Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 January 2012
page 70 note 7 I am greatly indebted to the Winchester Museum authorities for the opportunity to examine this knife and to publish an account of it.
page 70 note 8 It was unfortunately not possible at the time the knife was examined to identify the metals used by spectrographic analysis, but real brass (copperzinc alloy) was rare in Roman times.
page 71 note 1 Lindenschmit, Altertümer unserer heidnischen Vorzeit, v, 377–82.
page 71 note 2 Engelhardt, Denmark in the Early Iron Age, pl. xv, nos. 4 and 7.
page 71 note 3 Ibid., pl. xi, no. 40.
page 71 note 4 Behrens, G., in Schumacher-Festschrift, 285, 1930.
page 71 note 5 Ward Perkins, J. B., Land. Mus. Med. Cat. (1940), 41–2, 46, 53.
page 71 note 6 Lindenschmit, op. cit. iv, pls. 11, 16, 52, 57: Exner, K., Germania (1940), xxiv, 22.
page 71 note 7 Lindenschmit, op. cit. iv, pl. 11, no. 3.
page 71 note 8 Ibid. iv, pl. 49, no. 1. Cp. also other weapons on this plate.
page 71 note 9 Kendrick, T. D., Eurasia Septentrionalis Antiqua, ix, 392, 1935.Google Scholar
page 71 note 10 Leeds, E. T., Early Anglo-Saxon Art and Archaeology (1936), 18–19, and pl. vii, b.Google Scholar
page 72 note 1 Leeds, op. cit. 18, n. 4.
page 72 note 2 Werner, J., Münzdatierte Austraschische Grabfunde (1935), pl. 1A, no. 8.
page 72 note 3 Kühn, H., Vorgeschichtliche Kunst Deutschlands (1935), 182, pl. p. 433, no. 2: cp. also pls. pp. 430—1.
page 72 note 4 Veeck, W., Die Alamanneu im Würtemberg (1931) 73–4, 80, 82; pls. P9, N8, O8A, B, 78A8, 73A1.
page 72 note 5 Acta Archaeologica, ii, 104–ii, figs. 6 and 7, 1931.