[311] Survey of London (Everyman’s Library), p. 416.
[312] The Peck family may have been inn-keepers or dealers in peck or fodder, but more probably, like the Bucks and the Boggs, they may trace their descent much farther.
[313] See infra, p. 689.
[314] Akerman, J. Y., Ancient Coins, p. 17.
[315] There is a river Slee or Slea in Lincolnshire.
[316] Travels in the East (Bohn’s Library), p. 384.
[317] Larwood & Hotten, The History of Signboards, p. 285.
[318] It is simply futile to refer the word inn to “within, indoors” (see Skeat).
[319] Celtic Britain, p. 66. It is therefore feasible that Wrens Park, by Mildmay Park, Hackney, was primarily reines Park.
[320] Prehistoric Britain, p. 247.