] bis. Rev. Mr. the first protestant vicar of Gulval [124].—George, iii. 88. Mr. 82. Family 94, 286.—Sampson, iv. 55. Rev. W. of Zennar 166
  • —— of Trevarla, George and Mr. iii. 91
  • Vean, John, Robert, iii. 387
  • Veep, or Veepe, St. parish, i. 319—ii. [394], [409]—iv. 155, 159
  • Veep, St. parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, impropriation, founder of church, ancient name, value of benefice, patron, incumbent, impropriation, iv. 110. Land tax, Priory of Carock, St. Pile, Walter of Exeter lived there, wrote the Life of Guy Earl of Warwick, different opinions of the historian, new house, burying place converted into a garden, Botowne 111. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, ib. A vicar, value, patron, impropriation, manor of Manely 112. By Editor, situation of the church, monuments, St. Syriac priory, for two monks only, and St. Currie church ibid. Revenue of the priory, St. Cyric’s Creek, the saint buried on the site now called St. Cadix, the history of Earl Guy 113. Trevelyan, the family seated in Somersetshire, and have lost half this estate, several manors mentioned by Lysons, besides Manely Coleshill, patronage of the benefice, present incumbent 114. Part of King Charles’s army here at the surrender of Fowey, statistics, Geology by Dr. Boase 115
  • Velhuish, Mr. ii. [97]
  • Vellawrance, iii. 343
  • Vellownoweth, iii. 319
  • Venables, iii. 85
  • Venetians attacked Patras, ii. [369]. Sale of Thessalonica to [366]. Sir Henry Killigrew, ambassador to [372]
  • Venice, iii. 187
  • Vennefire, ii. [209]
  • Venning, Richard, iv. 18
  • Venton, ii. [1]—iv. 41
  • Venus, planet, transit of, observed, iii. 19.—By Dr. Maskelyne, ii. [222].—Observation interrupted by a storm, iv. 11
  • Verbena chamoidryoides, iv. 183
  • —— pulchella, iv. 183
  • Vere, John de, i. 262. John, Earl of Oxford 402. John 12th Earl, John 14th Earl, Richard 11th Earl, and Sir Robert 262.—Aubrey, son of the 12th Earl of Oxford, attainted, and beheaded, ii. [182]. George, brother of the 13th Earl [185]. Earls of Oxford, Richard 11th, John 12th [181] bis. Opposed the precedence of the spiritual lords [181]. Attainted and beheaded [182]. John 13th, adhered to Henry 6th at the battle of Barnet, fled to Mount’s bay [ibid.] Entered it by stratagem [183]. Twice repulsed Edward’s forces [184]. Capitulated, confined at Hamms, returned with Henry 7th, killed at Bosworth [185]. John 14th, and his arms, [ib.] Richard, and Aubrey, last Earl [195].—Richard de 11th Earl, iii. 65, 274. Family of the Earls of Oxford 258
  • —— river in Herts, iv. 79
  • Vergilia capensis, iv. 183
  • Verian, Veryan, or St. Verian parish, ii. [50]—iii. 198, 282, 402, 403, 404, 451—iv. 116
  • Verman, i. 387—ii. [25]. Family [357]. Monuments to in Lamaran church [357].—Miss, iv. 116
  • Vernoil, ii. [179]
  • Vernon, Judge, iii. 144
  • Veronica, St. i. 315
  • Verstegan, i. 302—ii. [236], [320].—His rhyme, iv. 128.—Richard, i. 264
  • Verulam, the ancient name of St. Alban’s, ii. [64]
  • Veryan limestone, iv. 123 bis
  • Veryan parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, iv. 115. Ancient name, value of benefice, patron, land tax, name of Elerchy, history of the Trevanion family 116. And of Robins, with their arms, manors of Treviles and Govile 117. By Tonkin and Whitaker, situation, boundaries, name, history of St. Symphorian, a vicarage, value ibid. Patron, incumbent, impropriation, ancient name, manor of Elerchy, etymology 118. By Whitaker, name derived from the manorial house, its situation ibid. The mills, derivation of the name, dissertation on the use of imagination in antiquarian researches ibid. Saint, corruption of his name, parish feast 120. The church tower a later addition 121. By Editor, the manor, impropriators and patrons ibid. Three vicars related, the parish mentioned in an old charter, statistics, Geology by Dr. Boase 122. And by the Editor 123. Mr. Trist’s account of the limestone, Pendower beach, analysis of the stone by Mr. Gregor, much superior to the Plymouth limestone ibid. Good for cement, contains iron, Mr. Greenough’s map 124
  • Veryon, ii. [79]
  • Vespasian, Emperor, i. 198
  • Vestia lycioides, iv. 283
  • Vetorio Capelli, a Venetian general, ii. [369]
  • Veye, St. i. 328
  • Vibart of Gulval, ii. [83]. Isabel [83]
