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



133 



Includes Stukeley's Common-place Book ; and his correspondence with 

 Koger and Samuel Gale and other antiquaries. There are fifty-seven 

 references to Stonehenge ; twenty-seven to Avebury ; aud nine to Silbury 

 Hill. 



Stukeley writes of himself (Vol. I., p. 52), that he " spent; every year a 

 month or two at Abury and at Ambresbury in Wilts, and by innumerable 

 drawings and measurements made himself master of the nature of the 

 two great [Druidical] temples of Stonehenge and Abury, with many 

 lesser." 



* ■ 



Sydenham, Jno. [1807 — 1846] : Antiquary. 

 1841. Baal Durotrigensis ; 8vo. : London. 



A description of the ancient colossal figure at Cerne, in Dorset. The 

 author distinguishes the original Celtic inhabitants of the district from 

 the Belgae. 



Symonds, Col. Rich. [1617 — 1692] : Royalist and antiquary. 

 1644. Diary of the Marches of the Boyal Army during 



the Great Civil War. [MS.] 

 1859. Edited by C. E. Long [Camden Soc.] ; 4to., xiv., 296 



London. 



The original MS. is in the British Museum. The army was near Marl- 

 borough during November, 1644, and encamped at Fyfield," a place so 

 full of a grey pibble stone of great bignes as is not usually seen . . . 

 the inhabitants calling them Saracen's stones ; you may goe upon them 

 all the way. They call that place the Grey-weathers, because a far off 

 they looke like a flock of sheepe " (p. 151). 



Tacitus [A.D. 55—117, c]. 

 97 A.D. Annales et Historic. 



1877. Translation [Bonn' Series] ; two vols., 8vo., c. 500 pp. each : 

 London. 



Contains numerous references to Britain and the Britons ; but makes no 

 mention of either Avebury or Stonehenge. Tacitus tells us [II., 354, 

 etc.,] however, that Agricola incited the Britons " to erect temples, courts 

 of justice, and dwelling-houses." He also treats of the Druids in I., 

 372—78 ; and II., 236. 



Tate, Dr. Gr. R. 1862. Incised Marking at Stonehenge. 

 Archazol. Journal, XIX., 77 — 78. 



The impost of the trilithon which fell c. 1620 bears a sickle-shaped figure 

 about 9 inches in length, and the letters L V : (see Thurnam). 



Taylor, E. S. 1902. Stonehenge. Nature Notes, (Jan.) XIII. 1. 

 Protests against the enclosure of the monument: — "Stonehenge per- 

 manently enclosed would be a caged lion indeed ! " 



