DORSET-FOUND CELTIC AND ROMAN BRONZE OHjfeCfS. 





No. of 

 Case. 



No. of 

 Object. 



Locality, &c. 



How procured. 



xvi. 



xvi. 



Br. 179. 



Br. 180. 

 Br. 181. 



Br. 182. 

 Br. 183. 

 Br. 184. 



both imperfect. Possibly the second was 

 like Br. 180. 



(On the same card with 178, &c., are 

 several small bronze fragments and a small 

 ring.) 



Dorchester. 



An imperfect, small Roman spoon, 

 without the curved neck. Also a little rod 

 which may be the shank of a spoon. 



Dorchester. 



An aurist's instrument. See Br. 206. 



Gaol Grounds, Dorchester. 



Near the tessellated pavements, of which 

 fragments are in the Museum. A stylus, 

 well made and perfect, but bent out of 

 shape. 



Dorchester. 



A small stylus, perfect but bent. 



Dorchester. 



Three bronze nails, iin. long. 



Dorchester. 



A fragment, the use of which is un- 

 known. A trefoil-shaped flat plate, about 

 i|in. by ifin. At its broad end it is 

 hinged to a piece of bronze about fin. 

 thick, curved downwards, with a curved 

 branch rising from it lin. away from the 

 trefoil. Both branch and stem are im- 

 perfect. Then beneath the trefoil and 

 nearly coinciding with its upper outline 

 are two curved arms, part and parcel of 

 the bar or stem. Both these arms are 

 broken at the ends. 





With the Hogg 



Loan 

 Collection. 



Do. 

 Do, 



Do. 

 Do. 

 Do. 



