PLANS AND PHOTOGRAPHS STONEHENGE, AND OF TURUSACHAN IN THE ISLAND OF LEWIS; WITH NOTES RELATING TO THE DRUIDS SKETCHES OE CROMLECHS IN IRELAND, COLONEL SIR HENRY JAMES, R.E., F.R.S., F.G.S., M.R.I.A., &c. Director-General of the Ordnance Survey. 1867. PREFACE. This short account of Stonehenge and Turusachan, with the few well-known passages from ancient authors relating to the Druids, and to the progress made in the mechanical arts in Gaul and Britain, at, and for some time before the Roman conquest, is circulated for the information of the Officers on the Ordnance Survey, in the hope that it may stimulate them to make Plans and Sketches, and to give Descriptive Remarks of such Objects of Antiquity as they may meet with during the progress of the Survey of the Kingdom. I have also given Sketches of four Irish Cromlechs, for comparison with those found in Great Britain. HENRY JAMES, Colonel , Royal Engineers , Director-General of the Ordnance Survey. Southampton, 29th May, 1867. STONEHENGE. Tiie celebrated structure called Stonehenge, that is, the “ Hanging Stones,” stands in a commanding position on Salisbury Plain, about seven and a-lialf miles north of the city of Salisbury and two miles west of Amesbury. The plain for two or three miles round Stonehenge is thickly studded over with tumuli, in almost every one of which cinerary urns containing the calcined bones of the dead, with their ornaments and arms, have been found ; and the whole plain to the distance of from ten to fifteen miles round, is more or less covered with similar tumuli. The structure, when complete, consisted of an outer circle of thirty large stones, upon which thirty other large stones were laid horizontally so as to form a perfect continuous circle. This circle is 100 feet in diameter within the stones. The stones in the uprights have each two tenons on their upper surfaces, which fit into mortices cut into the under surface of the horizontal stones, by this mode of con- struction the whole circle was braced together. The average dimensions of the up- rights in this circle are 1 2 ft. 7 in. high out of the ground, 6 ft. broad, and 3 ft. 6 in. thick. B o Those in the circle resting on the uprights are about 10 ft. long, 3 ft. 6 in. wide, and 2 ft. 8 in. deep. Within this circle there are five stupendously large trilithons, each consisting of two uprights with tenons on them, supporting a large horizontal lintel, in which two mortices are cut to receive the tenons. These trilithons, as may be seen on the plan, are arranged in the form of a horse shoe, so that one of them at A is central as regards the other four. The horizontal stone F called the Altar stone, lies in front of the central trilithon, and we see that the axial line of the structure is from N.E. to S.W., or on the line of the two stones G, H. The five trilithons are arranged very symmetrically within the outer circle, and nearly at the distance of half the radius from the centre. The dimensions of the trilithons are nearly as follows: — feet in. feet in. feet in. A — Height of upright out of ground. 22 5 Breadth, 7 6 Thickness, 4 0 Lintel, Length, 15 0 „ 4 6 „ 3 6 B — Height of upright out of ground. 17 o „ 7 0 „ 4 0 Lintel, Length, 15 9 „ 4 0 „ 3 7 C — Height of upright out of ground, 16 6 „ 7 9 „ 4 0 Lintel, Length, 17 0 „ 4 0 „ 2 8 D — Height of upright out of ground. 22 0 „ 8 3 „ 4 3 Lintel, Length, 16 0 „ 4 0 „ 3 6 E — Height of upright out of ground. 16 6 „ 7 0 „ 4 0 The Altar stone F is 17 ft. long and 3 ft. 6 in. wide. All the stones in the outer circle and in the trilithons are of an indurated tertiary sandstone, which is found upon the chalk in the neighbourhood, and more 3 particularly near Avebury and Marlborough, where they are known by the name of the “ Sarsen” stones, and the “ Grey Wethers.” They have all been roughly squared and dressed, especially at the joints between the lintels and uprights where the surfaces have been truly worked and the tenons and mortices truly fitted into each other. In addition to these there was formerly a complete circle of thirty smaller upright stones about six feet high, which was intermediate in position between the outer circle and the five trilithons. Within the trilithons there was also a row of smaller stones about seven feet six inches high, parallel to the trilithons as represented on the plan of “ Stonehenge restored.” Mr. Cunnington in a letter to Sir Richard Colt Hoare, has suggested the idea that these small stones did not form part of the original structure, an opinion in which I concur. They were probably monumental stones to the memory of chieftains and priests, afterwards erected within the temple. These smaller stones are of various kinds of igneous and primitive rocks, and are evidently erratic blocks from the north of England and from Scotland, trans- ported by the agency of ice. Many of such stones are still to be seen lying about in all parts of the country, although for ages the people have been using them for building and other purposes. Only seventeen of the thirty upright stones of the outer circle are now standing, and only six of the thirty lintels are now in their places. Of the trilithons only two (B and C) are perfect ; the lintel and one of the uprights of A has