By Dr Ashton; compare his annotations to edns in the Old Library (1686 and 1718, E.6.42 and C.5.7/1)
Ashton, Charles (1665-1752), Master of Jesus College, CambridgeBy an anonymous author, 19C
Endorsed "thesis by Dr Pearce"
William Lambarde's transcription (1565) of books 4-8 of Henry of Huntingdon's "Historia Anglorum"; with a work said to be Gervase of Tilbury's "De necessariis scacarii observatiis", actually the "Dialogue of the Exchequer" by Richard Fitzsimon
By John Ashton
Lists books seen by John Clarke as well as those he owned; the latter were donated to the College by Clarke's mother in 1790.
Printed work (London, 1657) by Geoffrey Watts, interleaved with ms. notes. [EEBO has a BL second edition with the title: A scribe, pharisee, hypocrite; and his letters answered, separates churched, dippers sprinkled: or, A vindication of the church and universities of England, in many orthodox tenets & righteous practices. Whereunto is added a narration of a publick dipping, June 26. 1656. In a pond of much Leighes parish in Essex, with a censure thereupon. By Jeffry Watts B.D. and Rectour of Much-Leighes. , London : printed for Edward Dod, at the Gun in Ivy Laine, and for Thomas Johnson, at the Golden Key in St. Pauls Church-yard, 1657.]
Notes on "Proverbs", "Ars Artium", "Scaliger's Apothegms", "Declamations", etc., with dates of birth and death of the compiler's family.
By John Dod, vicar of Fawsley.
Sermon preached at St John's College, Oxford, by Ambrose Bonwicke [linked with Elijah Fenton].
On the first leaf is an introductory statement describing Lyde's career, his residence in Palestine and death in 1860. The mss. received by bequest were listed by Major Grant Stephen of St Catherine's College. The list that follows (2 pp.) is headed: "List of Oriental books presented to college by Rev S Lyde Oct. 1858."; a note at the end says that it was drawn up by Grant Stephen for G. E. Corrie.
Stephen, GrantThe cover title concludes with the comment that this was "The first opening after the great repairs and restorations". A variant title on the first page includes the comment that Thomas Attwood Walmisley was B.A. of Jesus College, 1838, and that the singers in 1849 were Frederick Leete, William Neale, Jesse Frisby and Edmund Bilton. The music includes a solo, two, three and four parts, all with organ, and sets Psalm 5 verses 1, 2, 3, 7, 12 and 13. The text begins "Ponder my words, O Lord".
Walmisley, Thomas AttwoodA transcript of an inquiry into the Porteous Riots