Footnote 706:[(return)]
Strabo, iv. 4. 3, says these swine attacked strangers. Varro, de Re Rustica, ii. 4, admires their vast size. Cf. Polyb. ii. 4.
Footnote 707:[(return)]
The hunt is first mentioned in Nennius, c. 79, and then appears as a full-blown folk-tale in Kulhwych, Loth, i. 185 f. Here the boar is a transformed prince.
Footnote 708:[(return)]
I have already suggested, p. [106], supra, that the places where Gwydion halted with the swine of Elysium were sites of a swine-cult.
Footnote 709:[(return)]
RC xiii. 451. Cf. also TOS vi. "The Enchanted Pigs of Oengus," and Campbell, LF 53.
Footnote 710:[(return)]
L'Anthropologie, vi. 584; Greenwell, British Barrows, 274, 283, 454; Arch. Rev. ii. 120.
Footnote 711:[(return)]
Rev. Arch. 1897, 313.
Footnote 712:[(return)]
Reinach, "Zagreus le serpent cornu," Rev. Arch. xxxv. 210.
Footnote 713:[(return)]
Reinach, BF 185; Bertrand, 316.
Footnote 714:[(return)]
"Cúchulainn's Sick-bed," D'Arbois, v. 202.
Footnote 715:[(return)]
See Reinach, CMR i. 57.