fallen and lies broken upon the Altar stone F, whilst the other upright is in an inclined position, and supported only by one of the smaller stones which stood in front of it ; this fell in 1620. D lies prostrate, having fallen outward with its capstone on the 3rd January, 1797. One of the uprights of E has fallen inwards and is broken into three parts, and its lintel also is broken into three parts. Of the circle of smaller stones very few remain standing ; the small lintel on the left of the central entrance is all that remains to indicate that there were probably some lintels on this circle, as there may also have been on the inner row of stones. The structure is surrounded by a circular enclosure of earth, about 300 feet in diameter, with a shallow ditch outside it. The construction of this grand work has traditionally, and I think rightly, been attributed to the Druids, of whom a short account is given below. Those who require a fuller account of Stonehenge should consult Sir Bichard Colt Hoare’s great work on the Antiquities of Wiltshire. THE DRUIDS. Diodorus Siculus, wlio wrote about forty years before Christ, tells us, although he distrusts the accounts, regarding them “ as much like fables,” that Ilecatajus, [who wrote about 500 years before Christ] and others, say, “ there is an “ island iu the ocean over against Gaul, (as big as Sicily) under the arctic pole, “that the soil here is very rich, and very fruitful, and the climate temperate, “insomuch as there are two crops in the year,” and that “the Hyperboreans “ inhabit this island, and use their own natural language.” It is curious that from his own description of Britain, which he states is “ over 'against Gaul,” “ in form triangular like Sicily,” as being “under the arctic pole,” and “the inhabitants the original people thereof,” Diodorus did not recognise the fact that this island of the Hyperboreans was in reality the island of Britain. Indeed there is no other island to which this description could by possibility apply. Hecatieus wrote at a time when the Western parts of Europe were almost absolutely unknown to the Greeks, and only such imperfect knowledge reached 6 them as was brought by adventurous traders in gold, tin, amber, &c., and these we know from history were very jealous to conceal the knowledge of the places from whence they brought these valuable products. Thus Herodotus, who wrote about the year 410 B.C., or 90 years after Hecatreus, whose writings lie quotes, says : — - “ Concerning the Western extremities of Europe I am unable to speak with certainty, for I do not admit that there is a river called by the barbarians Eridanus (the Rhine) which discharges itself into the sea towards the north, from which amber is said to come, nor am I acquainted with the Cassiterides islands from whence our tin comes. For in the first place, the name Eridanus shows that it is Grecian and not barbarian, and feigned by some poet ; in the next place, though I have diligently enquired, I have never been able to hear from any man who has himself seen it, that there is a sea on that side of Europe. However, both tin and amber come to us from the remotest parts. Towards the north of Europe there is evidently a great quantity of gold, but how procured I am unable to say with certainty.” — in. 115. We now know that the accounts which Herodotus and Diodorus so much distrusted were correct ; but seeing how very limited was the knowledge of the Geography of Europe which they possessed, we need not be surprised at their incredulity. This island was called the island of the Hyperboreans under the idea that it was in “ the void recesses of Nature,” and beyond the place from which the north winds came, just as the name of Hypernotians was given to those who lived beyond where the south winds were supposed to turn back again. Diodorus, quoting from Hecatams goes on to say “ these inhabitants demean themselves as if they were Apollo’s priests, who has there a stately grove and renowned temple of a round form, beautified with many rich gifts — and I incline to the belief, held by many writers, that the island here referred to could be no other than Britain, and that this celebrated temple of a round form is no other than Stonehenge, and that the priests referred to were the Druids. Tli at the island of the Hyperboreans was Britain, may be also argued from Csesar’s account of the Druids in Gaul, in which he says that “their institution “ came originally from Britain, and even at this day such as are desirous of being “perfect in it travel thither for instruction.” Britain, therefore, was clearly con- sidered to be the school and head quarters of the Druidical order, and would have been so quoted by writers such as Hecatseus, under whatever fanciful name their ignorance of geography might lead them to adopt. F or information more or less exact respecting the Druids of Britain and their temples would through the travel- lers mentioned by Csesar, be spread over the whole of Gaul, from the Atlantic to the Adriatic, and so carried on to Greece. If, therefore, we grant that the island of the Hyperboreans was Britain, it is almost impossible to resist the inference that the “renowned temple” of the Druids mentioned by Hecatreus was