64 Bibliography of Stonehenge and Avebury. 



Rank ; Clan ; Kinship ; Community ; the State ; Law and Custom ; 

 Property, etc. 

 Hearne, ThOS. [1678 — 1735] : Antiquary ; (Bodleian Library, 

 Oxford). 

 1705 — 14. Ebmarks and Collections of Thomas Hearne [MS.] 

 1885—98. Edited by C. E. Doble and D. W. Eannie for the 

 Oxford Historical Society ; four vols. : Oxford. 

 In this diary Hearne has noted down an enormous number of facts. Vol. II. 

 p. 289, mentions the ideas of Camden, Inigo Jones, Charleton, and Webb 

 about Stonehenge : p. 321 refers to the " Table or Plate of MetaU " engraved 

 with (runick) certain strange letters, which Camden says was found " in 

 or by the Monument in the reign of King Hen. 8." See also III., 434; 

 and IV., 318. 



1714 — 22. (Diary) : Reliqui^ Hearnian/E. 



1857. Edition by Bliss; three vols. : London. 



1869. Second Edition. 



In Vol. I., p. 80, mentions Bolton as the reputed author of " Nero Csesar." 

 Vol. II., p. 81, refers to letters from "Dr. Jas. Garden of Aberdeen to 

 Mr. John Aubrey, concerning the druid's temples. He observes that 

 these temples (as he calls the monuments that have any resemblance to 

 Stone-Henge) in the high lands of Scotland are called caer, which signifies 

 a throne, an oracle, or a 'place of address. Some of them are called 

 chapells." Vol. II., pp. 154, 206, describes interviews with Dr. Stukeley, 

 of whom Hearne writes very disparagingly : — " He is a very fanciful man, 

 and the things he hath published are built upon fancy." 



Hearne, Thos. [1744 — 1817] : Water-colour painter. 

 1786 — 1807. Antiquities of Great Britain illustrated in 

 Views ; two vols., 4to. : London. 



" Engraved by W. Byrne, from drawings made by Thos. Hearne " : with 

 descriptions. There is a third vol. of etchings. Stonehenge (from the 

 west) is Plate No. 51 — the " Tail-piece," and is accompanied by four 

 columns of descriptive letterpress, mainly derived from Stukeley. This 

 plate is duplicated by an etching. 



Hecatseus [of Abdera] [11. B.C. 330] : Gred- historian. 

 B.C. 330. The Hyperboreans. 

 1730. Hecataei Abderitae Fragmenta : collected by P. Zorn ; 8vo. : 



Altona. 

 This author wrote a book on " The Hyperboreans " ; but only 



fragments of it exist (as quotations by later writers, especially 



Diodorus). 

 The famous passage in which Hecatasus is supposed to refer to Britain, and 



