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Secure Coding in C and C++

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Secure Coding in C and C++

Secure Coding in C and C++

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Secure Coding In C And C++

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.
knife-shaped articles, 218;
lacrymatory, Roman, 165;
medal, 404;
metal, lump, 155;
nails, 527;
ornaments, Anglo-Saxon, 11;
rude, 185;
more refined, 211;
of goblet, 297;
dragons, tortoise, fantastic heads of animals, 297;
in gold and bronze, 358, 526;
and copper, 527;
oyster shells, 74;
pebbles, 218;
pin, iron, 13;
bronze ditto, 141, 216;
copper, 210;
pine poles partly burnt, 526;
point, flint, of dart or javelin, 142;
pottery, fine, broken, 357;
pottery, rude, 12, 217, 218, 285, 339;
Roman, 105, 106;
black, 285;
fine, 404;
red and black, rude British, 105, 285;
Roman British, or Mediæval, 165;
precious stones, traces of, 142;
punch, iron, 218;
rat's bones, 13;
ring, gold, 210;
iron, ib.;
bronze, 218, 487;
Runes, 244;
representations of stag and camels, 218;
shield, fragments of, 156;
silver-flower sword-ornaments, 156;
slate, 525;
spear-heads, flint or stone, 182;
skulls, human, 155, 525;
snaffle bridle, 156;
sword, iron, 148, 156, 184, 446;
syenite, 217;
sea shells, 218;
silver, 13, 243;
skeletons, human, 11, 14, 17, 76, 145, 148, 165, 209, 289,
313;
sling-stones, 210;
spear-head, 11, 12;
of brass, 103;
sculptured slab, 365;
stained fragments, 218;
stag's bones, 216;
statuettes, 339;
stone, 11, 165;
polished stones, 218;
stone button, 210;
stone shot, ib.;
studs of coal, 13;
tiles, Romano-Gallic, 338;
others, 359;
teeth of animals, 12;
human, 155, 216;
of horse, 404;
tweezers, ivory, 103;
terra cotta, 339;
torques, gold, 210;
silver, 243;
urns, 11-13, 143, 179, 264;
with ashes, 184, 210;
of stone, 210;
for burial, 527;
vases, 140-1, 357;
whetstone, 13;
wood, coals, 74;
wood, burnt, 182;
wood, dark, 526.
Finds in Denmark, 10;
Derbyshire, 11;
Winster Moor, ib.;
Pegges Barrow, ib.;
Long Rood, ib.;
Haddon Field Barrow, ib.;
Gib Hill, ib.;
Cross Flats, ib.;
Galley Lowe, 12;
Minning Lowe, ib.;
Borther Lowe, ib.;
Rolley Lowe, ib.;
Ashford Moor, ib.;
Carder Lowe, ib.;
New Inns, ib.;
Net Lowe, 13;
Castern, ib.;
Chartham Downs, ib.;
Stand Lowe, ib.;
Wetton and Ilam, ib.;
Middleton Moor. ib.;
Come Lowe, ib.;
Dowe Lowe. ib.;
valley of Somme, 16;
Abbeville, ib.;
Gray's Inn Lane, ib.;
Nineveh, 34;
at Avebury, 74;
at Crichie, 75;
at Hakpen, 76;
contents of, 250;
tumuli, analysis of contents of, 11;
finds at Stonehenge, 103-5;
at West Kennet, 285 et seq.;
inferences from, 288;
inference from nature of, 106;
from coins, 338;
from absence of British, Gallic, and Christian coins, 340;
from Roman pottery, 360;
few inferences of age possible from finds in India, and why,
480;
no iron or bronze, but copper, in North America, 517;
and tools only of copper, 517.
Finn, suitor of Graine, 225.
Firbolgs, or Belgæ, in Ireland, 176;
when, 193;
defeat at Moytura, 179;
how long in Ireland, 193;
whence they came thither, 193.
Fire, worship of, forbidden by Councils, 25.
Flann, son of Conaing, 201.
Flint remains found at Abbeville, 16 note;
