| James Stuart - 1819 - 692 sivua
...cabinet of Mr. Thomas Lindley, Armagh. Golden cups, connected by a curvilinear bar of the same metal, have been dug up, from time to time, in various parts of every province in the kingdom. Dr. Ledwich in the first edition of his Antiquities, page 114, says,... | |
| Patrick Fitzgerald - 1826 - 474 sivua
...stones at a great distance with the greatest dexterity and precision. Many of the ancient Irish weapons have been dug up from time to time in various parts of the country. They appear to have been generally made of brass. Sir James Ware mentions, that he had in... | |
| John O'Driscol - 1827 - 448 sivua
...cabinet of Mr. Thomas Lindley, Armagh. Golden cups, connected by a curvilinear bar of the same metal, have been dug up from time to time in various parts of every province in the kingdom. " Dr. Ledwich, in the first edition of his Antiquities, page 1 14.,... | |
| Somersetshire Archaeological and Natural History Society - 1904 - 974 sivua
...concavity being uppermost. This townwas not in line with the eight above, about one-third of '•'• extent being situated outside the NE margin of Hearth...Among the objects of importance from Mound LXX were :— 93 ce by a row of three dots-and-circles. This and the folig, Nos. 391 and 392, form part of the... | |
| Emma Elizabeth Thoyts, Charles Trice Martin - 1893 - 182 sivua
...for fraudulent purposes. The use of signet-rings is very ancient. Many old Saxon and Roman signets have been dug up from time to time in various parts of England ; but small private seals bearing devices do not appear to have been attached to deeds earlier... | |
| Clifton Antiquarian Club - 1900 - 386 sivua
...were suitable for the harquebuss, carabine, and pistols of those troublous times. Though specimens have been dug up from time to time in various parts of Bristol, this is believed to be the first instance of unfired bullets of that period having been found... | |
| Alethea Chaplin - 1920 - 284 sivua
...exist no longer, such as the mammoth, a huge creature something like an enormous elephant, whose bones have been dug up from time to time in various parts of the world. The hunters wore skins of animals sewn together by bone needles threaded with the sinews of... | |
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