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Exhibits at Ballots

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 April 2011

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Exhibits at Ballots
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Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1990

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References

NOTES

1 Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae (LIMC) i, 2 (Zürich and Munich, 1981).Google Scholar

2 Bailey, D.M., A Catalogue of the Lamps in the British Museum I, Greek, Hellenistic, and Early Roman Pottery Lamps (London, 1975).Google Scholar

3 Howland, R.H., The Athenian Agora iv, Greek Lamps and their Survivals (Princeton, 1958).Google Scholar

4 Scheibler, I, Kerameikos xi, Griechische Lampen (Berlin, 1976).Google Scholar

5 Loeschcke, S., Lampen aus Vindonissa (Zürich, 1919).Google Scholar

6 Oziol, Th., Salamine de Chypre vii, Les Lampes du Musée de Chypre (Paris, 1977).Google Scholar

7 Bailey, D.M., A Catalogue of the Lamps in the British Museum II, Roman Lamps made in Italy (London, 1980).Google Scholar

8 Ibid., note 5.

9 Cahn-Klaiber, E.M., Die antiken Tonlampen des archdologischen Instituts der Universitdt Tubingen (Tübingen, 1977).Google Scholar

10 Bailey, D.M., A Catalogue of the Lamps in the British Museum III. Roman Provincial Lamps (London, 1988).Google Scholar

11 Way, Albert, Catalogue of the miscellaneous collections, in the possession of the Society of Antiquaries of London (1847).Google Scholar

12 Proc. Soc. Antiq. 2 ser. II (1885–7), 35–6.Google Scholar

13 Saldern, A.Von, German enamelled glass. The Edwin J. Beinecke collection and related pieces, Corning Museum of Glass (New York, 1965), especially 5167, 125–9.Google Scholar

14 The writers are indebted to Dr Denise Allen for reporting on the glass, to Mr D. Bailey for reporting on the lamps, to Dr Brenda Dickinson for reporting on the samian, to Dr J. P. Wilde for examining the textile impressions and to Dr Peter Northover for undertaking the metal analysis on the bronze bowl. Their full reports will be published with the final report on the burial. The cremation jar, bronze bowl, strigils and tripod were conserved by Birgul Biktimir and Philip Carter of the Verulamium museum, with facilities provided by the Stanmore Orthopaedic Hospital and the Ancient Monuments Laboratory. The initial recording and the drawing of the bronze bowl were carried out by Ralph Jackson and Karen Hughes of the British Museum; Mr Jackson also provided many useful comments on the bowl. The drawings in this note are the work of Joe Clarke (tripod), Karen Hughes (bowl), Clare Pollak and Alexandra Thorne (plans and sections). The photograph was taken by James Brown of the Verulamium museum, while Mr Roger Miles was of invaluable assistance in arranging for replicas of the tripod to be made. To all of these individuals and organizations, and to our colleagues in the Verulamium museum for their many useful comments, the writers wish to record their sincere thanks.

15 Stead, I.M. and Rigby, V., Verulamium. The King Harry Lane site, English Heritage Archaeological Report 12 (1989), 80204.Google Scholar

16 Frere, S.S.Roman Britain in 1986’, Britannia 18 (1987), 329, fig. 15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

17 See note 14.

18 See note 14.

19 Ritual breaking of objects prior to burial was recorded in several graves in the King Harry Lane cemetery, op.cit. (note 15), burials 12, 203, ?249, ?259, 327, 339.

20 Gage, J., ‘The recent discovery of Roman sepulchral relics in one of the greater barrows at Bartlow’, Archaeologia 26 (1837), 300–17CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Jessup, R.Fet al., ‘Excavation of a Roman Barrow at Holborough, Snodland’, Archaeol. Cantiana 68 (1954), 161.Google Scholar

21 Strong, D., Roman Art, Pelican History of Art (1976), fig. 135.Google Scholar

22 Though the finder and landowner would not divulge the exact findspot, it probably lies close to the Lincolnshire/Nottinghamshire border where it runs along the A46 (the Fosse Way), in the parish of Norton Disney or Stapleford. The statuette now has the British Museum registration number P. 1990. 1–1.1 and 2.

