Footnote 1250:[(return)]

Skene, i. 285.

Footnote 1251:[(return)]

Pp. [103], [116], supra.

Footnote 1252:[(return)]

Chretien, Eric, 1933 f.; Geoffrey, Vita Merlini, 41; San Marte, Geoffrey, 425. Another Irish Liban is called Muirgen, which is the same as Morgen. See Girald. Cambr. Spec. Eccl. Rolls Series, iv. 48.

Footnote 1253:[(return)]

William of Malmesbury, de Ant. Glaston. Eccl.

Footnote 1254:[(return)]

San Marte, 425.

Footnote 1255:[(return)]

Op. cit. iv. 49.

Footnote 1256:[(return)]

Joyce, OCR 434; Rh[^y]s, CFL i. 170; Hardiman, Irish Minst. i. 367; Sébillot, ii. 56 f.; Girald. Cambr. ii. 12. The underworld is sometimes reached through a well (cf. p. [282], supra; TI iii. 209).

Footnote 1257:[(return)]

Le Braz2, i. p. xxxix, ii. 37 f.; Albert le Grand, Vies de Saints de Bretagne, 63.

Footnote 1258:[(return)]

A whole class of such Irish legends is called Tomhadna, "Inundations." A typical instance is that of the town below Lough Neagh, already referred to by Giraldus Cambrensis, Top. Hib. ii. 9; cf. a Welsh instance in Itin. Cambr. i. 2. See Rh[^y]s, CFL, passim; Kennedy, 282; Rev. des Trad. Pop. ix. 79.

Footnote 1259:[(return)]

Scott. Celt. Rev. i. 70; Campbell, WHT Nos. 38, 52; Loth, i. 38.