[2013] The Races of Britain, pp. 26, 249, 258.
[2014] Caesar’s Conquest of Gaul, 1899, pp. 302-5.
[2015] In regard to the ethnology of the Belgae, sec ib., pp. 301-25, with which cf. J. Rhys, Celtae and Galli, p. 60.
[2016] pp. 17, 35.
[2017] The Welsh People, 1902, p. 12. When that book appeared he was disposed to apply the word ‘Goidel’ to the mixed population of ‘Celticans’ and aborigines, who, he holds, became more closely fused under pressure from the Brythons. [For ‘Celticans’ he is now (?) inclined to substitute ‘Kelts’ of the ‘Celtic’ (not ‘Keltic’) family. Unlearned readers who scoff at subtle distinctions will find an explanation in the professor’s Celtae and Galli, p. 56. Is not the word Celtican unfortunate? The Celtici (Strabo, iii, 1, § 6) were in N.W. Spain.]
[2018] The Welsh People, 1902, p. 75.
[2019] Celtic Britain, 1904, p. 4.
[2020] See p. 499, infra.
[2021] F. Vogel, in his edition of 1888, adopts the reading Βρεττανικῶν νήσων in i, 4, § 7; but everywhere else he prints the word with Π, following the codex Vindobonensis. See p. 459, infra.
[2022] Rev. celt., xiii, 1892, pp. 399-400.