Andrew Coltee Ducarel, an English antiquary, born in Normandy in 1713, died in London, May 29, 1785. He was educated at Eton, and at St. John's college, Oxford, and made a journey to Normandy in 1752, which supplied materials for his "Anglo-Norman Antiquities" (4to, London, 1754; enlarged, fol., 1767). This was received with great favor, and though subsequent researches have proved the inaccuracy of some of its statements, yet it is still valued for its materials, especially its descriptions and representations of some monuments since destroyed. In 1762 he was elected a member of the royal society, and the next year he was appointed, with Sir Joseph Ay-loffe, to put in order the state papers at Whitehall. He annually travelled with one of his friends during August, taking with him Camden's " Britannia " and a set of maps, and examined minutely all places of interest. Among his other publications were " A Series of more than 200 of the Anglo-Gallic Coins of the Ancient Kings of England, illustrated in 12 Letters" (4to, 1757); "The Histories and Antiquities of the Archiepiscopal Palace at Lambeth;" and numerous papers in the "Philosophical Transactions."