[974] Not to be confounded with the castle of Clun in Shropshire.
[975] Annales Cambriæ and Annales de Margam. See plan in Arch. Camb., 4th ser., vi., 251.
[976] Annales Cambriæ.
[977] Really Ty-yn-yr Bwlch, the house in the pass. Not to be confounded with Tenby in Pembrokeshire.
[978] Cal. of Close Rolls, Ed. II., iii., 415, 643.
[979] See “Cardiff Castle: its Roman Origin,” by John Ward, Archæologia, lvii., 335.
[980] See “Cardiff Castle: its Roman Origin,” by John Ward, Archæologia, lvii., 335.
[981] Mr Clark thought the shell wall on the motte was Norman, and the tower Perp. But the wall of the shell has some undoubtedly Perp. windows. The Gwentian Chronicle says that Robert of Gloucester surrounded the town of Cardiff with a wall, anno 1111.
[982] See Gray’s Buried City of Kenfig, where there are interesting photographs. The remains appear to be those of a shell.
[983] Annales de Margam, 1232.