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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 September 2012
Early in the present year (1920) a Roman sepulchral relief was brought by its owner to the notice of the British Museum. It had been acquired by him from a dealer in North London, with the information that it had been lying for at least fifty years in a contractor's yard at St. John's Wood. He had placed his purchase so as to form the central feature of a rock garden at Putney, but was ready to pass it on to other keeping. It now occupies the wall of one of the compartments of the Roman Gallery, in the British Museum.
page 180 note 1 Cf. J.R.S. iv, p. 143.
page 180 note 2 Annali dell' Inst. 1852, pp. 306, 313; Orelli-Henzen, no. 6251.
page 180 note 3 For recent discussions of the Modius, see A. Salazar, M., El Modio de Ponte Puñide in the Boletin de la real Academia Gallega, viii, no. 79, p. 169 (Corunna, 1913)Google Scholar and Haverfield, F., Modius Claytonensis: the Roman Bronze Measure from Carvoran in Arch. Aeliana, 3rd ser. xiii (1916), p. 85Google Scholar.
page 180 note 4 Amelung, , Vat. Kat. i, pl. 84Google Scholar. no. 685. The details are plainer in Jahn, Ber. d. sächs. Ges. d. Wissensch. 1861, pl. 12, fig. 3.
page 181 note 1 Quoted from Yarrell's History of British Fishes, 3rd ed. ii, p. 50; in Notes and Queries, 4th ser. iii, May 1, 1869, p. 407.
page 181 note 2 In her story ‘Jan of the Windmill,’ originally published under the name of ‘The Miller's Thumb’ in Aunt Judy's Magazine.
page 181 note 3 Amelung, , Vat. Kat. i, pl. 24, no. 31cGoogle Scholar.
page 181 note 4 Vol. iv, pl. 24.
page 181 note 5 Stuart Jones, Catalogue, pl. 12, no. 5; pl. 21, no. 48.
page 181 note 6 Rev. Arch. 5th ser. ix, p. 113.
page 182 note 1 Vol. iv, p. 2089, no. 9.
page 182 note 2 I am indebted for the reference to Dr. Ashby, who cites C.I.L. ix, p. 503.