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A Roman Child Burial with Animal Figurines and Pottery, from Godmanchester, Cambridgeshire

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 November 2011

Alison Taylor
Affiliation:
40 Hertford Street, Cambridge

Abstract

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Type
Notes
Information
Britannia , Volume 28 , November 1997 , pp. 386 - 393
Copyright
Copyright © Alison Taylor 1997. Exclusive Licence to Publish: The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies

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References

253 Taylor, A., ‘A Roman lead coffin with pipe-clay figurines from Arrington, Cambridgeshire’, Britannia xxiv (1993), 191226.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

254 Pers. comm. Christine Jones, Colchester & Essex Museum, July 1993.

255 M. Rouvier-Jeanlin, Les figurines gallo-romaines en terre-cuite au Musée des Antiquités Nationales, XXIVe supplément à Gallia (1972), no. 1028.

256 M.J. Green, The Religions of Civilian Roman Britain, BAR Brit. Ser. 24 (1976), 217, pl. xixa, b; M.J. Green, The Gods of the Celts (1986), 191, fig. 84.

257 M.J. Green, Symbol and Image in Celtic Religious Art (1989), 181, fig. 82.

258 Rouvier-Jeanlin, op. cit. (note 255), Type 1, Groupe C, no. 976.

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261 ibid., 211, pl. iie.

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263 M.J. Green, Animals in Celtic Life and Myth (1992), 204-10.

264 ibid., 220-4, esp. 223, fig. 8.21.

265 ibid., 234-8.

266 J.-L. Brunaux, The Celtic Gauls: Gods, Rites and Sanctuaries (1988); P. Meniel, Chasse et elèvage chez les Gaulois (1987).

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276 R.A. Philpott, Burial Practices in Roman Britain, BAR 219 (1991).

277 F. McAvoy (interim report), Godmanchester, Rectory Farm (1990).

278 M.J. Green in Taylor, op. cit. (note 253), 212-25.

279 Green, op. cit. (note 271), 196.

280 ibid.

281 S. Esmonde Cleary, ‘Town and country in Roman Britain?’ in S. Bassett (ed.), Death in Towns (1992), 32.