inference from, 166;
symbolic of what, 447.
SeeFinds.
Flower, Mr., account of African monuments, 396;
and their builders, 403.
Ford, Mr., his 'Handbook of Spain.'
Fordun, seeBoece.
Fomorians, from Africa settled in Ireland, 176;
dispossessed by Belgæ, 176;
of same race as Dananns, 187.
Forres, Sweno's stone at, 59.
Fountains, worship of, 24-5.
Fouquet, M., seeGalles, M.
Four-cornered grave, 449.
"Four Masters" cited, 213, 225, 382.
France, climate of, at epoch of "Cave men," 17;
finds in, 16;
menhirs, 59;
a single sculptured stone there, 59 note;
French study of rude-stone monuments, recent, but
scientific, 325;
'Dictionnaire des Antiquités Celtiques,' ib.;
Bertrand, M., his map of France, 326;
general distribution of French monuments, ib.;
no dolmens in East of France, 327;
date of Celtic first invasion of Gaul, 327, 334;
two early contemporary races in, 328;
the 'ac' termination, 329;
church architecture in dolmen region of the South of
France, 331;
form of dolmen distinguishes dolmens in Brittany from
those in South
of France, 335;
Confolens, 337;
plan of, ib.;
error of French antiquaries, ib.;
find, 337-9;
dolmens, 340;
size, number, and beauty of, ib.;
few and imperfect circles, ib.;
"Allée couverte" or "Grotte des Fées," ib.;
examples of, elsewhere than in France, ib.;
their distribution here, 340;
Saumur, Essé, Locmariaker, Bagneux, Mettray, 341;
form of French dolmens, 342;
Krukenho, ib.;
comparative age of, 343;
demi-dolmens, rocking stones, &c., 345 et seq.;
Carnac, cemetery and battle-field, 349;
alignments, Carnac and Erdeven, St. Barbe, 350;
Maenec and Kermario, 351;
map, 352-3;
stone rows, 354;
differ how, from Stonehenge and Stennis, 355;
head of column of St. Barbe, Mont St. Michel, ib.;
find, 356;
Kerlescant, find, 357;
Plouharnel, double dolmen and find, 358;
long barrow, Moustoir-Carnac, ib.;
find, 359;
Locmariaker, cemetery, dolmen, 360;
sculptured stones at Mané Lud, 361;
dolmen, Dol ar Marchant, ib.;
end stone and roof, sculptured, 362;
fallen obelisk, 363;
compared to dolmen at Krukenho, ib.;
allée couverte, 364;
ornamented stones, ib.;
Mané er H'roëk, and find, ib.;
Gavr Innis, sculptured stones, 365;
resemble sculptures at Lough Crew, 366;
three-holed stone, tools used, ib.;
Tumiac, tumulus and find, ib.;
Crozon alignments, their origin and purpose obscure, 367;
Gré de Cojou, double alignment, circle, enclosures, dolmen,
367-8;
Preissac, ib.;
date and object of monuments at Carnac, 370 et seq.;
Carnac, Erdeven, and St. Barbe, are they parts of one
whole? 372;
argument against their existence in Cæsar's time, 373;
not pre-Roman, ib.;
early history not satisfactory, ib.;
battle between Maximus and Gratian, ib.;
Conan Meriadec, 374;
author's view as to origin of Carnac monuments, 374-5;
Grallon's war with Liberius and Northern pirates, 374;
Romans never settled in Brittany, 370;
effect there of Roman building-style, ib;
and of withdrawal of Romans, 394.
Franks, M., his photograph of Ballo dolmen, 321.
French antiquaries, errors of, 337.
Frere, Mr., his find at Abbeville, 16 note.
Freyrsö, battle at, 276.
Frey's Howe, opened, 527.
Friar's Heel stone at Stonehenge, 7.
Frode Frodegode, tomb of, 299.
Frode V., 278, 288.

