In Wales, the Isle of Bardsey, off Carnarvon, alone offers an example of Céli-dé. Giraldus Cambrensis describes them in his Itinerarium Cambriae, 2, 6, p. 865.

The practical value of Dr. Reeves' work is much increased by an excellent index.

II.

Joseph Carriere, late Superior-General of the Sulpicians, and Vicar-General of Paris; St. Sulpice and the Church of France in his time. By T. J. O'Mahony, D.D., D.C.L. Dublin: Mullany, 1865, pp. 193.


[!-- H2 anchor --]

FOOTNOTES.

[!--Note--] 1 ([return])
No. viii., May, pag. 375.

[!--Note--] 2 ([return])
In the article we refer to the learned author (pag. 379) writes that the name Mechar and Machar are "clearly one and the same name". Their identity is indeed quite manifest in the extracts from our Irish writers, to which we will just now have occasion to refer.

[!--Note--] 3 ([return])
Page 376.