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and Mark the choleric: and it is characteristic of Dürer's thought that F'eter is put in the background. studying off a book held open by John. the favourite evangelist of the Reformation and of Luther: in this representation of John some have recognized the features of Melanchthon: its likeness to the poet Schiller is a coincidence much more obvious. These various classes of work were carried on

in the face of failing health. In the canals of the Low Countries Dürer had caught a fever, of which he never shook off the effects. The evidence of this we have in his own written words, as well as in a sketch which he drew to indicate to some doctor with whom he was in correspondence the seat of his suffering; and again, in the record of his physical aspect-the shoulders already somewhat bent, the features somewhat gaunt, the old pride of the abundant locks shorn away-which is preserved in a portrait engraved on wood just after his death, from a drawing made no doubt not long previously. That death came suddenly, so suddenly that there was no time to call his dearest friends to his bedside, on the night of the 6th of April 1628. Dürer was buried in the vault belonging to his wife's family, but since disturbed, in the buryingground of St John at Nuremberg. He left a name that will be honoured by the latest posterity, and a place that nothing could fill in the affections of his noblest contemporaries. This is the grave and feeling Requiescat of Luther, in a letter written to their common friend, Eoban Hesse :"As for Dürer, assuredly affection bids us mourn for one who was the best of men, yet you may well hold him happy that he has made so good an end, and that Christ has taken him from the midst of this time of troubles, and from yet greater troubles in store, lest he, that deserved to behold nothing but the best, should be compelled to behold the worst. Therefore may he rest in peace with his fathers: Amen."

The principal extant paintings of Dürer, with the places where they are to be found, have been mentioned above. Of his draw ings, by far the richest collection is in the Albertina Palace at Vienna; the next richest is probably that of the British Museum, where a large volume, forming part of Lord Arundel's collection, is preserved. By the acquisition of the Posonyi-Hullot collection, the Berlin Museum has now (1877) taken certainly the third place. The Louvre also possesses some good examples, and many others are dispersed in varioas public collections, as at Munich, Hamburg, Bremen, Basel, Milan, and Florence, as well as in private hands all over Europe.

The principal editions of Diirer's theoretical writings are these:GEOMETRY AND PERSPECTIVE.-Underwcysung der Messung mit dem Zirckel und Richtscheyt, in Linien, Ebnen und ganzen Corporen, Nurenberg, 1525. A Latin translation of the same, with

a long title, Paris, Weichel, 1532, and another ed. in 1555. Again in Latin, with the title Institutionum geometricarum libri quatuor, Arnheim, 1605.

FORTIFICATION.-Etliche Underricht zur Befestigung der Schloss, Stadt, und Flecken, Nuremberg, 1527, and other editions in 1530 and 1538. A Latin translation, with the title De urbibus, arcibus, castellisque muniendis ac condendis, Paris, Weichel, 1535.

HUMAN PROPORTION.-Hierin sind begriffen vier Bücher von

menschlicher Proportion, Nuremberg, 1548. Latin translation De Symmetria partium in rectis formis humanorum corporum libri in latinum conversi, de varietate figurarum, &c., libri II., Nur. emberg, 1532.

The private literary remains of Diirer, his diary, letters, &c., were first published, partially in Von Murr's Journal zur Kunstgeschichte, Nuremberg, 1785-1787; afterwards, in Campe's Reliquien von A. Dürer, Nuremberg, 1827; and again, carefully edited by Professor Moritz Thausing, in the Quellenschriften für Kunstgeschichte und Kunsttechnik, Vienna, 1872.

The principal remaining literature of the subject will be found in the following books and treatises, the elaborate monograph of Professor Thausing being the latest, and by far the fullest and most ingenious of them all:-Neudörfer, Johann, Schreib- und Rechenmeister zu Nürnberg, Nachrichten über Künstlern und Werkleuten daselbst. Nuremberg, 1547; republished in the Vienna Quellenschrift, 1875; Scheurl, Chr., Vila Antonii Kressen, 1515, reprinted in the collection of Pirkheimer's works, Frankfort, 1610: Wimpheling, Epitome rerum Germanicarum, ch. 68, Strassburg, 1565; Sandrart. Joachim von. Deutsche Academie, Nuremberg, 1675; Doppelmayr,

