_ t^ ^ ^ r N •' * ^ • * * ,A , t ' • . "/- < N C , V* 7 a * S ,0 // GV V .Oq, -0 '•> #%, ° "o o^ 0& . ' -P. A» W \CT ■A \X V 'd» ft ". s> - x ^. ^ v-5 ^> " Of- "Ck . -> . ; ■ --■ ?! A V 0> \ ?°,. <> /. o v ANCIENT BRITAIN CAMBRIDGE PRESS BY THE SAME AUTHOR : ANCIENT BRITAIN IN THE LIGHT OF MODERN ARCHAEOLOGICAL DISCOVERIES 8vo, pp. 250; cloth, $2. (8s.) THE MIDDLE AGES REVISITED OR THE ROMAN GOVERNMENT AND RELIGION FROM AUGUSTUS TO THE FALL OF CONSTANTINOPLE 8vo, pp. 400; cloth, $3. (12s.) THE WORSHIP OF AUGUSTUS CAESAR DERIVED FROM A STUDY OF COINS, MONUMENTS, CALENDARS, .ERAS AND ASTROLOGICAL CYCLES THE WHOLE ESTABLISHING A NEW CHRONOLOGY OF HISTORY AND RELIGION 8vo pp. 400; cloth, $3. (12s.) THE VENUS DI MILO ITS HISTORY AND ITS ART Brochure, illustrated; 50 cents. {2s.) I^****-*^*" I* ANCIENT BRITAIN ZW 7W.£ LIGHT OF MODERN ARCHAEOLOGICAL DISCOVERIES BY ALEX, DEL MAR Formerly Director of the U. S. Bureau of Statistics, Author of "A History of the Precious Metals," "A History of Mone- tary Systems," "The Middle Ages Revisited," "The Worship of Augustus Cesar," etc., etc. NEW YORK THE CAMBRIDGE ENCYCLOPEDIA CO. 62 Reade Street igoo {A II rights reserved) T LIBRARY Of CONGRESS One Copy rtecelved DEC 19 itfW) Goitjm«m tfltry IOUSS XXc No. COPY A. COPYRIGHT BY ALEX. DEL MAE 1899. G ■- (Persoa) 23Ja '07 ANCIENT BRITAIN CHAPTERS. PAGE. Preface, . . ix Bibliography, xi I. — Ancient Britain, i II. — The Roman Conquest of Britain, 15 III. — Language, Laws, Government, Religion, . . 26 IV. — From Agricola to the Sack of London, ... 34 V. — The Last Century of Pagan Imperial Rule, . 47 VI. — The Revolt under Maximus, 383-9, .... 54 VII. — The Reputed Invasion by Hengist and Horsa, . 64 VIII. — Monuments of Roman Civilization, 75 IX. — The Roman House of Commons, 89 X. — Trial by Jury, 10S XI. — The Writ of Habeas Corpus, 113 XII. — The Prerogative of Money, 116 XIII. — Rise of the Gothic Power on the Continent, . 126 XIV. — The Gothic Province of Saxony, 135 XV. — Destruction of the Gothic Power, ..... 145 XVI. — Gothic Language, Government, Religion, . . 154 XVII. — Gothic Remains Found in England, .... 166 XVIII. — Pretended Bretwealdas of the Heptarchy, . 175 XIX. — The Norman Conquest, 182 XX. — Conclusion, 189 APPENDICES. A — Origin of the British Tribes, 193 B — The Codex Argenteus, 195 C — Roman Walls in Britain, 199 Index, 201 Corrigenda, 206 ANCIENT BRITAIN IN THE LIGHT OF MODERN DISCOVERIES PREFACE. It has been shown by writers of the highest credit, among whom are Sir Francis Palgrave and Thomas Wright the antiquarian, that the monkish chonicles which relate that Britain was occupied by An- glo-Saxons in the fifth century, are forged or corrupted, some of them centuries later than the seras of their pretended authors. These spu- rious works were issued by or under the express authority of the same college which issued the forged Letter of St. Peter, the forged Do- nation of Constantine, the forged capitularies of Adrian and numer- ous other impostures. Albeit the true character of the false Saxon chronicles have been frequently exposed, they still continue to colour our popular histories and to injuriously affect our national policy. The archaeological discoveries and especially the numismatic finds which have come to light in late years, not only corroborate the con- clusions of Palgrave and Wright, they impress upon us so ample a body of testimony against the false witnesses of Rome that, inert and in- different as we have hitherto been in the matter, we are now com- pelled to choose between them; and upon that choice must depend the disposition of several important subjects of practical administra- tion. As with the period of the barbarian occupation, so with the circum- stances of the Roman conquest, the early records of Britain have been largely falsified or perverted. Many of our institutes of freedom, such as the right of assemblage, of trial by jury, of immunity from unlaw- ful detention, of representation in the Comitia and the subjection of the ecclesiastical to the civil power, which are clearly derived from the early Roman republic, together with others of an entirely differ- X PREFACE. ent sort, like the privileges and benefices of the priesthood, the feudal system and the institution of caste, which clearly sprang from the later Roman hierarchy, have, with careless inconsistency, been ascribed to the barbarians. It may be safely assumed that the tree which bore such diverse fruits sprang up in a cloister; for it will nowhere be found in the domain of nature. The worship of the Living Emperor, which was the corner-stone of the Roman hierarchy and was enforced in Britain for several centuries, giving rise at the very outset to the Revolt of Boadicea and remaining unshaken until it was overthrown by the Goths; this too has been falsified or suppressed. The pres- ence of Moslem influence in Britain — a fact unmistakedly indicated by the gold dinars of Offa, the common use of Arabian marks, man- cusses, carats, and sterlings, and many other circumstances — all this has been omitted from our histories and its place filled with fables stolen from the idolatrous mythologies of the Orient, or manufactured in the hotbeds of medieval imposture. Among the numerous products of hierarchical ingenuity none have more effectually fouled the stream of British history than the inven- tion of a line of Bretwealdas, or over-lords, who it is pretended, united the distracted chieftains of the Heptarchy and governed them in the name of Rome. This conceit, touching and warming a false national pride, has found belief, when it should only have excited contempt. It has slandered, belittled, and in some cases entirely removed from history, many of our brave Norse ancestors, those, who, whether pa- gans or christians, stamped upon our race the qualities and aptitudes for which we have the most reason to be proud, and filled their places with a succession of " kings " without royal powers, of heroes whose only virtue was subserviency to Rome, and of saints who never ex- isted at all. The design of the present work is to restore to the pages of British history those circumstances of which forgery and imposture have de- prived it and which archaeology has found safely preserved in the pure bosom of the earth. BIBLIOGRAPHY. The following list of books is to be read in connection with the lists pub- lished in the author 's previous works. The numbers at the end of each title are the press marks of the British Museum library. Abbay (Richard). Restoration of the Ancient System of Tank Irrigation in Ceylon. Printed in the London " Nature " of Oct. n, 1877. Abu Mashar (See Albumazar). Achery (Luke D'). Spicilegium; sivo collectio veterum aliquot scriptorum qui inGal- liae biblothesis delituerant. Paris, 1723, 3 torn. fol. 10. e. 1-3, Adam of Bremen. Historia Ecclesiastica ejusdem auctaris libellus de situ Danise, 1706, fol. 158. h. 14. Adams (Alexander), Rev. Roman Antiquities, 18th ed., Edinburgh, 1854, 8vo. (This popular work was originally published in 1791, and has passed through numerous editions, both in England and America. It omus or conceals much more than it discloses concerning the religious be- lief and ceremonies of the Romans, and must therefore be consulted with discretion.) Albiruni (Mohammad Ibn Ahmad). Chronology of Ancient Nations. Trans, by C. E. Sachau. London, 1879, 8vo. 752. 1. 24. Institutes and Customs of India in the eleventh century. Trans, by C. E. Sachau. London, 1888, 2 vols. 2318. h. 4. Albumazar (Jafar Ibn Muhammad, commonly known as Albumazar, Albumasar, or Albumashar). Flores Astrologie. Trans, from the Arabic by J. B. Sessa, Ven- ice, 1485, 4to. 718. f. 2. (2.) Alison (Archibald), Rev. " Essays," political, historical and miscellaneous. London, 1850, 3 vols, 8vo. Allen (John), Master of Dulwich College. Inquiry into the Growth of the Royal Prerogative in England. London, 1849, 8vo. 2238. e. 1. (A short performance, whose reputation exceeds its merit. It holds that "homage" is a custom derived from the ancient Germans; that modern sovereigns add to their titles, " by the grace of God," because the Saxon hlaford was sacred to the churl; and that the king, instead of the Augustus, is the Fountain of Honour. The author has advanced no evidences to support these assertions.) Allmer (A). Les Gestes du Dieu Auguste d' apres 1' inscription du Temple d' An- cyre. Vienne, 18S9, 8vo. 7705. ee. (17.) Alviella {See Goblet.) America. Recopilacionde Leyes de los Reynos de las Indias. Madrid, 3d edicion, 1774, 4tomos, fol. Anthropology. Journal of the Anthropological Society of Bombay. Vol. II, pp. 164-224. Fawcetton "Festivals to Village Goddesss." London, i886,8vo. Ac. 6242. Ar at us (of Soli). The Phenomena and Diosemeia, trans, by J. Lamb. London, 1848, 8vo. There is another trans, by J. H. Voss. 1348. c. 9. Aristotle. Works. Trans, by T. Taylor, London, 1812, 9 vols., 4to. 2052. h. Arrian (Flavius). The Anabasis of Alexander; literally trans, by E. J. Chinnock, London, 1884, 8vo. 9026. ff. 18. Voyage round the Euxine sea. Tr. W. Falconer, Oxford, 1805, 4to. 200. e. 18. Voyage of Nearchus and Periplus of the Erythrsean sea. Gr. with Eng. Trans. by W. Vincent, Oxford, 1809, 4to. 570. g. 16. Ashley (W. J.) Essay on Feudalism. London, 1887, 8vo. Atwood (William). Barrister at Law and Chief fustice of New York. Funda- mental Constitution of the English Government. London, 1690, fol. Aurelius Victor (Sextus). De origine gentis Romanae, i826,8vo. Origine du Peuple Romaine, a French translation of the same work, by N. A. Dubois. 11,306. K. 9. Xll BIBLIOGRAPHY. Ayliffe (J.) Rev. A new Pandect of Roman Civil Law. Vol. I. (The only volume published). 1734, fol. 500. g. 14. Bailly (Jean Sylvain). Histoire de l'Astronomie ancienne depuis son origine jusqu'a l'establissement de 1'Ecole d'Alexandrie, 2nd ed., Paris, 1781, 4to. 8562. e. 14. ■ Traite de l'Astronomie Indienne et Orientale. Paris, 1787, 4to, 59. h. 5. Ancient History of Asia; a series of letters to Voltaire. London, 1814, 8vo. 1137. b. 21, 22. Baluze (Etienne). Histoire des capitularies des Rois Francois de la premiere et. seconde race. Paris, 1779, 8vo. 708. a. 12. Banqueri (Josef Antonio). Libro de Agricultura,traducion de Abn Lakariya. Madrid, 1802, 2 vols, fol. 441- I- 2. 3. Bauer (Bruno). Christus und der Csesaren, Berlin, 1879, 8vo. 4534. cc. (7.) Beal (Samuel) Rev. Buddhist Travels in the West. London, 1890, 2 vols, 8vo. Beausobre (Isaac de). Histoire Critique de Manichee et du Manicheisme. Amster- stam, 1734-9, 2 vols, 4to. 678. e. 11-12. Beck (Ludwig). Die Geschichte der Eisens. Brunswick, 1884, 8vo. 7104. d. Bede. Ecclesiastical History of England and Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. Trans, by J. A. Giles, London, 1847, 8vo. Bell. Historical Studies of Feudalism, 1852. Belon (Peter). Travels. Trans, by J. Ray, 1693, 8vo. 978. g. (1.) Belot (E.) De la revolution economique a Rome au millieu du Hie siecle, A. C. Paris, 1885, 8vo. 8226. eee. (24.) Benjamin of Tudela. Itinerary; Heb. with Eng. Trans, by A. Asher. London, 1840-1, i2mo. x 938. c. 11. Bentley (John). Hist. Rev. of the Hindu Astronomy. London, 1825, 8vo. 531. i. (21.} Bernard (Jacques). Recueil de Traitezde Paixde Treve, etc., de A. D. 536, jusqua A. D. 1700. Amsterdam, 1700, fol. 589, i, 8. Beudoin. Etude sur lesorigines du regime feodal. Grenoble, 1889, 8vo. 6005. f. 4,(1.) Bezold (Carl). Oriental Diplomacy. London, 1893, 8vo. 7704. aaa. 54. Bhagavat-Gita; known also as Christna's Gospel, the Divine Song, Christna's Rev- elation, etc. Trans, from Sanscrit into English, by Sir Charles Wilkins. London, 1785, 4to. 14060. f. 1. Birch (Samuel), (formerly of the British Museum.) Records of the Past; being Eng- lish translations of the Assyrian and Egyptian monuments. London, 8vo, Old Series, in 12 vols., 1873-81; New Series, in 4 vols., 1880-92. 2258. a. 3. This work is published anonymously. The late Dr. Birch's name is attached to it in the catalogue of the Museum Library, but does not appear in the title page of the work. On the other hand, the name which does appear there is that of the editor, not the author. It is printed under the sanction of the So- ciety of Biblical Archaeology. Black (W. H.) The Calendar of Palestine reconciled with the Law of Moses, against the theory of Michaelis. London. 1865, 8vo. 437 2 - S- I 8 (9-) Blanchet (J. Adrien). Nouveau manuel de numismatique du Moyen Age et mod- erne. With Atlas. 1890, 2 torn, 8vo. 12208. b. Blavatsky (Helena Petrovna). Isis Unveiled. New York, 1877, 2 vols, 8vo. 2212. c. Boeckh (Augustus). Corpus Inscriptionum Graecorum, Berlin, 1828, 4 vols, fol. Catalogue Desk. K. Boissier (Gaston). La religion Romaine d' Auguste auxAntonines. Paris, 1874, 8vo. 2212. g. Bonwick (James). Egyptian Belief and Modern Thought. London, 1878, 8vo, 2212. b. Bouche Leclerc (A.) Les Pontiffes de l'ancienne Rome; etude historique sur les institutions religieuses de Rome. Paris, 1874, 8vo., pp. 435. 4506. d. (i.) Boulainvilliers (Count Henri de). Histoire de l'ancien gouvernement de France, Amsterdam, 1727, l2mo. 897. a. 14. History of the ancient Parliaments of France. Translated from the French by C. Forman, London, 1754, 2 vol., 8vo. 5424. c. The Life of Mahomet. Trans, into Eng. London, 1752, i2mo. -Etat de la France. London, 1727, 2 vols, 8vo. 1857. a. Bower (Archibald). History of the Popes. Dublin, 1749-68, 3 vols, Svo. 4855. bb. Another ed. Phila., 1844-5, 3 vols, 8vo. 4855. e. Bowker and Iles (R. R. and Geo.) Reader's Guide in Economic, Social and Polit- ical Science. New York, 1891, 8vo. 11,900. bb. 54. BIBLIOGRAPHY. X1U Brady (John). Clavis Calendaria, or a compendious analysis of the Calendar. Lon- don, 1S15, 2 vols, 8vo. Bramsen (W.) Japanese Chronological Tables. Tokio, 1880, 8vo. 11,099. b. 1. Brantome (Pierre de Bourdeilles). Seigneur de Br antome. Memoirs. Leyde, 1722, i2mo. 6 30. a. (25.) Another ed. Paris, 1876, i2mo. 8415. df. (2.) Brerewood (Edward), Rev. De Ponderibus et pretiis vetorum nummorum, etc. (Edited by R. E.) 1614, 4to. 602. e. 19. (2.) Britannica. Monumenta Histonca. (Passages in classical authors relating to Britain.) Brown (Alex.) F. R. H. S. The Genesis of the United States . . . movement in England 1605-16, which resulted in the plantation of North America, etc. Lon- don, 1S90, 2 vols, 8vo. 9 6 ° 2 - *■ C 1 -) Bruce (J. Collingwood,) Rev. The Roman Wall; a description of the Mural Barrier of the North of England. London, 1867, 4to. (Chiefly a description of Serverus', properly Hadrian's Wall and the antiquities found in the vicinity.) 