[237] Jour. Brit. Archaeol. Assoc., 1908, N.S. XIV. pp. 206-8. The cross is illustrated and discussed in Vict. Hist. of Cumberland, 1901, I. pp. 254-7; J. Nicolson and R. Burn, Hist. and Antiquities of Westmorland and Cumberland, 1777, II. pp. 478-9; W. Hutchinson, Hist. of Cumberland, 1794, I. p. 80 et seqq.
[238] T. W. Shore, Archaeol. Remains of Streatham, Balham and Tooting, 1903, p. 20. In connection with entrenched woodlands, notice Caesar, De Bell. Gall., V.C. 21, ‘Oppidum autem Britanni vocant, cum silvas impeditas vallo atque fossa munierunt’ (when the Britons have fortified a tangled woodland with rampart and ditch, they call it a town).
[239] T. H. Huxley, Elem. Physiology, 1885, p. 365.
[240] Chambers’s Encyclopaedia, Art. “Bone.”
[241] P. Kalm, Acct. of his visits to England (1748), trans. J. Lucas, 1892, p. 42; W. Cobbett, Rural Rides, ed. Pitt Cobbett, 1886, II. p. 15. Cf. Notes and Queries, 9th Ser., II. p. 126.
[242] Notes and Queries, 7th Ser., III. pp. 456-8, IV. p. 72.
[243] W. G. Wood-Martin, op. cit. II. p. 47, and generally pp. 46-115; also his Pagan Ireland, pp. 157-164, and especially p. 160; J. Bonwick, Irish Druids and Old Irish Religions, 1894, pp. 240-1; W. Henderson, Folk-Lore of the Northern Counties, pp. 2-3.
[244] O. Montelius, Civilization of Sweden in Heathen Times, tr. F. H. Woods, 1888, p. 200 n.
[245] G. S. Tyack, Lore and Legend of the Eng. Church, 1899, p. 15.
[246] Ibid.