  • Vibert, Mr. a benefactor to the church at Penzance, iii. 93
  • Victor 2nd Pope, i. 110 bis
  • Victory man of war, wreck of, iv. 174
  • Viel, heir of, iii. 279
  • Vienna, Christendom preserved by John Sobieski, under the walls of, ii. [351]
  • Vignierius, i. 192
  • Vigures, Hugh, ii. [423]
  • Ville Frank, taken by the English, iv. 177
  • Villie, De, i. 296
  • Villiers, Harriet, and John Earl Grandison, i. 69.—Barbara, Duchess of Cleveland, ii. [11]. George Duke of Buckingham [382]
  • Vincent, i. 18, 292. Henry and S. V., 54.—John and Matthias, ii. [227]. Walter, killed Mr. George Killigrew, was tried and acquitted [5]. Died suddenly [6]. Walter [316]. Mr. [227]. Mrs. aunt of Mr. Tonkin [98]. Arms, and story of them [227].—Family, made a fortune at Truro, iv. 88. Represented it in parliament, lived at Tresimple, have disappeared 89
  • —— of St. Allen, i. 205
  • —— of Creed, ii. [90]
  • —— of Nantellon, John, i. 257
  • —— of Stoke Dabernon, Surrey, family and arms, ii. [227]
  • —— of Trelevan family, iii. 192, 193.—Henry, ii. [55]
  • —— of Tresimple, Edward, Henry, Jane, Mary, Peter, Shadrack, Walter bis, and arms, i. 205.—Henry, ii. [317]—iii. 188, 328. Mary 188. Walter 328
  • —— of Trigowethan, Walter, iii. 319
  • —— of Truro, Edward, iii. 238. Nicholas 192. Walter 192, 327 bis
  • Vinicombe, John, biography of, iii. 87
  • Vinsam, Richard, i. 272, 275
  • Virgil, notes on, iv. 87
  • Virgin Mary, ii. [2], [96] bis—iv. 132. Truro church, dedicated to 75
  • Virginia, Sir Richard Grenville undertakes to people, ii. [342]
  • —— fleet, the Dutch attempt to capture, its cargo landed at Foy, ii. [42]
  • Vivian, i. 74, 222. Sir Hussey 173. John 2, 215. Matthew 2. Sir Richard 222. Thomas, prior of Bodmin 75, 233. Bishop of Megara 75. Tomb 75, 95, 101. His official arms 75. Family arms 76, 94.—Edward, ii. [303]. General Sir Hussey [34]. His ancestors lived at Comprigney [318]. Jane [304]. Ralph [398]. Rev. Mr. [34].—Francis and Mary, iii. 135. Richard 387. Thomas, prior of St. Petroc’s, Bodmin, and Bishop of Megara in Greece 279—iv. 160.—Mr. iii. 147.—Sir Hussey originated from Truro, iv. 86. John 89. Family 139
  • —— of Pencalerick, iii. 341.—Mr. iv. 89
  • —— of Trelowarren, iv. 160
  • —— of Trenowith, ii. [303]
  • —— of Trenowth in St. Colomb, ii. [335] bis. Thomas [335]
  • —— of Truan, i. 221, 383, 408. Anne 221, 222. Francis 216, 221, 222. Jane 221, 222. John 216 bis, 221 ter., 222 bis. Mary 211, 222 bis. Thomas 216, 221 bis, 222. Capt. Thomas 211. Arms 222.—Family, ii. [43]—iii. 148 bis—iv. 138 bis, 160 bis
  • Vivyan of Tollskiddy, ii. [255]
  • Volant, John de, ii. [209]
  • Voluba, i. 256
  • Vorch, St. ii. [391] bis
  • Vosper, i. 142—ii. [300].—Arthur, i. 142, 143.—John, iii. 16.—Etymology, i. 143
  • Vowell, i. 108
  • Voysey, John, Bishop of Exeter, ii. [195]
  • Vyel of Trevorder, Miss, iii. 134
  • Vyell, i. 117
  • —— of Trevorder, i. 250. Julyan and William 378
  • Vyvyan, i. 117, 209. Francis 248. Sir Vyell 101. Sir Francis and Jane, ii. [320]. Sir Richard, M.P. for Cornwall [351].—Sir Francis, iv. 162
  • Vyvyan of Cosowarth, in Little Colan, Mary, iii. 136
  • —— of Merthin, Charles, i. 136. Sir Richard 136, 241
  • —— of Trelowarren, i. 65, 148, 237. Jane 357. Sir Richard 211, 357, 391.—Hannibal, Sir Francis, Sir Richard and Sir Vyell, all successively governors of St. Mawe’s castle, Sir Richard displaced from the government by Cromwell, ii. [277].—Ann, born in the Tower, iii. 136. Barbara 342. Carew 136. Sir Carew 337. Charles 135. Francis, built the house at Trelowarren 134. Sir Francis 314 bis, 315 bis. Hannibal 134. Harriet 337. John 342. Michael 134. Philip 137, 337 ter. Richard 134 ter. Richard 136 bis. Sir Richard 135 ter. Sir Richard, a cavalier 135. Sent to the Tower, had time to destroy his papers, afterwards M.P. for Cornwall 136. Sir Richard seized by Mr. Boscawen 217. Sir Richard 337. Sir Richard R. his election for Bristol 137. Vyel 136, 137, 337. Sir Vyell 134, 135. Sir Vyell and his daughter 446. Five Misses 135. Mr. pupil of Dr. Borlase 53. Mr. 133, 337. Rev. Mr. 97. Family 44, 134 bis, 135 bis, 216, 250, 258. Arms 135.—Sir R. R., Rev. Vyal of Withiel bis, and family, iv. 163
  • Wadder family, iv. 17
  • Waddon, i. 167.—Family, iii. 255. Monuments to ibid.