GALATIA, importance of dolmens there, if any, to Celtic theory,


446.
Galles, M. René, explores Mont St. Michel,354;
with M. Fouquet explores Tumiac, find, 366.
Galley Low, find at, 12.
Gallicia, dolmens in, 378.
Ganora, seeGuinevere.
Gariock, Newton stone at, 57.
Garrywhin alignment, 529.
Gaul, Pliny's tale of snakes in, 4;
no stone temples in, mentioned by Cæsar or Tacitus, 20.
Gavr Innis, in Morbihan, 43, 364;
sculptures, holed stone, 365;
compared to Lough Crew, 366;
holes and trough below, ib.;
object of it.
Geraldus Cambrensis, his statement as to removal of stones to
Stonehenge, 107;
how fable originated, 108.
Germans, worship of, in groves only, 20.
Germany, North (seeScandinavia); dolmens in, 301.
Gervaise mentions cemetery at Canterbury, 22.
Ghazni, Saracenic arches at, 457.
Giant tribes in Palestine, builders of dolmens? 442;
circles, 453.
"Giant's dance," Geraldus and Ware cited as to, 107 note.
Giant's grave, 229;
circle there, ib.
Giants' towers, 415.
Giara, plan of, Nurhag of, 430. SeeMediterranean Islands.
Gib Hill, find at, 11, seeDerbyshire;
analogue of Silbury Hill, 147.
Gildas cited, 87;
as to interments at Stonehenge, 110.
Gilead, dolmens in, 442;
last safe place for dolmens before India, 443.
Gizeh, date of pyramid of, 31.
Glasfurd, Capt., find by, 487.
Glem, or Glein, river, Arthur's battle near, 135.
Glen Columbkille, 225.
Glen Columbkille and Glen Malin, survey of Mr. Norman Moore,
520;
cromlechs or dolmens, stone chambers, solitary stones,
320;
plan of one, 521;
groups of, 523-4;
find, 525;
resemblance of one to Calliagh Birra's tomb, 525.
Glen Malin More, 225.
Godmundingham, destruction of church at, 23.
Gond, seeBhil.
Gongora y Martinez, Don, his work cited, 377.
Gordon, Principal, anecdotes of, respecting holed stones at
Stennis,
255.
Gorm, monument of, 27;
date of, 126, 296 et seq.;
dragon on, 245.
Gothland perhaps mentioned by Diodorus, 8.
Göttenburg, drawings of ships on stones at, 303.
Göttingen, no dolmens in, 301.
Gower caves, 16.
Gozo, spirals and scrolls at, compared to those at Mycenæ, 424.
Graine, daughter of Cormac Mac Art, seeBeds.
Grallon, king of Briton, his wars, 374.
Grandmont, holed dolmen at, 343.
Grange, New, cairns at, 52.
Gratian, defeat of, in Brittany, 374.
Grave, four cornered, 449.
Greece, Aryan occupation of, 39;
early tombs in Greece, ib.;
succession of architectural styles, 393. SeeBactrian.
Greeks of Bactria introduce usage of stone monuments in India,
48;
Greek kings mentioned by Asoka, 498.
Greenland, route of early peoplers of America, 516.
Greenmount, tumulus at, 231;
diggings at, ib.;
date, 232.
Greenwell, Canon, his researches as to prehistoric tumuli, 289.
Gregory the Great, letter of, respecting English idols, 21.
Gröningen, dolmens in 301.
Grottes des Feés, seeAlées couvertes.
Groups of stones in England, 56.
Groves, sacred, 465.
Guest, Dr., accuracy of his dates, 86;
opinions as to place of Arthur's last battle, 87.
Guidebert circle, 531.
Guin, Arthur's 8th battle there, 137, 172.
Guinevere, where born and buried? 134.
Guzerat, ruins in, of Mahommedan city, 457.
HACAS PEN, seeHakpen Hill.
Hadrian, mausoleum of, 40;
coins of, 84.
Hagiar Khem, plan of cone, 423;
pit-markings, 424;
altar, 425;
headless image, ib.
Hag's Hill, 213. SeeSlieve na Calliage.
Haken, his victory, 291.
Hakpen Hill, circle and avenue, 4;
double circles, 64;
Dr. Stukeley's theory as to, 4;
dimensions, 65;
mentioned in Charter of Athelstane, 73;
dimensions of ovals, 75;
stones, 76;
find, 76;
date of interments, 77;
Camden's account, 78;
Saxon and Danish burials, ib.;
Roman road at, 83.
Hale Farm, 117.