Stonehenge, for neither in Britain or elsewhere in Europe is any structure to be found equal to it in magnitude and design. The vast number of tumuli which surround Stonehenge, containing in rude urns the ashes of deceased chieftains and men of note, with their arms and personal ornaments, prove that this must have been a celebrated place of worship and burial long before the Boman conquest of Britain. These tumuli and their contents, as Sir B. C. Hoare observes, “evidently prove their high antiquity, and mark them of an era prior to the Boman invasion.” From the intimate relations existing between the two countries, and their inhabitants being of one religion, we may safely assume that the description given of the Druids in Gaul also applies to those who at the same time resided in Britain. The intimate relations which existed between Gaul and Britain at the time of, and before the invasion of Caesar is obvious from what ho says of the Suessiones who were “ possessed of a very large and fruitful country, over which, even of late “years, Divitiacus had been king, one of the most powerful princes of all Gaul, “ and who, besides his dominions in those parts, reigned also over Britain.” — Book iii. Chap. 4. In speaking of the Yeneti, whose territories were on the coast about Cherbourg, against whom he was preparing an expedition, he says : — ** This last state is by far the most powerful and considerable of all the nations inhabiting along the sea coast; and that not only on account of their vast shipping, wherewith they drive a mighty traffic in Britain, and their skill and experience in naval affairs, in which they greatly surpass the other maritime states ; but because lying upon a large and open coast, against which the sea rages with great violence, and where the havens, being few in number, are all subject to their jurisdiction; they have most of the nations that trade in those seas tributary to their state.” — Book iii., Chap. 8. 8 The Veneti, ho further says: Chap. 9, “despatched ambassadors into Britain, “ which lies over against their coast, to solicit assistance from thence.” Again, in Book iv. Chap. 18 he says that he “resolved to pass over into Britain, having “ certain intelligence that in all his wars with the Gauls, the enemies of the “commonwealth had ever received assistance from thence;” and in Book v. Chap. 10, describing Britain, he says : “ The island is well peopled, full of houses “built after the manner of the Gauls, and abounds in cattle. They use brass “money and iron rings of a certain weight. The provinces remote from the sea “ produce tin, and those upon the coast iron.” It is worthy of remark that the Yeneti also possessed the country about Quiberon on the Bay of Biscay, which includes the extraordinary Druidical structure at Carnac, in which there are 4000 huge upright unwrought stones. The following is the account of the Druids given by Caesar [about 50 B.C.], from which the accounts of subsequent writers are principally taken : — “ Over all Gaul, there are only two orders of men, in any degree of honour and esteem: for the common people are little better than slaves, attempt nothing of themselves, and have no share in the public deliberations. As they are generally oppressed with debt, heavy tributes, or the exactions of their superiors, they make themselves vassals to the great, who exercise over them the same jurisdiction as masters do over slaves. The two orders of men, with whom, as we have said, all authority and distinctions are lodged, are the Druids and nobles. The Druids preside in matters of religion, have the care of public and private sacrifices, and interpret the will of the gods. They have the direction and education of the youth, by whom they are held in great honour. In almost all controversies, whether public or private, the decision is left to them : and if any crime is committed, any murder perpetrated ; if any dispute arises touching an inheritance, or the limits of adjoining estates ; in all such cases, they are the supreme judges. They decree rewards and punishments ; and if any one refuses to submit to their sentence, whether magistrate or private man, they interdict him the sacrifices. This is the greatest punishment that can be inflicted among the Gauls ; because such as are under this prohibition, are considered as impious and wicked : all men shun them, and decline their conversation and fellowship, lest they should suffer from the contagion of their misfortunes. They can neither have recourse to the law for justice, nor are capable of any public office. The Druids are all under one chief, who possesses the supreme authority in that body. Upon his death, if any one remarkably excels the rest, he succeeds ; but if there are several candidates of equal merit, the affair is determined by plurality of suffrages. Sometimes they even have recourse to arms before the election can be brought to an issue. Once a year they assemble at a consecrated place in the territories of the G'arnutes,* whose country is supposed to be in the middle of Gaul. Hither such as have any suits depending, flock from all parts, and submit implicitly to their decrees. Their institution is supposed to come originally from Britain, whence it passed into Gaul ; and even at this day, such as are desirous of being perfect in it, travel thither for instruction. The Druids never go to war, are exempted from taxes and military service, and enjoy all manner of immunities. These mighty encourage- ments induce multitudes of their own accord to follow that profession ; and many are sent by their parents and relations. They are taught to repeat a great number of verses by heart, and often spend twenty years upon this institution ; for it is deemed unlawful to commit their statutes to writing ; though in other matters, whether public or private, they make use At Carnac ? 