23 Taylor, M.V., ‘Statuettes of Horsemen and Horses and other Votive Objects from Brigstock, Northants.’, Antiq. J. 43 (1963), 264CrossRefGoogle Scholar, discusses all the examples known at the time: see also Green, Miranda, A Corpus of Religious Material from the Civilian Areas of Roman Britain, Brit. Archaeol.Rep. 24 (Oxford, 1976), 2931Google Scholar (general comments),181 (Brigstock), 210 (Willingham Fen); Pitts, Lynn F, Roman Bronze Figurines from the Civitates of the Catuvellauni and Trinovantes, Brit. Archaeol. Rep. 60 (Oxford, 1979), nos. 136–42.Google Scholar An additional find from Brigstock, a rider without his horse which came to light in 1972, is published in Wheeler, H, ‘Two Roman bronzes from Brigstock, Northants’.,Antiq. J. 61 (1981), 309CrossRefGoogle Scholar; this object was acquired by the British Museum in 1987, and has the registration no. P. 1987. 5–1.1. Another find from Brigstock, an extremely crudely-modelled horse, remains in private hands, but was published by Dix, Brian, ‘Some further Roman Bronzes from Brigstock, Northamptonshire', Antiq. J. 66 (1986), 126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar The Bunwell, Norfolk, horse, was published by Gregory, Anthony, ‘The Bunwell Horse’, in Britannia 17 (1986), 330. A very large bronze rider, about 200mm high, from Caves Inn, near Rugby, was photographed at the British Museum in 1952, but its present whereabouts are not known. Two separate riders, and one rider with his horse, were seen in a London private collection in 1990; the complete figurine was said to be from Lincolnshire.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

24 For a distribution map of the type, see Green, op. cit. (note 23), fig. 8.

25 Ambrose, Timothy and Henig, Martin, ‘A New Roman Rider-Relief from Stragglethorpe, Lincolnshire’, Britannia, 11 (1980), 135.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

26 Todd, M., ‘A Relief of a Romano-British Warrior-God’, Britannia, 2 (1971), 238.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

27 The Bisley altar is in the collections of the British Museum, registration number 1863.527.1.Google Scholar

28 For a discussion of this motif in Roman art, and its antecedants, see Mackintosh, Marjorie, ‘The sources of the horseman and fallen enemy motif on the tombstones of the western Roman Empire’,J. Brit. Archaeol. Ass., 139 (1986), 121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

29 Green, op. cit. (note 23), 218. All that survives of this bronze is a lozenge-shaped pedestal bearing the inscription DEO. MARTI/COROTIACI/SIMPLICIA/PROSE. V.P.L.M. around the sides, GLAVCVS FECIT beneath the base, and a supine headless male figure on the top. Two lumps of bronze mark the position of the feet of an attacker; they may well be the hind hooves of a rearing horse, but this is not certain. A case could be made for a human figure.

30 Gods and Mortals, Bronzes of the Ancient World from Italy to Iran, Royal-Athena Galleries (New York and Beverly Hills, 1989), no. 98.Google Scholar

31 Taylor, op.cit. (note 23), no. 1, does not identify the object supporting the hoof; Pitts,op. cit. (note 23), no. 139, describes it as a ‘domeshaped object’. In the published photograph, it resembles a helmet, but as the present author has not examined the bronze itself, the matter remains unresolved.

32 Williams, D., The Classical Riding Master: the Wilton House Collection (London, 1978 and 1979), pl. 13.Google Scholar

33 Schoppa, H., Die Kunst der Römerzeit in Gallien, Germanien unde Britannien (Munchen, 1957), pls. 61 and 62.Google Scholar

34 Morgan, Morris H. (translator), The Art of Horsemanship, by Xenophon (Boston, 1893; reprint London, 1962).Google Scholar

35 Anderson, J.K, Ancient Greek Horsemanship (Berkeley and Los Angeles, Univ. of California Press, 1961), chapter X, 117–27, discusses ‘advanced equitation’. Anderson interprets the manoeuvres which involve the horse rearing in a controlled manner as equivalent to the later highschool movements of the levade or pésade.Google Scholar

36 Vigneron, Paul, Le Cheval dans I'antiquité gréco-romaine, 2 vols., Annales de l'est, Mémoire 35, 36 (Nancy, 1968). Vigneron's section 5,99–102 is entitled, ‘l'absence d'une veritable haute-école’.Google Scholar

37 I should like to acknowledge the help of our Fellows Ralph Jackson and Jack Ogden, and of my colleagues Joanne Freeman and Karen Hughes, whose knowledge of horses and horsemanship has been invaluable.

