[2] Also between Hitchin and Cambridge, at Clothall, in Herts, on the Chiltern Hills, on the steep side of the Sussex Downs, in Clun Forest, in Carmarthenshire, and in Wilts.

[3] See p. 10.

[4] W. Long, in the Wilts Arch. Mag., p. 121.

[5] A furrow, or furlong, was, roughly speaking, the distance the plough would travel up or down the field before it was turned.

[6] Spinneys are plantations of trees growing closely together.

[7] A diocese is the district over which a bishop rules.

[8] In the Fens.

[9] The Cistercian houses here in England, however, were always known as abbeys, though Citeaux, their head-quarters, was in France.

[10] Commonly called Verulam, but Verulamium was its Roman name.

[11] feaden, that is, feed.