9 of Greek characters. They seem to me to follow this method for two reasons : to hide their mysteries from the knowledge of the vulgar ; and to exercise the memory of their scholars, which would be apt to lie neglected, had they letters to trust to as we find is often the case. It is one of their principal maxims that the soul never dies, but after death passes from one body to another ; which, they think, contributes greatly to exalt men’s courage, by disarming death of its terrors. They teach likewise many things relating to the stars and their motions, the magnitude of the world and our earth, the nature of things, and the power and prerogatives of the immortal gods. << The other order of men is the nobles, whose whole study and occupation is war. Before Caesar’s arrival in Gaul, they were almost every year at war either offensive or defensive ; and they judge of the power and quality of their nobles, by the vassals, and the number of men he keeps in his pay ; for they are the only marks of grandeur they make any account of. u The whdle nation of the Gauls is extremely addicted to superstition : whence, in threatening distempers, and the imminent dangers of war, they make no scruple to sacrifice men, or engage themselves by vow to such sacrifices ; in which they make use of the ministry of the Druids : for it is a prevalent opinion among them, that nothing but the life of man can atone for the life of man ; insomuch that they have established even public sacrifices of this kind. Some prepare huge Colossuses, of osier twigs, into which they put men alive, and setting fire to them, those within expire amidst the flames. They prefer for victims such as have been convicted of theft, robbery, or other crimes ; believing them the most acceptable to the gods : but when real criminals are wanting, the innocent are often made to suffer. Mercury is the chief deity with them : of him they have many images, account him the inventor of all arts, their guide and conductor in their journeys, and the patron of merchandise and gain. Next to him are Apollo, and Mars, and Jupiter, and Minerva. Their notions in regard to him are pretty much the same with those of other nations. Apollo is their God of physic; Minerva of works and manufactures; Jove holds the empire of heaven; and Mars presides in war. To this last, when they resolve upon a battle, they commonly devote the spoil. If they prove victorious, they offer up all the cattle taken, and set apart the rest of the plunder in a place appointed for that purpose : and it is common in many provinces, to see these monuments of offerings piled up in consecrated places. Nay, it rarely happens that any one shows so great a disregard of religion, as either to conceal the plunder, or pillage the public oblations ; and the severest punishments are inflicted upon such offenders. “The Gauls fancy themselves to be descended from the god Pluto; which, it seems, is an established tradition among the Druids. For this reason they compute the time by nights, not by days ; and in the observance of birth days, new moons, and the beginning of the year, always commence the celebration from the preceding night. In one custom they differ from almost all other nations ; that they never suffer their children to come openly into their presence, until they are of age to bear arms : for the appearance of a son in public with his father, before he has reached the age of manhood, is accounted dishonourable. “Whatever fortune the woman brings, the husband is obliged to equal it with his own estate. This whole sum, with its annual product, is left untouched, and falls always to the share of the survivor. The men have power of life and death over their wives and children ; and when any father of a family of illustrious rank dies, his relations assemble, and upon the least ground of suspicion, put even his wives to the torture like slaves. If they are found guilty, iron and fire are employed to torment and destroy them. Their funerals are magnificent and sumptuous, according to their quality. Every thing that was dear to the deceased, even animals, are thrown into the pile : and formerly, such of their slaves and clients as they loved most, sacrificed themselves at the funeral of their lord.” Diodorus Siculus, Book v. Chap. 2 [B.C. 40] speaking of the Gauls, says : “There are likewise among them philosophers and divines whom they call Saronidae (Druids), and who are held in great veneration and esteem. 