Footnote 625:[(return)]
For the water-horse, see Campbell, WHT iv. 307; Macdongall, 294; Campbell, Superstitions, 203; and for the Manx Glashtyn, a kind of water-horse, see Rh[^y]s, CFL i. 285. For French cognates, see Bérenger-Féraud, Superstitions et Survivances, i. 349 f.
Footnote 626:[(return)]
Reinach, CMR i. 63.
Footnote 627:[(return)]
Orosius, v. 15. 6.
Footnote 628:[(return)]
LU 2a. Of Eochaid is told a variant of the Midas story—the discovery of his horse's ears. This is also told of Labraid Lore (RC ii. 98; Kennedy, 256) and of King Marc'h in Brittany and in Wales (Le Braz, ii. 96; Rh[^y]s, CFL 233). Other variants are found in non-Celtic regions, so the story has no mythological significance on Celtic ground.
Footnote 629:[(return)]
Ptol. ii. 2. 7.
Footnote 630:[(return)]
Campbell, WHT iv. 300 f.; Rh[^y]s, CFL i. 284; Waldron, Isle of Man, 147.
Footnote 631:[(return)]
Macdougall, 296; Campbell, Superstitions, 195. For the Uruisg as Brownie, see WHT ii. 9; Graham, Scenery of Perthshire, 19.
Footnote 632:[(return)]
Rh[^y]s, CFL ii. 431, 469, HL, 592; Book of Taliesin, vii. 135.
Footnote 633:[(return)]
Sébillot, ii. 340; LL 165; IT i. 699.
Footnote 634:[(return)]
Sébillot, ii. 409.