38 Wilson, D.R., Wright, R.P. and Hassall, M.W.CRoman Britain in 1972‘, Britannia 4 (1973), 278–80, fig. 3 for details of the ditches. I am most grateful to Mrs M. Hall, of Peterlee, County Durham, the owner of this interesting and unusual piece of glass, for loaning it to me for study, to Mrs S. Thubron of Richmond and Mr P. R. Wilson of the Central Excavation Unit, Portsmouth who have provided information about the circumstances of finding, and to Ms Noelle McVicar of Newcastleupon-Tyne University for drawing the figure.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

39 Hutchinson, V.J., ‘The cult of Bacchus in Roman Britain’ in Henig, M. and King, A. (eds.), Pagan Gods and Shrines of the Roman Empire, Oxford Univ. Comm. Archaeol. Monograph 8(1986), 135–45.Google Scholar

40 Painter, K.S., The Mildenhall Treasure (Brit. Mus. Publications, London, 1977), pl. 4.Google Scholar

41 Manfrini-Aragno, I., Bacchus dans les bronzes hellenistiques et romains (Universite de Lausanne, Faculty des Lettres. Lausanne; Bron SA 1987), fig. 117.Google Scholar

42 Toynbee, J.M.C., The Roman Art Treasures from the Temple of Mithras, London Middlesex Archaeol. Soc. Special Paper 7 (1986), 3242 no. 15, pl. XII.Google Scholar

43 Merrifield, R., The Roman City of London (London, 1965), front cover and pl. 66.Google Scholar

44 For example see Harden, D.B., Hellenkemper, H., Painter, K., Whitehouse, D., Glass of the Caesars (Olivetti, Milan, 1987), 118 no. 50.Google Scholar

45 Hamelin, P., ‘Sur quelques verreries de BegramCahiers de Byrsa 2 (1952), 1213Google Scholar, pl. 1.1–3; 18–19.VI, pl.V, 2; Ibid., ‘Materiaux pour servir à l'etude des verreries de Begram (suite)’ Cahiers de Byrsa 4 (1954), 169–70 no. 27, pl. XXXIV.

46 Harden et al., op.cit. (note 44), 220–1, no. 122 and 245–9, no. 139.

47 Fremersdorf, F., Die römischen Gläser mit Schliff, Bemalung und Goldauflagen aus Köln. Die Denkmäler des römischen Köln VIII (Köln, Löwe, 1967), 152–3, pls. 198–9; 167, pl. 221; 173, pl. 232.Google Scholar

48 Harden, D.B.Ancient Glass, II: RomanArchaeol. J. 126 (1969), fig. 8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

49 Hamelin, 1952Google Scholarop. cit. (note 45), pl. III a–c; Ibid., 1954 op. cit. (note 45), 155–62, nos. 1–15, pls. XVII–XXVI.

50 Price, J., ‘The fragments of painted glass’, in M. Fulford, Guide to the Silchester Excavations. The Forum-Basilica 1982–84 (Department of Archaeology, University of Reading, 1985), 2324.Google Scholar

51 Isings, C., Roman Glass from Dated Finds (Groningen/Djakarta, 1957), Form 85.Google Scholar

52 Fremersdorf, F., ‘Seltene varianten steilwandiger römischer Glasbecher des 3JH. aus Köln’. Kölner jahrbuch 11 (1970), 63–4, figs. 4 and 6, pl. 3, 2–4; pls. 7–10.Google Scholar

53 For discussion of the British fragments see:J. Price, ‘The Roman glass’ in N. Holmes, Excavations at Cramond (forthcoming); J. Price and H.E.M. Cool, ‘Report on the Roman Glass’. In P.R. Scott and A. Fitzpatrick, Excavations at Piercebridge (forthcoming).

