The Phœnician origin of Britons, Scots & Anglo-Saxons : discovered by Phœnician & Sumerian inscriptions in Britain, by preroman Briton coins & a mass of new history : with over one hundred illustrations and maps

CATTI PLACE NAMES IN SCOTLAND 403

Aberdeen :

Moray Frith :

Sutherland :

Caithness :

Orkney : Shet-land :

Caitie villages in Don Valley, in neighbourhood of Newton Stone, see Map, p. 19, which adjoins many Pictish villages, bearing the prefix ‘‘ Pit.”

Caitie Burn, ditto.

Cot Hill at Hatter-Seat, on coast, N. of Aberdeen.

Gadie River, near Newton Stone (see Map, p. 10).

Keith, on Banff border.

Hadds, near Newton, and Hadds, at Newburgh.

Hatton, several as prefix to village names.

Cat-boll or Cad-boll, on promontory N. of Inverness.

Cawdor castle, near Nairn, on opposite side of Frith from above.

Chat (Druim-), with vitrified fort at Knockfurrel, in Ross-shire.

Catiey or Cathy (Norse, Catow), ancient name of Sutherland (4, 187).

Cat-ness or Cattey-ness (for Kata-ness of Norse), previously Chat of Pict Chronicle, and Kata-ib! (4, 187-190).

Watt-en, on Wick river.

“ Ocelis”’ is figured by Ptolemy as one of the Orcades.

Zet-land is an older form of the modern name Shet-land (4, 536).

Khaiti-cu or Xaitti-cu, name of old capital of Shetland (see p. 77).

» Calendar of Angus the Culdee in ninth century, a.v.