[227] In addition to the references given, these may be noted: Proc. Soc. Antiq. X. pp. 19-20; Jour. Brit. Archaeol. Assoc., XXXIX. pp. 431-33, XL. pp. 61-71; Antiquary, 2nd Ser., II. p. 80; P. H. Ditchfield, Our English Villages, 1889, p. 23.
[228] T. Wright, Hist. of Ludlow, 1852, pp. 13-14. The mound near Eccleston church, Cheshire, seems to be a barrow (W. Shone, Prehist. Man in Cheshire, 1911, pp. 55-6).
[229] Nineteenth Century, 1887, pp. 40-59.
[230] R. A. Smith, Vict. Hist. of Hertfordshire, 1902, I. p. 257.
[231] Jour. Brit. Archaeol. Assoc., N.S. III. p. 205. The whole question is thoroughly discussed by R. A. Smith in Vict. Hist. of London, 1909, I. pp. 124-5.
[232] J. De Baye, Indus. Arts of the Anglo-Saxons, trans. T. R. Harbottle, 1893, p. 125.
[233] Vict. Hist. of Buckinghamshire, I. p. 198; De Baye, loc. cit.; J. Y. Akerman, Remains of Saxon Pagandom, 1853, p. xx.
[234] Vict. Hist. of Bucks, loc. cit.; Archaeologia, XXXV. pp. 379-82.
[235] Vict. Hist. of Northampton, I. p. 215. The Norman church of Fordington, Dorchester (Dorset), was also built over a Roman cemetery.
[236] W. G. Wood-Martin, Traces of the Elder Faiths of Ireland, 1902, II. p. 313. Cf. Pagan Ireland, p. 590 et seqq.