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Historische Nachricht von den Nürnbergischen Mathematicis und Künstlern. Nuremberg, 1730; Von Murr, Chr. G., Journal sur Kunstgeschichte, as above; Bartsch, Adam, Le Peintre-Graveur, vol. vii. Vienna, 1808; Passavant, J. P.. Le Peintre-Graveur, vol. iii. Leipzig, 1842; Roth, J. F., Leben Albrecht Dürer's, Leipzig, 1791: Heller. Das Leben und die Werke Albrecht Dürers, vol. ii., Bamberg, 1827-1831; Von Eyc. Dr A., Leben und Verken Albrecht Dürer's, 2d ed., Nördlingen, 1869; Haussmann, A., Dürer's Kupferstiche, Radirungen, Holzschnitte und Zeichnungen, Hanover. 1861 Von Zahn. A. Dürer's Kunstlehre, Leipzig, 1866; Allihn. Max., Dürer-Studien. Leipzig, 1871; Nagler, G. V., Albrecht Dürer und seine Kunst. Munich, 1827; Kettberg, R. von, Nürnberg's Kunstleben, Stuttgart, 1854; Rettberg, R. von. Dürer's Kupferstiche und Holzschnitte, Munich. 1876; Heaton, Mrs Charles, The History of the Life of Albrecht Dürer of Nurembery, London, 1872; Scott, W. B., Albrecht Dürer, his Life and Works, London, 1872; Thausing, Prof. Moritz, Durer. Geschichte seines Lebens und Künstler des Mittelalters und der Neuzeit, Leipzig, 1877; Euvres seiner Kunst, Leipzig, 1876; W. Schmidt in Dohme's Kunst und de Albert Dürer reproduit et publié par Amand-Durand, texte par Georges Duplessis, Paris, 1877. (S.C.)

D'URFEY, THOMAS, more generally known by the familiar name of Tom d'Urfey, an English satirist and song writer, was descended from a family of French Huguenot refugees, and was born at Exeter.. The year of his birth is unknown. He was originally bred to the law, which he forsook for the more congenial employment of writing plays and songs. His humour both in writing and in singing the latter procured him access to the highest circles, and made him a favourite even at court. Addison in the Guardian (No. 67) relates that he remembered more than once to have seen Charles II. leaning on Tom d'Urfey's shoulder and humming over a song with him. He was a strong Tory and Protestant, and it is said that his songs had considerable influence in strengthening the cause of his party. His dramatic pieces, numbering upwards of thirty, were well received, but were so licentious that none of them kept the stage after the dissolute period for which they were written. D'Urfey, by imprudence and extravagance, became poor as he grew old; and having prevailed on the managers of the playhouse to act his comedy of the Plotting Sisters for his benefit, Addison wrote the above mentioned paper in the Guardian, with another (No. 82) giving a humorous account of his eccentricities, in order to procure him a full house. He died at an advanced age in 1723. His songs, published in 6 vols., under the title of Pills to Purge Melancholy, were reprinted in fac-simile in 1872.

DURHAM, COUNTY PALATINE OF, one of the northern shires of England. The county is triangular in form, its eastern limit or base being a coast-line exposed to the German Ocean. It is separated from Northumberland chiefly by the Tyne and its tributary the Derwent, and from Yorkshire by the Tees. Towards its western extremity it joins Cumberland and Westmoreland. Its greatest length is 45 miles, and its greatest breadth 36 miles; and it contains an area of 1012 square miles, or 647,592 acres. It is divided into four wards, Chester and Easington in the north, and Darlington and Stockton in the south. There were formerly three outlying portions of the county, shown in old maps, and known as North Durham (including Norhamshire and Islandshire), Bedlingtonshire, and Crayke. These were attached to the county as having formed parcels of the ancient "patrimony of St Cuthbert," of which the land between Tyne and Tees was the chief portion.

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Physical Features.-The western angle of the county occupied by spurs of the Pennine chain, and hence is mountainous, with black, naked, and barren regions, from which issue numerous streams flowing to the sea. The elevations vary from 1000 to 2196 feet. There are some beautiful and fertile valleys in the eastern and.central parts, pleasantly varied with hill and dale, and alternately appropriated to corn and pasture. Extensive tracts, principally in the western part of the county, are waste, but rich in minerals. In the southern districts the area of cultivation

has been considerably increased within the last few years. | The ancient common fields belonging to the townships are now mostly inclosed. Draining having been carried on to a great extent; there is very little marshy ground left. Near the river Tees, and in some places bordering on the other rivers, the soil is loam or a rich clay. At a farther distance from these rivers it is of an inferior quality, with patches of gravel interspersed. The hills between the sea and an imaginary line from Barnard Castle on the Tees to Alansford on the Derwent, are covered with a dry loam, the fertility of which varies with its depth. From this line westward the summits as well as the sides of the hills are in great part moorish wastes.

