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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 July 2012
I beg leave to address you in regard to another mass of Roman lead lately discovered in Derbyshire. Your attachment to this subject expressed to me in one of your late letters gives me great confidence to hope you will not think me troblesome in engaging your attention once more as briefly as I can.
page 170 note [a] It takes its name from the hillocks of earth and rubbish at such places.
page 171 note [b] Gent. Magazine, 1773, vol. XLIII. p. 61.
page 171 note [c] Of this see Gent. Mag. 1783. vol. LIII. p. 935.
page 171 note [d] Archaeologia, vol. V. p. 375.
page 171 note [e] See for this Archaeologia, V. p. 377.
page 172 note [f] Rom. Antiq. p. 904.
page 172 note [g] Inscript. Antiq. Sylloge, p. 205. and repeatedly in Gruter.
page 173 note [h] Amm. Marcellinus, p. 234 & var. Lect. Edit. Vales. Beda, p. 3. Indeed the Saxons almost universally give it so in the coins and MSS.
page 173 note [i] Gale, ad Antonin. p. 70. Mr. Sherringham observes, p. 21, that the British name is Llundain, and undoubtedly the name is of British original. See Richards's Brit. and Engl. Dict. v. Llundain, and archbishop Usher's. Brit. Eccl. Antiq. p. 34.
page 173 note [k] Archaeologia, V. p. 374.