  • —— of Tonacombe in Morwinstow, memorials of in Kilkhampton church, ii. [347]
  • Wade, general, i. 56
  • Wadebridge, i. 115, 351, 375. Account of 372, 376. Erection 373. Fund for repair 374
  • —— by Leland, iv. 259
  • —— parish, ii. [256]—iii. 324—iv. 46
  • Wadebrygge, iv. 255
  • Wadham college, Oxford, ii. [377], [389]—iii. 20, 251
  • —— Joseph, iii. 20. William 116. Family, founders of Wadham college, Oxford 20
  • —— of Merrifield, John, ii. [110] bis
  • Wadland, William, iii. 176
  • Wager, Admiral Sir Charles, iv. 21, 36. Bond gives his history 37
  • —— ship, loss of, iii. 205
  • Wakefield, battle of, iii. 294
  • Walburge, St. daughter of St. Richard, iv. 126. Little recorded of 127. Church dedicated at Chester to 125. At Bristol 127
  • Walcot, Dr. John, memoir of, iii. 219. His verses on Lieutenant Boscawen 220
  • Waldegrave, Hon. Edward, monument to, ii. [325]
  • Wales, i. 307, 330, 334, 373—ii. [127]—iii. 277, 336 bis, 340, 460.—St. German travelled through, ii. [65] bis. Tin and copper ore carried into to be separated [303]
  • —— Prince of, ii. [376], [408]—iv. 12, 19, 62, 72.—David, i. 339.—Frederick, i. 69—ii. [84].—Joan, Princess, iii. 27.—-His plume, iv. 71, 78
  • —— North, i. 294
  • —— North Nesta, Princess of, and Rosse, Prince of, i. 34
  • Walesborough, Walesbreu, Walesbury, or Whalesborough, John, iii. 116. Mark de 307. Thomas, Thomas 116. Family 115. Arms 116.—Family, iv. 39
  • Walesbury, or Walesborough, or Whalesborough manor, iii. 307. Account of 115, 117
  • Walfi, Bishop of Cornwall, iii. 415
  • Walker, Rev. S. M. i. 392.—Rev. James, ii. [85]. Rev. Robert, vicar of St. Winnow [34]—iv. 158 bis.—Rev. Robert, anecdote of, iii. 4
  • —— of Exeter, i. 369—ii. [170]
  • —— of Lanlivery, Mr. ii. [34]
  • Waller, Sir William, the parliamentary general, ii. [343]
  • Wallingford castle, iii. 285—iv. 9, 17
  • —— honour, iii. 44, 286—iv. 9, 17, 97, 127
  • —— manor, ii. [89], [113]
  • Wallington, iii. 26
  • Wallis, Rev. John, i. 96. Captain, R.N., 359—ii. [99]. The discoverer of Otaheite [270]. The circumnavigator [405]. Betty, his only dau., [270].—Christopher, notice of, iii. 446. John, Captain Samuel, R.N. family, and their monuments 440
  • Walocus, Bishop of Cornwall, iii. 415
  • Walpole, i. 151. Sir Robert 265, 284. George Earl of Orford, his deed of entail, Robert Earl of Orford 313. Sir Robert 84, 313.—George, Earl of Orford, iii. 230. Horace 117.—Family 254, and iv. 62
  • Walsh, James, iv. 67
  • Walsingham, St. Mary of, ii. [75]
  • Walter, Hubert, Archbishop of Canterbury, ii. [180] bis.—Mary, iii. 337. Family 254
  • Walton court, iii. 155
  • Walveden of Walveden, Catherine and John, and Miss, iii. 357. Family 357, 365
  • —— manor, iii. 356
  • Warbeck, Perkin, ii. [186] bis, [187] bis, [189], [190] quint.—iii. 433.—Saluted King of England, ii. [188]. Takes sanctuary at Beauly, submits [190]. Pardoned, afterwards escaped [191]
  • Warborough, iv. 125. The Editor thinks it resembles the Roman works in Dorsetshire 126
  • Warbstow parish, iii. 275—iv. 59, 61 quat.
  • Warbstow parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, ancient name, iv. 124. Consolidated with Trenegles, patron, incumbent 125. By Tonkin and Whitaker, situation, boundaries, name, saint, Chester Cathedral dedicated to her, attached to Treneglos, incumbent, Warborough fortification, from which, says Whitaker, the name is derived ibid. By Editor, this part abounds in military antiquities ibid. Surprising how armies could have been provisioned, has seen this entrenchment, much larger than those in Cornwall generally, the saint’s history, and of her relation St. Boniface 126. He invented the letter W, a church dedicated to St. Walburga at Bristol, impropriator, patron, Fentrigan manor, Donneny manor, statistics, Geology by Dr. Boase 127
  • Warburg, St. iv. 125
  • Warburton, William, Bishop of Gloucester, ii. [265], [266].—Dr. William, iii. 67, 68 quint., 69
  • Ward, Simon, brewer to King Arthur, i. 131.—Dr. Seth, Bishop of Exeter, consecrated Falmouth church, ii. [4]
  • Wardour castle, Wilts, iv. 106
  • Ware’s History of Ireland, iv. 145. MSS. 147
  • Warinus, ii. [427]
  • Warlegan parish, ii. [239]. Warleggon [167], [168]. Warliggan [89]—iv. 48, 49.—Warligon, iii. 260
  • Warleggon parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, ancient name, value of benefice, patron, incumbent, land tax, Trengove, and family, iv. 128. Their arms 129. By Tonkin and Whitaker, situation, boundaries, etymology, value, patron, incumbent, manor ibid. By Editor, descent of the manor and patronage of the living, manor of Carborro, the church and tower injured by lightning, general carelessness in neglecting the simple security against lightning 130. Statistics, rector, Geology by Dr. Boase 131
  • Warlewast, Robert, iii. 456.—William, Bishop of Exeter, i. 27, 95—ii. [87]—iii. 456, 457, 458.—Founder of Launceston priory, ii. [419], [428]. His deed of gift to it [426]. Buried at Plympton priory, suppressed St. Stephen’s collegiate church [419]
  • Warliggon manor, iv. 128. Account of 129
  • Warne, Rev. Mr. i. 246, 250.—Lawsuit between two brothers, ii. [253]. Lost the whole estate 254
  • Warr, Joan, iii. 60
  • Warren, Maria Lukey, i. 403. Thomas 10.—David, iii. 387. William 239
  • —— a Roman fort, description of, iii. 365
  • Warrick, Charles, his character, and anticipation of the machinery of steam-boats, iv. 91
  • Warrington, i. 107
  • Wars, French, of Edward 3rd, i. 85
  • Warton, Thomas, ii. [266].—Mr. iv. 141
  • ——’s History of English Poetry, iv. 113
  • Warwick castle, iv. 114
  • Warwick, Earl of, i. 168—iii. 73.—Guy, iv. 111, 113.—Thomas, i. 341.—Beauchamp, ii. [130]. Richard Neville [38]. Richard [182] ter.
