[197] Jour. Brit. Archaeol. Assoc., 1884, L. p. 70; Folk-Memory, p. 166; T. Wright, Hist. of Ludlow, pp. 13-14, also his The Celt, the Roman, and the Saxon, 1861, p. 326.
[198] Nineteenth Century, 1887, p. 57.
[199] Allcroft, op. cit. p. 540. In this connection see W. Greenwell, British Barrows, 1877, p. 28 n.
[200] New Oxford Dict. under “Toot”; Skeat, Etymol. Dict. under “Tout”; J. Tait, in Class. Assoc, of Eng. and Wales; Ann. Rept., Supplementary Vol. II., 1909, pp. 1-3; Home Counties Magazine, IX. p. 315, X. pp. 75-7.
[201] Allcroft, op. cit. p. 421 n.
[202] Sir J. Rhŷs, Celtic Folklore, Welsh and Manx, 1891, I. p. 311. See also J. G. Kohl, Ireland, 1843, pp. 17-18.
[203] S. O. Addy, op. cit. p. 153. Cf. Jour. Brit. Archaeol. Assoc., 1873, XXIX. pp. 264-5, describing a “Toot Hill,” which proved to be a barrow; cf. Vict. Hist, of Stafford, 1908, I. p. 377. Further evidence is given in Jour. Brit. Archaeol. Assoc., 1906, N.S. XII. pp. 249-54.
[204] Jour. Anthrop. Inst., 1890, XX. p. 9.
[205] F. J. Bennett, Sketch Hist. of Marlborough in Neolithic Times, 1891, p. 11.
[206] Vict. Hist. of Oxford, 1907, II. 346.