[1157] J. J. A. Worsaae, Pre-history of the North, tr. H. F. M. Simpson, 1886, p. 192; also (by the same writer), Industrial Arts of Denmark, 1882, pp. 190-2.
[1158] Baron J. de Baye, Indus. Arts of the Anglo-Saxons, p. 18. Prof. É. Metchnikoff, who cites the case of Duguesclin, gives an additional instance from Treves, A.D. 1781. See Nature of Man, tr. P. Chambers Mitchell, 1906, p. 141. See also Prim. Culture, I. p. 474.
[1159] Notes and Queries, 8th Ser., XII. p. 158. See, especially, E. P. Squarey, The “Moot” and its Traditions, 1906, pp. 34-5.
[1160] R. Southey, Letters of Espriella, 1st edition, 1807, I. pp. 52-3.
[1161] Notes and Queries, 7th Ser., VI. p. 73.
[1162] G. Rawlinson, in his edition of Herodotus, 1880, III. p. 63 n.
[1163] Pliny, Nat. Hist., l. VIII. c. 64.
[1164] E. Howlett, in Curious Church Customs, ed. W. Andrews, 1898, p. 129.
[1165] G. S. Tyack, Lore and Legend of the Eng. Church, 1899, p. 245. M. H. Bloxam, Monumental Architecture of Great Britain, 1834, pp. 96, 102.
[1166] Tacitus, De Moribus Germaniae, c. 10.