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|   | introduction | 
 
 
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|   | list, 2nd qtr 19th century | 
 
 
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|  | Gentleman's Magazine 1839 part 2 p.509 
 
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| book review Guide to Naworth and Lanercost
 Samuel Jefferson
 
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|  | Guide to Naworth and  
Lanercost 
 Book review.
 A Guide to Naworth and Lanercost; or, Historical and  
Descriptive Accounts of Naworth Castle and Lanercost Priory, 
and a Life of Lord William Howard. Carlisle: by  
Samuel Jefferson. 12mo.
 THIS is a pleasing guide-book, offered by the author of the  
History of Carlisle (which was reviewed in our May number,  
p.516), to those of his friends who devote a summer's  
holiday to a visit to the towers of Naworth, or the  
mouldering arches of Lanercost.
 Naworth Castle, the chief residence of the Dacres lords of  
Gilsland, has been characterised by Sir Walter Scott as "one 
of those extensive baronial seats which marked the splendour 
of our ancient nobles, before they changed the hospitable  
magnificence of a life spent amongst numerous tenantry, for  
the uncertain honours of court attendance, and the equivocal 
rewards of ministerial favour." It was here that the  
celebrated Lord William Howard, better known as Bold or  
Belted Will Howard,* a man
 
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|  | * "Lord William," says Mr. Howard, in his Memorials  
of the Howard Family, "is in the Lay of the Last Minstrel  
called by Sir Walter Scott Belted Will Howard,  
meaning, I apprehend, that he was in the habit of wearing  
the baldrick, or broad belt, which was formerly worn  
as a distinguishing badge by persons of high station. But  
this, as to him, is not at all founded on fact, as the belts 
which he wears in his pictures are particularly narrow. But  
the characteristic epithet with which his name has come down 
to our time is Bauld, meaning 'Bold Wyllie.' That of  
his lady is 'Bessie with the braid apron;' not, I  
conceive, from any embroidery of that part of her dress, but 
using the word broad, which is often so pronounced, in  
allusion to the breadth or extent of her possessions." 
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|  | gazetteer links 
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|   | -- Naworth Castle | 
 
 
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