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  • Itinerarium curiosum (centuria II) : or, an account of the antiquities, and remarkable curiosities in nature or art, observed in travels through Great Britain. To which is added, the Itinerary of Richard of Cirencester, monk of Westminster. With an account of that author and his work
Itinerarium curiosum (centuria II) : or, an account of the antiquities, and remarkable curiosities in nature or art, observed in travels through Great Britain. To which is added, the Itinerary of Richard of Cirencester, monk of Westminster. With an account of that author and his work

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Itinerarium curiosum (centuria II) : or, an account of the antiquities, and remarkable curiosities in nature or art, observed in travels through Great Britain. To which is added, the Itinerary of Richard of Cirencester, monk of Westminster. With an account of that author and his work

by William Stukeley

EN·~9 hours·15 chapters

Chapters

15 total
1

ITINERARIUM CURIOSUM: OR, AN ACCOUNT OF THE ANTIQUITIES, AND REMARKABLE CURIOSITIES IN NATURE OR ART, OBSERVED IN TRAVELS THROUGH GREAT BRITAIN.

0:37
2

Table of Contents.

4:29
3

The BRILL, Cæsar’s Camp at Pancras.

56:56
4

ITER BOREALE.

3:38:38
5

RICARDI MONACHI WESTMONASTERIENSIS COMMENTARIOLI GEOGRAPHICI De situ BRITTANIÆ Et Stationum quas ROMANI ipsi in ea Insula ædificaverunt LIBER PRIMUS.

1:15:12
6

RICARDI MONACHI WESTMONASTERIENSIS COMMENTARIOLI GEOGRAPHICI Descriptionis BRITTANIÆ sub ditione ROMANI IMPERII LIBER SECUNDUS.

16:01
7

An ACCOUNT of RICHARD OF CIRENCESTER, MONK of WESTMINSTER, And of his Works: With his Ancient MAP of ROMAN BRITAIN, And the Itinerary thereof. Read at the Antiquarian Society, March 18, 1756.

24:55
8

II. ON THE MAP of BRITTANIA ROMANA OF RICHARD of CIRENCESTER. A. D. 1338.

24:32
9

III.

24:58
10

IV.

27:03

Description

"Ricardi monachi westmonasteriensis commentarioli geographici de situ Brittaniæ": v. 2, p. 79-108. This is the famous forgery published by Charles Bertram in 1757, claimed by him to be copied from a manuscript written by Richard of Cirencester.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~9 hours (571K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Original publisher

London: Baker and Leigh, 1776.

Credits

Tim Lindell, Robert Tonsing, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2024-01-29

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

William Stukeley

William Stukeley

1687–1765

A lively early explorer of Britain’s ancient past, he helped turn Stonehenge and Avebury into subjects of serious study. Trained as a physician and later ordained, he brought curiosity, fieldwork, and a flair for big ideas to everything he wrote.

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