An Outline of the Relations between England and Scotland (500-1707) by Robert S. Rait
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page 24 of 240 (10%)
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[Footnote 10: For the real significance of such grants of land, cf. Maitland, _Domesday Book and Beyond_, Essay II.] [Footnote 11: _Scotland under her Early Kings_, vol. i, p. 239.] [Footnote 12: Annalia, iv.] [Footnote 13: There is a possible exception in Barbour's _Bruce_ (Bk. XVIII, 1. 443)--"Then gat he all the Erischry that war intill his company, of Argyle and the Ilis alswa". It has been generally understood that the "Erischry" here are the Scottish Highlanders; but it is certain that Barbour frequently uses the word to mean Irishmen, and it is perhaps more probable that he does so here also than that he should use the word in this sense only once, and with no parallel instance for more than a century.] [Footnote 14: Chronicle, Book II, c. ix. Cf. App. A.] [Footnote 15: Ibid, Book V, c. x. Cf. App. A.] [Footnote 16: _History of Greater Britain_, Bk. I, cc. vii, viii, ix. Cf. App. A.] [Footnote 17: _Scotorum Regni Descriptio_, prefixed to his "History". Cf. App. A.] [Footnote 18: _Fasti Aberdonenses_, p. 3.] [Footnote 19: _De Gestis Scotorum_, Lib. I. Cf. App. A. It is |
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