[35] See ante, pp. 3-5.
[36] Freeman, Norm. Conq. (2nd ed.) ii. 237.
[37] England in the Early and Middle Ages, i. 103.
[38] Casters and Chesters (Cornhill Magazine, xlv. 434).
[39] Anglo-Saxon Britain (S.P.C.K.), p. 65.
[40] Norman Conquest (2nd ed.), i. 18. It is, however, but right to state that Mr. Freeman may here not have meant what his words would imply. He was probably thinking not of the whole “name” but of the “Glou-,” for elsewhere he observes, “Here and there a place keeps a Welsh name ... like Gloucester and Winchester” (English Towns and Districts, p. 35), and even goes so far as to proclaim, exactly as I am myself doing, that “Our endless chesters everywhere proclaim the fact of their former Roman occupation. But they proclaim it by the name given to it by foreign conquerors, not by any title which the place bore while the rule of Rome lasted.” (Ibid. p. 192.)
[41] Roman Britain (S.P.C.K.), p. 180.
[42] Casters and Chesters, p. 423.
[43] Ibid. p. 419.
[44] Casters and Chesters, p. 434.