Mr. Willis, in endeavouring to ascertain the place where some battles were fought between Edmund Ironside and Canute, which are mentioned by our old historians in such a manner as to have left the spot doubtful to Mr. Camden and others, observes, that Dr. Stukeley, in his letter to lord Pembroke, speaking of Figbury-ring, near Salisbury, says, “To the east is Clarendon, which your lordship first observed “from old writings ought to be called Clorendun, from the fa-“mous camp half a mile off the park near the Roman road; “this was made or repaired by Constantius Chlorus, father of “Constantine the Great: this camp therefore properly written “is Chloridunum, being a beautiful fortification of a round form, “on a dry chalky hill.”