10 “ When the y are t0 consult on some g™t «"i weighty matter, they observe a most strange and incredible custom, for they sacrifice a man, striking him with a sword near the diaphragm across over his breast, who being thus slam, and falling down, they judge of the event from the manner of his fall, the convulsion of his members and the flux of blood ; this has gained among them (by long and ancient usage) a firm credit and belief. “ It is not lawful to offer any sacrifice without a philosopher. These Druids and Bards are observed and obeyed, not only in time of peace but war also, both by friends and enemies. “Malefactors they impale upon stakes, in honour to the Gods, and then with many other victims upon a vast pile of wood, they offer them up as a burnt sacrifice to their deities I n like manner they use their captives also, as sacrifices to the Gods.” J Strabo, Book iv. Chap. iv. 4, 5 [B.C. 30]— _ “ Without the Druids they (the Gauls) never sacrifice They would strike a man devoted as an offering in his back with a sword, and divine from his convulsive throes. It is said they have other modes of sacrificing their human victims; that they pierce some of them with arrows, and crucify others in their temples- and that they prepare a colossus of hay and wood, into which they put cattle, beasts of all kinds, and men and then set fire to it.” ’ Pliny, Book xyi. Chap. 95 [A.D. 75]- , „ „ U f° n if 0CCM10n we must omt to mention the admiration that is lavished upon this plant (the misletoe) y he Gauls The Druids— for that is the name they give to their magicians— hold nothing more sacred than the misletoe, and the tree that bears it, supposing always that tree to be the robur. Of itself the robur is selected by them to form whole groves, and they perform none of their religious rites without employing branches of if so much so, that it is very probable that the priests themselves may have received their name from the Greek name (Drus an oak) for that tree. v ’ “The misletoe, however, is but rarely found upon the robur; and when found, is gathered with rites replete with religious awe. This is done more particularly on the fifth day of the moon, the day which is the beginning of eir months and years, as also of their ages, which with them are but thirty years. This day they select because e moon, though yet not in the middle of her course, has already considerable power and influence; and they call her by a name which signifies in their language, the all-healing. Having made all due preparation for the sacrifice and a banquet beneath the trees, they bring thither two white bulls, the horns of which are bound then for the first time Clad m a white robe, the priest ascends the tree and cuts the misletoe with a golden sickle, which is received y ot lers in a white cloak. They then immolate the victims, offering up their prayers that God will render this gift propitious to those to whom he has so granted it.” Pliny, Book xxx. Chap. 4 — “ The Gallic provinces, too, were pervaded by the magic art, and that even down to a period within memory, for it was the Emperor Tiberius that put down their Druids, and all that tribe of wizards and physicians. But why make further mention of these prohibitions, with reference to an art which has now crossed the very ocean over, and has penetrated to the void recesses of Nature? At the present day, struck with fascination, Britannia still cultivates this art, and that with ceremonials so august, that she might almost seem to have been the first to communicate them to the people of Persia.” Suetonius, in Claudius xxv. [A.D. 100] — “The religious rites of the Druids, solemnized with such horrid cruelties, which had only been forbidden the citizens of Rome during the reign of Augustus, he utterly abolished among the Gauls.”— p. 318. 11 Dion Chrysostomus [about A.D. 100] observes that “ the Celtic kings could not so much as design any public measure without the Druids, who were adepts in divination and philosophy ; insomuch that these priests exercised regal authority, and that the kings, who had but the semblance of power, were in truth their servants.” We thus see what enormous power the Druids possessed, and that not only were the inhabitants of the two countries taught in the same manner by them, but that as regards the state of the mechanical arts and manufactures of the day the two countries must have been nearly equally advanced — for when Caesar tells that the Yeneti had such an immense fleet that at one time “two hundred and “twenty of their best ships, well equipped for service and furnished with all “kinds of weapons, stood out to sea and drew up in order of battle against us.” — Book hi. Chap. 14, it may safely be inferred that the ships of their British allies were included in this number, and that they were built in the same manner. “The body of the vessels” he says “was entirely of oak, to stand the shocks “ and assaults of that tempestuous ocean.” The benches of the rowers were “ made “ of strong beams of about a foot in breadth, and fastened with iron nails an inch “ thick, that instead of cables, they secured their anchors with chains of iron ; ” and as he also tells us their ships were large rather flat-bottomed sailing vessels, with very high bows and sterns, which gave them a great advantage over the Roman gallies, they must have been in fact in their outline very much like the modern Dutch galliot, and