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arches: In architecture, a curved or flat member made up of separate wedge-shaped solids: a means of spanning an opening. This keyword describes an arch-shaped entrance or opening.

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Old England: A Pictorial Museum of Regal, Ecclesiastical, Baronial, municipal and Popular Antiquities, Charles Knight (1791 – 1873) London, Charles Knight and Co., Ludgate Street, First Edition, 1845, two volumes, folio, pp. viii, 392; vi, 386, 24 chromoxylographs (incl. frontis.). Many wood-engraved text illustrations.

My copy has contemporary (worn) half-calf with gilt backs; there is some light foxing and dampstaining to the plates and margins of some leaves. Ref. Abbey, Life, 43; purchased D. & E Lake Toronto, 1992.

This book has been reprinted, but the reprint is out of print; you can search for a used copy on Amazon.

Some more of the images are online in much lower resolution scans at New York Public Library, as reprinted in a later book.

I have typed in the index to the book so that you can ask me for other scans if you like.

There is also a very incomplete transcription if you want to read the actual book!

The book starts with Druidical and Prehistoric remains and continues on to have Castles, Manors and stately homes, Churches, Abbeys and Cathedrals and much more.

Charles Knight also produced an illustrated edition of the Works of Shakspere, as he spelt it.

There is an entry in the Nuttall Encyclopædia for Charles Knight.

Some of the engravings were done by the Dalziel brothers; I have some images from their autobiography, A Record of Work.

Contents

Volume I

Book I. Before the Conquest. [Fig. 1]

Chapter I. The British Period. [Fig. 80]

Chapter II. The Roman Period. [Fig. 189]

Chapter III. The Anglo-Saxon Period.

Book II. The Period From the Norman Conquest to the Death of King John. A.D. 1066—1216.

Chapter I. Regal and Baronial Antiquities.

Chapter II. Ecclesiastical Antiquities.

Chapter III. Popular Antiquities.

Book III. The Period From the Accession of Henry III. to the End of the Reign of Richard II. A.D. 1216—1399.

Chapter I. Regal and Baronial Antiquities. Fig. 814]

Chapter II. Ecclesiastical Antiquities.

Chapter III. Popular Antiquities.

Book IV. The Period From the Accession of Henry IV. to the End of the Reign of Richard III. A.D. 1399—1485. [Fig. 1150]

Chapter I. Regal and Baronial Antiquities.

Chapter II. Ecclesiastical Antiquities.

Chapter III. Popular Antiquities.

Although some of the images here are from Volume II, I plan to move them into their own darling little folder soon, and will make a second table of contents.

This book is online at archive.org, although the OCR has done a really bad job, and the scans are lower resolution and not cleaned up. But you could use it to request a specific image, and I will scan it for you if it’s not here yet.

1023.—Howden Church

1023.—Howden Church

Old England: A Pictorial Museum (1845)

The perfect Romantic Ruin, an abbey that was once a place of worship and a seat of power, and has now fallen so low that cattle graze where there was once a High Altar. A poem written by William Words [...]

Keywords: ruins, abbeys, arches, cattle, animals, churches

Places shown: Howden; Yorkshire; England

Added: 2006-02-13

Image status: public domain, hence royalty-free stock image; usage credit requested

Methley Hall

Methley Hall

Old England: A Pictorial Museum (1845)

“Methley Hall, or Methley Park, in the West Riding of Yorkshire, seven miles south-east from Leeds, is the seat of the Saviles, Earls Mexborough, which family have held the manor for several centuries [...]

Keywords: interiors, windows, ceilings, arches, stairs, colour, furniture, manors, halls

Places shown: Mickletown; West Riding; Yorkshire; England

Added: 2005-12-20

Image status: public domain, hence royalty-free stock image; usage credit requested

915.—Southampton Gate: North Front.

915.—Southampton Gate: North Front.

Old England: A Pictorial Museum (1845)

A castellated (fortified) tower with a cout of arms, various statues, and an arched entrance; a horse and cart are going through, and a man wearing a top hat pushes a barrow.

Keywords: castles, entrances, arches, carts

Places shown: Southampton; Hampshire; England

Added: 2005-12-20

Image status: public domain, hence royalty-free stock image; usage credit requested

1308.—Stratford Church: West End

1308.—Stratford Church: West End

Old England: A Pictorial Museum (1845)

See also Stratford Church Looking In Through The Door.

