[35] Watkin’s “Roman Lancashire,” p. 203.
[36] “The Palatine Note–book,” iv. 201.
[37] Fishwick’s “History of Rochdale,” p. 7; also Lanc. and Ches. Arch. Soc., p. 73 et seq.
[38] Ibid., p. 12.
[39] Authorities differ as to this locality: one writer places it on the Firth of Forth, another in Worcestershire.
[40] Pp. 36, 39.
[41] Sanderson’s “History of England,” p. 44.
[42] A.D. 923.
[43] After the death of Cnut, in 1035, the kingdom was again divided, and Mercia and Northumbria fell to Harold. Harthacnut was (in 1039), however, King of all England.
[44] Vol. i., p. 12, 2nd edit.