Halkor, 305;
dolmen, with drawing of ships, circles with crosses or
chariot-wheels, 304.
Hamlet, citation from, 286.
Hannibal in Spain, 380.
Hanover dolmen, 301;
with enclosure, 308.
Harald Blaatand, 296.
Harald Hildetand, his defeat, 280;
grave, 282.
Harold Harfagar, 248;
when took the Orkneys, 250.
Haugagerdium, 249.
Havard the Happy, 250.
Havard, Earl, where interred, 298.
Hauran, Roman tombs in the, 445.
Haxthausen, cited as to Steppes, 448-9.
Head-stone, seeKivik.
Hecatæus cited, 8.
Height of mound an indication of its age, 142 note.
Helmstädt, once dolmens were near, 301.
Hengist and Horsa, 119;
Hengist's grandson, 57;
his treachery, 107.
Henry of Huntingdon cited as to triliths at Stonehenge, 94.
Heracleidæ, return of, what figured by, 39.
Heraldic symbolism, 273.
Heremon, Spanish race of, in Ireland, 381 et seq.;
kings of this race in Ireland, where buried, 200.
Herodotus, his descriptions of tomb of Alyattes, 31;
his account of the Nasomenes, 407.
Herrestrup, dolmen at, 303;
ships, and circles with crosses engraved upon, 303.
Hesiod, his statement as to respective antiquity of brass or iron,
35.
Hiero's temple at mouth of Loire, 21.
Hildebrand, his account of diggings and find at Oden's Howe,
526.
Hildesheim, no dolmen at, 301.
Hindu Goni, 412.
Hindus as builders, 457;
did not employ the arch, 457;
not immutable, 458.
Historic, monuments not, 416.
Hjarnæ, tomb of, 299.
Hjortehammer, singular form of graves at, 316;
date of, according to Worsaae, 316;
Viking graves at, 528.
Hoare, Sir R. C., 5;
his work on Wiltshire, ib.;
his authority, in what questionable, 10;
his account of Hakpen, 77;
etymology of Marlborough, 84;
surveyed Marden, 85;
his opinion of, 86;
plan of Stonehenge, 91;
cited as to Stonehenge, 101-5, 110;
Stanton Drew, 150;
find by long barrows, 289.
Hob Hurst's house, 172.
Höbisch, double dolmen at, 309.
Hock Norton, defeat of English at, 126.
Holback, 310.
Holes in dolmens, 161;
Plas Newydd monolith at Stennis, 255;
ceremony connected with, ib.;
date of, 256;
certainly Scandinavian, 258;
in France, Trie, Grandmont, Bas Languedoc, 343-4;
umbrella form has analogues in India, &c., 343;
holes as entrances to chambers at Kerlescant and
Rodmarton, 357;
others at Finistère, 358;
Gavr Innis, 365;
objects of holes there, trough below, 366;
in trilithon, 411;
in dolmen in Circassia, 447;
at Rajunkoloor, 469;
inference of connexion of race from, 495.
SeeTumulus.
Holland, dolmens in, 301.
SeeDrenthe, Hunebeds.
Holland, Rev. Mr., cited as to Sinai, 443;
find by, 444.
Holstein, dolmens in, 301.
Holy Land, seePalestine.
Horsa, his burial-place, 119-21;
battle between and Vortigern, 119.
Horses, sacrifices of, in the Steppes, 449-52.
Horstead, Horsa perhaps there buried, 121.
Houel's monuments in Malta, 416.
Howes, Danish and Saxon burials in, 104;
British ditto, to what date, ib.;
Danish kings buried, 250;
to what date, argument from, 297.
Hoxay, 249-50.
Hubba the Dane, his era, 104.
Huc and Gabet cited as to monasticism in the East, 502.
Human remains, seeFinds.
Human sacrifices amongst Anglo-Saxons, 284-5;
and Khonds in India, 460;
in Cuttack, 465.
Humble, tomb of, 299.
Hunebeds, 318, et seq.;
Emmen, 320-1;
Ballo, 321;
were they originally covered, 321;
Gröningen and Friesland, 322;
use and date, ib.
Hunestadt, dragon at, 245.
Hwitaby circles and Bacta stones, 290.
Hydahs in Alaska, 18;
compared to Cave men, ib.;
accounts of, 18 note;
whether of race of mound builders, 517.
Hy Fiachrach cited, 233.
Hyperboreans, mentioned by Diodorus, 8;
circular temples amongst, ib.;
falsely supposed to be inhabitants of Britain, ib.

