[137] When depicted with star-spangled garments she was the goddess of the starry sky ("Milky Way") like the Egyptian Hathor or Nut.
[138] Professor W. J. Watson, Place-names of Ross and Cromarty, pp. 62-3.
[139] Dr. Joyce, Irish Names of Places, Vol. I, p. 375.
[140] Ibid., Vol. II, p. 378.
[141] The two headlands, the "souters" or "sutors", are supposed to have been so called because they were sites of tanneries.
[142] The Diamond (Chicago, 1915).
[143] Natural History, Book IX. Chap. LIV.
[144] Tacitus, Manners of the Germans, Chap. XLV.
[145] British Museum Guide to the Antiquities of the Early Iron Age, pp. 135-6.
[146] Natural History, Book XXXVIII, Chapter III.