2258. f. Bruce (Philip Alex.) Economic History of Virginia in the 17th Century. London, 1896, 2 vols, 8vo. 9605. c. (22.) Brugsch (Heinrich), History of Egypt. Trans, by Philip Smith. London, 1881, 2 vols, 8vo. 2069. a. Brunnemannus. {See Justinian.) Bryant (Jacob). Ancient Mythology. 3ded. London, 1807, 6vols, 8vo. 86. f. 11-16. This work is an elaborate effort to reconcile all the mythos, in which effort it fails ; not, however, ■without incidentally furnishing a large fund of valuable information. Bryce (James). The Holy Roman Empire. 4th ed. London, 1873, 8vo. Brydone (Patrick). Sicily and Malta. London, 1776, 2 vols, 8vo. 10,151. d. 21. Buchanan (George), The historian. See Macfarlan. Buckman and Newmarch. Illustrations of the Remains of Roman Art in Cirences- ter, by Prof. Buckman and C. H. Newmarch. London, 1850. Burigny. {See Levesque.) Burke (Luke). "The Principles of Mythonomy", (Laws of Mythology, Systems of Zodiacs, etc.) " Hebrew Chronology ", " Egyptian Chronology ", " Discovery of America, by the Northmen", etc.; a number of articles on these and kindred topics published in the London Ethnological for 1848, 1854, and 1865-6, these being the only years of its publication. 8vo. PP. 3862. a. and 295. ■Callimachus. Hymns, Epigrams, etc. Trans, by Revd. J. Banks. Bound with Hesiod. London, 1856, 8vo. 2500. f. Candolle (Alphonse de). Histoire des Sciences et des savants depuis deux siecles, suivre d'autres etudes ... en particulier sur la selection dans l'espece humaine. Geneve, Bale, Lyon, 1873, 8vo. 8707. ee. (15.) •Capella (Martianus Mineus Felix). De Nuptiis Philologies et Mercurii. (On the accord of Bacchus and the Logos). Ed. Kopp, Frankfort, 7836, 4to. 718. i. (25.) Carew (George), Sir. Pacutu Hibernia, or History of the late wars of Ireland under Sir George Carew and compiled by his direction. 1663, fol. 186. d. (8.) History of Ireland. 601. m. 6. Letters to Sir Thomas Roe. Ac. 8113-71. Carew (George), Earl of Totness. Report of the Master of the Rolls upon the Carte and Carew Papers. 1864, 8vo. 2075. c. i. -Calendar of the Carew mss. 1867, 8vo. 2075. c. Carlile (Richard), The Deist; containing theological Essays by Baron de Holbach, Voltaire, and others. London, 1819-20, 2 vols, 8vo. 4015- L Carranza (Alonso). El adjustamento y proporcion de las monedas de oro, plata y cobre, y la reducion distros metales, etc. Madrid, 1629, fol. 504. g. (6.) Caton (W.) Abridg. of the Chronol. of Eusebius. London, 1661, i2mo. 453°- aa - •Charton (Edouard). Voyageurs, anciens et modernes. Paris, 1854, 4 vols, in 2,8vo. 2060. Christna (Isvara), The. Trans, by H. T. Colebrooke, Oxford, 1S37, 4to. 752. 1. 1. Christna. {See Christna's Gospel, or the Bhagavat-Gita). Churchill (Chas. Henry.) Mount Lebanon. London, 1853, 3 vols, 8vo. 10,075. d. The Druzes and the Marionites. London, 1862, 8 vo. _ 10,075. d. Clarke (Edward), Rev. Letters concerning the Spanish Nation (including Coins). London, 1763, 4to. 179- d. 18. Xiv BIBLIOGRAPHY. Clarke (G.) " Pompeii." London, 1831, 2 vols, i2mo. H57- a. 21-2. Codex Argenteus. Quator D.N. Jesu Christi evangeliorum, versiones per antiquse- duse Gothica scilicet et Anglo-Saxonica: Quaruam illam ex celeberrimo Codice Argenteo nune primum depromsit, Franciscus Junius F. F. hanc autem ex co- dicibus mss. collatis emendatius recudi curavit, Thomas Mareschallus, Anglus, etc. Dordrechti, 1665, 4to. 218. g. Colebrooke (Henry T.) Miscellaneous Essays, containing "Religious Ceremonies- of the Hindus." London, 1873, 3 vols, 8vo. 14085. e. 6-8. Columella (L. J. M.) Husbandry; in XII Books. French trans, by Nisard; Eng. trans, by M. C. Curtius. London, 1745, 4to. 34. d. i„ Constitution and Present State of Great Britain. (See Great Britain.) Coote, The Romans in Britain, London, 1878, 8vo. 2394. e. (A work of merit, the materials being chiefly drawn from the Roman laws relative to land and the archaeological remains of Britain.) Corsino (Edoardo). Fasti Attici, in quidus Archontum Atheniensium series, Philo- sophorum, oriorumque Illustrium Virorum aetas, etc. 4tom. Florentiae, 1744-56, 4to. 673. h. (4.> Coulanges (Numa Denis Fustel de), The Ancient City; a study on the religion, laws, and institutions of Greece and Rome. Trans, by W. Small. Boston, 1874, 8vo. 2259. b. (e.> — The Origin in Property by Land. Trans, by M. Ashley. London, 1891, 8vo. 08276. e. (9.). Histoire des institutions politiques de l'ancienne France. Paris, 1 891-2, 6 vols. 8vo. 2390. d. Coutzen (Adamus). Politicorum libri decern in quibus de perfectse reipubl. forma, virtutibus et Vitiis, etc. Moguntias, 1621, fol. C. 24. d. The plot of Coutzen the Moguntine Jesuit to cheat a church of the religion es- tablished therein and to serve in Popery by Art, etc. London, 1641,410. 702. d. 8.(2.)' Creech (Thomas). The Five Books of Marcus Manilius, containing a system of the Ancient Astronomy and Astrology, together with the Philosophy of the Stoics. Done into English verse, with Notes. London, 1697, 8vo. (See Manlius and Shirburn for other editions of the Five Books called the Astronomicon.) 11385.^ b. Creuzer (George Frederich). Religions d' antiquite refondu, etc., par G. D. Guigniaut, L. F. A. Maury, and E. Vinet. Paris, 1825-51, 4 vols. 8vo. 2212. b.. Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage, A. D. 248-58. Unity of the Church, a Sermon. Trans., by Revd. J. Fell, Bishop of Oxford. London, 1681, 4to. 3805. a. Daremberg et Saglio. Dictionnaire des Antiquites Grecques et Romaines. Paris,. 1873, 2 vols, 4to. In progress: In 1897 it was completed to " E." Cat. .Desk I. De Sacy. (See Silvestre.) Deuber (F. H. A.) Geschichte der Schiffahrt in atlantischen Ozean, zum Beweis das. . der Compass . vor F. G. entdeckt worden sey. Bamberg, 8vo. 1424. c. Didron (Adolphe N.) Christian Iconography, or the History of Christian Art in the: Middle Ages. Trans, by E. J. Millington. London, 1849, 2 vols, 8vo. 2502. b. Dietrichson (L.) Stavkirker; or an illustrated treatise on the church architecture of Norway. Christiania, 1892, 8vo. Diodorus Siculus. History. Trans, by G. Booth. London, 1600, fol. 2068. g. Dion Cassius. Rerum Romanarum, libri octoginta, ab Immanuel Bekkero. Greek text. Lipsiae, 1849, 2 vols, 8vo. 2052. e. Histoire Romaine. Paris, 1845-70, 10 torn., 8vo. 1307. i. (12-19. )• An oration ... to Octavius Caesar Augustus, against monarchy, taken out of the XHth book of Dion. London, 1657, 4to. E. 972. (3.) The History of D. C. abridged by Xiphilinus. Done from the Greek by Mr. Manning. London, 1704, 2 vols, 8vo. 293. f. (28, 29.) Dionysius of Halicarnassus. Antiquities of Rome. Trans, by Spelman. 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London, 1793, 8vo. Ara abbreviated edition of the above work, 1877, 8vo. 8632. ccc. 4. (4.) Dureau de LA Malle (A. J. C. A.) Economie Politique des Romains. Paris, 1840.. 2 vols, 8vo. 7702, bb. (7.) D'Urville (Dumont d'). On the Venus de Milo, contained in an official periodical entitled " Recueil des Lois relatives a la Marine et aux colonies, etc., edited by M. Bajot. Paris, 1821, 8vo., part II. P.P. 1365. Duruy (Victor). Histoire des Romains. Nouvelleed. Paris, 1879, 7 vols, 8vo. 9039. e. ■ An English translation by Miss Clarke. London, 1883, 6 vols, 8vo. 2382. g. Dutt (Romesh Chunder). Barrister of the Middle Temple. A History of Civiliza- tion in Ancient India, based on Sanscrit literature. London, 1890. Duvergier (G. B. Paul). La Banque Internationale. Paris, 1865, 8vo. 8227^.35.(7.) Duvergies (Jean Baptiste). Revue Etrangere(et Francaise)de legislation, etc. 1834, etc., torn. 7. P. P. 1275. De 1' effet retroactif des lois. Paris, 1845, 8vo. 5405. d. Dyer (L.) 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England's Improvement by Sea and Land; to Outdo the Dutch without Fighting; to Pay Debts without Moneys; to set at Work all the Poor of England with the growth of our own Lands; to prevent unnecessary Suits in Law; with the benefit of a voluntary Register (registration of land titles); di- rections where vast quantities of Timber are to be had for the building of Ships; with the advantage of making the great Rivers of England navigable; rules to prevent Fires in London and other great Cities; with directions how the several companies of handicraftsmen in London may always have cheap Bread and Drink. London, 1577, 2 vols, 4to. (An ingenious and extremely rare work.) Zasius (Joannes U.) Epitome in usus feudarum. Lugduni, 1544, 8vo. 5306. a. 2. Zoroaster. Boum-Dehesch, cosmogonie des Parses; trad, par M. Auguetil du Per- ron. Paris, 1771,2 torn., 4to. 696. i. 6. 8. ANCIENT BRITAIN IN THE LIGHT OF RECENT DISCOVERIES IN ARCHAEOLGY, NUMISMATICS, ETC. CHAPTER I. ANCIENT BRITAIN. The name of Britain — The Veneti — The Phoenicians — The Greeks — Greek types of Coins found in Britain — Voyage of Pytheas — Landing of the Norsemen — Torf seus — Archaeological remains — Religion — Svastica — Customs — Runic inscriptions — Name of the Sun-God — Tribal names — Place names — Name of London — Venet — Venicontes — Venetian glass — Virgil proves, and Bede admits, that the Picts came from Scythia — Norsemen not Germans — The latter theory advanced by the Romans as a claim of dominion — Opinions of antiquarians — Tacitus identifies the Iestians and Britons — Pliny classes together the Massagetse, Histians, Brittones, and Frisians — The Persians call the Scythians, Sacae — Tribes found in Britain by the Romans — Baug money — Progress of the Norsemen from Caledonia to South Britain — The Roman Conquest — Counts of the Saxon Shore — The subsequent Gothic revolt. BRITAIN has been usually regarded as a corruption of Bratanac, or Baratanac, the Phoenician term for " Isles of Tin," or " Tin Isles," which the Greeks translated into the equivalent Cassiterides. 1 Anac is advanced as a Syriac term for tin; bedil, commonly translated tin, being regarded to mean lead. 2 Another verbal theory is based on the story that before the conquest of Britain under Claudius, whilst Germanicus for two years was encamped near the sea shore, east of the Rhine, the sufferings of his troops, from their being obliged to drink brackish water, were alleviated by means of a plant, pointed out to them by the native Frisians, and called " Britannica. " Says Pliny, "the name surprises me, though possibly it may have been so-called because the shores of Britannia are not far distant. " (Nat. Hist., xxv, 6.) Lipsius, in a note to Tacitus, finds a marshy tract, called " Bret- aasche Heyde, upon the west banks of the Ems, between Lingen and Covoerden, upon which to base another verbal theory. But aside from 1 Anderson's "Hist. Commerce," ed. 1787, 1, lxxx. 2 Prof. Tychsen, in Beckmann's " Hist, of Inventions," art. " Tin." Anac is used in Amos, vn, 7, 8. I 2 ANCIENT BRITAIN. the anachronical character of this last suggestion, the locality, which is 60 miles from the sea-shore, is wholly unfit for a camp, and does not coincide with Pliny's description. However, the fact that Britannia is mentioned in a work ascribed to Aristotle, (de Mirabilibus Auscul- tationes,) rather disposes of the Bretaasche Heyde theory and con- firms Pliny's suspicion that the plant was named after a country, and not the country after the plant. But what country? This question, or rather the broader one, what is the origin of the names Britain and Bretagne, is thoroughly answered by the Roman archaeologist Dr. Vicenzo de Vit, in the Archaeological Journal, vol. xl. He holds that both Britain (England) and Bretagne (France) are named after Brit- tia, or Jutland. Pliny, who lived for thirty years in the northern coun- tries and was well acquainted with them, says (Nat. Hist., iv, 31, 106) that the Menapians, Scalds, Toxandrians, Frisians, and Britanni com- posed the inhabitants of the Low Countries. Hyginus, who wrote ' ' De Castrorum Munitione " during the reign of Trajan, mentions (ch. 29 and 30) the Brittones, as furnishing auxiliaries to the Romans, together with the Cantabri, Getae, and Dacians — all Goths. The "Britones" in Juvenal, xv, 124, and " Britannia " in Martial, xi, 3, relate to Brittia, not to Albion. The "Britanni" conquered by Augustus (Georgics, in, 25) were Netherlander, not Islanders; for Augustus never was in Britain. On a bronze diploma of Domitian, A. D. 85, both Britannica aud Brittonum occur — a conclusive proof that they related to two dif- ferent peoples. A votive inscription, tempo Trajanos, has been found on the Rhine, near Xanten, dedicated to the " Matres Brittiae," the : Brittian Mother (of the gods). Other votive inscriptions with " Brit- • tones " and " Brit." have been found in the Oden-wald, between the : Neckar and Maine. Procopius (Gothic Wars, iv, 20) mentions the isle • (the peninsular of Jutland was then deemed an island) of " Brittia," which is situated between Britain (Albion) and Thule (Scandinavia), about 200 stadia from the Rhine. It is inhabited by Angles and Frisians ; called "Brittones." These and many other like evidences render it all i but certain that Britain was named, as London was named, fron places sil in the mother country of the namers ; and that that mother country was ; Scandinavia. Britain was known to the Phoenicians a thousand years before our'rj sera, and may have been known to the Veneti of the Euxine at a still Ij earlier date. It was known to the Carthaginians so early as 600 B. C. , , and to the Greeks before the time of Herodotus; for he mentions itt as the Cassiterides,. or Tin Islands. It was doubtless visited by Pytheas of Marseilles during the aera of Alexander the Great. Native imitations ANCIENT BRITAIN. 