  • Wash in Lincolnshire, iii. 10
  • Wastrell downs, i. 239
  • Water, high, time of, at various points, iii. 375
  • Waterloo, battle, Sir Hussey Vivian shared the glories of, iv. 86
  • —— bridge, built of Cornwall stone, iii. 63
  • Watson, Bishop, iv. 45
  • Waunford, Thomas de, iv. 13; or Waurnford family and coheir 16
  • Wayne, William, iii. 426
  • Wayte, William, i. 243. Arms 244
  • —— of Lestwithiel, i. 243
  • —— of Trewenethick, William, iii. 324 bis
  • Webb, John, ii. [196]
  • Webber, Jonathan and arms, ii. [336].—Edy, iii. 387. Joseph 362. Thomas 181, 387
  • Wedgewood, Josiah, and Mrs. iii. 34.—Mr. procured soap rock from Lammoran parish, ii. [360]
  • Wednock, St. iv. 53
  • Week St. Mary, near Stratton, a tower at, iii. 363
  • Week St. Mary, parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, value, patron, land tax, iv. 131. Thomasine Bonaventure, her history, obscure birth, she falls in with a London merchant 132. Goes with him to London as his servant, afterwards marries him, and is early left a rich widow, her second marriage and widowhood 133. Marries thirdly, is Lady Mayoress, in her third widowhood lived piously and charitably, founded a chantry and school in this parish 134. Dissolved by Edward 6th, two fairs 135. By Editor, church conspicuous, tower nearly the most lofty in Cornwall, town large, etymology of Week, lines on sweet saints ibid. Town called a borough, manor merged in that of Swannacot, manor of East Orchard Mauvais, Castle-hill, advowson, statistics, rector, Geology by Dr. Boase 136
  • Weekly Miscellany, i. 283
  • Weights, stone, found in Castle Dinas, i. 228
  • Well, medicinal, i. 160
  • Wellington, Duke, iv. 86, 159
  • Wells, insurgent advance to, i. 86. Proceed from 87.—See removed to, iv. 36
  • Welscomb, Thomas, i. 290
  • Welsh bards, iii. 431.—Jones’s Relics of, ii. [166]
  • —— people, i. 307
  • —— princes, iii. 336
  • —— stone coal, iv. 123
  • —— tongue, i. 337
  • —— victory over the Picts, ii. [65]
  • Wen, de, iii. 214
  • —— St. parish, sheaf of, ii. [44]
  • Wena, St. Bishop of Winchester, iv. 137
  • Wenap, St ii. [129], [132] bis
  • Wenap parish. See [Gwenap]
  • Wenca, i. 2
  • Wendron church, iii. 447.—St. Wendron, ii. [136], [137]—St. Wendrone, iv. 5
  • Wendron parish. See [Gwendron]
  • —— parish, i. 261.—St. Wendron, ii. [160].—St. Wendrone, iii. 5
  • —— St. vicarage, ii. [138]
  • Wendyn, Robert, i. 313
  • Wenheder, i. 2
  • Wenn, St. iv. 160
  • —— church, i. 74—iii. 188
  • —— parish, i. 115, 212.—iii. 391, 395—iv. 163
  • Wenn, St. parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, saint, the only parish in Cornwall with the prefix of saint in Domesday Book, value of benefice, patron, incumbent, impropriation, land tax, iv. 137. Tower and bells struck down by lightning, Tregury family, Michael, Archbishop of Dublin, his Latin epitaph, mistranslated by Hals, Lancorla barton 138. The dwelling of Mr. Hals, the manor of Lancorla and of Checkenock, Trewithan 139. Damelsa castle and house, Treganatha, fairs at 140. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, saint, a vicarage, value, patron, incumbent, manor of Borlase ibid. Family of Norman origin, disputed by Whitaker 141. By Editor, Great Skewish, Skewish family, one of them compiled the wars of Troy temp. Henry 6th, Archbishop Tregury. Editor’s communication with Dean Dawson, the Archbishop’s tomb restored by Swift ibid. Engraving of the tomb 142. Editor’s letter to the Gentleman’s Magazine with it, antiquity and vigour of that work, history of the Archbishop nearly lost, noticed by Lysons, successive possessors of the estate, tomb seen by a Cornish gentleman, application to the Dean 143. Records of the Dublin prelates, &c. lost, preservation of the tomb, Wood’s mention of the Archbishop as governor of the newly founded college of Caen 144. Memoir of him from Ware’s History of Ireland 145. Said to have been taken prisoner at sea, doubted, certain persons excommunicated for laying violent hands on him, his death 146. Monument described, preserved, his will 147. Celebration of a jubilee at Rome, dreadful fatality from the crowds, Tregury ordered a fast of three days in his diocese, his works, documents respecting the restoration of his temporalities 148. Parish statistics, incumbent, Geology by Dr. Boase 151
  • Wenna, i. 2.—A female saint, iv. 140
  • Wennack, St. iii. 37
  • Wennow, St. parish, i. 112.—St. Wenow, ii. [41]—iv. 110
  • Wensent, i. 2
  • Wentworth, Earl of Strafford, iii. 152
  • Werrington, i. 266.—Barton, iii. 283, 459 quat. Possessors of 460
  • —— manor, iv. 64 bis
  • —— parish, iii. 456, 459 quat., 460—iv. 152
  • Werstanus, Bishop of Devon, iii. 415
  • Wescombe, Robert, iii. 153
  • Wesley, John, preached in Gwenap pit, ii. [133]
  • Wessy, St. ii. [412]
  • West, John, iii. 387. Colonel John 419
  • —— of Redruth, Udy, ii. [239]
  • —— of England Architecture, iv. 16
  • —— hundred, i. 112, 167, 174, 316—ii. [291], [394], [409]—iii. 13, 118, 245, 260, 291, 347—iv. 19, 23, 110, 111, 128, 129, 155, 184
  • —— Indies, regular communication of Falmouth with, ii. [18]. Mr. Knill’s mission to [266]. Ship supposed to have made for when driven to the Cornish coast [268]
  • West Looe, Mr. Daniell, M.P. for, ii. [318]
  • —— Saxon Kings, iii. 139
  • —— Saxons, Kingill, King of, ii. [284].—St. Richard, King of, iv. 126
  • —— North, account of, i. 319
  • Westbury of Winston Westbury, Edward, i. 400
  • Westcot, iii. 163
  • —— down, iv. 18
  • Western circuit, ii. [227]. Lawyers of [53]
  • —— lighthouse, its latitude and longitude, ii. [359]
  • Westlake of Elmsworthy, ii. [347]. The last of the family died in destitution, twice pricked for Sheriff while in the poorhouse [347]. Memorials in Kilkhampton church [ibid.]
