Pegge, Samuel, 1704-1796
Samuel Pegge
Pegge, Samuel
Samuel Pegge British antiquarian
VIAF ID: 54181731 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/54181731
Preferred Forms
- 200 _ | ‡a Pegge ‡b Samuel ‡f 1704-1796
- 100 1 _ ‡a Pegge, Samuel
- 100 1 _ ‡a Pegge, Samuel ‡d 1704-1796
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Pegge, Samuel, ‡d 1704-1796
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- 100 0 _ ‡a Samuel Pegge
- 100 0 _ ‡a Samuel Pegge ‡c British antiquarian
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (4)
5xx's: Related Names (1)
- 551 _ _ ‡a Chesterfield
Works
Title | Sources |
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Anecdotes of the English language : chiefly regarding the local dialect of London and its environs ; whence it will appear that the natives of the metropolis, and its vicinities, have not corrupted the language of their ancestors ; in a letter from Samuel Pegge, to an old acquaintance, and co-fellow of the Society of Antiquaries, London ; to which is added, a supplement to grose's Provincial Glossary | |
Anonymiana; or, Ten centuries of observations on various authors and subjects. | |
An assemblage of coins, fabricated by authority of the archbishops of Canterbury. | |
Curialia miscellanea : or Anecdotes of old times : regal, noble, gentilitial, and miscellaneous : including authentic anecdotes of the royal household, and the manners and customs of the court, at an early period of the English history | |
Forme of cury | |
The forme of cury : a roll of ancient English cookery, compiled, about A.D. 1390, by the master-cooks of King Richard II, presented afterwards to Queen Elizabeth, by Edward Lord Stafford, and now in the possession of Gustavus Brander, Esq. : illustrated with notes, and a copious index, or glossary, a manuscript of the editor, of the same age and subject, with other congruous matters, are subjoined. | |
Fumifugium | |
An historical account of that venerable monument of antiquity the textus Roffensis : Including Memoirs of the learned Saxonists Mr. William Elstob and his Sister. by Samuel Pegge, M. A. To which are added, Biographical Anecdotes of Mr. Johnson, Vicar of Cranbrooke; and Extracts from the Registers of that Parish | |
The history and antiquities of Eccleshal manor and castle; and of Lichfield House in London. By Samuel Pegge, M. A. F. S. A | |
Illustrations of the manners and expences of antient times in England, in the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries, deduced from the accompts of churchwardens, and other authentic documents, collected from various parts of the kingdom, with explanatory notes. | |
Inconveniencie of the aer and smoak of London dissipated | |
The life of Robert Grosseteste, the celebrated Bishop of Lincoln. By Samuel Pegge, LL. D. Prebendary of Louth, in that Church. With an account of the bishop's works, and an appendix. | |
Light shining in darkness : or, the effects of the Christian Institution, antiently, Upon the Recusant Pagan, And at Present, Upon the modern infidel, Illustrated in a discourse On John i. 5. Preached at Christ's Church, Canterbury, on St. John's Day, 1742, By Samuel Pegge, M. A. Vicar of Godmersham in Kent, and late Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge, Author of the Examination of the Enquiry into the Meaning of the Demoniacs in the New Testament. | |
A narrative of what passed at the Revolution House, at Whittington, county of Derby, in the year 1688 : With a perspective view, and plan of that cottage. | |
Observations on an antient font at Burnham Deepdale : in Norfolk | |
Observations on the chariots of the antient Britains. By the Rev. Mr. Pegge. In a letter to the Rev. Mr. Norris. | |
Popery, an encourager of vice and immorality; a sermon preach'd at the cathedral church of Canterbury, on occasion of the present unnatural rebellion. By Samuel Pegge. | |
Remarks on Governor Pownall's conjecture concerning the Croyland boundary stone. By Mr. Pegge. In a letter to the Rev. Dr. Milles. Read at the Society of Antiquaries May 9, 1776. | |
The roman roads, Ikenild-Street and Bath-Way : discovered and investigated through the country of the Coritani, or the county of Derby. To which is added A dissertation on the Coritani | |
A series of dissertations on some elegant and very valuable Anglo-Saxon remains : I. A Gold Coin in the Pembrochian Cabinet, in a Letter to Martin Folkes, Esq. late President of the Royal Society and of the Society of Antiquaries. II. A Silver Coin of Mr. John White's, in a Letter to Mr. White. III. A Gold Coin of Mr. Simpson's of Lincoln, in a Letter to Mr. Vertue. IV. A Jewel in the Bodleyan Library. V. Second Thoughts on Ld. Pembroke's Coin, in a Letter to Mr. Ames, Secretary to the Society of Antiquaries. Also the Coins engraved on a Copper-Plate. With a preface, wherein the question, whether the Saxons coined any gold or not, is candidly debated with Mr. North | |
A sermon preached at Whittington in the county of Derby : on the grand jubilee, or centenary commemoration of the Glorious Revolution, MDCLXXXVIII. By Samuel Pegge, M. A. Rector Of Whittington. | |
Sketch of the history of Bolsover and Peak castles, in the county of Derby | |
A sylloge of the remaining authentic inscriptions relative to the erection of our English churches; embellished with a number of copper plates, exhibiting fac-similies of some of the most material. By the Rev. Samuel Pegge, A.M | |
Two collections of Derbicisms containing words and phrases in a great measure peculiar to the natives and inhabitants of the county of Derby |