3 of the Greek coins of this period have been found in many parts of Britain. It was even known to the East Indians, who got their tin from it. 3 Yet the monkish chroniclers assure us that the Northmen, who lived close to it, knew nothing of it until it was conquered, in the fifth century, by Hengist and Horsa. This idle tale will receive further attention as we proceed. For the present we shall dismiss it altogether and proceed to advance the reasons for believing that Britain was known to and settled by maritime tribes from the Baltic and North Seas, not only before the Gothic uprisings of the fourth and fifth cent- uries, but even before the Roman conquest. Torfseus, in his " Orcades," claims that his countrymen discovered Britain in the fourth century before the Christian sera and colonized it a century later. By itself this testimony would be of little worth, but it receives confirmation from sources whose correctness is hardly open to dispute. At every step of his progress throughout the British isles the antiquarian meets with the remains of an invading or coloniz- ing race, who in point of time must have preceded the Romans, and yet who were neither aboriginals, Phoenicians, Greeks, Iberians, Ger- mans, nor Gauls. These colonists were tall and powerful men, fair- haired, blue-eyed, and accustomed to the sea. They cultivated the earth, manufactured wooden, bronze, and glass wares, traded with ring-money, fought with bronze weapons, and worshipped a deity whose symbol was the svastica, and to whom they sacrificed horses and sometimes men. These evidences all point to the Veneti and other Norse tribes of the Baltic. " On the right-hand coast of the Suevian Sea," says Tacitus, "dwell the Iestians, whose dress and manners are Suevian, whilst their language is British (lingua Britan- nicae proprior). They cultivate the earth with far more industry than the Germans, they explore the adjacent sea for amber, which they dispose of in commerce. Using no iron, they fight with clubs, and they worship the Mother of the Gods, (Matrem deorum venerantur)." That the masters of Iestia at this period were indeed Norsemen is not only proved from the similarity of their language with the Britsh and the close resemblance of ancient Norse and early English, 4 it is con- firmed by the situation of the Gothic metropolis of Venet, and by other circumstances which will be adverted to in the progress of the present work. Although the Iestians had adopted the dress and some 3 Pliny, "Nat. Hist.," xxxiv, 16. 4 The language now spoken in the more open parts of Norway, is Danish. The ancient tongue was discouraged and forbidden by the Roman church and driven to the more secluded parts, where it still lingers. 4 ANCIENT BRITAIN. of the habits of the Suevians, whose country they had invaded, yet their more industrious mode of life distinguished them, according to the Roman historian, both from the Suevians and Germans. The an- tiquities found in Britain perfectly agree with this description. There is nothing to connect them with Germany; there is everything to con- nect them with Norway, Iestia, Denmark, and the Low Countries. That remotely the Norsemen issued from that conquering race of Scythia which subdued successively the various powerful nations who encompassed its arid but elevated and bracing table-lands, there can be but little reasonable doubt. The proof lies in their Runic inscrip- tions and the name of the sun-god, Ies, which they bestowed upon nu- merous provinces, rivers, and towns. These inscriptions commence on the Yen-Iesei river, near Lake Baikal, and continue westward to Britain, Iesland (Iceland) and Greenland. During the whole of this vast distance, until Britain is passed, the runic inscriptions and place- names derived from Ies are confined between the 50th and 60th paral- lels of north latitude, an isothermal zone, whose uniform climate affords strong corroboration of the theory deduced from archaeolog- ical etymology. Westward of the Yen-Iesei the Norsemen appear to have crossed and named the Ieshim, or Ishim, an affluent of the Irtish, in Siberia. Next we find them in Iestia, or Estya, now Esthonia. In Brandenburg they were known as the Iesidini, or Sidini, and the god they worshipped was called Rada-Gaisus, rada being a Mongolian form of the Indian rajah, or king. 5 Advancing westward and con- quering or amalgamating with the tribes of the coast and the adjacent flat country, they successively crossed and named the Am-Iesus, now the Ems, and the Iessel, or Yessel,now the Saal. Iesleben, or Eisle- ben, a town of Merseburg, on the Saal, an affluent of the lower Rhine ; lessen, a district of the lower Rhine; Ieserlohn, a town of Westphalia below Cologne; Iesendyck, a town on the Blie eight miles east of Sluys in Flanders; Ober-Iessel and Am-Isia in Frisia (now Emden); and Isigny, a town near Bayeaux, on the north coast of France, all commemorate, in their names, a division of that Norse or Saxon race who eventually fell beneath the sword of Charlemagne. An- other division, passing to the northward of the Baltic, left their mark in the names of Up-sala and Ieskilstuna near Stockholm, and of Ieslof and Iestad, towns in Gotland, the latter situated 26 m. S. E. 5 The sera of the Rada-Gaisus mentioned by Mascou (vin, 14) appears to have been about A. D. 406; but there was a more ancient god or hero of the same name, who flour- ished, or was believed to have flourished, many centuries previously. " Father Jasius, from whom our race is descended," occurs in Virgil's "yEneid,"m,i68. The chronology of these heroes or demi-gods is given in the author's " Worship of Augustus Caesar." ANCIENT BRITAIN. 5 of Lund, or Lunden. From Scandinavia they undoubtedly crossed to Britain, where one of their tribes was called the Ieseni, or Iceni. They built or dwelt near a town called Lunden, or London, situated upon a river which they called the Tam-Ies and the Romans, the Tam- Issus. 6 They also built a town named Oxford, on the banks of a river which they called the Ies, or Issus. The great antiquity and Gothic names of these rivers cannot be doubted, for it was also the name of the principal river of the Gothic Veneti, who, ages before, had colo- nized the shores of the Euxine. 7 The rock-cuttings of the Yen-Iesei are in Great Permia, near the city of Tzerdyn on the banks of the Tomm, between Tomskoi and Kusnetskoi, and are sculptured on the rocks through which the Yen- Iesei flows. They comprise runic letters, the sign of the cross fre- quently repeated, a spoked wheel, a heart, and a chase on horseback after wolves. Their general character is similar to the ancient rock- cuttings of Sweden and Iceland, represented in the wood-cuts pub- lished by Du Chaillu. 8 The Jakuhti, (Jaku is one of the names of Buddha,) a pagan nation of ten tribes, comprising about 30,000 tax- payers, still live along the river Lena, near Jakutskoi. They call themselves Zachi. Procopius, iv, 24, mentions the Zachi or Zechi, probably related to Sacse or Saxons. The Kalmucks, who worship Buddha, designate him as Zacha or Xaca. Formerly the Zachi lived near Lake Baikal, with the Bretti or Bratti, from whom they after- wards separated. They adore a triune god, one of whose personages they suspend in effigy upon a tree whilst in the act of worship. Cer- 6 Among several remains of very ancient Norse council-rings, Mallet found one at Lunden, in Scania. It was therefore a place of importance. This Lunden is at the southernmost extremity of the Swedish peninsular. There are other Lundens both in Sweden and Denmark. The Ieseni and Trinobantes, who occupied the country near London, in Britain, when the Romans first took possession of it, were probably Iestians, or Gothic tribes, and it may be reasonably conjectured that, following an almost universal •custom, the name of the place was brought by their forefathers from their ancient homes in Gotland and Iestia. 7 Hecatasus, in Strabo, xii, 3, 25. 8 The rock inscriptions on the Orkhon river, which flows from Karakorum northward into Lake Baikal, contain similar characters, as well as others of a less archaic period. These last are said to be Turkish monuments of the seventh and eighth centuries, men- tioning a Turkish prince called Kul-Teghin, whose sera antedates by four or five centuries the first appearance of the Turks in current western literature. The credit of decipher- ing and publishing these inscriptions belongs to Prof. Thomsen, of Copenhagen, and Dr. W. Radlof, of the Imperial Academy of St. Petersburgh. Trans. Tenth Cong. Orientalists at Geneva, London Times, Sept. 28, 1894. A Turkish prince of the sixth century, Mu-han K»han, the conqueror and successor of Solien Khan of the White Huns, is mentioned in the fragmentary chronicles of the latter. Numismatic Chronicle, 1894, part in. ANCIENT BRITAIN. tain trees are sacred to them. Their year at the present time begins at the vernal equinox, when they light perpetual fires, sacrifice horses, and drink koumiss. Similar fires, lighted by the ancient Cimbri and Gots, also the keeping of the ninth day, are mentioned by Trogus, or Troghill Arnkiels, in his account of the "Religion of the Cimbrian pagans," Hamburg, 1702, and by Adam of Bremen, p. 144. Before they were subdued by the Russians the Zachi used to offer human sacrifices at the graves of their chieftains. They were an exclusively pastoral nation, who practiced polygamy, and sold their wives. He- rodotus states that the Veneti had a similar custom. Each tribe of the Zachi had a favourite aninal for its ensign, or "totem," as the raven, swan, goose, etc., a custom similar to that of the Iestians, Norsemen and Danes. Many of these details, together with others equally suggestive, will be found in Philip John von Strahlenberg's ' ' Northern and Eastern Europe and Asia. " The author was a Swedish officer, who was taken prisoner at the battle of Pultowa, (1709,) and spent thirteen years of captivity in Siberia. The worship of Yen-Iesei or Gan-esa, (him of the twelve sacred names,) and his holy Mother, by tribes still dwelling in the nooks of the Himalaya mountains, is- described in the Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, liii, 71. "Whatever doubts may remain with regard to the genealogy of the Norse tribes, there can be few with respect to their early settlement and conquest of Britain. Let us begin with the evidences afforded us- by the names of tribes and places. The earliest names that have been preserved of the tribes north of the Humber are Norse or Gothic. Thus, parts of Northumbria, Merse and the Lothians, were inhabited by the Ottodini, probably from Otto, a common name among Norse chieftains. At a later period the Ottodini were classed with the Maeatae, another proof of Norse origin. Other parts of Northumbria and Tiviot- dale were inhabited by the Gadeni, probably a corruption of Gateni, or Getse. The Selgovae possibly got their name from the Norse " sil " orsild; the Novantae, Damnii, Epidii, Gerones, Carnonacae, Carini, Carnavii, Logi, and Cantae, were petty tribes who occupied other por- tions of Scotland at the period of Agricola's conquest. They have usually been classed with the Masatae, probably identical with the Mertae, whom Ptolemy locates in the northwest part of Sutherland. Unless they were Norsemen, or else Aborigines, whom the Norse left behind them in their southward progress and who at a later period united with them against their common enemy, the Roman authori- ties, there is no clue to their origin. Maeatae is the original name of the tribe which was afterwards called indifferently Maeatae or Gaetae,. ANCIENT BRITAIN. 7 a fact due to the absence of the letter G in the early runes and the resemblance of G to M in the later ones. The Venicontes of Fife, who had a town named Orrea, which was near the river Ore, were probably Norsemen, all these names being Norse. Dungeness, Fife- ness, Arundel, Dover, Canterbury, orCantabri, Orail, Oxford, Orford, Naze, Nore, and many other English names of places, are derived from Norwegian prototypes; as Arendal, Dovre, Oxenfiord, Ness and Nor. Indeed Norse names of places abound all over Britain, as Lon- don, Saturday, Wednesday, Satterthwait, Whitby, Grimsby, Sheer- ness, and all towns ending in " by," " ford," or "ness." 9 Not one of these was brought from Germany. The use of the term "dale " for valley, proves Norse settlement. The "bols" of Sutherland and Ross, bespeak the presence of Norsemen. "The Norse foirdr may be discovered under many a strange form, not the least being Knut- fiordr, or Cnut's firth, appearing as Knoidert, pronounced in Gaelic, Croderst. Norse place-names occur all the way from Caithness to Cantyre. " 10 But such evidence cannot be accepted to prove the pres- ence of Norsemen previous to or during the Roman occupation, un- less the period can be ascertained when the Norse names of these places were conferred or employed. The doom-rings, runic inscrip- tions and other Norse remains found in various parts of Britain, are testimonies of a similar kind. They prove the presence of Norsemen, but not the period of their coming. Ue Quincy says that the English lake dialects and the names of mountains, tarns, etc. , are "pure Danish of the elder form." Il The cockney dialect is evidently derived from that of Osen, where its analogue is stil 1 spoken. One has only to travel a month or two in Norway to remark the striking similarity between its inhabitants and those of North Britain, both in stature, hardihood, features, complexion, language, fearless bearing, love of freedom and aptitude for a seafaring life. Caledonian was the name employed by the earlier Romans to desig- nate all the tribes without the Wall. The name is derived from Cael or Gael (Gaul), and dun, a mountain, and meant Gauls of the Moun- tains, or highlanders. As is elsewhere explained with regard to the Roman use of the word "Germany," this word was erroneous and misleading. The Romans in Britain had made allies of the Norsemen and enemies of the Gaels. Hence they choose to regard all the bar- 9 Ness means nose, or cape. It is the same in Russian, Scandinavian, English, French, and Spanish; in short, in the language of every country conquered by the Goths. 