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Thursday, March 24th, 1898

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 May 2010

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Abstract

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Proceedings
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1899

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References

page 119 note * Archaeologia, li. 168, 225, 226, 262.

page 119 note † Pottery has seldom been found in these graves, and when present the vessel is nearly always imcomplete.

page 125 note * No weapons of war have ever, to my knowledge, been found.

page 125 note † The Rev. Canon Greenwell found four goats accompanying a body in one of the Danes' Graves. See Archæological Journal, xxii. 264.

page 125 note ‡ See Oliver's History of Beverley, footnote, p. 4.

page 125 note § In Archæological Journal, xv. 151, is an account of a group of 120 small mounds, mainly in rows, in the midst of which were three ordinary tumuli. They are described as being about 6 feet in diameter and 1 foot high, and varying from 3 to 4 or 5 paces apart. This group is situated at the northern extremity of Holm Heath, Dorsetshire.

page 125 note ‖ Transactions of the East Riding Antiquarian Society, iii. 21–23.

page 125 note § Ibid. v. xxi.

page 126 note * The marked prevalence of the long type of skull found, I believe, in all the graveyards of the Early Iron period supports the latter view.