Archaeologia Cambrensis

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W. Pickering, 1928
 

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Page 187 - ... wives, and they at the same time desired to possess them, and each took a wife of the mothers of their companions, and they governed the country and peopled it. And these five divided it amongst them and because of this partition are the five divisions of Ireland still so termed. And they examined the land where the battles had taken place, and they found gold and silver, until they became wealthy.
Page 102 - I suggest that the other method, a labour force recruited by the State, paid by the State, and continuously employed over a period of years, is...
Page 356 - We must turn to a remarkable series of tales which are associated with the name of the Irish Finn, and which not only bear a close resemblance to the Lugh-Lleu legend, but, if not originally identical with it, have been so mixed with it as almost to lose all claim to an independent...
Page 28 - Corresponding Societies. The Society of Antiquaries of London, Burlington House, W. (c/o The Secretary). The Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, 63, Merrion Square, Dublin (c/o The Hon.
Page 203 - In the last decade of the sixteenth century and in the early part of the seventeenth century there lived in England two brothers, prominent lawyers, who were natives of Anglesey, Walea.
Page 103 - I have been disposed to hold, the free choice of a conquering race, but a boundary defined by treaty or by agreement between the men of the hills and the men of the lowlands. The latter, one would say, although clearly the dominant partners in the arrangement, did not have matters all their own way'.
Page 233 - ... this increase of proportional height is greater than has been found in any of the stocks from which the modern Englishman is derived.
Page 233 - Was Darwin right when he said that man, under the action of biological forces which can be observed and measured, has been raised from a place amongst anthropoid apes to that which he now occupies?
Page 347 - Military Architecture, vol. ii, p. 79) to Henry de Elreton, but I do not know on what authority. Harlech is akin to Rhuddlan and Beaumaris rather than to Carnarvon. 1 J. Bain, Calendar of Documents Relating to Scotland, vol. ii, No. 1308. town, his chief being William de Feiton, who, it is significant to note, had been constable of Beaumaris Castle in 1296, with James of ¡St.
Page 124 - the father of all such as handle the harp and organ," as his brother Jabal is mentioned as ' the father of such as dwell in tents.

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