10 Proceedings Society Scottish Antiquarians, April 12, 1886. 11 De Quincey's Works, x, 60, and xm, 273-83. " Danish of the elder form" means the ancient Norse, now only spoken in the more secluded parts of Norway. 8 ANCIENT BRITAIN. barians without the Wall as Gaels 12 ; but this was so far from being' true that the later Romans classified them into two races and referred to them by the names which they had given each other. One race was called Scuites, the other Picts. We are told that Scuites meant scutlers or wanderers, and Picts, pickers, or plunderers; but this is mere trifling. Picts was the name of a tribe of Goths who are men- tioned as such by Virgil and Claudian. 13 Scythians, Scuites, and Scots are one word and mean one people. The name of Veneti is very remarkable. We have elsewhere traced it from the Euxine to the Adriatic. It may be also traced to Taren- tum. Caesar found it at the mouth of the Loire, where the Veneti and Picts had trading stations, which were evidently connected with others in Britain and the Low Countries, for when he attacked them, they sent to Britain and Menapia for aid. They are mentioned, under the name of Vendians,by Tacitus and other Roman writers, as inhabitants of the Baltic coasts. If we may be guided by the names Venicontes and Menapia, they had also stations on the coasts of Scotland and Wales. Little or no mention is made of them during the Dark Ages, but later on they are described as possessing the rich and populous city of Venet, from which they commanded the trade of the Baltic, and which, until they were driven out by Charlemage, was the capital of the Saxons. 14 The tribes whom the Romans encountered in Britain may be divided into four principal classes. First, the aboriginal Britons, probably from the " isle " of Brittia, or Jutland. Second, the Gaels, whose Druid religion embraced some rites gathered from the Punic and Iberian traders who had visited their shores for tin. Third, the Gothic tribes from the neighborhood of Bergen, Osen, (Oxen,) Lunden, and other places in Norway, whose religion was the worship of Thor, Woden, and Frica, the Mother of Gods. 15 The Iestians alluded to by Tacitus, 12 Caesar committed the same blunder: he classed the Picts and Gaels together. De Bell. Gall., in, u. The country of the Vendians and Picts still goes by their names, Vendee and Poictiers. 13 " Pictosque Gelonos,"Georgica, n, 115; " Perlegit exsangues Picto moriente fig- uras." De Bell. Get. 418, tempo Arcadius et Honorius. The word meant " Painted men," or men who tatoo their bodies, as their descendants do to this day. 14 See further on, chapter xv, on the Pagan Hansa. 15 There are various monkish legends to account for the name of London, and the reader has ample room for choice between them. The popular one is from Goeffrey of Monmouth, who connects it with the fabulous king Lud. It has the disadvantage of being complicated with the Trojan iEneas, Brutus, etc. To these verbal theories Sir Walter Besant has recently made an addition. What we know for certain is that London had its present name, that is to say, Londinium, the Latin form of it, so early as the period of Tacitus, for it is so written in his Annals, xiv, 33. It has also been found on numerous tiles of the same period. Archaeological Journal, XL, 80. ANCIENT BRITAIN. 9 (the Picts of Virgil and Claudian,) were probably one of those hybrid tribes, whose Gothic fathers, Gelones or Suiones, had amalgamated with native women, Suevians, to the confusion of history and the eff ace- ment of racial relations. 16 Fourth, the Belgian tribes from Soissons, Rheims,Bibrax,Artois, Arras, etc., named Suessiones, Regni, Bibroci, and Attrebatti, who came into Britain shortly before the first invasion of Caesar, and whose racial characteristics and religion both seem to have been influenced by contact with the Saxon or Gothic tribes who had previously invaded the Low Countries. To these tribes may be added the Gaelic priests, whose establishment in Britain had been greatly augmented in consequence of the hostile measures of Julius Caesar in Gaul. That country, once the seat of a powerful hierarchy, was now a political ruin. After passing through the various stages of that feudalism which appears to be the invariable and inevitable consequence of hierarchical government, Gaul had fallen under the sway of a multitude of warring chieftains. To grind them against one another, as Cortes afterwards ground the Toltecs and Aztecs, the Tlascalans, and Mexicans, was no great achievement for the greatest politician of his age. To get rid of the Druidical priests and fill their places with Romans, was a far more difficult task and of greater political importance. The sword and the lash may have sufficed to drive the more stubborn Druids to Britain; but methods less irritating to the remaining Gauls were required to reconcile them to the ministrations of strangers, These were probably the retention of the more tractable priests in Roman ecclesiastical establishments 17 ; the adoption into theRoman provincial ritual of some of the old Druid- ical gods, customs, and symbols; and finally, the advancement of the Gaulic chieftains to senatorial and other imperial honours. These measures probably sufficed to ensure that rapid overthrow of the Druidical hierarchy, which had been nearly effected by internal decay before Caesar invaded their country. 16 Murphy, in a note to this passage, (Ger. 45,) argues that the British dialect of the Iestians proves affinity to the Gnels of Britain, and that therefore their race was Gselish, or, as he confusedly terms it, " Scythico-Celtic." But there is no affinity between Eng- lish and Gaelic, whilst between English and Norse the affinity is marked. Moreover, it would be difficult to account for the presence of Gaels in Esthonia; whilst that of the Veneti and Norsemen is well attested. Mr. Arthur J. Evans, the archaeologist, writes from Oxford to the " Times," under date of September 21, 1893, concerning the recent finds of pottery at Aylesford, in Kent, and of spiral glass ornaments in the Glastonbury fens, that they establish beyond doubt a connection between the Veneti and pre-Roman Britain: an opinion in which he appears to be joined by Prof. Boyd Dawkins. On a Hindu intaglio found at Montrose, in Scotland, consult Trans. Royal Asiat. Soc, Dec, 1830. 11 An instance of this character is mentioned by Tacitus, Annals, 1, 57. lO ANCIENT BRITAIN. Among the most remarkable and distinctive of antiquarian remains- which attest the early domination of Norse tribes in Britain, and there- fore the fabulous character of the Anglo-Saxon invasion of the fifth century, are the baugs, or ring-money, which, at least in northern Eu- rope, are known to have been used only by the Norse or Gothic tribes. Vast numbers of these rings, which from their size, material, and other circumstances were evidently employed for money, have been found in subterranean hoards in various parts of Britain and Norway. They are frequently mentioned as money in the Norse sagas; and to attest their epoch, they are succinctly described by Csesar, who in- forms us that they were used as money by the tribes whom he en- countered in Britain. These evidences and others of the same sort yet to be produced, are mutually corroborative; they crystalize together; they fit each other, and are seen to be parts of one great truth — a truth, that in the frag- ments of ancient literature and in the fabulous chronicles of the med- ieval monks, all of which have emanated from the same Sacred College of Rome, found no place at all. That the world had been grossly de- ceived by these forgeries was long ago shown by Horsley, and has since been confirmed by Wright, Kemble, Russell, and other distin- guished antiquarians; yet they continue to fill the popular histories and to work their baneful influence upon the popular mind. . Bede admits that the Picts came from Scythia, whose coasts, there can be little doubt, were, centuries before his time, entirely in posses- sion of the Norsemen. That the Picts were a Gothic race is not only evident from these circumstances, it was the opinion of Bishop Still- ingfleet, Dr. Russell, and other antiquarians. Says Dr. Russell, (1,43,} "On attentive reflection and inquiry I am convinced, by the express authority of Bede and by other considerations, that the Picts were Scandinavian emigrants who passed from Norway into the country now called Scotland, long before the Romans visited this island, and were not of the Celtic, but of the Gothic race. " 18 The passages from 18 The Orkneyinga Saga, p. 550, says that the aborigines of these islands were Picts. According to Torfseus, the isles were discovered by the Norsemen, B. C. 385, and col- onized B. C. 260. In A. D. 839 the Picts of Orkney fled to Norway, and in the reign of Harold Harfaga, 865-933, they induced him to reinstate them in their native country. The Orkney and Jetland isles were possessions of the Norwegians from the ninth century down to the year 1468-9, when they were pledged by Christian I., for 58,000 Rhenish florins. Although, according to the Norwegian accounts, this debt was frequently offered to be repaid, both to the Scotch and English kings, they refused to restore the islands. The last offer was made by Frederick V., about 1750. A Scotch antiquarian says: " The possession of the Hebrides by the Norsemen must have given them great influence on the west coast." There can be little doubt that this influence extended wherever there was water enough to float an oared barge. ANCIENT BRITAIN. II Virgil and Claudian, which seem to have escaped Dr. Russell's re- searches, attest the soundness of his conclusions. The inclusion of the Baltic coasts in the " Germany "of Tacitus, and their subsequent inclusion in the " Teutonic race " theories invented by ecclesiastical writers and accepted by those who have thoughtlessly followed them, is of a piece with the claims advanced by Cortes and Pizarro in America : ' • God gave the earth to Christ : Christ to Peter :. Peter to the Pope: the Pope to Charles I., whose Lieutenant am I;; therefore I advise you to lay down your arms, and to swear fealty and pay tribute to your rightful suzerain: otherwise I will despoil and destroy you! " Germany was a province of Rome, whose sovereign- pontiffs assumed the title of Germanicus. If the Saxons, Goths, Norse- men, Veneti, call them what you will, are shown to be of German descent, then they were vassals of Rome. Tacitus advances this theory- in describing the scope of Germania; Charlemagne enforced it with the sword ; and the Roman church, devoting centuries to the purpose, patiently worked it into the language, customs, and annals of the North. Yet there is not a grain of truth in it: the Saxons, or North- men, and the Germans have teleologically nothing in common. Putting together these various evidences' we are warranted in as- serting that the Gothic invasion or colonization of Britain took place not under the Empire, but during the Commonwealth of Rome. The ice, the cold, the long dark winters, the damp, the fogs of northern Britain had no terrors for the new-comers: they had experienced dis- comforts like these in the Holy Land of Norway, whence their vikings first adventured to the Jetlands. They saw only the bright side of things, the warm flood, which, coming from some unknown Paradise beyond the Western Ocean, madly raced through the North Passage and cast strange relics upon the shores of Cantyre; 19 the bright sun, which for a time scarce dips beneath the horizon; the wild heather which gaily decked the moors; the welcome summer warmth; the quick vegetation ; above all, the numerous inlets and ports of the coast, delighted them ; for the Norsemen were a race of sailors, accustomed to live upon the waters, and to laugh at storms. To their dull and heavy, but brave and practical minds, the land was good enough. Pytheas of Marseilles, had visited it before them, perhaps had told them something about it, how few inhabitants it possessed, how easily 19 " The Land Junction of Great Britain and Ireland,'' by J. C. King, pamph., 1879. Logs of wood of a kind unknown in Europe have floated to Spitzbergen. These derelicts must have suggested to the Norsemen the existence of land to the westward. Dufferin„ ''High Latitudes," 189. 12 ANCIENT BRITAIN. these could be beaten off, or what rich spoils might be had on the southern downs. Of this distant portion of Albion the Norsemen of that early period probably knew little or nothing. But plunder has ever been to them a word of magic charm ; so that in the course of a century or two, when their colonies in the northern country were well established and strongly fortified, it is safe to assume that they had reconnoitered the coast at least, to the Humber on the east, and the Mersey on the west, sailing up all the firths and rivers, picking up a few words of Gaelic, and capturing such spoil as fell in their way. South of the Humber they found tribes of people greatly differing from themselves; shorter, darker, and much more civilized, or as they regarded it, richer in moveable property. 