Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 January 2012
The presence of a Saxon settlement at Selsey (other than that of St. Wilfrid, which is generally supposed to have been in the eastern half of the Peninsula) has recently been revealed by coastal erosion west of the remains of Medmerry Farm, (O.S. 6 in. LXXXI, N.W.). The site is on low ground, only a few feet above the marshy land which lies behind, and the Saltings on the east.
page 396 note 1 Antiq. Journ. xiii (1933), 109 ffGoogle Scholar.
page 396 note 2 Ibid, xii (1932), 288 ff.
page 399 note 1 Antiq. Journ. xii (1932), 290Google Scholar, pl. LV, 2.
page 399 note 2 Archaeologia, lxxiii, 147 ff., and lxxvi, 59 ff.
page 399 note 3 Proc. Sac. Antiq. xxvi, 133 and 134.
page 399 note 4 Selsey Bill: Historic and Prehistoric, E. Heron-Allen, p. 196.
page 399 note 5 The Place-Names of Sussex (English Place-Name Society), part I, pp. 83 and 84. I am indebted to Mr. O. G. S. Crawford for drawing my attention to this point.
page 400 note 1 Waters of Arun, A. Hadrian Allcroft, p. 108 ff.
page 400 note 2 The Place-Names of Sussex (English Place-Name Society), part I, pp. 88 and 89.