TENTH SERIES.
71
Cope (Mrs. Hautenville) on births, marriages, and
deaths, xi. 348. Bishops and abbots, x. 309.
Cambridge early lists, ix. 350. Conway charter,
x. 307. Elizabeth of Bohemia, xii. 189.
Gainsborough and Pomeranian dog, v. 288.
Genealogical, ix. 130. Llangollen, x. 307 ; xi.
348. Manor Rolls, x. 309. Mitred abbots, x.
410. Morland (Sir Samuel), xi. 68. Rawdon,
iv. 248. Recusants' marriages, xi. 290. Regi-
mental marches, x. 457. Saxon abbeys, xi. 89.
Scots Greys : regimental history, x. 396.
Scrope (Adrian), x. 469. Sulhamstead Rectory,
xi. 9. Wrexham, x. 307
Cope (Rev. Sir Richard), d. 1806, his preferments,
ix. 350, 414 ; x. 36
Cope family of Bramshill, iii. 87 ; iv. 97 Copes and cope-chests, mediaeval, v. 189, 254 Copenhagen expedition, 1807, viii. 469. See also
Tilsit*
Copenhagen House in 1824, iv. 205, 295, 351 Copernicus and the planet Mercury, i. 509 ; ii. 56 Copernicus, etymology of the name, xi. 409, 473 Copford Church, Dane's skin at, i. 15, 73, 155 Copin, French diminutive for Jacob, vii. 29, 74 Copinger (W. A.) on catalogues of MSS., v. 51. Comber family, i. 89. Feet of Fines, xii. 518. ' The Philobiblion,' ix. 92. Quartering of arms, v. 245. Rous or Rowse family, i. 55. Sturmy or Esturmy family, viii. 73 Copland-Griffiths (F.) on Stanhope Aspinwall, vi.
473. Hart (Sir W. Neville), x. 263 Copley (Sir John) and George Canning, xii. 470 Copp6e (Francois), his 'La Greve des Forgerons,'
xii. 469
Coppenburgh or Croppenbergh family, viii. 67, 112 Copper coins and tokens, how to clean them, i.
248, 335
Copper mill, Whitechapel, its history, ix. 290, 451
Copperillo, meaning of the word, v. 69
Copthall Avenue, Nos. 8 and 10, their history,
vi. 345
' Copy "= copyhold, i. 347 Copying letters, earliest process, v. 287, 351 Copying press, its introduction, ii. 488 ; iii. 153,
414
Copying process, rotary bromide, v. 346 Copyright, International, early instance of, ix. 147 Copyright in letters, v. 128, 176, 217, 314 ; xi. 125 Corbet (Bishop), his poems, 1647, vi. 126 Corbet (Miles), regicide, his marriage, xi. 510 Corbet (Peter) = Valletort (Isabel or Beatrice),
x. 168, 253 Corbett (F. St. J.) on German Emperor and Poets
Laureate, v. 187 Corbridge (James), Westminster scholar, xi. 208,
357 Corbridge, Roman inscription concerning, ix.
249, 311
Cordiner (Cornelius), Westminster scholar, vii. 428 Cordova (Rudolph de) on animals ennobled, v. 7. Boundary incidents, vii. 30. Clothes and their influence, xii. 468. Detectives in fiction, iv. 307. Laconic letters, v. 108. Late intellectual harvest, i. 469. Men walking round the earth, vi. 230. Smith in Latin, v. 13, 152. Pictures as signs, iv. 169. Repartee of royalty, iv. 467. Twins, iii. 249
Corfe Castle, painting by Morland, ii. 207 - Corfield (Wilmot) on ' A shoulder of mutton," &c., ii. 48. Anglo-Indian ' Little Jack Horner,' vii. 277. Bell-horses, vii. 258. The Bonassusj x. 90. Brougham (Lord) and ' Punch,' vii. 246. Cromwell and Milton, viii. 375. "Glory
of the Methodists," i. 406. Holwell (John
Zephaniah), x. 76. London statues and
memorials, x. 124, 372. Parodies of Kipling,
xii. 472. Stamp collecting and its literature,
ii. 38. Statues at Calcutta, xii. 466. Statues
in the British Isles, xii. 234. Willie (William),
i. 457. Zoffany, x. 295. Zoffany's Indian
portraits, viii. 110, 358 Corinthian, use of the word by Lord Rosebery,
vi. 307
Corisande, derivation of the name, iv. 247, 352 Corked (man tie )= purple, the word c. 1420, ix. 467 Corks, the game described, ii. 347, 391, 452 Corley (F. E.) on Ramsammy, viii. 233. Corliss (G. F. ) on quotations wanted, v. 92 Corn, damage to, its heinousness, i. 283, 394 ;
" quarter of," 340
Corneille, houses inhabited by, vii. 469 Cornelia on " As the farmer sows his seed," x. 273 Corner (S.) on Queen Elizabeth's Day, x. 477.
Walt Whitman on Alamo, xii. 91 ' Cornhill Magazine,' its Jubilee, xii. 481, 501 Cornish (F. F.) on Early Victorian songs, xi. 128 Cornish and other apparitions, ix. 325, 392 ; x. 35,
51, 117
Cornish apple : Sops in wine, viii. 249, 313 Cornish " Bridal Stone," ix. 509 Cornish chough and witches, viii. 388 Cornish dish : squab pie, recipe, viii. 195 Cornish epitaphs, viii. 325 Cornish lexicology, i. 326
Cornish speech : dimpsy, teening time, v. 186 Cornish vergers : Carne family, viii. 5, 115 Corn-rent, its definition, v. 448 Corn-tending, old custom of, vi. 227, 296 Cornutelli, La Fete di Felici, at Rome, viii. 309 Cornvalgian on authors of quotations wanted, xii.
469 Cornwall, Philip Ny colls and the rebellion in, v.
370, 408 ; " County of Cornwall and nowhere,"
vi. 490 Cornwallis (Sir Thomas), d. 1604, his biography,
iii. 29, 73, 135
Cornwallis (Thomas), of Porchester, v. 244 ' Cornworthiad,' and Barter family of Devon, vii.
128
Coronation coins and medals, x. 130, 190, 230 Coroner, first medical, v. 489 ; vi. 13, 38 Coroon, a cherry, origin of the name, viii. 48 Corpus Christi Day, observance in England, xi. 443 Corpus Christi Day observed at Oxford, ix. 481 ;
x. 52 Correct, its comparative and superlative, iv. 189,
294 Corrodies, " Liber serviens," meaning of the term,
vii. 128 Corsica, linguistic curiosity in, vii. 307, 357 ;
seen in mirage from Italy, 495 Corsica, Nelson relic in, v. 89, 137 Corsley, Wilts, place-name, its origin, xi. 108 Cortel clocks, meaning of the term, viii. 89, 156 Cortes, Keats, Balboa, and the South Sea, ix.
107, 212
Corunna : bearer of the first news, xi. 130, 212, 275 Corvo (Frederick Baron) on " My Lord the Sun,"
i. 193 Coryate (Tom), his ' Crudities,' iii. 426, 494 ;
iv. 49, 132, 195 ; x. 373 ; on Mediolanum, x. 375 Cosas de Espana, ii. 474, 510 ; iii. 191, 336 Cosmogony, heretical, x. 347 Cosiest, surname, vii. 30
Cosmo. (Sir Gordon), biographer of Byron, vii. 89 Costello, Canning, and Scott families, viii. 148