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^According to Bede, besides using Chad at Lichfield, after his reconsecration, Theodore used other Irish trained clergy: eg Eata, Cuthbert, Bosa, and Eadhaed. 61Canon XIII, ed. W Haddan and W Stubbs, Councils and Ecclesiastical Documents, III, p. 367. 62FE Warren, The Liturgy and Ritual of the Celtic Church, Oxford, 1881, p. 147; Haddan and Stubbs, op. cit., Ill, p. 368. 63Ludwig Bieler, Ireland, Harbinger of the Middle Ages, London, 1963, p. 108. MBede, op. cit., V:7; V:19; III: 18; V: XIX. 65In Cornwall there is Davidstow, Michaelstow, Padstow, and Morwenstow. There are Bridstows in Hereford, Cornwall, and Devon, and Stow and Wistanstow in Shropshire. There is a Wonastow in Monmouth. IN K Chadwick, 'The Celtic background of early Anglo-Saxon England', Celt and Saxon, Cambridge, 1964, p. 343: See also, C L Wrenn, 'Saxons and Celts in South- West Britain', Transactions of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, 1959. 67Bakewell and Egham in Derbyshire, and Sandbach in Cheshire, where place- name evidence records their existence at Christleton, Rowton (formerly Little Christleton) and Littleton (formerly Little Christleton). 68He has Mercian dedications at Shustoke, Warwcs., Holme Lacey, Herefords.and at Donnington and Clungford in Shropshire. He appears in several Gloucestershire field names. 69E John, Orbis Britanniae, pp. 28-34. 70A W Wade-Evans, Welsh Christian Origins, p. 18 The Emergence of England and Wales, Cambridge, 2nd. ed., 1959, p. 123, n. 2. "C Fox, Offa's Dyke, London, 1955, pp. 217, 218. 72Chs.70and71.. 73HPR Finberg, The early charters of the West Midlands, 60, p 42. 74FE Harmer, Select English Historical Docuntents, Cambridge, 1914, 1, p. 39. 75HPR Finberg, The early charters of the West Midlands, 76, p. 48. nIbid. 77FM Stenton in Offa's Dyke, p. xviii. 78FM Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, p. 214. 79R Bromwich, ed., Trioedd Ynys Prydein The Welsh Triads, Cardiff, 1961, 49, p. 128; The Book of Taliesin, ed. J. G. Evans, Llanbedrog, 1910, pp. 36, 68. 80VE Nash-Williams, The Early Christian Monuments of Wales, p. 202. 81In Nancy Edwards and Alan Lane, eds, The Early Church in Wales and the West, Oxford, 1992, p. 145, the Very Revd J Wyn Evans defined a clas rather more broadly, as 'an association of interested persons'. 82GRJ Jones, 'The tribal system in Wales: A reassessment in the light of settlement studies', Welsh History Review, 1, 1960, p. 128. "HPR Finberg, The early charters of the West Midlands, 405, p. 139; 15, p. 141; 404, p. 147: p. 220. MHPR Finberg, 'The Archangel Michael in Britain', Culte de Saint Michel et Pelerinages au Mont, Paris, 1971. "Life of St Cadoc, ch.9, Wade-Evans, AW, Vitae Sanctorum Britanniae et Genealogie, Cardiff, 1944.