their chain cables must necessarily have been very strong, and thus we see that their knowledge of ship-building and of the me- chanical arts, and especially the art of manufacturing iron in every required form must have been very great. This more advanced state of the mechanical arts in Gaul and Britain than I think is generally admitted, enables us to understand how it was that the Britons were able to construct such an extraordinary number of chariots of war armed with scythes, that as Caesar tells us, when Cassivelaunus the British king was disbanding his forces, he retained “ only four thousand chariots.” We should be justified in drawing the same inference as to their knowledge of the mechanical arts from the fact that for centuries before the invasion of Caisar the inhabitants of this country were well versed in the art of mining for and smelting tin. The 12 ingots of tin were carried at a very early period by the Phoenicians to Cadiz and to the East through the Straits of Gibraltar, and after the Roman conquest of Gaul and Britain, across Gaul to Marseilles. Through these channels, some knowledge of Britain, and of the institution of the Druids would be sure to reach the East. With the knowledge we thus possess of the unlimited power of the Druids over the rulers and people of Britain, and of all the resources of the country in men, horses and all the requisite mechanical appliances for the construction of such a temple as that at Stonehenge, we can have little doubt but that the tradition respecting the Druids is correct, and that it is to them we are indebted for this “wonder of the west.” It was not possible without such a combination of skill and power as they alone possessed that such huge stones could have been trans- ported several miles, worked into their required forms, and raised into their places. — And even supposing that the assistance of the Veneti, with their chain cables and mechanical skill was required, the Druids could easily have commanded it, and sent some of their best artificers and mechanics with their chains and tools from Southampton or Poole to Stonehenge. It must have required ages to enable the Veneti to so far advance the art of manufacturing iron as to produce large chain cables, and there is no anachronism, therefore, in attributing to the Gauls and Britons a high degree of mechanical skill long before the time of Ceesar or Hecatams. It is in vain we look to the Romans for an example of such a structure and it is in vain we search our subsequent history for anything like proof of the existence of such a combination of skill and power in any one of the rulers in this country, to whom we could attribute, with any shadow of probability, the construction of this great work. Nor was there any object, after the introduction of Christianity, for which such a structure could be required.* The peculiarly open character of this imposing temple was well suited to the extraordinary religious rites of the Druids. The temple in fact was admirably adapted, both by its position and construction, to produce the greatest possible effect on a vast concourse of people, assembled to witness their dreadful sacrifices. » “ Soon after the fall of the great trilithon in 1797, Mr. Cunnington dug out some of the earth that had fallen into the excavation, and found a “fragment of fine black Roman pottery.” — Sir R. C. IIoare, vol. 1, page 150. And on other occasions mentioned by him fragments ot Roman pottery , and of coarse half-baked pottery, have been found by excavating within and about the temple ; but these prove nothing beyond the fact that the p ace was visited by those who used vessels made of these materials. We should find now in addition to these, pieces ot glass, cliina, and tobacco pipes. 13 The Druids were as Csesar tells us especially observant of the movements of the heavenly bodies ; and the selection of the number of thirty for the stones of the outer circle at Stonehenge is supposed to have been made in consequence of its representing the number of days in their lunar month. “All nations (says Newton) before the just length of the solar year was “known, reckoned months by the course of the moon, and years by the returns “ of winter and summer, spring and autumn ; and in making calendars for “their festivals, they reckoned thirty days to a lunar month, and twelve lunar “months to a year , taking the nearest round numbers.” — Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms. It is quite possible that the number five was also selected for the number of the great trilithons within the circle, as being the number of days required to complete the year of twelve months of thirty days each ; but this is mere conjecture. Driven back before the Eoman arms, the Druids sought refuge in the island of Anglesey, the conquest of which was made [A.D. 60] by Suetonius Paullinus, the then Roman governor of Britain. Tacitus, in his Annals Book xiv. Chap. 31, gives the following very graphic description of their appearance and conduct on the eve of the battle which decided their fate as regards every part of the country to which the Roman arms extended : — ■ • :-;-..i - .;.V... ' , , i v. ,, l r l ';‘ ®K ' y*v»t7.2 l l. y - WOT iWMB, ^wSBwf sranp BMMBEMhBI 1