At the distance of about three miles from Darlington, at Oxenhall, are cavities in the earth, called "Hell Kettles." There are similar natural pits in the neighbourhood of Ripon, and elsewhere. The diameter of the largest is not less than 114 feet, and that of the least 75. About five miles from Hartlepool is one of the most singular clusters of rocks in the north of England, called "Black Halls," formed by the force and constant action of the waves, which have separated enormous masses of the magnesian limestone, washing some entirely away, but leaving others standing, like vast towers. In some places the rock is perforated so as to form curious arches.

The only considerable river, beside those just mentioned, is the Wear, which rises in the western hills and flows past Durham to join the sea at Bishop-Wearmouth and MonkWearmouth, which places unite with Sunderland to form one great town. The Team, which gives its name to the Team Valley Railway, is a mere rivulet.

Trees are chiefly confined to the parks and seats of the nobility and gentry; but many plantations have been made of late years. The banks of the rivers and brooks, particularly in the vicinity of Durham, are fringed with wood of long growth and much value, and the deep wooded denes or ravines which open on to the sea-coast, each having a small stream at the bottom, are very characteristic. Castle Eden dene is about four miles in length, and famous for its beautiful trees and wild flowers.

Minerals. The western hills are composed of carboniferous limestone, succeeded eastward by millstone grit, coalmeasures, magnesian limestone, and new red sandstone. The south-east portion of the limestone is covered with sand, resulting from disintegration of the coal-measures and often showing black beds of coal-detritus. The mountain limestone contains productive veins of lead ore, which are extensively worked, also zinc ore. The beds of coal in the coal-measures are from 5 to 6 feet thick, and have long been source of enormous wealth. The mines are among the most extensive and productive in the kingdom. At Sunderland the coal trade furnishes employment for hundreds of vessels, independently of the "keels" or lighters which convey the coal from the termini of the railroads and tramways to the ships. The seams now worked extend horizontally for many miles, and are from 20 to 100 fathoms beneath the surface. Under almost every seam of coal is a bed of fire-clay, full of roots of primeval forest trees. The basaltic formation known as the "Great Whin Sill" appears in Teesdale, and is also remarkable at Cockfield. A beautiful variety of the mountain limestone known as Frosterley marble, has for many centuries been quarried near Stanhope for decorative purposes, in Durham Cathedral and elsewhere taking the place of Purbeck marble, while in modern houses it is used chiefly for chimney-pieces. Ironstone is extensively worked in the neighbourhood of Swalwell and Winlaton. Some excellent quarries of slate for buildings have been opened in different parts of the county. The neighbourhood of Wolsingham abounds in fine millstones. The Newcastle

grindstones are procured at Gateshead Fell; and firestone of high estimation, for building ovens, furnaces, and the like, is obtained in various parts of Durham, and exported in considerable quantity.

Towns. -Besides the city of Durham, the county includes seven ancient boroughs, viz., Hartlepool, Barnard Castle, Bishop Auckland, Darlington, Sunderland, Stockton, and Gateshead. The large villages of Staindrop, Wolsingham, Stanhope, and Sedgefield are "market towns." The port of Stockton-upon-Tees is well situated for commerce: Hartlepool, being on a promontory, nearly encompassed by the German Ocean, which forms a capacious bay to the south of the town is advantageously placed for maritime traffic; Sunderland and South Shields are also well placed at the mouths of the Wear and Tyne.

No county in England presents a closer network of railways than Durham. The York, Newcastle, and Berwick trunk line enters the country south of Darlington, and continues due north until at Gateshead it crosses the Tyne and enters Northumberland. From this a great many smaller lines diverge to the ports and mineral fields.

