alene, Cambridge.
1798 Thomas Kipling, D.D.
1822 James Henry Monk, D.D., Professor of Greek, Cambridge, Canon of Westminster, Bishop of Gloucester and Bristol.
1830 Thomas Turton, D.D., Professor of Mathematics, Regius Professor of Divinity, Cambridge, Prebendary of Lincoln, Dean of Westminster, Bishop of Ely.
1842 George Butler, D.D., Headmaster of Harrow.
1853 Augustus Page Saunders, D.D., Headmaster of Charterhouse.
1878 John James Stewart Perowne, D.D., Prebendary of S. David's, Canon of Llandaff, Margaret Professor of Divinity, Cambridge, Bishop of Worcester.
1891 Marsham Argles, D.D., Canon of Peterborough.
1893 William Clavell Ingram, D.D., Hon. Canon of Peterborough.
1901 William Hagger Barlow, D.D., Prebendary of S. Paul's Cathedral.
1908 Arnold Henry Page, M.A.
FOOTNOTES:
[Footnote 1: "English Towns and Districts," 1883, pp. 103, 130.]
[Footnote 2: A few other cathedrals which were originally churches of
monasteries are still called Minsters, as York (nearly always),
Canterbury (occasionally), Ripon, Southwell, and perhaps more. Lincoln
Cathedral though often called a Minster was a Cathedral from the first,
and was never attached to a monastery.]
[Footnote 3: Gunton, p. 4.]
[Footnote 4: "Ingulf and the Historia Croylandensis." By W.G. Searle,
M.A., Camb. Antiq. Soc., 8vo. xxvii. p. 65.]
[Footnote 5: Searle: Ingulf, p. 63.]
[Footnote 6: "On the Abbey Church of Peterborough." By G.A. Poole, M.A.
Arch. Soc. Archdeac. Northampton, 1855, p. 190.]
[Footnote 7: Poole, p. 193.]
[Footnote 8: Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, anno 1128.]
[Footnote 9: "Remarks on the Architecture of Peterborough Cathedral." By
F.A. Paley, M.A. 2nd Ed., 1859, p. 21.]
[Footnote 10: The two eastern pillars of the nave are circular; and the
third pillar from the tower, on both sides, is "composed of nook-shafts
set in rectangular recesses against the body of the pier."]
[Footnote 11: Some of Mr Poole's reasoning, as to the different parts of
the nave to be attributed to different abbots, depends upon an
assumption that the Saxon church was on the site of the present one, and
that some part of the nave was still existing in a ruinous condition
while the present choir and tower were being built. Recent discoveries
have proved that this assumption is groundless, for the nave of the
Saxon church was beyond the south aisle of the existing nave.]
[Footnote 12: Poole, p. 204.]
[Footnote 13: Paley, p. 54.]
[Footnote 14: P
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