  • Westmacott, the sculptor, iii. 229
  • Westminster, i. 345—ii. [403]—iii. 242
  • —— abbey, i. 170—iii. 65, 167.—Monuments in, iv. 38
  • —— abbot of, ii. [149]
  • —— hall, ii. [190], [191], [192]—iii. 131. The Bishops tried in 296
  • —— school, iii. 296, 300
  • —— statute, ii. [4]
  • Weston, William, English prior of the Knights of Malta, i. 411.—Stephen, Bishop of Exeter, iii. 40. Judge 144.—Mr. and Bishop, iv. 118
  • Wetherall, Sir Charles, ii. [162]
  • Weymouth, sea fight near, ii. [26]
  • Whaddon, i. 104
  • Whalesborough family, iv. 114. See [Walesborough]
  • Wharton’s History of English Poetry, i. 342
  • ——’s London, i. 251
  • Wheal tower mine, ii. [33]
  • Wheare, Degory, his history and works, ii. [233]
  • Whele, Alfred, i. 143—iii. 345
  • —— Etherson, i. 414
  • —— Fortune, ii. [83], [219]—Copper, iii. 47
  • —— Reath, tin, account of, iii. 113
  • —— Treliston, ii. [143]
  • —— Vor, i. 127, 128—iii. 13, 447
  • Wherry mine, account of, iii. 99
  • Whetstone, iv. 54
  • Whetton, Samuel, i. 112
  • Whichcott, Colonel Christopher, commissioner for the parliament army, iv. 189
  • Whigs were joined by George I. and George II. the battle of Culloden caused their fall, ii. [244]
  • Whitaker, Rev. John, i. 96.—Some particulars of his Life, rector of Ruan Lanyhorne, iii. 406. His literary character 407.—His history of Cornwall, ii. [123], [127], [143], [153], [199], [231], [240], [254] bis, [255], [273], [274]—iii. 278, 292, 302, 321, 348, 363, 364 ter., 365, 366, 398 bis, 399. His style, &c., 342.—His remarks upon Truro castle and town, iv. 78. General remarks at the end of the work 167.—Mr. i. 73
  • Whitaker’s cathedrals of Cornwall, i. 299
  • Whitchurch, Ranulph de, iv. 16
  • White, i. 266.—John and Robert, ii. [300]. Rev. Mr. 151.—Thomas, Bishop of Peterborough, one of the seven, iii. 299
  • White’s “Natural History of Selborne,” iii. 206
  • White Friars, house at Truro, iv. 76, 79
  • —— works mine, ii. [302]
  • Whitechapel, iii. 188
  • Whitechurch parish, near Tavistock, iii. 390
  • Whiteford barton, iv. 9, 11. Purchased by Mr. Call 10
  • —— Rev. Mr. of Lestwithiel, iii. 24
  • Whitehall, iii. 143
  • Whiteleigh of Efford, John, i. 313, and Richard 313 bis.—Richard, ii. [43], [109], [189]. Whitleigh of Efford [419]. Joanna, Margaret, and Richard, [ib.]
  • Whitford, Rev. Mr. of Poundstock, iii. 352
  • Whiting, Rev. William, of St. Martin’s in Meneage, iii. 126
  • Whitminster family and heir, iv. 16
  • Whitmore, Mr. iii. 90
  • Whitsand, or Whitsend bay, iii. 310, 433, 435.—Excavation at, ii. [252]
  • Whitstone parish, i. 133—iii. 86—iv. 39, 40
  • Whitstone parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, value of benefice, patron, incumbent, land tax, barton of Bennet, iv. 152. By Tonkin, situation, boundaries, etymology, ib. A rectory, value, patron, incumbent, manor, name of the parish derived from it, Whitaker 153. By Editor, church and tower fine and well seated, monuments, patron, and incumbent, statistics, Geology by Dr. Boase 154
  • Whitsuntide, iii. 427.—Celebrated at Wilton by Canute, iv. 96
  • Whittington, i. 121, 262.—Blanche, John and Thomas, iii. 317. William 316, 317 bis
  • Wickliffe, iii. 163.—John, i. 314
  • Widemouth, west, manor, iii. 353
  • Widislade, ii. [427]
  • Wiedbury, ii. [292]
  • Wight, Isle of, a battle off, ii. [342]
  • Wike St. Mary, parish, i. 296—iv. 40, 59, 152 bis
  • Wilgress, Rev. J. T. ii. [144]
  • Wilkes, John, i. 173.—Mr. ii. [245]
  • Wilkin, John, ii. [189]
  • Wilkins, Rev. Mr. ii. [372]
  • Wilkinson, William, ii. [189]
  • William, Rev. Anthony, rector of St. Keverne, rendered insensible by a storm during divine service, ii. [324]. Sends an account of it to the Royal Society, [ib.]
