[19] I must caution the visitor against the blunders that crowd the pages of a little local guide to Golant. Amongst other misstatements is this, that the capitals are Norman and the arches of Moorish design. The four-centred arch is quite common in all third-pointed work.

[20] Reprinted in Preb. Hingeston-Randolph’s Registers of Bishop Grandisson. Exeter, 1897, p. 608.

[21] The arch over door and window is decisive against sixth-century work. All the earliest Irish churches have a stone slab thrown across from the jambs, and no arch with key.

[22] The church without, as outside of the camp.

[23] Not Witherne in Galway, nor Ty Gwyn âr Daf. See Mrs. Dawson’s article in Archæol. Cambr., 1898.

[24] Sullivan, Introduction to O’Curry’s Lectures on the Manners and Customs of the Ancient Irish, 1873, i. p. cliv.

[25] Quite the best monograph on the colonisation of Brittany is by Dom Plaine, La Colonisation de l’Armorique par les Bretons insulaires. Paris: Picard, 1899. See also Loth (M. J.), Emigration Bretonne en Armorique. Rennes, 1883.

[26] Figured in Wood-Martin, The Rude Stone Monuments of Ireland, 1888, p. 154.

[27] Matthews, A History of St. Ives. London, 1892.

[28] Jago (Mr.), Glossary of the Cornish Dialect. Truro, 1882.