IBERIANS, or Celtiberians, 227;


in Britain, 162;
in Donegal, 227;
dolmens, 228;
Irish dolmens, 238;
not very ready converts to Christianity, 228.
Idols, worship of, Councils forbidding, 24, 25.
Ilam, find at, 13.
Images, headless, 425;
of dead on tombs, 449.
India, temples of, 1;
no Druids in, 6;
observations on, 7;
when iron first known in, 35;
tombs in, 41;
holed stones, 343;
westernmost dolmen, 443;
rude-stone monuments, 455;
dates of Aryans crossing Indus, of Vedas and laws of
Menou, 455;
no existing stone building prior to Asoka, ib.;
progress of Indian architecture contrasted with that of
other
countries, 457;
Hindu not immutable, 459;
but other races are so, 459-461;
Khassia Hills, 462;
rude monuments there similar to European examples, ib.;
cremation amongst Khassias, 463;
funereal seats, ib.;
origin of menhirs there, stone turbans, 464;
menhirs and tables, ib.;
turban-stone, stone-table, trilithon, ib.;
no circles and alignments, tumuli, nor sculptures, but
coincidences
with Western nations, 465;
points of similarity and of dissimilarity to Druidical
institutions,
ib.;
date of monuments, ib.;
Kamarupa, 466;
Sylhet, ib.;
Western India, ib.;
Belgaum altars or tables, 467;
small circles, central stones, worship of Betal, ib.;
dolmen at Rajunkoloor, 468;
closed dolmen, 469;
find, 470;
cairns, ib.;
Raichore Doab dolmens surrounded by double circles, 470;
arrangement of dolmens at Rajunkoloor, ib.;
cairns at Jewurgi, find, 471;
purpose of each set of dolmens, 472;
their ages, ib.;
double dolmen, Coorg, 473;
tomb, Nilgiri Hills, ib.;
sepulchral circles at Amravati, 474;
circular rail, 475;
distribution of dolmens in India, ib.;
Karumbers Buddhists, 477;
Dravidians or Tumulians, 478;
Karumbers and Singalese, connexion of, ib.;
importance of the unexplored territory of Nizam, ib.;
Travancore cromlechs, 479;
mode of interment, offerings to departed spirits,
explanation of
miniature utensils, 479;
finds, 480;
age of monuments, iron how long known in India, iron
pillar at Kutub,
Delhi, 481;
sculptured Indian dolmen, 483;
Iwallee, 484;
group at Shahpoor, 485;
cross and dolmen at Katapur, 486-7;
dolmen with cross at Nirmul Jungle, 488;
dagobas in Ceylon, 489, 490;
dolmen at Pullicondah, 491;
Sanchi, rail near, 492;
author's view as to dates of hewn and rude-stone buildings,
ignorance
of natives, 493-4;
Eastern and Western dolmens, similarities between, how far
proof of
connexion, 495;
tomb of Akbar at Agra, 496;
proof from literature inconclusive, 496;
from Asoka's rock-engraved edict, 498.
Indian Buddhists, rails of, 48;
art influences elsewhere, 414.
Indian origin of Essenes, 500.
Inhumation, different kinds and history of, 30.
Inigo Jones, his treatise on Stonehenge, 23.
Inquisition, 332.
Inscriptions in Maes-Howe, 246;
Newton Stone, perhaps earliest Scotch inscription, 271;
Kirkliston, 271;
Ogham inscription, 271.
Interments, place of, in case of circles, 132, 151;
at Shap, Hakpen, and Crichie, 131-2;
Saxon (seeBeowulf);
articles deposited by Saxons, 145-6;
theory of successive interments, 146;
secondary interments, 165-6;
fallacy as to, 288-9;
Sir John Lubbock's argument respecting summit interments,
166.
International Prehistoric Congress at Paris, 337.
Iolaus with Thespiadæ colonizers of Sardinia, 429.
Iorsala Farer or pilgrims, 244.
Iran and Turan or Aniran, of what these words the equivalents,
506.
Irby and Mangles, Captains, observe dolmens in Syria, 441.
Ireland, tomb-building in, 43;
dolmens in, 45;
external ditto, 46;
menhirs in, 58;
no symbolage in, 59;
bluestones from, transported to England, 108;
rude-stone monuments in, 175;
best illustration of megalithic remains, ib.;
obstruction of the study of Irish monuments, ib.;
services of Dr. Petrie, ib.;
materials for history of, ib.;
copious literature, 176 (seeMoytura);
King Eochy, 178;
Firbolgs or Belgians, 179;
tradition of the "One Man," ib.;
Queen Misgan Meave, 184-6;
Dananns who? 188;
King Nuada of the Silver Hand, 186;
Fomorians, 186-7;
Breas, 186;
Balor of the Evil Eye, 187;
the great Daghda, ib.;
Fomorians and Dananns alleged to be of same
Scandinavian race, ib.;
their very early intercourse with Irish, 188;
Dananns were Danes, ib.;
chronology of early events, 188 et seq.;
places of royal interment, 190;
race of Crimthann, 132;
introduction of alphabet, 189, 196;
division into kingdoms, 189;
early accounts of its peopling, ib.;
Irish history doubtful until Cimboeth, ib.;
burial-places of ancient kings, 190;
first influx of civilization, when, according to Dr. Todd,
193 note;
Oghams, 196;
authentic history of Ireland, when commences, according to
Petrie,
ib.;
legend of the Beds of Diarmid, 225;
tradition as to (seeCemeteries);
St. Colomba, 227;
Iberians in Ireland, monuments of, 227;
murder of Dathi by foster-brothers, 233;
barbarism of Irish before St. Patrick, 235-6;
their civilization progressive, 236;
stages of architecture, 237-8;
marks of triple system of monuments, 238;
importance of them to history, 238;
age and sequence of its monuments, 237-8;
circle-building race in, 274;
dolmen-building ditto, 274, 381;
Spanish migration to, Heremon, 381;
where Spaniards settled, 382;
date, ib.
SeeGlen Columbkille.
Iron, when known to Greeks, Israelites, Etruscans, 35;
argument from absence of iron in tombs considered, 37;
when introduced into Denmark, England, Egypt, ib.;
iron, early manufacture of, in India, 482;
and now by Khassias especially, ib.
Iron pillar at Kutub, 481;
date of, 482.
Italy, tomb-building in, 40;
dolmen at Saturnia, 391-2;
chambered tumuli, 392;
hewn stones, ib.;
Etruria, ib.;
why dolmens not so uniform in Italy as in France and
Scandinavia,
393;
earliest colonists, the Pelasgi and Tyrrheni, in contact with
merely
stone-hewing peoples, ib.;
reverence of Etrurians for dead, ib.;
their effacement by more progressive races, ib.;
Rome adopts and improves Etruscan architecture, ib.;
and forces Spain and France to a more ambitious sepulture,
394;
their relapse into rude-stone monuments, ib.
Iwallee, singular place of dolmen, 484.

