[2539] Hist. de Jules César, ii, 157, note.
[2540] Domesday Book of Kent, ed. L. B. Larking, 1869, p. 93, and Extension, p. 2.
[2541] I need hardly say that Digges’s statement, which refers only to the inlet where the port of Dover had been, does not support Redman’s assertion (p. 529, n. 4, supra).
[2542] Archaeologia, xi, 1792, p. 212, note a. Archcliff Fort is about 400 yards west of the first groyne on the western side of the Lord Warden Hotel.
[2543] Naut. Mag., 1850, p. 269. See also John Leland, Itin., vii, 1744, fol. 128, p. 117.
[2544] About 1 mile 4,100 feet in a straight line from the present high-water mark of ordinary tides (Six-inch Ordnance Survey, Sheet 68).
[2545] Nearly 2 miles beyond Crabble (ib., Sheets 67-8).
[2546] Archaeol. Cant., xx, 1893, p. 129.
[2547] Archaeologia, v, 1779, p. 325; John Lyon, Hist. of ... Dover, i, 1813, p. 9; Archaeol. Cant., xx, 1893, p. 131.
[2548] Ib., xviii, 1889, p. 202.