Footnote 2: [(return)]

Royal Commission 2nd Report, 1911, and 3rd Report, 1911; see also Laing and Huxley's Prehistoric Remains of Caithness, 1866.

Footnote 3: [(return)]

Survivals in Belief among the Celts, 1911.

Footnote 4: [(return)]

Tacitus, Agricola 22-28.

Footnote 5: [(return)]

Coille-duine, or Kelyddon-ii.

Footnote 6:

H.B., vol. i, p. 5.

Footnote 7: [(return)]

Anderson, Scotland in Pagan Times, p. 222. Two plates of brass found in Craig Carrill Broch. Copper 84%, tin 16%.

Footnote 8: [(return)]

See Laing and Huxley's Prehistoric Remains in Caithness, Laing ascribes a much greater antiquity to the Burgs, pp. 60-61. See Skene, Chron. Picts and Scots, pp. 157-160 as to a legend of their Scythian origin, and p. xcvi and p. 58.

Footnote 9: [(return)]

See Reeves' Life, and see H.B., vol. i, pp. 12-15; also Dr. Joseph Anderson's Scotland in Early Christian Times, 1879, p. 139.

Footnote 10: [(return)]

H.B., vol. i, pp. 10-17.

CHAPTER II.