531 
city, the privilege of a mint. It is one of Sitric, the father 
of Anlaf. On the obverse it bears a sword, the name 
SITRC, and LVDO, which can only be the name of a mint. 
On the reverse we have ERIC MOTI the moneyer's name 
and title. (See Lindsay's " Coinage of the Anglo-Saxons.") 
A notice of two or three monuments, similar to those 
which have occupied our attention in the foregoing pages, 
existing in the neighbourhood of Leeds, shall conclude this 
memoir. 
In Raistrick churchyard, there is the base or shaft of 
a cross two feet four inches high, tapering from about 
two feet eight inches to two feet one inch, and from two feet 
four inches to one foot ten inches, with the socket in which 
the cross was fixed at the top thirteen inches by ten, and 
nine inches deep. The northern, southern, and eastern sides 
are each divided by a vertical line into two panels ; the first 
has simple fretwork, the two others have spiral scrolls with 
foliage. The western side has probably an inscription, but I 
have not had an opportunity of visiting it, nor have I yet been 
able to procure a cast which would enable me to decypher it. 
On Hartshead Moor, not far from the church, there is the 
shaft of a cross, called Walton Cross. It stands upon a 
plinth, is four feet nine inches high, and tapers from three 
feet six inches to two feet four inches on its broad sides ; and 
from two feet ten inches to one foot eleven inches on its 
narrow sides. The latter are covered with fretwork ; of the 
former, one has a cruciform device in a circle, and below it 
a scroll with two birds ; the latter has a scroll with four birds, 
a frame of fretwork enclosing the device on each side. A 
fragment of the head which had been broken off", and lay 
by its side for many years, is now at Halifax. The devices on 
this monument are peculiar, but their character so strongly 
resembles that of the crosses at Ilkley, that I could fancy 
them the work of the same hand. 