20 Among those natives, whom the Romans afterwards called Brigantes, 21 were to be observed some refugees belonging to tribes of the southern coasts, whence they had been expelled recently by other refugees from Belgium. Availing themselves of the information gained by these reconnaisances,we may suppose that the Norsemen gradually advanced their settlements down the coasts, until their dominion extended to the Thames, driving the natives before them and seizing their possessions. In these conflicts they proved themselves to be inferior to the tribes previously pos- sessed of the land in nothing but flocks and herds, and to remedy this inequality was probably among the first measures which distinguished their early polity. As for stout weapons and brawn withal to wield them, the Norsemen asked no odds of any one, whether of blue-blooded Brigante or parvenu Gael, whether from Rheims, or from Soissons. It was whilst these adventurers, whose forefathers had sailed from Brittia and Halgaland, were picking their way southwards, that Julius Caesar, at the head of 40,000 veteran soldiers, landed on the southern coast, and pressed northwards. Between this upper and nether mill- stone, as though forecasting the manner of their subsequent destruc- tion, lay the pent-upon Gaels and Belgians. Following these events, after the interval of a century, came the permanent, the Roman conquest of Britain. This time it was not Julius, wisely content with determining the frontiers of the empire, but Claudius, eager to celebrate a triumph and establish the worship •of the emperors. The cost of forcing this religion upon Britain was the political extinction both of the ancient Gaels, the Belgian refu- gees, and the Iesini. Then the upper and nether millstones came 20 << England is richest in moveable property of all the northern lands." Knytlinga Saga, c. 19. 21 Possibly from the biga, or chariot, which they used in battle. ANCIENT BRITAIN. 13 together, and having no longer any native grist to grind, they ground each other. In the Goths the Romans met foemen worthy of their steel. Other races they had divided and assimilated; the Goths were rarely di- vided and never wholly subdued. Their peculiar religion kept them together and upon terms with other Buddhic tribes; whilst their phys- ical strength, numbers and maritime proficiency, rendered them diffi- cult to master. So long as the Romans kept to the ancient policy of religious toleration, the Goths remained on the best of terms with them; and supplied them with wives, workmen, citizens, soldiers and even a few commanders. Some of these were ennobled by the Romans as Counts of the Saxon Shore. The fiercer tribes of the Goths, the Maeatse, Picts, and Scuites,made frequent attacks upon the Roman settlements; but until the third century, although often goaded to the point of revolt, the Goths within the Walls, whom the archaeological remains assure us must have formed the principal portion of the tribes subject to the Romans, remained at peace with their conquerors. The final rupture between them evi- dently originated in the enforcement of the official religion. The Gothic races, not only in Britain, but also in every other province in which they were established, absolutely refused to submit to hier- archical government. They were willing to obey the emperor, and might even have been taught to worship him; but to regard him as equally man and god, or both as earthly sovereign and high-priest of Heaven; to surrender not only the greatest but also the smallest of their affairs into his hands, or what was still worse, into the hands of the numerous intermediaries who had sprung up between the veiled Caesar and his subjects; was more than Gothic common sense could grasp, or Gothic patience endure. In the third century, as though by a concerted signal, the entire Gothic race in Europe rose up in arms against a religion which they could not understand, and a gov- ernment too distant to afford them either protection or redress. The Varangians of the lower Danube, the Vendians of Scythia, the Saxons of the Baltic coasts, the Menapians, and the Salian Franks of the Low Countries, the Mseatae, Picts, and Norsemen of Britain, all allied races, made a simultaneous attack upon the Roman garrisons. In the course of two or three centuries the remains of the native tribes, who had once acted as buffers between these mighty forces, were everywhere, except in southern Gaul, and Bcetica, crushed and swept out of sight. From the dust of this conflict sprang the Four Great Nations who, between them, have achieved all the notable results of modern mari- 14 ANCIENT BRITAIN. time discovery, and who, as a token of this naval aptitude and su- premacy, to-day command both shores of the North Atlantic; the Angles, the Saxons, the Gaels, the Salian Franks, and the Normans, are all Gothic races, whose common parentage has hitherto been re- fused a registry, and whose common characteristics have been de- signedly disguised and kept out of view. These characteristics are the capacity of great physical endurance, the love of freedom, of home, of fireside, the fear of God, an abhor- rence of plotting, mystery, or subterfuge, and a passionate instinct for the sea. Upon this Gothic foundation their social life has reared an edifice, whose materials, forged in the civil conflicts of the ancient Roman Republic, but buried for centuries by the Roman Hierarchy, were at length recovered and employed in the construction of the Western kingdoms. These materials are Constitutional Government, Supremacy of the Law, the Right of Assemblage, Representation in the Comitia, Trial by Jury, and the Restriction of the Church to spir- itual affairs. All these and other institutions of freedom, for the most part unknown to the Goths in their tribal state, were by them resur- rected from the ancient Commonwealth of Rome and implanted in the early charters of France and England. ' ' The Norsemen deified the Sea-tempest and called it Aegir, a very dangerous Jotun and now, to this day, on the river Trent, the Not- tingham bargemen when the river is in a certain flooded state call it Eager; they cry out, 'Have a care, there is the Eager coming! ' Cu- rious; that word surviving, like the peak of a submerged world! The oldest Nottingham bargemen had believed in the god Aegir. Indeed, our English blood, in good part, is Norse, or, rather at bottom, Norse and Saxon have no distinction. * * * All over our Island we are mingled with Danes * * * in greater proportion along the East Coast, and greatest of all, as I find, in the North Country. From the Hum- ber upwards, all over Scotland, the speech of the common people is still, in a singular degree, Icelandic." 2S 22 Thomas Carlyle, " Hero Worship." i5 CHAPTER II. THE ROMAN CONQUEST OF BRITAIN. Conquest and settlement — Formation of a Romano-Gothic race — Reaso/is why the history of Roman Britain is commonly slurred over or suppressed — Division of the lands of Britain — Estates granted — Treatment of the Norse and Gaelic natives — Quasi-feudal fiefs — Ecclesiastical lands — Benefices — Mining — Opulence of Roman Britain — High state of civilization — Roads — Fisheries — Drainage of the Fens — River dikes — Indus- trial establishments — Fortresses, villas, basilicae, temples, and other public works — Security of life — Diversity of industries — Commerce — Corn trade — Money — Irritating restrictions imposed at Rome — Trades and trade guilds— Merchants— Bankers— Learned Professions — Church — Law — Medicine — Navigation — Astronomy — Fine Arts. IN another place reasons will be given for believing that the Romans remained in possession of some portions of Britain until a much later period than is commonly supposed. For the present it will be sufficient to recall the commonly accepted belief that the legions held control of Britain from the reign of Claudius to nearly the middle of the fifth century, that is to say, for upwards of four hundred years. This control was substantially unbroken and continuous. It extended •over the entire island from sea to sea, and from the Channel north- wards to the prodigious line of fortifications and battlements known anciently as the Outer Wall and now as Graham's Dyke. Within this area the Romans established a provincial state whose inabitants dif- fered from those of the mother country chiefly in the important re- spect that each successive generation was recruited from fresh stock, the result of marriages between Roman soldiers drawn from every country in Europe and women who were always, or nearly always, of Norse descent. The product of these unions was a provincial race, which as time went on became more and more Gothic and less and less Ro- man ; so. that at the period when, according to the monkish chronicles, Britain was suddenly snatched from the Romans by unconnected bands of barbarian Goths from Denmark and Schleswig-Holstein, the prov- ince was already filled with a Gothic race which was not barbarian but civilized and which possessed all the advantages of walls, castles, fortifications, arms, equipment, commissariat, discipline, superior l6 ANCIENT BRITAIN. numbers, and unity of purpose. The shriek of despair which the chroniclers have transmitted to us from this period is probably one of those rhetorical touches which characterizes all fabulous or semi- fabulous history. The Roman government of Britain having lasted at least four cent- uries, why is it that this period is usually disposed of by modern writ- ers in the fewest lines and that in some historical works it is scarcely mentioned at all? The museums and antiquarian collections are full of objects belonging to it. Is it for lack of interest in the events of the period? They are the most significant, the most instructive, the most important events that ever happened to the country pre- vious to the thirteenth century. No. The true reason is that any examination of this period which is not entirely superficial discloses facts to publish which would jeopardize the popularity of the book that mentioned them. It comes to this then, the truth having been rendered incredible, unpopular and unprofitable — therefore let us continue to suppress it. But, as Polybius long since remarked, history which is not founded upon the truth is an idle tale that may serve to entertain or amuse, but not to guide or instruct. Such history is now out of date. The world is moving on. New political situations occur every day. We want actual events, pictures of actual life, actual thoughts, actual pas- sions — in a word, experience — to pilot us. In place of this we have been offered little else than cloister tales made readable by modern art: medieval mendacity perpetuated by historical romances. With the conquest of Britain by Claudius, the circle of the Roman hierarchy was completed. It embraced all the ancient hierarchies of the Occident — Persia, Assyria, Egypt, Greece, Etruria, and Gaul. Outside of this circle there appeared to be no organized state west of the Indies; only predatory and wandering tribes, attached to no particular soil and united by no general polity. In these and many other respects the wanderers closely resembled the northern Indians and the relations which the latter bore to the European colonies of America. Passionately fond of freedom, brave, strong, fierce, cun- ning, warlike, and inured to every species of danger and privation, they were nevertheless no match for disciplined men, abundantly pro- vided with arms, food, and the resources of civilization; and in the end the Indians succumbed. So with the so-called barbarians of Eu- rope. Barring a few engagements at long intervals, in which the Romans suffered defeat, the latter rarely had any serious difficulty to repel the tribes who dwelt beyond the Rhine, the Danube, and the THE ROMAN CONQUEST OF BRITAIN. 