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MacRitchie, David, 1861-1925

"Fians, Fairies and Picts"

ii.; where he also refers to Wilde's _Boyne and Blackwater_ and
Wakeman's _Irish Antiquities_. A recent work, illustrating the same
subject, but which I have not yet had an opportunity of seeing, is Mr.
George Coffey's "Tumuli and Inscribed Stones at New Grange, Dowth, and
Knowth," Dublin, 1893.]
[Footnote 77: Forbes Leslie's _Early Races of Scotland_, vol. ii. p.
335, _note_.]
[Footnote 78: O'Curry's _Lectures_, Dublin, 1861, p. 505.]
[Footnote 79: For most of which see Dr. Standish O'Grady's _Silva
Gadelica_, pp. 102-3, 146, 233, 474, and 484.]
[Footnote 80: _Silva Gadelica_ (English translation), pp. 474 and 520.]
[Footnote 81: _Op. cit._ (English translation), p. 522.]
[Footnote 82: Skene's _Celtic Scotland_, vol. iii. pp. 106-7.]
[Footnote 83: Class H. 3, 17, Trinity College, Dublin. [I quote from Mr.
Petrie's "Round Towers," Trans, of Roy. Irish Acad., vol. xx. (Dublin,
1845), p. 98.]]
[Footnote 84: Rath Chruachain, Co. Roscommon: the cemetery was styled
_Relig na Riogh_, or the Cemetery of Kings.]
[Footnote 85: _Op. cit._, p. 106.]
[Footnote 86: "_Is in Brug, or Bruig_." Mr. Petrie invariably translates
this as "at" Brugh.


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