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Longford and Langford as Significant Names in Establishing Lines of Roman Roads

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 November 2011

Kenneth E. Jermy
Affiliation:
5 Far Sandfield, Churchdown, Gloucester

Abstract

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Type
Notes
Information
Britannia , Volume 23 , November 1992 , pp. 228 - 229
Copyright
Copyright © Kenneth E. Jermy 1992. Exclusive Licence to Publish: The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies

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References

45 ‘The Viatores,' Roman Roads in the South-East Midlands (1964); Ogden, T.L., Durham Univ. Journ. n.s., xxvii (19661967), 1324.Google Scholar

46 ‘The Viatores,’ op. cit. (note 45).

47 Gelling, Margaret, Med. Arch, xi (1967), 87104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

48 P.L. Collins, private communication, 9 October 1968.

49 S.E. Rigold, private communication, 4 April 1970.

50 I.D. Margary, Roman Roads in Britain (3rd edn, 1973).

51 W.H. Duignan, Staffordshire Place-Names (1912).

52 Margary, op. cit. (note 50); one Langford is related to a suggested Roman road: Jermy, K.E., Cornish Arch. viii (1969), 81.Google Scholar

53 English Place-Name Society xlii–xliii (Westmorland i–ii) (1967).Google Scholar

54 idem, xii (Essex) (1935).

55 idem, various volumes.

56 Penny, S.R., Derbys. Arch. Journ. lxxxvi (1966), 7187; English Place-Name Society xxvii (Derbyshire i) takes this road to be the Ryknild Street running in a NE direction from the Chesterfield area towards Doncaster.Google Scholar

57 Jermy, op. cit. (note 52).

58 K.E. Jermy, C.B.A. Group 9 Newsletter no. 4 (1974), 12.

59 Many people provided data and useful criticism, including A.L.F. Rivet (now Emeritus Professor) of the University of Keele, D.J. Stagg of the former Archaeology Division of the Ordnance Survey, and officials of local councils.