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Gentleman's Magazine 1824 part 1 p.5
[com]mon, which was perfect in his day, and does not appear
to have traced its extent northward through the old inclosed
land. That so extensive a space as is here occupied should
have any reference to a place of worship, seems hardly
probable. That it was to commemorate some event, and
probably a victory, seems more likely, and the name of
Skellaw, i.e. the Hill of Skulls, strengthens the
conjecture.
GEORGE HALL.
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