36 Bibliography of Stonehenge and Avebury. 



1891. Second Edition ; 8vo., xx„ 382 ; illustrated. 



Contains two page-cuts of Stonehenge. These stone circles are "commonly 



supposed to have been seats of Druid worship " (p. 8). 



Clappertou, W 



1858. Stonehenge Handbook. Twenty-fifth Edition; 8vo., 

 64 pp., with plan and illustrations. Walter Clappertou ; Salisbury. 



An abstract of the opinions of thirteen authors, from Camden, 1600, to 

 Duke, 1849. 



Clarke, C B. [b. 1832] : Indian Civil Service. 

 1874. Stone Monuments of Khasi Hills. Jowrn. Anthrop. 

 Inst., III., 481 — 493 ; with five woodcuts. 



" To set one of the slabs upright, one end is slipped into a hole dug 1 — 3 

 feet in the ground, while the other end is tugged by ropes. For putting 

 one stone upon another . . . it is drawn up a sloping stage of bamboo ; 

 but if the slab be of great weight, a slope of earth must be constructed, up 

 which it may be pulled." They transport the stones on wooden rollers. 



" Clarke, Rev. C. C (Sir Rich. Phillips ?) 

 1818. The Hundred Wonders of the Would, and of the Three 

 Kingdoms of Nature, described according to the best and latest 

 authorities: 12mo. : London. 



1820. Eighth Edition. 



Clarke, S. R. 1826. Vestigia Anglicana: two vols., 8vo. ; 

 pp, 432 ; 482 : London. 



For Stonehenge see Vol. I., pp. 1 — 5 ; 68 ; and 74. The whole is give n in the 

 form of a dialogue. "I cannot doubt that the Druids were the architects." 



Clodd Edward [b, L840]: Secretary} London Joint Stock Bank 

 I87r>. Childhood ok Religions: 8vo., viii, 288 : London. 



A good iiiid simple introduction to the general study of the subject. 



L895. STOEY OF PRIMITIVE Man: llhno., L'OOpp.. illustrated; 



London. 



Stonehenge (with two cuts) occupies pp. 129 — 130. 



1S1M). Stonkuknok. lhiihj Chronicle. 20 August. 



Stonehenge belongs to tin- 11 Bronze Age"; its date of erection being about 

 '250 B.C. 



