[30] Memoirs of the Anthropological Society, vol. i. p. 311.

[31] Across Africa.

[32] The Lakes and Mountains of Eastern and Central Africa: Elton, pp. 156 and 243.

[33] In Lewis’s Topographical Dictionary, published 1837, mention is made of a “wooden house” which formerly existed in Lough Annagh, vol. ii. p. 175.

[34] Journal Royal Hist. and Arch. Asso. of Ireland, vol. v. (4th Series), pp. 325-26.

[35] Journal Royal Hist. and Arch. Asso. of Ireland, vol. i. (3rd Series), pp. 220, 21, Rev. W. Kilbride.

[36] Joyce, Irish Names of Places, 4th ed. p. 299.

[37] Geology of Ireland, p. 278.

[38] The peasantry of the neighbourhood say that “crannog” signifies the hopper of a mill, and that in all probability there was formerly a mill there. This is the popular explanation given of every crannog in the kingdom.—MS. Letters, Ordnance Survey.

[39] Proceedings R. I. A., vol. vii. p. 157.