[27] Notes and Queries, 7th Ser., x. p. 11. Cf. G. Baldwin Brown, op. cit. II. p. 336.

[28] Murray, Handbook for Devon, 1895, p. 22.

[29] The discoveries now include a tessellated pavement, pottery, and a Roman lamp (Antiquary, 1911, N.S., VII. p. 162).

[30] W. Johnson, Folk-Memory, 1908, p. 88, et seqq.

[31] Conybeare, op. cit. pp. 265-6.

[32] Essex Naturalist, 1890, IV. p. 155.

[33] W. Harrod, Norfolk Archaeology, 1859, V. pp. 146-160 (plates and illustrations given); A. Suckling, Hist. and Antiq. of Suffolk, 1846, I. pp. 323-324; G. Baldwin Brown, op. cit. I. p. 270; M. Stokes, Three Months in the Forests of France, 1895, pp. xxxii, 158-62; A. H. Allcroft, op. cit. p. 344 n.

[34] C. Roach Smith, Collect. Antiq., V. p. 200.

[35] F. J. Haverfield, in Vict. Hist. of Norfolk, 1901, I. p. 290. The whole series of Prof. Haverfield’s contributions to the Victoria Histories will repay study. See also his valuable paper, The Romanization of Roman Britain, 1905, p. 33 (reprinted from the Proc. Brit. Academy, II.).

[36] Haverfield, in Vict. Hist. of Norfolk, I. pp. 314-5.