Notes, ArchcBological and Historical. 261 



the other for making a donble-looped celt 5^in. long ; found at Eulford, near 

 Amesbury." For this most interesting object a spirited contest took place 

 between the British Museum and Gen. Pitt-Rivers, and in the end it fell to 

 the latter bidder for £30. Gen. Pitt-Rivers also secured for £8 the smaller 

 of the two fine torques of bronze and three bronze finger-rings from Lake, 

 the larger torque going fur £7 10^. to Mr. Graves. The only lot secured 

 for our own Museum was No. 124, " a flat bronze armlet channelled on the 

 outer side " \unhappily grievously ruhhed tip and mended^ " and five simple 

 armlets of square or rounded bronze— all said to be from Lake " (£3 5*.). 

 In Mr. Duke's MS. notes of the contents of barrows opened in that neighbour- 

 hood, however, no mention of such armlets is made. Two bronze celts— one 

 socketed and one flanged— from Lake, went for £7. 



The following were the lots bought by the British Museum, all from Lake 

 unless otherwise noted : — 



Lot 113. A fine cinerary urn with deep rim, 15^in. high. £9 5*. 

 „ 114. Ditto, rim broken, 16in. high. £5 10s. 



115. Ditto, unusually well made, and ornamented, narrow rim, 12in. 



high. £10 10s. 



116. Ditto, plain, no rim or ornament, marks on the side where handles 



or eyelet-holes have been, 12Jin. high. £11. 



117. Small food vessel, or urn, with two pierced ears or handles at 



sides. Sin. high. £11. 



118. About half-a-dozen small fragments of urns and food vessels with 



different ornamentation. £3. 



119. The small reversible "incense cup" figured in Ancient Wilts, 



plate xxxi., one side of it a good deal broken ; and a curious 

 flat circular cover (? apparently not belonging to the cup). 

 £7 10*. 



122. A small stone celt, broken flint arrow-head, three whetstones, and 



four whorls from Lake and Normanton, &c. £2. 



123. Five small bronze dagger blades— ^nc?e«i5 Wilis, vol. I., 211, 212 



—and the point of a bronze spear-head found when making the 

 Kennet and Avon Canal. £18. 

 127. A very curious late Celtic armlet of thin hammered bronze filled 

 up with lead or tin, with repousse engraved design and paste 

 beads set in it, found ia 1802 in a stream work at Trenoweth, 

 Cornwall : figured in ArchcBologia. vol. xvi, £20. 



129. Four small pieces of bone, with patterns on them, described and 



figured in Ancient Wilts, I., 312, as tessera, but more probably 

 bone inlays ; with small bronze chisel, bronze and bone awls, 

 and three beads of jet and chalcedony— all found at Lake. 



£7 15s. 



130. Neck ornament formed of eight perforated plates of amber, found 



at Lake, in 1806, in a barrow— Jjac/ewi! Wilts, vol. L, 204; 

 Archmologia, vol. xlii., 505; together with three similar plates, 

 from an armlet (?) and eleven pendant-shaped beads from a 

 necklace of the same material. £41. 



131. Fifty round beads, twenty barrel-shaped and six others, with ten 



