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Thursday, 29th March, 1906

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 May 2010

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Proceedings
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Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1905

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References

page 128 note * Mr. Norris, until recently, for twenty-four years represented the Society of Antiquaries as one of the Local Secretaries for Somerset.

page 129 note * All found on Ham Hill during 1905, unless otherwise stated.

page 129 note † Guide to the Early Iron Age, British Museum, 1905, p. 93 and pi. i.; Romilly Allen's Celtic Art, 1904, pp. 92, 151, and plate facing p. 152.

page 130 note * Excavations in Cranborne Chase, ii. pl. civ. figs. 12, 13.

page 131 note * Vol. lx. 236 ; and vol. lxii. 265.

page 131 note † Figured in Archœological Journal, lx. plate facing p. 240.

page 131 note † Archœological Journal, lxii. 265.

page 131 note § figured in Archœological Journal, lxii. 266.

page 131 note ‖ Figured in Proceedings of the Somerset Archœological Society, li. pt. ii. Plate facing p. 144, fig. 6.

page 131 note para; Figured (three views) in The Reliquary and Illustrated Archœologist (April, 1906), xii. 135Google Scholar.

page 132 note * Figured in Proceedings of the Somerset Archœological Society, xxxii. pt. i. pl. i. figs. 7 and 9 ; see also xlviii. pt. ii. 30, 31.

page 132 note † Proceedings of the Somerset Archœological Society, xlviii. pt; ii. 30, 31 ; xxxii. pt. i. pl. i. fig 8 ; and li. pt. ii. plate facing p. 144, fig. 3.

page 133 note * Gnildhall Museum Catalogue, 1903, p. 12, No. 125.

page 134 note * Figured full-size as a line-drawing, Proceedings of the Somerset Archœological Society, xlviii. pt. ii. 33.

page 134 note † Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society, viii. 133–141, and pl. xii.

page 134 note ‡ Excavation in Cranborne Chase, i. pl. xiii. fig. 4, etc.; ii. pl. xcix. figs. 2, 3, pi. c. figs. 3, 10, 12 ; iii. pl. clxxxii. fig. 18.

page 135 note * Figured in Proceedings, 2nd S. vi. 539.

page 136 note * Figured in Roach Smith's Collectanea Antiqua, vi. pl. iii. figs. 2–4.

page 136 note † Archœological Journal, yiii. 296 ; and Collectanea Antiqua, vi. 8.

page 136 note ‡ Figured in Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle-on-Tyne, vi. 245.

page 136 note § Since writing this paper, a note on the Roman station at Newstead has been pointed out to me in the Scottish Historical Review, October, 1905, pp. 126–7, in which it is briefly stated that portions of an iron cuirass, ornamented with mountings of what appears to be gilded bronze, was found ; also “upwards of 350 scales of brass, which had formed part of the armour.” With regard to the latter, Mr. James Curie, jun., F.S. A., has kindly sent me an outline of a scale which is of the same general form as the Ham Hill ones, with two holes on either side near the top for joining the scales together, but with one hole only at the top for attachment to the tunic ; whereas in the case of the Ham Hill scales there are two holes at the top. The Newstead scales are 1⅛ inch long (28·3 mm.) by ½ inch wide (12·5 mm.), of “bright brass and very thin.” Mr. Curie says that “many of them were fastened together by wires almost square in section. The largest number of scales fastened together was 15. I have handed over 337 of the scales to the museum at Edinburgh. The find was made on September 21st, 1905, near the bottom of a great pit in the courtyard of the prætorium, along with a number of other objects. A human skull was found at the same level. Coming up in the mud some of the scales may have had the appearance of being rolled together, but it would be a mistake to describe them as found in bundles. I have not as yet formed any definite theory as to this pit, but I may say that at 13 feet deep it contained a coin of Hadrian, and from the silt of the bottom we recovered a coin of Titns or Vespasian (somewhat defaced).”

page 137 note * See “Roman Leaden Coffins from Somerset” (H. St. G. Gray), Somerset and Dorset Notes and Queries, ix. 8, 58, 230.

page 137 note † Figured in Proceedings of the Somerset Archaeological Society, li. pt. ii. plate facing p. 144, fig. 5.

page 137 note ‡ Excavations in Cranborne Chase, ii. pl. xcvii. fig. 5.

page 137 note § Guide to the Early Iron Age, British Museum, 1905, pp. 100, 110 ; Excavations in Cranborne Chase, ii. 117. Mr. Reginald Smith informs me that about thirty brooches of this type are known from Britain.

page 137 note ‖ Figured in Proceedings of the Somerset Archœological Society, li. pt. i. plate facing p. 144, fig. 1.

page 137 note ¶ Archœological Journal, xxxvii. 95.

page 137 note ** Proceedings of the Somerset Archœological Society v. pt. i. 92, fig. 6.

page 138 note * Proceedings of the Somerset Archœological Society, vii. pt. i. 27, fig. 1.

page 138 note † Evans's Ancient Bronze Implements, figs. 466, 467, and 469.

page 138 note ‡ Op. cit. fig. 468.

page 138 note § Archaeologia, xiv. 94, pi. xxxiii.

page 138 note ¶ Figured in Proceedings of the Somerset Archœological Society, li. Pt. ii. plate facing p. 144, fig. 2.

page 138 note ¶ Figured in Evans's Ancient Bronze Implements, 96, fig. 87 ; and Archœological Journal, xxxvii. plate facing p. 107.

page 138 note ** Evans's Ancient Bronze Implements, 96.

page 138 note † † Figured in Evans's Ancient Bronze Implements, 96 ; and Proceedings, 2nd S. v. plate facing p. 398. Another with imperfect loops has been found in Cornwall (Proceedings, 2nd S. v. 430).

page 138 note ‡Proceedings, 2nd S. v. 398, 422, 428.

page 138 note § § Evans's Ancient Bronze Implements, 104. The other Irish specimen is figured in the Bristol volume (1851) of the Archœological Institute, lxiv.

page 139 note * Mittheilungen der anthropologisehen Gesellschaft in Wien, vii. (1877), 125.

page 139 note † Veirupgaard, Marslev, Fyen (Mèmoires de la Soc. des Ant. du Nord, 1866–71, p. 161, fig. 3).

page 141 note * This does not include the balance in hand (£45 16s. 8d.) of the Research Fund.