The primary evidence for a king of this name is the medieval Penzance Market Cross which now stands in the grounds of
Penlee House in
Penzance,
Cornwall, England, UK. The cross dates to around 1050 AD, Writing about it in 1986,
Charles Thomas said that because of the cross' late date, Ricatus could have been little more than a local ruler around
Land's End. However, Thomas describes the cross in greater detail in his later book on post Roman inscriptions in Western Britain,
And Shall These Mute Stones Speak? (1994). In this work, he describes the inscription as having "lettering so grotesque as to be unintelligible", and he relegates Macalister's reading to a footnote, where he says that it "is impossible to follow", adding that "an eleventh-century Cornish king would need a lot of explaining."
Philip Payton, in his
Cornwall: A History (2004) acknowledges this, but says there was "perhaps a semblance, an echo, an assertion of Cornish kingly independence" in the far west of Cornwall less than a century before the Norman Conquest. an
Old English personal name, unrecorded elsewhere, which Thomas ascribes to the donor or benefactor of the land (a graveyard) on which the cross was originally erected.{{cite book == Possible mentions ==