I 



By W. Jerome Harrison, F.G.S. 43 



1833. Second Edition ; 8vo., xiv., 475. 



Stonehenge was a Druidical Temple [pp. 370, 377, 409]. The two horse- 

 shoes of stones may symbolize the moon ; the two circles representing 

 the sun. For Serpent-worship in Britain see pp. 253 — 272 ; and for 

 Serpent-temples, pp. 359 — 410. 



1834. Dracontia [Abury, Carnac, etc.]. Archceologia, 



XXV., 188—229. 



"Dracontia" are Serpent Temples; such as Abury, etc. The term 

 originated in the fertile brain of Dr. Stukeley. 



1834. Celtic Monuments at Locmaeiaker. Archceologia, 



XXV., 230—234. 



A figure carved "on the lower side of the table of the great cromlech " 

 should be compared with that discovered by Dr. Tate at Stonehenge. 



[ ] (?) 1849. Review of Herbert's "Cyclops Christianus." 



Gent's Mag., n.s., XXXII., 483—491 [with cut of Avebury.] 

 Reproves Mr. Herbert for condemning Stukeley as an " impostor." 

 Ridicules Herbert's idea that Stonehenge and other similar erections 

 were raised in post-Roman times by the later Britons as substitutes 

 for the Groves of Oaks of their ancestors. 



[Defoe, Daniel.] [1661 — 1731] : Aiithor of " RoUnson Crusoe." 

 See Life of Defoe, by Lee ; 1869. 

 1724. Tour in England : Letter III., Hants ; Dorset ; Wilts ; 

 Somerset, etc. By a Gentleman : 8vo., 126 pp. : London. 

 Stonehenge (pp, 41 — 44) is prehistoric and its age uncertain ; "we must 

 leave it so." 



Diodorus SiCUlUS. [fl. B.C. 50] : Greek historian. 

 B.C. 8. BibliotheCjE Historic, etc. [Universal History, or 



" Library of Old Authors."] 

 1604. First printed edition : Hanover. 

 1721. Translation by G. Booth: "The Historical Library," in 



fifteen books, etc. : f ol. : London. 

 1814. Another edition of Booth's translation. 



1828. Edition by Dindorf ; six vols., 8vo. : Leipzig. 



See Book II., Chap, iii., for account of the Hyperboreans, etc. 



In Booth's edition, I., 138 — 9, we have the famous account (quoted from 

 Hecatseus) of the " renowned temple of a round form " in " an island over 

 against Gaul." It is supposed that this temple was either Stonehenge or 



