200 The Church Heraldry of North Wiitshire. 
But the only point for my purpose is that the northern invaders when they 
followed the Romans gave their name, as the Romans had done before them, to 
these camps, and that their name of “ Bury ” had for them the same signifiance 
as “castle” had for the Roman, and signified the secured or sheltered dwelling- 
place of a tribe or clan, and that they were in fact the primitive towns of the 
earliest inhabitants of our island, and coeval with Abury. Thus Barbury, 
Ringsbury, Bury Town, Bury Hill, bear their silent and lasting witness to the 
Saxon use of these ancient dwelling-places, and as their tenure of them was long, 
and indeed until civilization superseded them with better towns, their distinctive 
name has kept its hold in our common use, whilst the Roman name has lingered 
more rarely among us. 
I am well aware that I shall in this lengthy paper have given no new light 
to many of your members. All that I can hope to have done is to have brought 
together some scattered information and to have shaped it after my own ideas 
on this subject. 
W. H. E. Mc. Kyicar. 
Che Chucy Heraldry of orth Ciltshive. 
By ArrHur ScHoMBERG, Esq. 
(Continued from Vol. xxiii., p. 50.) 
HUNDRED OF POTTERNE AND CANNINGS. 
DEVIZES. 
St. Jonn Baptist. 
Chancel, North Screen. 
122. I.—Per pale ermine and ermines, on a chevron between 
three fleurs-de-lys five fusils, each charged with an ermine spot, all 
counterchanged. ADDINGTON. 
123. II—Ermine, on a chief indented gules three estoiles, or. 
Estcourt. 
124, III.—Svurron (12). 
125. IV.—Argent, on two bars azure three martlets or, 2, 1. 
WILLY. 
Eleanor Sutton, 1844. 
