[77] G. E. Fox and W. St John Hope, in Vict. Hist. of Hants., I. p. 364. See also Archaeologia, LIII. pp. 564-8; G. Baldwin Brown, op. cit. I. pp. 145-6, II. p. 11; F. Bond, Gothic Archit. in England, pp. 195, 215, 223; O. M. Dalton, op. cit. p. 3.
[78] G. Baldwin Brown, op. cit. II. pp. 125, 293.
[79] Ibid. I. p. 271.
[80] G. E. Fox and W. St John Hope, in Vict. Hist. of Hants., I. p. 364.
[81] Ibid., loc. cit.
[82] A. Harnack, Expansion of Christianity in the First Three Centuries, tr. J. Moffatt, 1905, I. pp. 391-97; O. M. Dalton, op. cit. p. 28. Cf. W. E. Addis, Christianity and the Roman Empire, 1893, pp. 17, 18, 185-90.
[83] Sir G. L. Gomme, Folk-Lore as an Historical Science, 1908, p. 321.
[84] G. S. Tyack, Lore and Legend of the Eng. Church, 1899, p. 11; Conybeare, op. cit. p. 266.
[85] Bede, Eccles. Hist., L. i. c. 30.
[86] Bede, op. cit. L. i. c. 26. See also A. J. Giles’s edition, 1887, p. 29.