[3318] Rev. arch., nouv. sér., viii, 1863, p. 303.

[3319] Philologus, xxii, 1865, pp. 309-10.

[3320] B. G., vi, 34, 43.

[3321] Athenæum, Feb. 27, 1869, p. 317.

[3322] B. G., v, 12, § 5.

[3323] Origines Celticae, ii, 370-2.

[3324] Britain and the British Seas, 1902, p. 315.

[3325] J. Prestwich, Geology, ii, 1888, p. 502; Clement Reid, The Origin of the Brit. Flora, 1899, pp. 69, 146. Cf. J. Evans, Anc. Bronze Implements, p. 339, and Reliquary, N. S., vii, 1901, p. 92.

[3326] The late Professor Rolleston (Sc. Papers, ii, 1884, p. 780) argued that by praeter Caesar meant ‘besides’. It is true that he used the word several times in this sense (H. Meusel, Lex. Caes., ii, 1186-7): but when he did so the meaning was always unmistakable; and, as Mr. Colbeck remarks, in his school edition (p. 49), ‘to say “there is timber of all sorts besides the beech and the fir” is hardly a natural expression, unless these two trees were the commonest form of timber [or were non-existent in Gaul], which they were not.’

[3327] Hist. de Jules César, ii, 186, n. 2. Napoleon’s map (pl. 16) contradicts his text.