[69] William of Malmesbury calls her Æthelswith.
[70] Of the Gaini nothing is known.
[71] Largely from the Chronicle.
[72] ‘A compound of tig (Modern Welsh tŷ, “house”), and guocobauc (Modern Welsh gogofawg), an adjective derived from gogof, “cave.” ... The name ... is certainly applicable to Nottingham, which has long been famous for the houses excavated out of the soft sandstone upon which it stands’ (Stevenson). The word Nottingham itself, however, has not this meaning.
[73] Here and elsewhere in the text often spelled Æthered.
[74] From the Chronicle.
[75] In Norfolk.
[76] Mostly from the Chronicle.
[77] Chiefly from the Chronicle.
[78] Five and one-half miles southwest of Reading.