Agriculture.-Improvements in agriculture have been pursued with considerable spirit and success. On some spots of gravelly soil, turnips and barley are grown in almost perpetual succession, a crop of clover being sometimes interposed. The manures are chiefly lime and the produce of the fold-yard; and though abundance of sea-weed might be collected on the coast, as it was in medieval times, the farmers now make but little use of it. The farms are of moderate size, few of them exceeding 200 acres. The largest portion of each is arable, except towards the western extremity of the county, where the whole is pasture. The farm houses are well situated and commodious; and improve ments in farming and farming machinery keep pace with the age. The cattle of Durham have long been in great repute; in point of form, weight, produce of milk, and quickness of fattening, there are none better. The cows yield from 25 to 30 quarts of milk daily. The sheep also stand high in estimation, particularly the Tees-Water breed. The Weardale sheep are small, but their mutton is finely flavoured.

The following figures, taken from the Agricultural Returns for 1873 and 1876, show the acreage of the principal crops and the numbers of the live stock in the county in those years :

Bere.

Grass

Corn Wheat. Oats. Barley and Green under Crops. Turnips. Crops. rotation 1873...99,243 37,669 87,681 18,470 82,803 22,153 50,834 1876...91,109 28,359 35,815 23,070 33,616 22,196 58,170

Pigs.

12,053 12,182

Horses. Cattle. Sheep. 1873. .16,204 62,452 224,714 1876....... ..17,486 61,028 202,109 According to the Owners of Land Return, Durham was divided in 1873 among 34,317 separate proprietors, of whom the large proportion of 91 per cent. owned less than 1 acre—the average of England and Wales being 71 per cent. The gross rental of the land amounted to £2,889,152, or an average of £5, 11s. 21d. per acre-as compared with £3, Os. 2d., the average of England and Wales. This unusual value per acre is to be ascribed to the presence of minerals. The proprietors possessing more than 8000 acres were as follows:-duke of Cleveland, 55,837 acres; Ecclesiastical Commissioners, 26,868; Viscount Boyne, 15,310; earl of Durham, 14,664; marquis of Londonderry, 12,823; earl of Eldon, 11,841; John Bowes, 8313; dean and chapter of Durham, 8089.

Natural History.-Except in the moorlands of the west only a few scraps of the county have been left in their natural state; but these portions are of great interest to the student of natural history. The ballast-hills at Shields and Hartlepool are overgrown with aliens, many of which are elsewhere unknown in this country. Nearly fifty different

species have been found Cypripedium, Epipactis, Pyrola, |
Ophrys, under the yews of Castle Eden, are visited by
butterflies found nowhere else in England, as Oreina blandina,
Polyommatus salmacis, and the little moth Acidalia
blomeraria. The most interesting birds left are the dotterel
(Charadrius morinellus), pied flycatcher (Muscicapa luc-
tuosa), and crossbill (Loxia curvirostra), which still breed
occasionally in the west of the county The siskin
(Chrysomitris spinus) and black redstart (Ruticilla tithys)
have-reared their young near the city of Durham. The
stockdove has within the last few years become not uncommon.
Red grouse and black game are abundant in suitable
localities, and one heronry still remains. But the shores of
Durham are deserted by the sea fowl, which 200 years ago
were so abundant by Tees and Tyne that, as an old writer
says, "in tyme of breeding one can hardly sett his foote
so warylye that he spoyle not many of theyr nestes.” The
badger and the otter still linger in one or two nooks; the
last marten was killed in Weardale 30 years ago, and
meantime the squirrel has become common. Stockton is
almost the last retreat in England of the native black rat.
Of the former abundance of deer, wild ox, and boar every
peat bog testifies by its remains; the boar appears to have
existed in the reign of Henry VIIL, and records of red
deer in the county may be traced down to the middle of
the last century.

