Footnote 11:[(return)]

Cæsar, i. 1.

Footnote 12:[(return)]

Cæsar, ii. 30.

Footnote 13:[(return)]

Cæsar, i. 1; Strabo, iv. 1. 1.

Footnote 14:[(return)]

Cf. Holmes, 295; Beddoe, Scottish Review, xix. 416.

Footnote 15:[(return)]

D'Arbois, Les Celtes, 175.

Footnote 16:[(return)]

Cæsar, ii. 4; Strabo, vii. 1. 2. Germans are taller and fairer than Gauls; Tacitus, Agric. ii. Cf. Beddoe, JAI xx. 354-355.

Footnote 17:[(return)]

D'Arbois, PH ii. 374. Welsh Gwydion and Teutonic Wuotan may have the same root, see p. [105]. Celtic Taranis has been compared to Donar, but there is no connection, and Taranis was not certainly a thunder-god. Much of the folk-religion was alike, but this applies to folk-religion everywhere.

Footnote 18:[(return)]

D'Arbois, ii. 251.

Footnote 19:[(return)]

Beddoe, L'Anthropologie, v. 516. Tall, fair, and highly brachycephalic types are still found in France, ibid. i. 213; Bortrand-Reinach, Les Celtes, 39.

Footnote 20:[(return)]

Beddoe, 516; L'Anthrop., v. 63; Taylor, 81; Greenwell, British Barrows, 680.