[1.] His jurisdiction extended from Norfolk around to Sussex.
[2.] This is the usually accepted division of tribes; but Dr. Latham denies that the Jutes, or inhabitants of Jutland, shared in the invasion. The difficult question does not affect the scope of our inquiry.
[3.] Gibbon's Decline and Fall, c. lv.
[4.] H. Martin, Histoire de France, i. 53.
[5.] Vindication of the Ancient British Poems.
[6.] Craik's English Literature, i. 37.
[7.] Sharon Turner, History of the Anglo-Saxons, book ix., c. i.
[8.] Bosworth's Anglo-Saxon Dictionary.
[9.] Kemble ("Saxon in England") suggests the resemblance between the fictitious landing of Hengist and Horsa "in three keels," and the Gothic tradition of the migration of Ostrogoths, Visigoths, and Gepidæ to the mouth of the Vistula in the same manner. Dr. Latham (English Language) fixes the Germanic immigration into Britain at the middle of the fourth, instead of the middle of the fifth century.
[10.] Lectures on Modern History, lect, ii.