Antiquities of pre-Roman date, whether implements of stone or bronze, or sepulchral remains, are scarcely found except in the valley of the Wear. A very remarkable discovery was made some years ago at Heathery Burn Cave, near Stanbope, where, under a coating of stalagmite, were preserved a great many bronze weapons and other objects, including almost every article which appears to have been known in Britain at that remote period. One mile north of Eggleston are some remains of an ancient structure called the Standing Stones. This originally consisted of a cairn in the centre, surrounded by a trench, and that again encompassed by a circular arrangement of rough stones, many of which have been removed and broken to repair the roads. Near a brook, at a small distance, is a large barrow, crossed from east to west by a row of stones. There are frequent references to "Standing Stones" now gone in old charters, where they are referred to as marking boundaries. The principal Roman remains are connected with the ancient Watling Street, which entered the county by crossing the Tees at Pierse-bridge, and left it on crossing the Derwent just north of Ebchester. The boundaries of the four stations of Pierse-bridge, Binchester, Lanchester, and Ebchester, on the line of this road, may still be clearly discerned. At Lanchester there are considerable remains of masonry, and at Binchester the most perfect hypocaust in the north of England. Chester-le-Street, as its name indicates, occupies the site, now obliterated, of a Roman station, on a subsidiary Roman road; and there was a camp, still partly to be recognized, on "Maiden Castle Hill," near the city of Durham. Many Roman altars and sculptured stones from Lanchester and elsewhere are preserved in the chapter library at Durham. Roman altars, coins, &c., have been found at South Shields, as well as about the above-mentioned stations. To the Anglo-Saxon period are to be referred portions of the churches of MonkWearmouth and Jarrow, and numerous sculptured crosses, two of which are in situ at Aycliffe. The best remains of the Norman period are to be found in Durham Cathedral (the finest Norman building in England) and in the castle, also in some half-dozen parish churches. Of the Early English period are the eastern portion of the cathedral (see below), the fine churches of Darlington, Hartlepool, and St Andrew, Auckland, and portions of a few other churches. The Decorated and Perpendicular

periods are very scantily represented, on account, as is
supposed, of the incessant wars between England and
Scotland in the 14th and 15th centuries. The principal
monastic remains, beside those surrounding Durham
Cathedral, are those of its subordinate house or
"cell,"
Finchale Priory, situated in a lovely valley by the Wear.
The most interesting castles are those of Durham, Raby,
Brancepeth, and Barnard. There are ruins of castelets,
or peel-towers, at Dalden, Ludworth, and Langley Dale.
The hospitals of Sherburn, Greatham, and Kepyer, founded
by early bishops of Durham, retain but very few ancient
features.

The principal noblemen's seats are Raby Castle (duke of
Cleveland), Lambton Castle (earl of Durham), Wynyard
Castle (marquis of Londonderry), Ravensworth Castle (earl
of Ravensworth), Brancepeth Castle (Viscount Boyne), and
Whitham Hall (Sir Hedworth Williamson, Bart.)

The county is divided for parliamentary purposes into two divisions (North and South Durham), each of which returns two members. The northern division includes 20 polling-places, and the southern 33. The population has greatly increased within the last thirty years. In 1851 the inhabitants numbered 390,997; in 1861, 508,666; and in 1871, 685,089-353,117 males and 331,972 females. The increase between 1851 and 1871 amounts to 72 per cent. The population is estimated at upwards of 850,000 in 1877.

History.-Before the arrival of the Romans the county formed part of the British territory of the Brigantes, which comprised all between Tyne and Humber. Then it became part of the Roman province Maxima Cæsariensis. In Anglo-Saxon times it was included in Conquest it gradually acquired in one way or another that peculiar Bernicia, in the kingdom of Northumbria. After the Norman independence which was attached to "Counties Palatine." The bishops of Durham were temporal princes as well as spiritual rulers, exercising most of the royal prerogatives, such as paramount property in all lands, and supreme jurisdiction both civil and military, privileges would be the more readily conceded to this county on as in making war, right of forfeiture, levying of taxes, &c. These account of its remoteness from the metropolis, and its proximity to the hostile kingdom of Scotland, in order that the inhabitants, having justice administered at home, might not be obliged to go out of their county, and leave it open to an enemy's incursions. For they pleaded privilege not to pass over Tees or Tyne for military service, their special charge being, as was alleged, to keep and defend the sacred body of St Cuthbert, whence they were called "Haliwer fole" (Holy war folk). By an Act passed in the 27th year of Henry bishops of Durham had enjoyed, and at the death of Bishop Van VIII. a heavy blow was struck at the regal powers which the Mildert in 1836, an Act was passed whereby all temporal jurisdic tions and privileges were declared to be for ever removed from the bishopric. Up to that time the bishops opened the assizes in person, as being still at the head of the administration of justice, the judges sitting by virtue of the bishop's writ. Durham is now included in the province of York, and in the north-eastern circuit. The principal county histories are those by Hutchinson and Surtees, the latter incomplete, but, so far as it goes, it is a noble work, one of the very best of that class ever published. Murray's handbooks to the county and to the cathedral, though occasionally inaccurate, are full of interesting and valuable information.

