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Thursday, 29th June, 1905
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 May 2010
Abstract
- Type
- Proceedings
- Information
- Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of London , Volume 20 , Issue 1 , June 1905 , pp. 341 - 357
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1905
References
page 343 note * Folk-Lore, i. (1890), 82Google Scholar, “The Greek Trade-routes to Britain.”
page 344 note * With brooch of La Tène II. type in an urn, Jarlsberg : Undset, Auftreten des Eisens in N. Europa, p. 486. figs. 179, 182.
page 344 note † With burnt bones in an urn, Ibsker, Bornholm : Årböger f. nord. oldkynd. 1872, pp. 24, 123, pi. i. fig. 5.
page 344 note ‡ Mémoires de la Société des Antiquaires dn Nord, 1890–5, pp. 342, 359.
page 344 note § An intermediate form may be the crook-headed pin found at the Laws, Forfarshire, and figured in Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, xvii. (1883), 302Google Scholar.
page 344 note ‖ Miss Mestorf, Urnenfriedhöfe in Schlesivig-Holstein, pi. ii. fig. 17.
page 345 note * Proceedings, xx. 33 ; plate in Archacologia, xyi. 348.
page 346 note * Monumenti Antichi, x. 322.
page 347 note * This drooping of the head like a sunflower was common in the Bronze Age both here and on the Continent, but the head was conical or domed, not a simple ring, and the pin sprang from the centre at the back.
page 347 note † Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, xviii. (1883), 301, fig. 2 ; iii. (1862), 446Google Scholar.
page 347 note ‡ Ibid, xxxviii. (1904), 433, 438.
page 348 note * Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, xxix. (1895), 281, fig. 5Google Scholar.
page 348 note † Ibid. ix. (1873), 359.
page 350 note * Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, xxxviii. (1904), 436, fig. 9Google Scholar ; Cat. Scottish Mus. of Antiquities, 229, no. 91.
page 350 note † Eck, Denx cimetières Gallo-romains, 188, pi. ix. fig. 9.
page 350 note ‡ Moreau, Album Caranda, pi. 113 (Nouvelle Série), fig. 4.
page 350 note § This date is confirmed by M, Déchelette, of Roanne.
page 350 note ‖ In the days of Ptolemy (early second century A.D.), Salinæ, near Sandy, was in the territory of the Catyeuchlani.
page 352 note * Two of this type, and a third showing transition to the next, are figured in Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, xxxv. (1901), 279Google Scholar.
page 352 note † Wood-Martin, Lake-Dwellings of Ireland, 110, fig. 129.
page 352 note ‡ Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, xviii. (1884), 244, fig. 10Google Scholar.
page 352 note § Not 682, as repeatedly stated in accounts of this find.
page 352 note ‖ Figured in colours, Trans. R. I. Acad. xxx. 291, pi. xix. Another from Gaulcross, Banffshire, is figured by Stuart, Sculptured Stones of Scotland, ii. 75, pi. ix.
page 354 note * As Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, xv. (1881), 81 ; and one from Ireland in British Museum. Also the specimen inlaid with coral or shell from Danes' Graves, E. R. Yorks. (Proceedings, xvii. 120).