17 Outer Wall of Britain. We shall deal in another place with the so- called barbarian invasions of the fifth century; meanwhile what is desired to be conveyed is that no fears of barbarian conquest prevented the Romans during their occupation of Britain from freely expending upon the improvement or embellishment of that island, its numerous cities, ports, commercial centres, roads, arteries, and channels of com- munication, all the capital, art, and labour they had at command, and for which employment could be found. In fact the antiquarian remains prove that, after a brief initial period of conquest and settlement, Britain acquired all those elements of civilization and progress which distinguished the mother country at the same period. Martial boasted that no sooner did the legions con- quer Britain than Roman civilization, institutes, and literature filled the places which their swords had made vacant, and Juvenal, that even the learning and eloquence of Rome was extended to that distant prov- ince. When the neglect of modern historians in respect of these details is borne in mind, the reader may perhaps not unwillingly listen to some of the most notable results of the Roman conquest of Britain. Previous to this event, Britain was little more than a desert. The island, for the most part, consisted of forest, moor, and fen; the clear- ings were few, mostly upon the southern coasts, whose inhabitants had learnt, through intercourse with the Phoenician, Carthaginian, and Greek traders, some rudimentary arts of civilized life. The rivers, winding through a rich soil and without the restraint of dykes, were bordered by extensive marshes, which rendered them difficult to cross and useless for transportation, or commerce. The products of the soil were limited to the natural grasses upon which the cattle were fed, and to a scanty crop of corn. Add to these resources the wild coster, plum, and several sorts of berries and nuts, and we have an almost complete inventory of all that the land yielded to support human life. The numerous fruits and vegetables and commercial plants which now grow with so much luxuriance, were nearly all introduced by the Ro- mans; the peach, apricot, and pear from Asia; the vine, cherry, and currant from Greece; the apple, goosebery, and chestnut from Italy; the walnut from Gaul. There are reasons to believe that in the settlement of Britain, those native chieftains who evinced a willingness to live under Roman laws were granted something like feudal fiefs, which were to last during the lifetime of the incumbent or else during that of the sovereign- pontiff of Rome and renewable at death. Such appears to have been the nature of the estates granted by Claudius to Prasutagus and Cogi- 16 ANCIENT BRITAIN. danus. ' An inscription discovered at Chichester proves that Cogidanus, for one, ruled as Legatus Augustus, 2 and it is more than likely that Prasutagus also ruled with the same vicarious title and powers. The natives who proved less tractable were either driven off or re- duced to vassalage and their lands seized and engrossed by the fisc, or sovereign-pontifical treasury, which, after appropriating a specified portion of them to the service of the local temples, leased out the re- mainder to the veteran troops or to Roman colonists, both of whom, under the conditions common to such fiefs, were liable to military service. 3 As we shall see farther on, these estates were afterwards sub- jected to the management of the proconsuls, to whom, instead of to the sovereign-pontiff, as formerly, the rents and military service became due. The lands donated to the temples were also leased out, because since they had become the property of the gods, they could not be sold. As the ecclesiastical profession enjoyed the benefit (beneficio) of ex- emption from military service, these lands were much sought after by those who preferred a peaceful to a military life. We have here all the materials of a feudal land system. Most of these arrangements were made between the reigns of Claudius and Caracalla. In Mr. Coote's interesting work, the system of surveying, allotting and mark- ing off the lands by stone monuments are all clearly and accurately pourtrayed. Agriculture was pursued so systematically that in Gaul the Romans used machine-mowers drawn by two horses, and it can scarcely be doubted that implements equally perfect were employed in Britain. 4 Next in importance to the surface rights were those which related to mines. Besides "streaming " for tin in Cornwall and working some small alluvial "washings" for gold in the mountain-basins and river- vallies of Wales, there are no evidences of any mining in Britain pre- vious to the Roman settlement. Then, suddenly, the whole island seems to have been ransacked for metals. Subterranean mines of gold, silver, silver-lead, silver-zinc, tin, copper, iron, lead, coal, 5 and jet, were opened in all directions and attacked with an energy and suc- cess which it is difficult to measure without visiting the immense dumps, heaps of debris and other remains left behind, some of which, as in the case of the iron. ore refuse heaps at Kangie, have been reworked 1 Tacitus, Agric, xiv. " Horsley, Brit. Rom., 332. 3 Sir Francis Palgrave, " Eng. Com.," I, 351, supports the feudal view herein taken. 4 Pliny, xviii, 30; Columella, 11, 21. s The Romans worked coal mines at North Benwell and other places in the Tyne valley. THE ROMAN CONQUEST OF BRITAIN. 19 In modern times. Quarries of chalk and building-stone, lime-kilns, brick, tile, and pottery works, were established in almost every neigh- borhood which has since been utilized for similar industries. Within •eighty years of its conquest distant Britain was important enough to merit a ceremonious visit from the divine Hadrian; and sufficiently opulent to sustain a vast local expenditure for roads, temples, fortifi- cations, drainage-works, river-embankments, ports, light-houses and fleets. Rome, like the hub of a wheel which covered Europe, western Asia, and northern Africa, was the centre of a system of highways that •extended to the confines of civilization. These were lined with guard and posting-houses, provided with relays of horses ready for imme- diate service, and patrolled by rural policemen. The highway that ended at Boulogne was continued at Dover and went beyond York, crossing the North Tyne by a stone bridge whose magnificent abut- ments were only laid bare to the antiquarian a third of a century back. Branching from this great highway were numerous others, which pen- etrated to all parts of Britain. These roads are still in use and upon some of them yet stand the original milestones planted there seven- teen centuries ago. If we turn from the land to the sea we shall find similar marks of Roman industry and enterprise. There is not a branch of fishing which was not prosecuted. A Roman harpoon has been found in the skeleton of a whale 25 feet above the highest tides of the Forth, 6 a proof that the animal met its death when the sea rose to the level in- dicated by the ruins of the Roman quay at Cramond. ' Native oysters of Rutupise or Richborough were packed in baskets and sent to Rome, where, as Juvenal tells us, they took high rank among the bivalves favoured by Italian epicures. 8 The cod, ling, salmon and herring fish- eries were all pursued on a large scale. Nothing escaped the Roman fisc. Even the size of the ox-hides received for taxes was narrowly scrutinized. 9 Extensive remains of draining works in the Lincolnshire fens have 6 Scarth, 18. 1 The Roman quay at Cramond (the Roman Alaterva) is 24^ feet, in one place 26^ feet, above sea level. This is due to a gradual geological upheaval of the country, which has gone on from time immemorial and is still going on at an accelerated rate. For many centuries previous to 1810 the annual vertical movement was about one-fifth of an inch; since that date it has amounted to one-half of an inch. These measurements have been ascertained from two interesting facts — first, the wall of Antoninus, originally carried to the sea-level, now comes to an end at a point 26 feet above high tide (Emil Reclus); second, the position of the skeleton of a whale, mentioned in the text. 8 Satires, IV, line 141. 9 Tacitus, Annals, lxxii. 20 ANCIENT BRITAIN. rewarded the search of antiquarians. 10 The prosecution of these works by the Romans evince the scarcity and high value of farm-lands, which again attest the large area already under culture and the am- plitude of the agricultural product. River embankments known to be Roman, to-day line the shores and help to confine the waters of the Thames, Ouse and other streams. Mills, smelting-furnaces, forges, smithies, machine-shops, armouries and industrial works of various kinds, arose on all sides. Around these works grew villas, towns and cities, many of the former, in a more or less ruined condition, still surviving. Within the cities were erected citadels, temples, basilicae, fountains, baths, pavements, sewers, statues, shrines and other pub- lic works of use or embellishment. In short, as Mr. Kendrick says of Roman York, "The antiquities comprehend all the apparatus of a civilized and even luxurious life; and show that side by side with the troops of the garrison, an industrious and wealthy population had formed itself." It is important to observe that the Romans who went to Britain were not obliged to resign themselves to a life in the bush. Britain was- but little like the other provinces. Its inhabitants were more secure from the vicissitudes of war than those nearer the capital; they were surrounded with similar conveniences, advantages and opportunities; they were governed by the same laws and could appeal to the same gods. The visitor who saunters through a British museum of antiqui- ties cannot fail to be impressed with the immense number and variety of objects made of every possible material, such as gold, silver, cop- per, lead, iron, steel, brass, bronze, tin, wood, ivory, tortoise-shell, mother-of-pearl, horn, bone, jet, stone, glass, clay, terra-cotta, wool, silk, flax, hemp, leather, and feathers. Many of these articles, es- pecially the smaller ones, may have been made in Italy or Gaul ; most of them must have been made in Britain. Look at the remains of the magnificent temples, basilicae, theatres, and baths, at York, Silches- ter, Lincoln, Wroxeter, Bath, St. Albans, and Chichester. These stones were evidently cut in Britain, they evince not only skill and taste, but also the employment of capital wherewith to purchase the materials and pay the artists and labourers who cut them. Villas with ten to forty apartments, the roofs covered with copper-plate or sheet-lead, the court-yards decorated with fountains and pictures, the interiors warmed with hypocausts, the whole drained by spacious sewers, have been found in many places, for example, at Lincoln, Wroxeter, Cor- 10 i< Our bodies are worn out in clearing woods and draining marshes." Galcagus to the Caledonians. Tac, Agric, xxxi. THE ROMAN CONQUEST OF BRITAIN. 21 lingham, Chetworth, Thorpe, Silchester, Cirencester and Bignor. All these works must have been the product of provincial skill or industry. The Romans could hardly have failed to discover the advantages which the humid climate of Britain afforded in the spinning of such textiles as wool and silk. Woolen-mills were worked at Winchester .and at all other places that possessed available water powers; and it is not too much to suppose that the texture made of these materials, which Pliny mentions under the name of bombacine and which still goes by that name, was largely made in Britain. Certain compara- tively obscure products must alone have been sufficient to employ a large number of workmen. In the recesses of the Mendip Hills re- mains have been found which indicate that, as, in America, at the present time, the mines were lighted with candles. Mining was con- ducted upon so extensive a scale in Roman Britain that the manu- facture of candles must have formed no small industry. Beer was then as now, the chief beverage of the workmen. The breweries must therefore have been numerous and important. Remains of tasselated pavements and mosaic works have been found in such quantities as to bespeak a body of artists and an organized industry, of no mean magnitude. The foreign commerce of provincial Britain, though for a long pe- riod carried exclusively in Roman bottoms, was of great dimensions. It extended to Ireland, Gaul, Spain, and Italy, on the one side; and to Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Zealand, on the other. Romano- British remains have been found in all these places. In the reign of Augustus a Roman fleet visited the principal parts of the North and Baltic seas, and not improbably collected the information which fur- nished the ground-work for the " Germania " of Tacitus. The chief commerce of Roman-Britain was of course with the mother country, and much of this was conducted overland through Gaul by way of Boulogne or Calais and Marseilles. The exports of Britain were chiefly tin, gold, silver, jet-goods, pearls, lead, chalk, timber, masts and spars for ships, corn, hides, peltries, dried-fish, oysters and hunting-dogs, •of which last, Britain produced a race much esteemed in Rome. The imports consisted of gold coins, bronze " S C " money, salt, silk, fine pottery, bronze weapons, tools, implements, utensils, ornaments, and trinkets,ivory and other fancy goods, steel weapons and cutlery, works of art, plants, seeds, wines, and dried fruits. The details of this trade doubtless greatly varied from time to time. Many commodities, especially those made of bronze or copper, which at first were wholly imported, appear to have been afterward manu- 22 ANCIENT BRITAIN. factured in Britain and eventually became profitable to export. Such seems to have been the case with glass and glasswares. During the first centuries of the Roman establishment in Britain it is probable that the imperial fisc managed to carry out its colonial policy pretty rigidly, and this was to monopolize the supply of manufactures for the province. After that time, the province appears to have gained some commercial freedom, only to lose it again at a subsequent pe- riod. The exports of gold from Britain were comparatively small, and after the alluvions were exhausted they rapidly diminished. Those of pearls were never important. The corn trade grew to such con- siderable dimensions that in the reign of Julian the Roman troops on the continent were supplied with no less than eight hundred cargoes, of grain from Britain, in a single season. The size of the ships em- ployed in this trade can only be conjectured. Zosimus, (lib. iii,) in- forms us that they were larger than common barks. Edicts were issued by Augustus and Claudius, and probably by all the sovereign-pontiffs of Rome, which forbade any kind of bronze money from being used in the provinces, except that which was struck by the government at Rome. As such money formed the commonest medium of exchange, this regulation must have had a powerful influ- ence upon the affairs of Britain. This subject will be discussed in another place. During the sixteenth century similar restraints were imposed by the Spanish government upon the colonies in Mexico and Central and South America. This unwise example was afterwards, followed by Great Britain with reference to its colonies in North America, a policy that led to the establishment of unlawful banks, un- lawful mints, and the coinage of Pine-tree shillings. Efforts of the Crown to suppress these establishments first gave birth to that popular irritation and defiance of the royal authority in Massachusetts, which eventuated in the Outbreak of 1775. 