< Page:Archaeological Journal, Volume 3.djvu
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NOTICES OF ANCIENT ORNAMENTS, various times found in the graves of ecclesiastics, in the Minster : of a similar discovery in the coffin supposed to con- tain the remains of Henry of Worcester, abbot of Evesham, who died A.D. 1263, an interesting record has been preserved by Mr. Rudge'^, and many other examples might be cited. In forming a grave in Hereford cathedral, in 1836, a place of Cbalice, FJvesham. Chalice, Hereford. sepulture was brought to light, containing human remains, clothed in vestments which had been richly embroidered ; at the right side lay a small chalice and paten of white metal, and on the paten were two pieces of wax taper, the wicks partly consumed, placed in the form of a cross. This singular circumstance seemed to indicate a practice, analogous, in some measure, to the deposit of the waxen sigillum, accord- ing to the ancient Custumal above mentioned, cited by Mar- tene^. The chalice was placed in the hand of the deacon, as a kind of investiture, at his ordination, as represented in the curious subject from the legend of St. Guthlac, given in a former volume of this Journal^ The same, possibly, was in many instances placed between the hands of the defunct '^ Archseologia, vol. xx. p. 566. ^ Amongst many other instances of such discoveries may be noticed several chalices found at Chichester, one of which, of singular form, has been assigned to the twelfth century ; several found on the site of Hyde Abbey, represented by Carter, in his Sculpture and Painting; also two discovered in the choir at Lich- field, and formerly in Green's Museum. Shaw's Hist. Staff., vol. i. pp. 256, 332. ' Archaeol. .louinal, vol. i. p. 286. i:>iiihestei' t'athedral

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