[587] Church and Conventual Arrangement, p. 62.
[588] Illus. Handbook of Architecture, II. p. 691. The nave and chancel of Manorbier church, South Pembrokeshire, vary to the extent of 16° (Reliquary, XV. 1909, p. 197), but whether the difference is due to re-building is not known.
[589] F. Bond, Screens and Galleries in Eng. Churches, 1908, pp. 87-94; J. T. Page, in Curious Church Customs, ed. W. Andrews, 1898, pp. 168-170.
[590] T. Ely, Manual of Archaeology, 1890, p. 17.
[591] Ibid. p. 132.
[592] Notes and Queries, 9th Ser., II. p. 256. Barfreston church has been thus described, “Quite a gem as a specimen of highly-enriched Norman work” (Sir S. R. Glynne, Notes on the Churches of Kent, 1877, p. 42).
[593] Bond, Gothic Arch. in England, p. 632 and note.
[594] Murray, Handbook for Lincs., 2nd edition, 1903, p. 23.
[595] Gothic Arch. in England, p. 632.
[596] Church and Conventual Arrangement, p. 136.