11 What followed the adoption of this policy in Roman Britain does not appear from any extant texts ; we only know that about A. D. 280 there was a revolt and (for the first time) a provincial mint. The industrial classes of the Romans in Britain embraced farmers, herdsmen, clerks, merchants, manufacturers, miners, tradesmen, me- chanics, labourers, fishermen, carriers, publicans, apothecaries, porters, stevedores, marketmen, hucksters, shipbuilders, sailors, and others. Barbers, bathers, and domestic servants, were very numerous. The 11 This policy is now abandoned. Local mints exist in both India and Australia. Nevertheless, through the operation of the Acts of 1666 and 1812, the control of the monetary system still remains with the mercantile community of London. On this sub- ject consult the author's " History of Money in America." THE ROMAN CONQUEST OF BRITAIN. 23 merchants seem to have been specialized almost as much as tney are at the present day, except perhaps in very large cities. For example, in 1647, a Roman votive altar was discovered near Domburg, in Zea- land, which had been erected by Silvanus Secundus, evidently a Ro- man citizen of Gothic descent, who described himself as a "Brittian chalk merchant. " 12 * Next in social importance to the merchants, and in later and more degenerate times, before them, ranked the money-brokers, who ex- changed the over-valued "SC" bronze money minted in Rome and used in Britain, for the gold and silver bullion intended for export, or the gold and silver coins employed in commerce. There was a bank- ing class in Rome, but it was probably absorbed by the Pontificate before Britain was permanently settled. A governmental Monetary Commission, consisting of three bankers, was formed so early as B. C. 218. Six years later, a fire which broke out near the Forum, destroyed several banking-houses. In the reign of Augustus certain of these in- stitutions were called the New Banks. In that of Tiberius a monetary stringency resulted in the establishment of a pontifical bank with a capitalofonehundredthousandgreatsestercesandpowertolendmoney on the security of lands worth double the sum loaned. After this time we hear no more of banks until the fall of the Sacred empire in 1204. During the intervening centuries the monetary system of the empire was substantially in the hands of the sovereign-pontiff; who thus be- came the Sole banker of Europe. The sacred character which the Ro- man religion attached to gold, enabled the Sacred emperor to preserve this and a few other regalian rights from being exercised by the pro- consuls or feudal princes, and in his palsied hands they remained until the last. The learned professions in Britain included the church — that is to say, bishops, curates, augurs, clerks, monks, and other ecclesiastics — the law, medicine, surgery, the army, the navy, astronomy, astrology, pedagogy, natural sciences, civil and mining engineering,architecture, literature, sculpture, painting,music,engraving,die-sinking, lapidary- work, the drama, oratory, and other avocations. The Roman law was too ample, intricate, and refined to be administered without the aid of a regularly constituted bench, and a faculty of advocates, students, notaries, and other officials; and these may therefore be safely in- cluded among the professions practised in Britain. Papinian, one of the ablest lawyers of Rome, was in the train of Septimius Severus, and 12 Wright's "Celt, Roman, and Saxon." Mr. Wright has translated " Brittian" as " British," but both Prof, de Vit's exposition and the fact that the altar relates to the arrival of a cargo of chalk prove that it relates to Brittia, or Jutland, and not to Britain. 24 ANCIENT BRITAIN. he officiated as advisor to the emperor's son, Geta. During the ab- sence of the emperor in North Britain, Geta acted as Legate at York, where Papinian is believed to have founded a law university ; for there lingered in that capital a school of Roman law in 639, which we hear of again in 804. Papinian's university, if it ever existed, must have soon dropped into ecclesiastical hands, and from an university fallen to the rank of a canonical college. Even during the interval when Britain freed itself from the dominion of Rome, the ancient laws prevailed, only now they were modified and administered by local authorities. When Christianity was introduced, the Roman authority and the Roman laws were restored and made permanent. That these laws afforded to the citizen, if not liberty, at least an ample measure of security, is the opinion of Mr. Coote, himself a lawyer and a close student of the Roman antiquities of Britain. Medicine has left memorials at Colchester, where Doctor Hermo- genes has perpetuated his name and title upon an altar, and at House- steads, in Northumbria, where a monumental stone commemorates a young medical practitioner named Anicius. Navigation is evidenced not only by the fact that a regular commerce was carried on in sailing- vessels with the Baltic and Mediterranean ports, but also by the cir- cumstance that ^Esclepiodotus, a military praef ect and naval lieutenant under Constantius, conducted his fleet from Iessoriacum (Boulogne) to Britain, in a storm, and with a side wind: thus proving that ships at that time could sail on a bow-line. This is a refinement in navigation which at a later period the Norsemen copied from the Romans. Mean- while, whenever the wind was not aft, the early Norse navigators were obliged to use their sweeps as a means of propulsion. Mr. Coote claims that many of the nautical terms in use at the present day had a Roman origin; an opinion to which Roman proficiency in navigation lends great plausibility. Astronomy was cultivated with much assiduity by the learned classes of Rome and her provinces. They were the inheritors of the entire body of Oriental and Greek learning on this subject. Thales had demonstrated the sphericity of the earth; Pythagoras had calculated its motions; Meton had his name attached to the Indian cycle, which was employed to foretell eclipses; Eratosthenes, by actually measur- ing the arc of a meridian, determined the circumference of the earth at 252,000 stadii, or about 28,000 English miles; Strabo alluded to its sphericity as a well-known fact; and Pliny, whose Natural History must have been in the library of every cultivated person in Britain, said: " I do not suppose that the land is actually wanting, nor that THE ROMAN CONQUEST OF BRITAIN. 25 the earth has not the form of a globe, but that on each side, the un- inhabitable parts have not yet been discovered. " The work of Ptolemy the Younger also maintained that the earth was spherical. Indeed, ages before this time, Herodotus had remarked that the sphericity of the earth was a belief derived from astronomical observation, which was yet to be verified by an actual voyage. 13 If the Romans did not make such a voyage, they nevertheless coasted along the south of Asia to Ceylon, and the north of Europe to the vicinity of Bergen; whilst they coasted the shores of eastern Africa as far south as the Mozam- bique. They also bequeathed to the Norsemen the belief in spher- icity, as well as the practical art of sailing on a bow-line; and the latter, by the aid of both the belief and the invention, crossed the Atlantic ocean and discovered Greenland and America. Says the Ynglinga Saga, a work of the ninth century : ' ' The round of the earth on which men dwell is much cut by the sea, large seas stretch from the outer sea round the earth, into the land." 14 That intoxication of religious belief which enabled a Greek or an Italian to worship images, provided their names and attributes were changed to suit the prevailing mythology, seems to have been entirely foreign to the provincials of Britain. There, the large admixture of Norse blood kept the people sober, and when emperor-worship and other paganisms came to an end, nearly everything was destroyed which perpetuated the ancient idolatries. Hence the few sculptures or castings that remain. Among these must be included the fine bronze head of Hadrian recovered from the Thames and now in the British Museum. The statues of the other gods were destroyed, broken to pieces, melted down, or cast it into the rivers. The Mithraic monu- ments at York and Newcastle are chiefly of the third century, which is probably also the sera of the Mithraic cave at Barcovicus. Their rudeness proves that they were not sculptured for the established church of that period, but for the people. 15 13 Herodotus, Melpomene, 8. 14 Ynglinga Saga, chap. 1. In the twelfth century the Norsemen erected the follow- ing remarkable monument on the western shores of the Atlantic ocean. It was a stone slab, found in 1824, on the island of Kingiktorsoak, in Baffin's Bay. latitude 72 degrees 54 seconds, longitude 56 degrees west of Greenwich, the inscription being in runes: ELLIGR • SIGVATHS • SON : R • OK • BJANNI : TORTARSON: OK : ENRITHI • ODDSSON : LAUKARDAK • IN : FYRIR GAKNDAG HLOTHV • VARDATE • OK RYDU : MCXXXV. " Erling Sighvatsson and Bjarni Thordasson and Eindrid Oddsson on Laugarday, (an- other name for Saturday) before Gangday, raised these marks and cleared the ground, 1135" (Bishop Percy's Supplement to Mallet's "Northern Antiquities," p. 248). 15 See the altars to these gods in the Catalogue of the Blackgate Museum, at Newcastle. 26 CHAPTER III. LANGUAGE, LAWS, GOVERNMENT, RELIGION. Universality of the Roman language— Of the Civil Law — Of the ancient religion and government — These were impersonal institutes under the Commonwealth — They be- came personal and local ones under the empire — Yet long after the establishment of the empire the ancient influences prevailed — Example from the tenure of lands — The empire introduped feudalism — Yet feudalism did not assume characteristic forms until near the period of the Gothic revolts — Same with the Augustan religion — Reason why Romano-British antiquities evince artistic degeneration — No evidences of degeneration in the social state of Britain — Moral attributes of the Romano-British — No archseological evidences of Christianity in Britain during the Roman sera. THE Roman language was one and wherever the legions penetra- ted, the native tongues soon fell into disuse and gave place to the sonorous and flexible speech of the conquerors. When, centuries later, the Roman towns were governed by provincial Gothic chieftains, lan- guage afforded to the vanquished imperialists a refuge which their ramparts had denied. The conflict of tongues, though fierce at first, soon resulted in grinding to pieces the Gothic upon the polished sur- face of the Latin ; and the English of to-day at once attests and meas- ures the supremacy of the latter. 1 The Roman law was one, and it prevailed over the whole empire. It was embalmed in written codes of high antiquity and gradual growth, the result of many ages of practical experience and refinement in the administration of justice. It was open to all, it proclaimed the rights of all, it refused protection to none. 2 It not only defined the rights of Romans, it determined the relations between Romans and others; and thus, except in strictly local cases, it concerned the entire popu- lation of the empire. 1 Because the Gothic words ox, sheep, and calf express live animals, and the Latin words beef, mutton, and veal express dead ones, the pitiful inference has been made of virility in one language, and of poverty and exhaustion in the other. But this is so far from being true that the Gothic language, in its barrenness, had no words to dis- tinguish the flesh of these animals from their living bodies, whilst the Latin language, in its ample wealth, had both. See De Quincey, xiv, 151, as to the great value of our Roman inheritance of language. 2 " It granted equal rights to all, and closed against none the path of honourable ambition." Bryce, Holy Roman Empire, p. 370. LANGUAGE, LAWS, GOVERNMENT, RELIGION. 27 At the period of the provincial revolts in Britain, the Roman law was pagan, it consisted of ancient acts of the Comitia or of the Senate, or of both combined, of imperial ordinances and rescripts, of ecclesi- astical regulations, 3 of the equity of the praetors, and of other juridical materials. The amplitude and complexity of this vast body of law unfitted it for use by the provincials. After an abortive attempt to- rule the provinces by means of the mixed codes that had grown up- since their conquest, Theodosius met their wants more fitly by pro- mulgating a simpler code, which they utilized for the basis of their subsequent legislation. However, this too gave way at last to the older Roman law. Whilst the Roman language and the civil law were the same in all parts of the empire, the Roman imperial religion gave rise to a degree of discontent which was unknown to the polytheistic religions of the Commonwealth. Whilst the language and the civil law were imper- sonal and the circuit courts carried the administration of the latter into every corner of the Roman world, the imperial canon law was essentially personal and local. It emanated from, and centered in, the city of Rome; it bound the people, not by mutual obligations to each other in all places, but in fealty and service to the sovereign-pontiff at Rome; it permitted the worship of ancient gods and local deities, but only in the manner and with the ritual prescribed at Rome. The Latin language and the civil law were of the highest antiquity, they came from the Commonwealth. The imperial government was a new establishment, and the canon law was greatly altered after the apo- theoses of Julius Caesar and Augustus. The former arose from the people, belonged to the people, and kept the people together; the latter arose from the sovereign-pontiff, belonged to the sovereign- pontiff, and kept the people apart. Before the creation of the hier- archical empire, the citizen consulted the laws to ascertain the rights he possessed and the obligations he owed to his fellowmen; after the establishment of the empire he needed only to study those that af- fected his relations to the long line of suzerains which ascended to. and ended with the sovereign-pontiff. Yet, so slow is the march of innovation, that several centuries elapsed after the Roman constitution was changed by Julius Caesar, before 3 The Roman canon law, even after the expulsion of the kings, largely trenched upon the Civil Code, through its hold upon the Code of Procedure and the pontifical control of the calendar. All this was broken down in A.U. 449 by thecurule aedileCaius Flavius, whose name should ever be held in veneration by the lovers of freedom. Livy, ix, 46. But what was gained for the popular cause by Caius Flavius was lost again when Julius. Caesar crushed the liberties of the Roman world. 