54 (Registration number P1960.2–6.1). I am grateful to our Fellow, Dr I.H. Longworth, the Keeper of the Department, for permission to exhibit it at this Ballot and to Ms Karen Hughes in the same Department for drawing the figure.

55 Wright, R.P., ‘Inscriptions in Roman Britain in 1959’, J. Roman Stud. 50 (1960), 239, no. 19.Google Scholar

56 Wall, J., ‘Christian evidence in the Roman period. The northern counties; part II (concluded)’, Archaeol. Aeliana (4th ser.) 44 (1966), 151–2Google Scholar; Thomas, C., Christianity in Roman Britain to AD 500 (Batsford, London, 1981).Google Scholar

57 For example, I sings op. cit. (note 51), Form 50.

58 British Museum, Department of Prehistoric and Romano–British Antiquities, reg. no. P1984,6–2,1.

59 Wheeler, R.E.M. and Wheeler, T.V., Verulamium. A Belgic and two Roman Cities, Soc. Antiq. Res. Rep. 11 (Oxford, 1936), 222–3, fig 49.Google Scholar

60 Niblett, R., Sheepen: an early Roman industrial site at Camulodunum, C.B.A. Res. Rep. 57 (London, 1985), fig. 66, no. 61.Google Scholar

61 Bushe-Fox, J.P., Fourth Report on the Excavations of the Roman Fort at Richborough, Kent, Soc.Antiq. Res. Rep. 16 (Oxford, 1949), 125, pl. XXXIV,84–5.Google Scholar

62 See e.g. Robinson, H.Russell, The Armour of Imperial Rome (London, 1975), 48, fig. 83,174–86, figs. 178, 180.Google Scholar

63 Bushe-Fox, J.P., Third Report on the Excavations of the Roman Fort at Richborough, Kent, Soc. Antiq. Res. Rep. 10 (Oxford, 1932), 82, pl. XII, fig. 2, 39a–c.Google Scholar

64 Frere, S.S. and St.Joseph, J.K., ‘The Roman Fortress at Longthorpe', Britannia 5 (1974), 46–7CrossRefGoogle Scholar, fig. 25;Dannell, G.B. and Wild, J.P.,Longthorpe II, Britannia Monog. 8 (London, 1987), 88–9Google Scholar, fig. 22, no. 22; Ulbert, G., Die römischen Donau-Kastelle Aislingen und Burghöfe, Limesforschungen 1 (Berlin, 1959)Google Scholar, pl. 19, no. 10; Newstead, R., ‘Records of archaeological finds at Chester’, Journ. Chester Archaeol. Soc. 27 (2) (1928), 91, pl. IX, 5.Google Scholar

65 G. Webster and R. Niblett in R. Niblett, op. cit. (note 60), fig. 66, no. 61, M3: B11–12.

66 For embossed belt plates see e.g.Brailsford, J., Hod Hill I (London, 1962),4Google Scholar, fig. 4, A115, A116; and Down, A., Chichester Excavations 5 (Chichester, 1981) 166Google Scholar, fig. 8.30, 1. And for the animal design, cf. Down, A., Chichester Excavations 3 (Chichester, 1978), 290, fig. 10.30, 13.Google Scholar

67 For successive seasons on the site, see M.J. Hicks, ‘St Gregory's Priory’, Canterbury's Archaeology, Canterbury Archaeol. Trust (1987–8), 33; M.J. Hicks, T. Anderson and T. Tatton-Brown,‘St Gregory's Priory’, Canterbury's Archaeology, Canterbury Archaeol. Trust (1988–9), 15–24; Alison and Martin Hicks, ‘St Gregory's Priory’, Canterbury's Archaeology, Canterbury Archaeol. Trust (1989–90), 1–5; see also Hicks, M.J, ‘St Gregory's Priory: The Church and Conventual Buildings’, Archaeol. Cantiana, 107 (1989), 309–14.Google Scholar

68 T. Tatton-Brown, St Gregory's Priory Canterbury, Canterbury Archaeol. Trust (1989); Ibid., ‘The History of St Gregory's Priory’, Archaeol.Cantiana 107 (1989), 314–27.

