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A Book of Cornwall

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2017
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16

There are two rivers Lew in West Devon and two in Wales. There is a Loue that flows into the Vézère. There is also Loe Pool by Helston; the root enters into lough or loch.

17

A new edition was published by Longmans in 1845.

18

Madoc and Madan are the same name; oc and an are diminutives. The real name was Aed. It became Mo-aedoc. Mo is a term of endearment-"my" – given to many Irish and Welsh saints.

19

I must caution the visitor against the blunders that crowd the pages of a little local guide to Golant. Amongst other misstatements is this, that the capitals are Norman and the arches of Moorish design. The four-centred arch is quite common in all third-pointed work.

20

Reprinted in Preb. Hingeston-Randolph's Registers of Bishop Grandisson. Exeter, 1897, p. 608.

21

The arch over door and window is decisive against sixth-century work. All the earliest Irish churches have a stone slab thrown across from the jambs, and no arch with key.

22

The church without, as outside of the camp.

23

Not Witherne in Galway, nor Ty Gwyn âr Daf. See Mrs. Dawson's article in Archæol. Cambr., 1898.

24

Sullivan, Introduction to O'Curry's Lectures on the Manners and Customs of the Ancient Irish, 1873, i. p. cliv.

25

Quite the best monograph on the colonisation of Brittany is by Dom Plaine, La Colonisation de l'Armorique par les Bretons insulaires. Paris: Picard, 1899. See also Loth (M. J.), Emigration Bretonne en Armorique. Rennes, 1883.

26

Figured in Wood-Martin, The Rude Stone Monuments of Ireland, 1888, p. 154.

27

Matthews, A History of St. Ives. London, 1892.

28

Jago (F. W. P.), Glossary of the Cornish Dialect. Truro, 1882.

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