I 



By W. Jerome Harrison, F.G.S. 77 



Overton " ; and considers that the term " stone row " therein used refers 

 to the Kennet avenue, etc. 



1857. The Word " Stonehengb." Mtes and Queries, 



ser. 2, III., 2—3. 



It is the Anglo-Saxon word Stanhengena, or Stanhengen ; and means " the 

 stone-gallows." 



Eemm, W. C. 1869. Eeply to the Query relating to 

 Stonehenge. Wilts Mag., XI., 243. 



[For query, see same vol., p. 112.] Does not know of any large blocks of 

 sarsen stone built into the churches near Stonehenge ; but considers that 

 similar stones occur in the walls, etc., of West Amesbury House. 



Eenrick, Rev. Jno. [1788 — 1877]: Historian. 

 1855. Phcenicia ; 8vo., xxiv., 468 : London. 



Describes the early traffic in tin and in amber. " As the PhcEniciaus made 

 no settlements in Britain, and merely anchored their vessels, first at the 

 Scilly Isles and afterwards at Maunts' Bay, returning at the close of 

 summer to the south of Spain, it is not wonderful that no inscriptions or 

 monuments of any kind attest their presence or their influence in our 

 island " (p. 221). 



Kenward, James. 1881. Keltic Element in England. 

 ProG. Birmingham Phil. Soc, II., 309 — 342. 



The Neolithic tribes of Britain were " small-statured, long-skulled and dark- 

 featured men of proto-Iberian stock." The eastern origin of the British 

 Kelts may help to explain their temple -building ; and the circles of Stone- 

 henge may be connected with the Circles of Transmigration. 



Eenworthy, Jos. 1899. Antiquities of Bolsterstone, etc. 

 Eeliq^um/,\., 145 — 160 ; illustrated. 

 At a hamlet eight miles west of Sheffield are two stones, one of which 



contains two so-called " mortise-holes." The author thinks that these 



stones once formed part of a trilithon. 



Keysler, Jno. Geo. [1683 — 1743J : German Antiq^iary. 



1720. Antiquitates Selects Septentrionales et Celtics; 

 Svo., xxviii., 590 ; illustrated : Hanover. 



An essay upon Stonehenge, etc., occupies pp. 1 — 234, and has four 

 folding plates (after Jones and Webb) illustrating the monument. Keysler 

 was the first to give to the antiquaries of the Continent representations of 

 this famous British monument. He quotes from Aubrey, Jones, Charleton, 

 etc. ; and believes that either the Anglo-Saxons or the Danes were the 

 erectors of Stonehenge. 