The niches above the door may have held statues before the Reformation.

Keywords: churches, gravestones, windows, entrances, arches

Places shown: Stratford; Warwickshire; England

Added: 2005-12-20

Image status: public domain, hence royalty-free stock image; usage credit requested

Stratford Church.

Stratford Church.

Old England: A Pictorial Museum (1845)

Interior, seen from the door.The plate is coloured in the original book.The parish church of Stratford-upon-Avon is a large and handsome structure, of the usual cross-form, with a central tower surmou [...]

Keywords: doors, entrances, arches, interiors, colour

Places shown: Stratford; Warwickshire; England

Added: 2005-12-20

Image status: public domain, hence royalty-free stock image; usage credit requested

1046.—Stone Church, south door.

1046.—Stone Church, south door.

Old England: A Pictorial Museum (1845)

The South Door of an English Church generally has the font inside, and leads through the South Aisle into the West End of the Nave.

Keywords: doors, arches, entrances, churches

Places shown: Stone; Cheshire; England

Added: 2005-12-20

Image status: public domain, hence royalty-free stock image; usage credit requested

399.—Norwich Castle

399.—Norwich Castle

Old England: A Pictorial Museum (1845)

“[...] Hugh Bigod, who had sworn that Henry had appointed Stephen his successor, was the first to hold out against the king in the Castle of Norwich, which his ancestor had built. Norwich was a regul [...]

Keywords: castles, people, trees, arches

Places shown: Norwich; Norfolk; England

Added: 2005-12-20

Image status: public domain, hence royalty-free stock image; usage credit requested

567.—Chapel in Canterbury Cathedral.

567.—Chapel in Canterbury Cathedral.

Old England: A Pictorial Museum (1845)

“[...] an ancient chair in the chapel of the Holy Trinity, formed also of grey marble, in pieces, which is used for the enthronization of the Archbishops of the See, and which, sayeth tradition, was t [...]

Keywords: chairs, furniture, interiors, cathedrals, churches, arches, windows

Places shown: Canterbury; Kent; England

Added: 2006-08-26

Image status: public domain, hence royalty-free stock image; usage credit requested

914.—Strand Gate, Winchelsea

914.—Strand Gate, Winchelsea

Old England: A Pictorial Museum (1845)

Built in the late 13th Century. It still has a road running through the arch today.

Keywords: castles, ruins, towers, arches

Places shown: Winchelsea; Sussex; England

Added: 2005-12-20

Image status: public domain, hence royalty-free stock image; usage credit requested

1023.—Howden Church (detail for use as computer desktop background image)

1023.—Howden Church (detail for use as computer desktop background image)

Old England: A Pictorial Museum (1845)

A detail taken from the engraving of Howden Church, sized so that it makes a good screen background, or desktop wallpaper; cows graze in the ruins of a mediæval monastery.

Keywords: wallpaper, backgrounds, churches, ruins, abbeys, cattle, arches

Places shown: Howden; Yorkshire; England

Added: 2006-02-13

Image status: public domain, hence royalty-free stock image; usage credit requested

211.—Windows from the Palace of Westminster

211.—Windows from the Palace of Westminster

Old England: A Pictorial Museum (1845)

The windows are supposed here to be of Saxon origin; that is, dating between A.D. 440 and A.D. 1100 or so. “A doorway remaining of the old palace at Westminster exhibits the triangular arch (Fig. 212) [...]

Keywords: windows, arches, anglosaxon remains

Places shown: Westminster; London; England

Added: 2005-12-20

Image status: public domain, hence royalty-free stock image; usage credit requested

425.—Interor of Newark Castle

425.—Interor of Newark Castle

Old England: A Pictorial Museum (1845)

The ruins we can still see today were built by Bishop Alexander (“the Magnificent”) of Lincoln in the first half of the twelfth century, although there was a castle here at least as early as 1089, alm [...]

Keywords: castles, ruins, animals, sheep, people, trees, arches, entrances, wallpaper, backgrounds

Places shown: Newark; Nottinghamshire; England

Added: 2005-12-20

Image status: public domain, hence royalty-free stock image; usage credit requested