By W. Jerome Harrison, F.G.S. 83 



Lewis, A. L. 1892. Stone Circles of Britain. Archceol. 

 Journ., XLIX., 136—154. 



They were probably " sun temples and star temples." At Stonehenge there 

 have doubtless been interments in the centre, but probably long after the 

 original construction of the circles. 



1895, c. British Stone Circles. Science, XXI, 161 ; 



274; and XXII, 17. 



In this American periodical Mr. Lewis gives a summary of the results of 

 his observations upon the stone circles of the British Isles. 



1899. Circles of Stanton Drew. Brit. Assoc. Bept. for 



1898, p. 1014. 



Eegards the " Cove" as the remains .of a shrine, resembling the similar 

 stones in the centres of the circles at Abury and Arborlowe. 



1900. Stone Circles of Scotland. Journ. Anthrop. 



Inst, XXX., 56—73 ; plans. 



Groups Avebury with Arborlowe as a " separate type." Stonehenge " forms 

 a class by itself." 



■■ 1901. Stonehenge. Times, 14th Jan, p. 5. 



Urges careful restoration and concreting. 



Lewis, Sir Gr. C [1806 — 1863] : Statesman and author. 

 1862. Astronomy of the Ancients; 8vo, viii, 527 : London. 



The last chapter deals with the " Navigation of the Phoenicians," including 

 the early tin and amber trade-routes, and the voyage of Pytheas. 



Lewis, Jno. [1675—1747]: Author. 

 1729. History of Great Britain ; fol. : London. 



Gives a repetition of Geoffrey's story of the massacre of the Britons by 

 Hengist " near the Abbey of Ambri, in 461 A.D." 



Lhuyd, Edward [1660 — 1709]: Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum. 

 1707. Arch^eologia Britannica; fol, 309 pp., with preface, 

 appendix, etc. : Oxford. 



Chiefly concerned with Celtic philology. Gives the etymology, grammar, 

 etc, of the Cornish; Irish; Armoric, etc., languages. 



Lockyer, Sir J. N. [b. 1836] : Astronomer. 

 1894. Dawn of Astronomy ; 4to, xvi, 432 ; illustrated : London. 



Many of the Egyptian temples are built so as to receive the rays of the 

 rising sun, or to mark the point of rising of some bright star. Quotes 

 Petrie (quite wrongly) as assigning a date of 2000 B.C. to Stonehenge. 



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