  • —— son of the Earl of Morton, ii. [211]
  • —— the Conqueror, i. 43, 241, 367—ii. [89], [118], [130], [147], [175], [176] bis, [210], [211] ter., [235], [237], [238], [259], [310], [344], [379], [384], [399], [418]—iii. 22, 44, 46, 114, 129, 134, 142, 276, 291, 346, 349, 352, 422, 451 bis, 456. Charter of 114, 117—iv. 14, 15, 62, 67, 102, 118, 153
  • —— 1st, King, ii. [50], [51], [59], [62], [80], [92], [94], [106], [129], [145], [155], [175], [253], [257], [259], [273], [299], [315], [332], [335]—iii. 64, 74, 79, 101, 114, 115, 118, 139, 391—iv. 184
  • —— Rufus, ii. [147], [211] bis, [344]—iii. 462—iv. 140
  • —— 3rd, i. 46—ii. [51], [54], [76], [89], [112], [127], [255], [277], [278], [301]—iii. 15, 78, 148, 168, 176, 182, 186, 195, 199, 208, 222, 237, 297 bis, 417, 421—iv. 22, 107, 116 ter., 152, 160
  • —— and Mary, ii. [236]
  • —— 4th, King, iv. 18
  • —— Duke of Normandy, iii. 462
  • —— of Malmesbury, i. 200—iv. 96
  • Williams, i. 16, 158, 210, 387. Edward 272, 276. Rev. Humphrey 355. Jane 357. John 154, 277.—John, ii. [134]. Richard [256]. Mr. [157]. Family [336].—Rev. Anthony of St. Kevern, iii. 88. Courtenay 367. John 350. Thos. of Lombard Street, London 162. Three Misses 343. Mr. 82, 363. Family 343, 363.—John, iv. 55. Mr. 74. Henry 77
  • —— of Bodenick, or Boderick, William, i. 319.—William, ii. [410], [411]
  • —— of Carmanton, John, i. 225.—(or Willyams) of Carnanton, Anne, iii. 229. Humphrey 151. John 229
  • —— of Carvean, Catherine, John, iii. 355. Mary 355, 362. Arms 355
  • —— of Dorset or Wilts, arms, iii. 145
  • —— of Helston, John, i. 357
  • —— of Herringston in Dorset, Mr. family, and arms, iii. 356
  • —— of Probus, i. 396—ii. [54]
  • —— of Rosworthy, John, and arms, iii. 145
  • —— of St. Blazey, Hugh, his marriages, and death, i. 53. Building a new house 54. Arms 53
  • —— of Tregenna, John, i. 420
  • —— of Trehane, i. 400.—Mary and Mr. iii. 366
  • —— of Trevorva, arms, iii. 355
  • —— of Trewithan, Richard, i. 53, 225.—Courtenay, iii. 356
  • —— of Trewithgy, William, iii. 355
  • —— of Truthan, i. 398 bis. John 396, 398. Arms 396
  • Willington family, iii. 348
  • Willis, Andrew, killed at Skewis, i. 276 bis
  • —— Browne, ii. [200]—iii. 120, 268, 459.—His additions to Camden, i. 257, 339. Notitia Parliamentaria 200—ii. [68], [403]—iii. 14, 16, 17, 24, 25, 26, 27—iv. 117.—Account of St. German’s priory, ii. [69], [71], [72]. Of Launceston [422], [423]
  • —— of Fen Ditton, Bart. Sir Thomas and Sir William, ii. [97]
  • —— of London, Dorothy and Thomas, ii. [97]
  • Willoughby, sheriff of Cornwall, ii. [186]. Family [313]
  • —— de Broke, Lord, ii. [231].—Family, iii. 47
  • Wills, Rev. Mr. i. 383.—Anthony offers himself and six sons to King William 3rd, ii. [112]. Rev. Thomas [139] bis. Rev. Thomas, vicar of Wendron [326].—Rev. Mr. of Mullion, iii. 257
  • Wills of Helston, Matthew, ii. [139], [326]
  • —— of Wivelscomb, iii. 269
  • Willyams of Cannerton, Anne, John, John and Oliver, ii. [85]
  • Wilow, St. ii. [411].—By Leland, iv. 279
  • Wilson’s Martyrology, iii. 385
  • Wilton, Canute celebrated Whitsuntide at, iv. 96
  • —— abbey, Wilts, iii. 291.—St. Udith, abbess of, iv. 93. Built St. Denis church at, and was buried there 94.—Priors of, ii. [291]
  • —— convent at, iv. 96
  • —— of Dunveth, Miss, John, iv. 3
  • Wiltshire, i. 334
  • —— William Lord Scrope, Earl of, Lord treasurer, iii. 129
  • Wimbourn Minster, iv. 126
  • Winchelsea, its naval armaments defeated Fowey, ii. [45]
  • Winchester, i. 326, 327, 336—ii. [139].—Rebels march through, i. 87
  • —— Stephen Gardiner, Bishop of, ii. [194].—Jonathan Trelawney, iii. 295, 297
  • —— Levignus, monk of, ii. [60]
  • —— measure, iii. 182
  • Windham, Madam, iii. 449. Mr. 449 ter.