DURHAM CITY, a municipal and parliamentary borough of England, and the chief town of the county of Durham, is situated on the River Wear (which is crossed there by four bridges), 14 miles S. of Newcastle and 60 miles N.N.W. of York. Though there was a small Roman camp at Maiden Castle Hill, about a mile distant, Durham itself dates only from the end of the 10th century, when the monks of Lindisfarne rested there with the body of St Cuthbert, after wandering about with it almost all over the north of England. Soon afterwards a church was built by Bishop Ealdhune, and the removal of the see from Lindisfarne thither, together with the growing fame of the incorruptible body of the saint, led to the rise of the city. The rocky peninsula on which Ealdhune's church was founded, about 80 feet above the river, was called Dunholme (Hill Island),

VII. — 71

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the abbey, contains a number of curious and interesting printed books, and MSS., and the portable altar, vestments, and other relics found in St Cuthbert's grave. The see of Durham was long the richest bishopric in England. The total revenue of the dean and chapter during the seven years ending 1834 amounted to £36,937 a year. On the death of the incumbent in 1836, at the recommendation of the Ecclesiastical Commissioners, the income of the bishop was fixed at £8000 per annum-the surplus revenues of the see being reserved to form a fund for augmenting the incomes of the poorer bishops.

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church was rebuilt by Bishop Carileph, who changed the Anglo-Saxon establishment of married priests into a Benedictine abbey.

Arms of Bishopric.

Castle, &c.-The castle of Durham consists of a polygonal keep, now reconstructed to form a very inconvenient set of college rooms; the great hall built by Bishop Hatfield, which in some respects exceeds any hall in the older universities; the Norman hall, now cut up into rooms; the old Norman crypt chapel; Bishop Tunstall's chapel, at present in use; the Black Staircase, built by Bishop Cosin; and the kitchen, the gate-house, and other offices. These are grouped round a court very irregular in plan, and not less picturesque in general effect. Durham Castle was the chief residence of the bishops of the Palatinate, but is now appropriated to the uses of the university, with the exception of the state apartments, which are partly reserved for the bishop and for Her Majesty's judges of assize. The university was opened in 1833; an account of it will be found under UNIVERSITIES. Besides the cathedral, Durham has seven parish churches. There are also places of worship for Roman Catholics, and for various denominations of Protestants. The grammar school attached to the cathedral was founded by Henry VIII. in 1541, and possesses eighteen "king's scholarships," of the annual value of nearly £40 each. There are also several scholarships and exhibitions tenable at the universities. The original school-room is now used by the university of Durham; the new buildings are beautifully situated to the west of the city, and are very handsome and commodious, including residences for the head and second masters, and a school infirmary. Durham possesses flourishing diocesan training colleges for schoolmasters and schoolmistresses; and about four miles to the west of the city is the great Roman Catholic College called St Cuthbert's College, Ushaw, the present representative of the old college at Douai.

The Cathedral.-Carileph's grand Norman church still forms the main part of the cathedral buildings; but numerous additions have been made from time to time, the chief of which are the Galilee or western chapel, of the Transitional period, the eastern transept or "Nine Altars" and the western towers (Early English), and the central tower (Perpendicular). Decorated and Perpendicular windows have, as is usual in old churches, been freely inserted. The interior presents the appearance, as Dr Johnson remarked, of "rocky solidity and of indeterminate duration," and combines, we may add, absolutely perfect proportion in all its original parts with a harmonious magnificence of detail in its massive columns, arches, and stone groining. It has recently been thoroughly cleaned, and supplied with much painted glass and very costly modern fittings, including a new organ built on the largest scale and of fine tone. Durham Cathedral, or "The Abbey," as old-fashioned residents still call it, has long been celebrated and still maintains its reputation for its choral services, as being at least equal to any in England in point of musical execution. This glorious building has been admirably illustrated in Carter's Plates, and in Billings's Architecture of Durham Cathedral. It is 507 feet in length, by 200 in extreme breadth, with a central tower 214 feet in height, and two smaller ones 138 feet high at the west end. The Galilee or western chapel was built by Bishop Pudsey between 1153 and 1195, and contains the supposed remains of the Venerable Bede. In the chapel of the Nine Altars are the remains of St Cuthbert, brought to light in 1827. The cathedral library, formerly the dormitory and refectories of

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