69 Woodcock, Audrey M. (ed.) Cartulary of the Priory of St Gregory Canterbury, Camden Society, 3rd ser. 88 (London, 1956).Google Scholar

70 The head is 160mm high. It is 200mm deep of which 95mm correspond to the squared-off stone formerly engaged in the wall. Its inventory number is: Northgate, 1988–8B, SF1374, Layer274.

71 Catalogue of the Lichfield Museum collected by Richard Green 3rd ed. (Lichfield, 1786), 57.Google Scholar The collection is discussed by Clive Wainwright, The Romantic Interior (New Haven and London, 1989), 16.Google Scholar

72 BM M L A 1987, 4–4, 1. The seal was purchased at Bloomsbury Book Auctions, 12 March 1987, Lot 135.

73 Proceedings at the Meetings of the Archaeological Institute: Antiquities and Works of Art Exhibited, Archaeol. J. 13 (1856), 189.Google Scholar An impression from the matrix in sulphur taken by Doubleday exists in the British Library see Birch, W.de Gray, Catalogue of Seals, 6 vols. (1892) 11Google Scholar, no. 5573. Sir Hilary Jenkinson commented on these impressions in The Great Seal of England: Deputed or Departmental Seals’, Archaeologia 85 (1935, pub. 1936), 327.Google Scholar

74 Gentlemans Magazine (1769), 277, fig. opp. 377,439, fig. opp. 568.

75 For the use of this seal see Griffiths, R.A., Principality of Wales in the later Middle Ages: structure and personnel of government (Cardiff, 1972), 39 especially footnote 27.Google Scholar

76 This is now in the Caerleon Museum, see Walford, W.S. and Way, A., ‘Official seal of Edward IV for his Chancery of MonmouthArchaeol. J. 14 (1857), 55–7.Google ScholarWakeman, T., ‘On the Chancery of MonmouthJ. Brit. Archaeol. Ass. 14 (1858), 5660, wrongly assigns the seal to Edward VI.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

77 Wyon, A.B., The Great Seals of England (London, 1887), 43–6Google Scholar and pl. XII and Heenan, Michael G., ‘The French quartering in the Arms of Henry IV’, Coat of Arms 10 (1968–9), 215–21.Google Scholar

78 W. de Gray Birch, op. cit. (note 73) no. 4843.

79 Blair, C.Hunter, ‘Durham Seals, Part VI, English Royal Seals’, Archaeol. Aeliana (3rd ser.) 13 (1916) 130Google Scholar, no. 3035. Sandford, F., Genealogical History (London, 1707) 245. S. Pegge in Gentlemans Magazine (1769), 439.Google Scholar

80 Lloyd, Sir John, History of Carmarthenshire, 2 vols. (Cardiff, 1935), IGoogle Scholar, 252. The military activity of Henry, Prince of Wales, is discussed in two recent articles by Griffiths, Rhidian, ‘Prince Henry Wales and the Royal Exchequer, 1400–1413’, Bull.Board Celtic Studies 32 (1985), 202–15Google Scholar and ‘Prince Henry's War: Armies, Garrisons and supply during the Glyndwr rising’, Bull. Board Celtic Studies 34 (1987), 165–73.Google Scholar

81 Devon, F., Issues of the Exchequer (London, 1837), 322.Google Scholar

82 Reddaway, T.F. and Walker, L.E., The early history of the goldsmiths Company (London, 1975), 329.Google Scholar

83 Milne, G. and Richards, J.D., Wharram, A study of settlement on the Yorkshire Wolds VII, Two Anglo-Saxon buildings and associated finds. York University Archaeological Publications (forthcoming).Google Scholar