  • Windsor, i. 146 bis
  • —— collegiate church, i. 341
  • —— dean and chapter of, ii. [72]
  • —— poor knights of, ii. [52], [54], [55]
  • —— Gerald de, i. 34. Otho de 34 bis. Walter de 34. William de 34, 35
  • —— Lord, i. 34
  • Winenton in Kerrier, iii. 133
  • Winfred, St. iv. 126
  • Wingfield, Miss, i. 266—ii. [243].—Family, iv. 156
  • Winnocus, St. and his history, iv. 157
  • Winnous, St. by Leland, iv. 278
  • Winnow manor, ii. [252]
  • —— St. downs, iv. 29, 186 bis, 188
  • —— St. parish, i. 113, 421, 358, 376, 379, 390—iii. 24—iv. 111, 184.—Rev. Robert Walker, vicar of, ii. [34]
  • Winnow, St. parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, saint’s name, ancient name, value of benefice, incumbent, land tax, St. Nectan’s chapel. History of the saint, his chapel at Hartland, built by Goditha, daughter of Earl Godwin, the Earl attributing his preservation in a tempest at sea to the saint’s intercession, iv. 155. Barton and manor of St. Winow, its possessors 156. Tethe, Trevego, Laran bridge 157. By Tonkin, saint, his history, Bergh St. Winnox, benefice, a vicarage, value, patron, incumbent, impropriation ibid. By Editor, beautiful situation of the church, vicarage house and glebe, Mr. Walker, chapel, Ethy, notice of Admiral Penrose 158. Statistics, the vicars, value of the benefice, Geology by Dr. Boase 159
  • Winnow, St. vicarage, beauty of, iv. 158
  • Winock, St. abbey, at Bergh in Flanders, iii. 33
  • Winotus, St. iv. 155
  • Winow, St. barton and manor, iv. 156
  • Winslade, i. 7
  • —— of Tregarrick, or St. Agnes, William, ii. [192]
  • Winsloe, Mr. ii. [399]
  • Winslow, Rev. R. of Minster, iii. 236 bis. Thomas, took the name of Phillips 235
  • Winstanley of Littlebury, Essex, built the first lighthouse at Eddystone, iii. 376 ter.
  • Winter of Sydney, Sir John, i. 398
  • —— of Kellyfreth, ii. [304]. Arms, [ib.]
  • —— an eminent family of Gloucestershire, ii. [304]
  • Winwaloe, St. iv. 60
  • Winwallo, St. ii. [127]. His history [127], [128] ter.
  • Winwolaus of Tremene chapel, iv. 60
  • Wise, i. 370
  • —— of Stoke Damarel, i. 266
  • Witchalse, Benet and his daughter, iii. 199
  • Withal rectory house, i. 75
  • Withel parish, iii. 391, 395.—Withell, ii. [94], [335].—Withiel, i. 115—ii. [384]—iv. 137, 140
  • Withell goose manor, iv. 160 bis
  • Withering, Dr. ii. [331].—The botanist, iii. 173
  • Witherington, Dr. i. 150
  • Withiel church, i. 74
  • Withiel parish, see [Withel]
  • Withiel parish, by Hals, situation, boundaries, etymology, ancient name, value of benefice, patron, incumbent, land tax, iv. 160. Rectory house built, Burnevas, Trenance, family, and arms, Bryn 161. Birth of Sir Bevill Grenville 162. By Tonkin, situation, value of benefice, appropriation, a rectory, value, incumbent ibid. By Editor, rectory house improved, Trewren monument, statistics, incumbent, Geology by Dr. Boase 163
  • Withroe manor, ii. [252]
  • Withyel, Richard Trewren, rector of, i. 376
  • Wivelsberge, advowson of, iii. 115
  • Wodehouse, ii. [117]. Lord, is the representative of the Killigrew family [23]
  • Wolf, the, iv. 173
  • Wolfchild, Lady, mother of St. Udith, iv. 93
  • Wolfe, General, iii. 218
  • Wolfran, St. and his festival, iv. 117
  • Wollacombe of Devon, Mr. iii. 222 bis
  • Wollas, iii. 258
  • Wolphard, abbot, iv. 126
  • Wolpher, King of Mercia, iv. 125
  • Wolridge, Thomas, iii. 374
  • —— of Gorminick, John, i. 420
  • Wolrige, Dr. Hugh, monument to, and John, iii. 454
  • Wolsey, Cardinal, ii. [361]—iii. 299 bis
  • Wolsey’s survey, iii. 340
  • Wolvedon, or Goulden, barton, in St. Probus and Tregony, iii. 359. Fort on 365
  • —— of Golden, Charles or Christopher, i. 297
  • Wolverston, i. 136
  • —— of Wolverston, ii. [5]
  • Wood, i. 76, 210—ii. [215].—Anthony, iii. 251—iv. 144. His Annals 144.—His Athenæ Oxonienses, ii. [233]—iii. 296—iv. 86. His Fasti 144.—William, ii. [353].—Rev. William, junior, iii. 450.—Rev. William of Withiel, iv. 162. Rev. Mr. of Treneglos 61. Rev. Mr. of Warbstow 125. Rev. Mr. of Withiel 160
  • —— Knowle, iii. 117
  • Woodberry, i. 168
  • Woodland, Sir William, iii. 239
  • —— street, i. 79
  • Woodley, Rev. C. W. of Stithians, iv. 5
  • Woodly village, ii. [385]
  • Woodvill, Lionel, Bishop of Salisbury, ii. [194]. Richard Earl Rivers [194]
  • Woolcock, ii. [192].—J. H. iii. 387
  • Woolcombe, Rev. Charles of Minster, iii. 236. Rev. William of Pillaton 347
  • Woolcumbe, Mr. ii. [279]
  • —— of Longford hill, ii. [279]
