58 Bibliography of Stonehenge and Avebury. 



in a " MS. of the Scala Mundi in Benet College library, E. viii., p. 57, 

 written about 1340 and continued to 1450," is reproduced ; being " the 

 oldest view " known of Stonehenge. [See also Catalogue of Books o)i 

 British Topography bequeathed to the Bodleian Library by Rich. Gough ; 

 4to. : Oxford : 1814.] 



1789. New Edition (Translation) OF Camden's "Britannia," 



I 



three vols., fol. ; London. 

 1806. Second Edition; four vols., fol., (c. 550. pp. per vol.) 

 Wiltshire occupies pp. 129 — 164 of Vol. I. ; Stonehenge being described on 

 pp. 134 — 136, and 155 — 157 ; with three cuts and four ground-plans of 

 the monument. Silbury is described on p. 159 ; and Abury — "a stupendous 

 monument of druidism "—on pp. 160— 161 : [Edition of 1806]. Gough 

 makes certain additions to Camden's original remarks. 



Gould, P. C. [b. 1844] Caricnturist. 

 1901. " On Salisbury Plain " [page-plate]. Westminster Budget 

 (Jan. 11), XVII., 1. 



The uprights of Stonehenge which still remain (more or less) vertical, are 

 depicted as bearing the heads of the present members of the Cabinet ; while 

 the fallen stones are made to represent certain other politicians (Goschen, 

 Chaplin, etc.) who have lately ceased to belong to that august body. 



Graham, T. H. B. 1896. Druidism. Gent's Mag., pp. 599—614. 



Druidism was peculiar to the Celtic race. A summary is given of what is 

 known about the Druids and their doctrines. 



Greatheed, Sev. Sam. 1812. Origin of the Inhabitants 



OF THE British Islands. Arehceologia, xvi., 95 — 122. 



The earliest Southern Britons were not Celts but Iberians ; the Celts were 



a distinct original nation, which included also the Belgae and the Germans. 



1814. Letter to Jno. Britton. Beauties of England : 



[Vol. XV., Wiltshire, 707—714]. 



The smaller or " foreign " stones of Stonehenge are Druidical, and are older 

 than the rest of the monument. 



Green, J. R. [1837—1883]: Historian. 

 1882. Making of England ; 8vo., xxviii., 447 ; with twenty-nine 

 maps : London. 



The Gewissas or West Saxons were the first of that nation to conquer 

 Wiltshire, in 552 A.D. Upon capturing the strong fortress of Sorbiodunum 

 [Old Sarum] they found that " its fall brought with it the easy winning 

 of the district which it guarded; as well as the downs on whose edge 



