[97] Y Cymmrodor, xxviii.
[98] Triad 4.
[99] “The notion that the Albanian is a mere mixture of Greek and Turkish has long been superseded by the conviction that though mixed it is essentially a separate language. The doctrine also that it is of recent introduction into Europe has been similarly abandoned. There is every reason for believing that as Thunmann suggested, it was, at dawn of history, spoken in the countries where it is spoken at the present moment.”—Latham, R. G., Varieties of Man, p. 552.
[100] Rhys, J., Celtic Britain.
[101] The same root may be behind deruish or dervish.
[102] Gordon, E. O., Prehistoric London, p. 127.
[103] Virgil, Æneid, 79, 80, 81.
[104] Cornish Feasts and Folklore, p. 119.
[105] Malory, viii.
[106] I question the current supposition that this is a corruption of chy an woon or “house on the hill”.