FIBULA. 



No. of 

 Case. 



No. of 

 Object. 



Locality, &c. 



How procured. 



xiii. b. 

 xiii. b. 



xiii. b. 

 xiii. b. 



Br. 146 

 to 149. 



Br. 150. 



Br. 151. 



Br. 152 



to 155. 



Br. 156. 



Br. 157. 



three extremely thin ends or wires, not 

 thicker than a thread. 



Fifehead Neville. 



Fragments of fibulae. 



Dorchester. 



A small cross-headed fibula, without its 

 pin. On the bow is a slight hollow, per- 

 haps for enamel. 



Charlton Marshall. 



Fragment of a fibula. 



Winterlorne Kingston, in a Roman Well. 



152, a small imperfect fibula cross and 

 ring-headed. It looks a little as if it had 

 been plated. 153, a large fibula with flut- 

 ing and other ornament. Pin gone and 

 also the ring. The cross bar is unusually 

 short. This has been a good specimen of 

 the flat-barred, harp-shaped fibula. With 

 the ring it must have been more than 3in. 

 long. 154, a pin only. Note the shoulder 

 or stop, whereby the springiness of the pin 

 was able to be used to make it take the 

 catch. 155, of no importance. 



Winterborne Kingston, Roman Well. 



An imperfect fibula of the kind made of 

 one wire beaten out at one end into a catch. 

 The other extremity forms the pin. The 

 curious twist forming a spring where the 

 bow joins the pin is well seen. 



Stoke Abbot, Bridport. 



A cross-headed fibula, the bow of tri- 

 angular section and boldly curved. The 

 pin is gone. 



Given by 

 C. Connop, Esq. 



Given by 

 A. Emson, Esq. 



Given by 

 J. C. Mansel- 

 Pleydell, Esq. 



Do. 



Do. 



Given b\ 

 B. A. Hogg,] 