28 ANCIENT BRITAIN. the influence of its old republican legislation was entirely lost. Take, for example, the feudal system. It can be shown that this must neces- sarily have begun its growth on the day that Julius Caesar was apotheo- sized; feudalism and hierarchical government being essentially re- lated. Proconsular government, vicarious government, renewable kingships or dukedoms, telescopic or involved castes of nobility, tenures of land other than complete ownership, tenures on condition of performing military or other service to any other person than the Head of the State — all these are feudal, they are the necessary con- sequence of hierarchical government, and have followed it wherever it has been established; whether in Roman Europe, Brahminical Hind- ostan, or Aboriginal Mexico. Josephus has transmitted to us the texts of several charters granted by Julius Caesar himself, which are ■essentially and undeniably feudal. 4 Why, then, if feudalism was es- tablished with the hierarchy, did it not immediately develope into that matured and complex system which it became after the provincial re- volts, and while yet many cities in Italy, Spain, Gaul and Britain remained in imperial Roman hands? Because of the influence of the •ancient Commonwealth, whose laws and customs, despite the hier- archy, still maintained a secret hold upon, not merely the people, but their rulers, as well. It was the same with religion. The most ancient religion of Rome had for its core the worship of ancestors. Around this in time had clustered the religious myths of every race that Rome admitted into ber composite structure. Prominent among these were the Greek an- thropomorphic conceptions of the Sun, Moon, Mars, Mercury, Jove, Venus, Saturn, Earth and other heavenly bodies. 5 Beneath all lay hidden the subtle myths of Brahma and Buddha. Horsley gives a list of above one hundred and fifty minor deities to whom votive offer- ings were made in Britain and made in much the same way that similar offerings were afterwards made to the myriad saints of a later myth- ology. Indeed what the Romans meant by a minor god was very like what the medieval Christians meant by a "saint." Horsley says nothing about the worship of those ancestral images, nor of the im- ages of their emperors, to whom the pious were taught to address their vows; perhaps because being commonly made of wax, they did not strictly come within the scope of " antiquities." Yet, within a few miles of where this antiquarian composed his great work, he might have observed a striking instance of the persistency of religious cus- 4 Josephus, Antiquities, xiv, 10. 5 Uranus was not discovered (known as such) until 1781, nor Neptune until 1846. LANGUAGE, LAWS, GOVERNMENT, RELIGION. 2C> toms. In an obscure chamber of Westminster Abbey were grouped together a series of royal images in wax, which although of course not worshipped, were made in pursuance of that ancient Roman cus- tom, which religion had once enjoined and which, wherever the Roman religion had prevailed, had probably never fallen into disuse. In that chamber they remain to this day. 6 The religion established by Julius Caesar and afterwards by Augus- tus, was the worship of himself, as the son of God. Temples were erected to it in all parts of the empire; a vast body of priests and other officers were appointed to perpetuate its rites; innumerable benefices of lands were granted to its temples : immense sums of money were devoted to its support; and the lex crimen majestatis was em- ployed to enforce its observances, and punish heretics. Yet in time it all fell so dead and flat beneath the contempt of the intellectual classes and the inveteracy of ancient custom, that only the lowest classes of Rome, the rabble, the pot-lickers, the corn-beggars, the dead-heads of the circus, could be depended upon for constancy to the new and repulsive creed; and even these classes, in the course of a few generations, had to have the nauseous dose sweetened by the worship of Julius Caesar, through Venus, and of Augustus, through Maia, his pretended mother. We find Tacitus, who was a priest of the Sacred College and therefore sworn to the maintenance of the Julian and Augustan worship, holding in fact to the ancient worship of Jupiter; Pliny swearing by Hercules; and Juvenal scoffing at both. 7 The better classes of Rome no more adopted emperor-worship than did the Jews, who would not have it in Palestine, nor the Ieseni un- der Boadicea,who marched to a certain death, rather than yield sup- port to its hated temples in Britain. We shall find this provincial hostility to emperor-worship of the highest importance in restoring the effaced outlines of early British history. The civil liberties of the Romans had begun to decline before the legions improved and fortified Britain; hence many of the extant Ro- man antiquities evince artistic degeneration; for art cannot survive the decay of liberty. Yet so slow was the progress of such degeneracy 6 Dean Stanley. 1 " Hearest thou these things, O Jupiter, as if indeed thou wert made of bronze or marble ? As for thy effigies, I can perceive no difference between them and the statue of Bathyllus the Musician." Juv., Sat., xm, 114. " Our home-bred ancestors knew no better. Formerly there was no carousing among the gods, no Ganymede, nor Hebe to be cup-bearer; while Vulcan, not yet feigned to quaff celestial nectar, scoured from his arms the black marks of his Liparan forge. Each god then dined alone, and the present rout of divinities had no existence." Juv., Sat., x:n, 40. 30 ANCIENT BRITAIN. that for more than a century after the Roman conquest, few or no evidences of it are to be observed. The arts continued to flourish, life and property remained secure, the burdens imposed by the state do not appear to have occasioned any outcry or remonstrance, and but few irksome monopolies of trade existed. The metallic tribute demanded from Britain, was more than supplied by the produce of her native mines, and both education and numerous social and industrial opportunities were open to every citizen, regardless of race or religion. Decay is first observable in the monuments of the second century. The pitiless mendacity of bigots has almost deprived the Romans •of moral character. Whether of Italy or Britain, they have rendered the name of Roman pagan, synonymous with everything that is vile. The bitter invectives of Juvenal, unmistakingly aimed at the abomi- nations of the capital, these bigots have applied to distant London and York, which probably barely heard of them. In this manner they have blurred and falsified all the lines of history. But no unprejudiced person can read the fond and affecting inscriptions upon the ancient tombs and altars of Britain, without giving the provincial Romans credit for as much truth, love, and piety, as are to be gleaned from similar evidences of our own times. Mr. Wright publishes a great num- ber of these inscriptions, and the student who wishes to derive from original proofs a just estimate of Romano-British character, must read them for himself. Whatever may have been its rites, customs, or cere- monies, the monuments of Britain indicate that,in practice, the Roman religions promoted the observance of as much tenderness, filial affec- tion, benevolence, pity, charity, decency, and sobriety, as are known to prevail in the same places at the present day. There, indeed, came a time when all these moral traits grew fainter, and the social bond itself was dissolved; b,ut this appears to have been no more caused by the anciet beliefs, than the brutality and depravity of the middle ages were caused by Christianity. The names found upon the tombs and other remains of the Romans and provincials, afford, when rightly studied, a valuable guide in trac- ing the decline and extinction of liberty and its subsequent restoration after the Fall of the Eastern empire. The Roman ingenui, or free- born, had three several names, the prsenomen, nomen, and cognomen. 8 The prsemonen, or given name, was conferred, as now, by the priest- hood, upon the nomination of the parents. The nomen, or patronymic, was the name of the gens, tribe, or clan, to which the person belonged. 8 Adams, "Roman Antiquities." LANGUAGE, LAWS, GOVERNMENT, RELIGION. 31 The cognomen, surname, or family name, was hereditary. Slaves had no family names. Both they and their children, together with what- ever they possessed, belonged to their owners ; slaves could transmit nothing, not even a name. Under the Commonwealth, they were com- monly called after their masters. Under the empire, they were some- times called after their country, as Danicus, Syrius, or Tagus; and sometimes by capricious or even derisive names. When manumitted, they commonly took the nomen of their masters, but not the cognomen. Upon the early Roman remains of Britain the occurrence of three names upon a tombstone is quite common; upon the later remains there are seldom more than two ; and frequently but one name. From the establishment of the Medieval empire under Charlemagne to the Fall of Constantinople in the thirteenth century, the great mass of the people of Britain had no family names; a sure indication of their servile condition. Notwithstanding the many volumes that have been written on the subject, and in which the prevalence or practice ofQiristianity during the occupation of Britain by the Roman legions is assumed, no valid evidences have been adduced in its support. No temple, no altar, no tombstone, no inscription, no book, no mark, no symbol of any kind, has yet been found which contains any certain evidence of, or allusion to, Christianity. The Romans entered Britain both before and after the beginning of our sera. They came not only from Rome and Byzantium, but also from numerous other parts of the empire. The temples and tombstones of the Romans, their altars, graves, personal relics, coins, furniture, decorations, all prove that Christianity was unknown. Down to the moment when the troops departed from Britain, the people offered sacrifices and inscribed their last pious wishes to Jupiter, Bacchus, Serapis, or Mithra, gods who had been worshipped from very ancient times. The degrading worship of emperors had fallen into disuetude. Sir Francis Palgrave, after a careful examination of all the literary materials bearing upon the subject, finds no valid evi- dence that the British tribes ever heard of Christianity. The earliest evidences of Christianity in Britain relate to the romanized Britons, chiefly of the higher ranks, and (he might have added) therefore those to whom the official religion of emperor-worship was most repugnant. 9 The Rev. Dr. Bruce sums up the case in a few words. 10 After ad- mitting the absence of any Christian memorials in the Roman remains he says: " We meet the cross in several of its forms, but it is admitted on all hands that the cross and even the famed cipher p or X P are 9 Palgrave's "English Commonwealth," 1, 154. 10 Bruce, "The Roman Wall," p. 11. 32 ANCIENT BRITAIN. emblems older than Christianity. Their appearance on monuments- prior to the time of Constantine cannot be regarded as emblems of the Christian profession. Neither do we meet with any other indica- tion of the adoption of the verities of revelation by the romanized Britons." Mr. Thomas Wright goes even farther than this and claims that Christianity was not known in Britain until a period much later than the Gothic revolts. "The rites of Odin or Wodin were brought by these barbarians from Scandinavia and the Continent; and an emi- nent antiquarian says that after the conquest of Britain, Saxon pagan- ism was everywhere substituted for Roman, and it was only perhaps in a few cases, chiefly, we may suppose in the towns, that individuals preserved for a while their respect for Roman gods, or their attach- ment to Roman ceremonies. " After mentioning that in one case what at first sight, appeared to be Christian emblems, were found in a "clearly pagan interment" and in others, similar emblems with By- zantine and Frankish coins, cowries from the Orient and other articles imported from foreign countries, he disposes of the subject with the warning that, "approaches to the cross-shape in fibulae, ornaments, and safety-pins, worn on the person or attached to the clothing, found in Saxon graves, must not be taken to prove any connection with