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XX. On the Eastern Terminus of the Wall of Antoninus. By the Rev. Richard Garnett, Assistant Librarian of the British Museum. Communicated by Sir Henry Ellis, K.H., F.R.S., Secretary
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 June 2012
Extract
In a well-known passage of his “Ecclesiastical History,” Bede observes that the eastern extremity of the wall of Antoninus was called by the Picts Peannfahel, and by the Anglo-Saxons Peneltun. The latter would lead us to expect a modern Pendleton; but no such name is known in the district. There is some disagreement among antiquaries as to the precise point where the vallum actually terminated. The common opinion places it at Caerriden or Carriden, adjoining the æstuary of the Forth in Linlithgowshire, chiefly on the ground of the vestiges found there of a Roman fort or station. Though Horsley does not formally controvert this opinion, it is evident that he thought there were serious objections against it, which it will be best to state in his own words:—
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- Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1844
References
page 246 note a Britannia Romana, c. 10, p. 159.
page 246 note b By a mistake of the engraver, Kinneil appears on Roy's Plan as Reneel.