Page:Archaeological Journal, Volume 11.djvu/39

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NATIONAL ANTIQUITIES IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM.
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pool. It is the well-known beaded torc and bronze bowl found in Lochar Moss, Dumfriesshire.[1] A bronze buckle of the same period has been acquired, which was found on the South Downs[2]: it retains traces of enamel, and is very similar to some of the objects found at Polden Hill and Stanwick.

Of Celtic art of a still more recent date some interesting specimens have been added from Ireland. They consist of brooches of bronze and iron, buckles, fragments of croziers and ornaments, which, though contemporaneous with the Saxon remains in England, are quite distinct from them in the style of their ornamentation and workmanship.

The additions to the Roman portion of the collection have been, as usual, numerous. The most important of them is the sarcophagus discovered in Haydon Square, Minories, and presented to the Museum by the incumbent and church- wardens of the parish, together with the lid of the leaden coffin found within it. Ample notices of this interesting discovery have appeared in the Archæological Journal, x., 255; Smith's Collectanea Antiqua, vol. iii., p. 46; and Journal of the British Archæological Association, vol. ix. A sepulchral inscription found at Lincoln has been presented by Mr. Arthur Trollope. It is represented on the next page. It records Julius Valerius Pudens, son of Julius, of the Claudian tribe and a native of Savia; he appears to have been a soldier of the second legion and of the century of Dossennus Proculus, and to have lived thirty years, two of them as a pensioner.[3]

Some interesting sepulchral antiquities were presented by Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Shiffner, discovered in and around a stone sarcophagus found at Westergate, near Chichester. They consist of pottery, fragments of a mirror, a glass bottle, and two enamelled fibulæ. A group of the pottery is represented in the accompanying engraving. The ware is of a pale colour, and has suffered considerably from the damp of the earth in which it has lain. The mirror appears to have been square. The vases as well as the sarcophagus exhibit great similarity to the sepulchral deposit which was found at

  1. Engraved in Archæologia, xxxiii. pl. 15. See Arch. Journ., iii. 159; the torc was exhibited at the Lincoln meeting.
  2. Arch. Journ. x. 259.
  3. Lincoln Volume, p. xxviii. For inscriptions of a similar form, see Steiner, Codex Inscr. Rheni. Nos. 315 and 432.