84 Excavation of the ‘Sandygate’ site, as part of a Community Programme sponsored by the Manpower Services Commission, was directed by D r E.M. Evans and supervised by D. Baldwin for the Glamorgan-Gwent Archaeological Trust (Frere, S.S., ‘Roman Britain in 1986Britannia 18 (1987), 307). Dr Evans has kindly discussed details of the circumstances of discovery and possible date. The initial conservation measures which revealed the nature of the piece were taken by Kate Hunter, then of University College, Cardiff; final treatment and reconsolidation for display were effected by our fellow Michael Corfield and staff of the conservation laboratory at the National Museum of Wales. At the time of writing, the plaque remains the property of the landowner, Mr L. Hill, who has kindly loaned it to the National Museum of Wales for display at the Roman Legionary Museum at Caerleon.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

85 Nash-Williams, V.E., ‘The Roman Legionary Fortress at Caerleon in Monmouthshire. Report on the Excavations carried out in the Prysg Field 1927–9’, Archaeol. Cambrensis 86 (1931), 153–4.Google Scholar

86 Evans, Edith, ‘Excavations at “Sandygate”, Cold Bath Road, Caerleon, Gwent’, Britannia 22 (1991), 103–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar J. David Zienkiewicz, ‘A Bronze Plaque depicting Victory and Trophy’, Ibid., 130–2. For the pottery see Ibid., D.R. Evans, ‘The Pottery’, 118–29, who provides opinion as to date.

87 Op. cit. (note 85), 157 and Boon, G.C., Isca. The Roman Legionary Fortress at Caerleon, Mon. National Museum of Wales (Cardiff 1972), 56.Google Scholar

88 As demonstrated by XRF analysis undertaken at the Oxford laboratory by Dr Mark Pollard, to whom thanks are recorded.

89 A patchy, brown-black surface layer is shown by XRF analysis to be no more than a copper corrosion product.

90 Confirmed by XRF analysis. Cf.Kellner, H., Der Römische Verwahrfund von Eining (Munich, 1978), 23, Taf. 31, for repoussé work also filled with lead.Google Scholar

91 Victory with such a chiton is clearly depicted on the Victory monument at Carthage (Picard, G.C., Les Trophées Romains, Bib. des Ecoles Francaises d'Athènes et de Rome, fasc. 187 (Paris, 1957) Pl. XXII), but with the robe falling loose to the ground and waist-tie exposed.Google Scholar

92 The mis-alignment of shaft and trophy is conveniently paralleled on the triumphal arch of Severus at Lepcis Magna (ibid., pl.XXX), which repeats this general arrangement.

93 As e.g. on the Sant'Ombono frieze (ibid., pl. III).

94 E.g. on a relief from Gordum (Delminium; ibid., pl. XIIb), where similar vertical elements emerge amidst spears; and the identification is confirmed by a trophy which appears on the column of Marcus Aurelius at Rome, cf. Reinach, S., Répertoire de Reliefs Grecs et Romains, 3vols. (Paris, 1909), 1 Les Ensembles, 311, no. 69.Google Scholar

95 Woelcke, K.,‘Beitrage zur Geschichte des Tropaions’, Banner Jahrbücher, 120 (1911), 127235.Google Scholar

96 Op. cit. (note 91).

97 Roscher, W.H., Ausführliches Lexikon der Griechischen und Römischen Mythologie (1978), III, 1, 326, and fig. 5 for Nike and trophy on a red figured vase of the fifth century. The association appears also, e.g., in the decoration of screens at the sanctuary of Athena Nike at the Athenian acropolis (c. 411–405 BC), cf. Reinach, op. cit. (note 94), 1,22.Google Scholar

98 E.g. Reinach, op. cit. (note 94), 1, 206–10, and Robertson, M., A History of Greek Art, 2 vols. (Cambridge, 1975), 11, pl. 170dGoogle Scholar

99 Picard, op. cit. (note 91), 17.

100 The cuirass, crested helmet and shields can all be paralleled individually among the Greek and Gallic spoils depicted on the balustrade at the Temple of Athena at Pergamon (second century BC), cf. Reinach, op. cit. (note 94), 1, 211–15.

101 Woelcke, op. cit. (note 95), 167.

102 There is no ancient warrant for the term.

103 picard, op. cit. (note 91), 53.

