In some of your name indexes at the front of your books you refer to “Abona” as being “Avonmouth, Avon”. Both are incorrect. Strictly “Abona” is the small Roman dock in Sea Mills which still exists and is still used by small private boats. The dock is fed by the small tributary river called the Trym which then runs into the river Avon. At one time the Trym must have been larger than it is now since it was said that the Romans mined lead in what is now Blaise Castle estate and also on Henbury golflinks and floated it down the Trym to load in the dock in Sea Mills, and thence out onto the Avon. Avonmouth did not really exist as a place in those days, just mud wastes when the tide was out. The county of Avon did not exist either, though it briefly appeared in recent years. The Tory idiot Heath, prior to the mad cow Thatcherm era thought that if he combined Bristol with bits of Gloucestershire and Somerset he could create a permanently Tory stronghold. He was wrong, and the surrounding Tory ratbags, and Bristol, reverted to our original statuses (or should that be stati?) Thus, in accordance with one of the early Edward’s intentions Bristol is correctly termed “The City and Borough County of Bristol” PS Enjoy your historical books though !! Allan Moore