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The Pilgrims' Way from Winchester to Canterbury

Chapter 19: FOOTNOTES:
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About This Book

An illustrated account traces the medieval pilgrimage route linking Winchester and Canterbury, following surviving stretches and exploring villages, churches, manor houses, and natural features encountered along the way. It combines route descriptions and topographical detail with historical anecdotes, architectural observations, and literary and antiquarian associations, and discusses efforts by scholars and walkers to reconstruct lost sections. Practical notes for travelers and evocative sketches of rural scenes unify the narrative into a cohesive guide to the road and its surroundings.

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PRINTED BY
HAZELL, WATSON AND VINEY, LD.,
LONDON AND AYLESBURY,
ENGLAND.

FOOTNOTES:

[1] W. H. Hutton, “Thomas Becket,” p. 249.

[2] E. Abbott, “St. Thomas of Canterbury,” i. 223.

[3] T. C. Robertson, “Materials for the History of Archbishop Becket,” ii. 47, iv. 145.

[4] Op. cit. p. 322.

[5] “Anonymus Lambethiensis. Materials,” ii. 140.

[6] “Thomas Saga,” ii. 202.

[7] Hyde Bourne.

[8] Grose, “Antiquities of England and Wales,” v. 110.

[9] Meredith’s novel, “Diana of the Crossways,” takes its name from this farm.

[10] Captain E. Renouard James, whose “Notes on the Pilgrims’ Way in West Surrey” will be found to supply much valuable local information. (London, Edward Stanford, 1871.)

Typographical errors corrected by the etext transcriber:
ten gold growns=> ten gold crowns {pg 188}
Alresford, 35, 38; New, cloth frade at, 39;=> Alresford, 35, 38; New, cloth trade at, 39; {pg 217}