104 Gnecchi, F., Rivista Italiana di Numismatica 19 (1906), 141 and pl. 11, no. 9Google Scholar; and idem, I Medaglioni Romani, 3 vols. (Milan, 1912 11, Bronzo; 1, Gran Modulo, 31, no. 36 and Tav., 61, no. 10, noting that the piece has been retouched: but this can hardly have been so extensive as to affect the comparison. I am grateful to our fellow Edward Besly for pursuing this parallel, and to Curtis L. Clay for observations on the possible extent of the retouching. The photograph was kindly supplied by the Minestero per i Beni Culturali e Ambienti, through the Soprintenza Archaeologica di Roma, and is reproduced with permission.Google Scholar

105 Vermeule, C., Hellenistic and Roman Cuirassed Statues (Boston, 1980), e.g. figs. 11, 12, 21– 2, etc.Google Scholar

106 Garbsch, J., Römische Paraderüstung (Munich, 1978). I am grateful to Dr Garbsch for his observations on the Caerleon piece.Google Scholar

107 The largest of the paired breast-plates, to which this bears only superficial resemblance, are about 180mm long (ibid., pl, P28 etc ) the Caerleon piece, quite simply, is too large to have been worn on the chest without risk of buckling when the wearer sat down.

108 Garbsch, op. cit. (note 106).

109 Compare, e.g., the medium size of chamfron, ibid.op. cit. (note 106), Abb. 5 and Taf. 6, B21, 22 etc. (trapezoid, and 255mm and 265mm respectively); the Caerleon piece is of an appropriate width to have served in this way.

110 Reference at note 90 above; the piece measures 204mm by 138mm, and retains a tie-loopriveted at top centre of the panel so as to leave a hole as appears on the Caerleon plaque.

111 I am most grateful to Dr Martin Henig, and John Clark of the Museum of London for drawing my attention to a number of the parallels discussed here, and to Justine Bayley and Gerry McDonnell of the Ancient Monuments Laboratory, English Heritage.

112 Ancient Monuments Laboratory reference number 1479. A Scanning Electron Microscope was used, with an attached energy dispersive X-ray analysis system; the accelerating voltage used was 20KV. Since the technique is surface sensitive, and silver surfaces are affected by burial, the results are inevitably approximate.

113 For illustrations: H.A., Cahn and A.Kaufman, Heinimann (eds.), Der Spätromische Silberschatz von Kaiseraugst (Derendingen, 1984), pl. 2930, 33–6.Google Scholar

114 Hackenbroch, Y., Renaissance Jewellery (London, 1979), nos. 58Google Scholar, 434, 436, and 606, and Cocks, A.Somers, Princely Magnificence, Victoria and Albert Museum exhibition catalogue (1980), no. 75a.Google Scholar

115 Platt, C. and Coleman-Smith, R., Excavations in Medieval Southampton 1953–67, 2vols. (Leicester, 1975), 11, no. 1901 and fig. 246.Google Scholar

116 Sherlock, D., Woods, H.etal., St. Augustine's Abbey; report on excavations 1960–78 (Maidstone, 1988), no. 60 and fig. 69; see also comparable items nos. 57–59, and recent finds in the Museum of London, published in G. Egan and F. Pritchard, Dress Accessories. Medieval Finds from Excavations in London 3 (H.M.S.O., 1991).Google Scholar

117 See Gay, Victor, Glossaire archeologique du Moyen Age etde la Renaissance, 2 vols. (Paris, 1887),IGoogle Scholar, 480, see under coutelet, a reference for which I thank Claude Blair. For further discussion of the types see Lightbown, R.W., Medieval European Jewellery (London, 1992), 236–7.Google Scholar

118 Hope, W.H.St.John, ‘On English Medieval Drinking Bowls Called Mazers’, Archaeologia 50 (1887), 129–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

119 Op. cit. (note 113), pl. 27; alsoPainter, K., ‘A Roman silver treasure from Canterbury’, J. Brit.Archaeol. Ass., 3rd ser. 28 (1965), 8–9, pl. I, v.Google Scholar