( 797 ) 
Years ElU had enough to do in Suffex ; and the Blow 
he had given him the Ninth Year at 
oblig’d him to be quiet the other two Years of Hen- 
gift^ and till his Succours { as above*mention’d ) came 
to him from German'^, Befides, we have not the lead; 
Hint from any of our Hiftorians, that Andtrida, was an 
Eye- fore, either to Hengift or his Son Esk after him ; 
or that Ella affided the Kcntijh Saxons, or the Kentijh 
Saxons E^lla in reducing it : Therefore this mufl: be a 
Suppofition only of Mr. Camden, in order to give Strength 
to the Notion of Anderidds being at Nervenden. Ta- 
king no notice therefore of that Suppofition, we may 
confider Nesvenden is on the Kent fide of the Limen 
( for fo is the River Rather call’d ^ in the Saxon An- 
nals, and by Mathevp Weftminfler ; and the Mouth of it 
nam’d Partus Lmeneut, and CinUttE hy Ethelrverd and 
/denr. HuntindonO and that Kent having been fubdued 
by Hengif; and his Saxonr, near Forty Years before i 
the Town at the Mouth of the L'men, and the reft, 
if any, up the Stream on the fide of Kent, weiQ aUb > 
part of their Conqueft. 
Furthermore, after it had coft Ella fo much Time, 
and no doubt Pains too, in reducing the plain Ground 
of Su(fex, ’tis not likely he fhould call more Forces out 
of Germany, that he might lead them Thirty Miles, 
through the Difficulties of the great Wood ( which he 
muft have done if Netvenden were the Place, ) to be° 
fiege a City, fo far from his own, and within the Ken- 
tijh-Saxon Limits, efpecially if there’s any heed to be 
given to the Words of Math. V/ejlminjier before cited 5 
who, after relating the fad Fate of the Inhabitants and 
City 
’ Chron. Sax. A. Dom DCCCXCIII. Mat. Wcftm. Fl. Hift. A. Dom, 
DCCCXCII. ^ Ethelwerd. Lib. HI. cap. iii. A. D. DCCCXCIIL.:, 
Hen. Hunt. Hift. Lib, V, Alfr. Reg, an. 19, 