  • Woolford village, iii. 255
  • Woolley, J. T. i. 314, 315.—James, iii. 346. Mr. 163
  • —— village, iii. 255
  • Woolridge, Rector of St. Michael Penkivell, i. 256.—Rev. Mr. of Tywardreth, iv. 99
  • —— of Carlynike, John, and arms, i. 256
  • Woolrington, John de, i. 246
  • Woolston, George, shot in Rogers’s affray, i. 274 quat., 275 ter.—Mr. iii. 366
  • —— manor, iii. 353
  • Worcester, St. Chad, patron of, ii. [391]
  • —— Florence of, iii. 310—iv. 168
  • —— William of, ii. [203], [204], [206]—iii. 223, 292, 350.—His Itinerary, Appendix 6, iv. 222 to 256. Containing his life 222. List of Cornish castles 228. Itinerary from Polston Brygge to Porthenys 229. List of the Scilly islands and of obits 230. Memoranda 231. List of rivers 233. Memoranda from Thomas Peperelle 234. Extracts from the Bodman kalendar 236. Sources of the rivers, and a list of islands 237. Account of Bodman, and an extract from the Martyrology 238. From Bodman kalendar 239. From Bodman register respecting the plague, and memoranda from Robert Bracey 240. Verses at Tavistock and extract from the Tavistock kalendar 241. Property of Penryn college 242. Itinerary from North sea to the Thamar river 243. List of the havens 244. Itinerary from Penzance to Plymton 245. Memoranda from the kalendar of Mont Myghele, journey from Weare to Manchew 249. Various memoranda 250 to 252. Dates of the above journey 252 to 255. Bridges in Cornwall from Exeter to St. Michael’s mount 255
  • Worcester, William Worth, Archdeacon of, iii. 62
  • —— William Lloyd, Bishop of, iii. 299
  • —— college, Oxford, ii. [233]
  • Worcestershire, ii. [147]—iii. 344
  • Woronus, Bishop of Cornwall, iii. 415
  • Worsley, Rev. Charles, rector of Leskeard, iii. 23
  • Worth, i. 240.—Mr. ii. [97].—John, iii. 60, 62 bis. Built a house at Tremogh 62. Family and marriage of the heiress ibid.
  • —— of Penryn, John son of John, William, and William, D.D. iii. 62
  • —— of Worth, family and arms, iii. 60
  • Wortha, Higher, iii. 258
  • —— Lower, iii. 258
  • Worthyvale manor, iii. 234 bis, 236. King Arthur received his death wound at 236
  • Wotton, account of, ii. [362]. The barton of Trelugan manor [363]
  • —— cross village, ii. [362]
  • Wray, William, iii. 358
  • Wrey, Elizabeth and Sir William, i. 210.—Rev. H. B. ii. [416].—Sir William, iii. 16.—Sir Bourchier, iv. 112. Rev. W. B. 50. Family 110 bis. Of Devon 50
  • —— of Trebigh, Sir Bourchier, Sir Chichester John bis, William bis, and arms, i. 411
  • Wright, ii. [130], [253], [375]
  • Wring Cheese, i. 178, 179. Described 184, 190
  • Wringworthy, Higher, iii. 246
  • —— manor, iii. 252
  • Wroughton, Miss, ii. [218]
  • Wulrington, ii. [430]
  • Wulvedon, by Leland, iv. 272
  • Wykeham, William of, iii. 171
  • Wyllacombe, iv. 29
  • Wylliams of Roseworthy in Gwyniar, Ann, iii. 159. Rev. Cooper 159, 160. Rector of Kingston near Canterbury, his works 160. Humphrey James and James 159. John 159 bis, 160. John and John 159. John O. 159 bis. An anecdote he told 160. Thomas Captain 159
  • Wymer, St. ii. [142]
  • Wymond, Mr. i. 78.—Family and coheirs, iv. 113
  • Wymondesham, W. de, iv. 44
  • Wymondeston, W. de, iv. 46
  • Wymondham, William de, i. 383
  • Wymp, i. 2
  • Wynn, Right Hon. Charles Williams, M.P. ii. [20]
  • Wynnanton, ii. [126], [128]
  • Wynne, i. 163, 400, 401. Rev. Dr. Luttrell 164, 401 ter., 402 ter., 403.—Rev. Dr. ii. [114]
  • Wynnenton, i. 241
  • Wynnock, St. parish, ii. [358]
  • Wyse, William, iv. 147
  • Xantus, Prince of Caretica, i. 300
  • Xenophon, translations from, ii. [76]
  • Xysten, St. i. 88
  • Yealm bridge, iii. 283
  • Yeard, Richard, i. 210
  • Yellow Leigh manor, ii. [416]
  • Yeo family, ii. [86], [416].—Arms [87]
  • —— of Trevelver family, iii. 240
  • Yescombe, E. B. monument to, iii. 229
  • York, i. 397—ii. [213]
  • —— Archbishop of, i. 139—ii. [90].—St. Paulinus the first, iii. 284, 285
  • —— county, i. 258—ii. [76]—iv. 42.—Chalk hills in, iii. 10
  • —— diocese, iv. 42
  • —— Duke of, ii. [94]. James [27]. His engagement with the Dutch fleet, and letter of thanks to Captain Penrose [28].—Richard, i. 168, 169 ter.—ii. [260]
  • —— William, ii. [189]
  • —— house of, i. 169—ii. [108], [185], [186] bis, [187]
  • —— street, near Covent Garden, iii. 252
  • —— and Lancaster wars, iii. 199
  • Yorke of Somersetshire, Humphrey settled at Trevassack, Richard of Wellington, Sarah, and family, iii. 342
  • Young, Rev. Denis, iii. 256
  • Yse, i. 2