JACOB, stone set up by, 438-9.


Jains succeeded Buddhists in India, 459.
James I. directs researches respecting Stonehenge, 3, 104.
Janssen, Dr., his work on Hunebeds, 319.
Jarl Ragnvald, his expedition, 244.
Jarls, Orcadian, how buried, 297.
Jeffrey of Monmouth cited, 88;
account by, of Stonehenge, 106 and of Merlin, are justified,
412;
his character as writer, 106.
Jellinge, King Gorm's tomb at, 245, 296 et seq.
Jersey, tumulus in, 51;
circle, 52.
Jewurgi, cairns at, 471-2.
Jey Sing, observatories of, 7, 459.
John, St., Baptistery of, at Canterbury, erected, 22.
Jones, seeInigo.
Joshua, stone set up by, 438-40;
flint instruments of circumcision interred with him, 440.
Joyce, Rev. Mr., on crosses, 488.
Juggernaut, temple of, 460.
Junies, remains there, 368.
Jutes, settle in and trade with Britain before Cæsar's time, 133.
Jutland, dolmens in, 301.

KAFR ER WÂL, dolmen at, 441.


Kamarupa, Hindu kingdom, 466.
Karl Lofts, if circle there, 130.
Karumbers, 476 et seq.;
originators of rude monuments in India, 478.
Katapur, cross and dolmen at, 486-7.
Kemble cited, 64, 73;
as to historical value of poem of Beowulf, 120.
Kemp How, 130.
Kennet Avenue at Avebury, 63-4;
called "stone row" in charter of Athelstan, 74;
river, station of Saxons upon, 88;
long barrow similar to Lethra, 283.
SeeRiver Kennet.
Kens Low, 139;
barrow, find at, 145.
Kent, division of, by Bede, 120.
Kent's Hole, 16.
Kerdouadec alignment, 367.
Kerland demi-dolmen, 336.
Kerlescant, 351, 356;
long barrow opened, find, 356.
Kermario avenues, 350.
Keyna, traditions respecting, 151.
Keysler, citations from, 24, 25;
compares Drenthe to Stonehenge, 319.
Khassia Hills, rude-stone monuments, 462 et seq.;
tribes practise cremation, 463;
funereal usages, 463;
iron manufacture, 482.
Khatoura, tomb of Isidorus at, 100.
Khonds (seeGonds), usages of, resemblance to Druids, 460;
Major Macpherson's remarks respecting their worship, 461;
difficulty of putting an end to their human sacrifices, ib.
King Stone, 146.
SeeStanton Drew.
Kings of Denmark, tombs of, 15.
Kinsey, his 'Portugal Illustrated,' 377.
Kistvaens, or cists, how composed, 43;
contents of, ib.;
when covered, 43-4;
passages into, 43;
sculpture in, ib.;
New Grange, ib.;
Gavr Innis, ib.;
Maes-Howe, ib.;
Arbor Low, 140;

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