ROMANO-BRITISH NORFOLK 



2. At Baconsthorpe. Here Mr. F. G. Spurrell has noticed ' bricks, 

 sherds, querns, etc.,' at and near the ruined Hall and in Baconsthorpe 

 generally, and the bricks, if Roman, may indicate a house. No other 

 writer, however, mentions such remains.^ For the large hoard found near 

 this village in 1878 see the seventh section of this article. 



3. Near Brundall railw^ay station, on the rising ground to the north- 

 west. Here discoveries made in 1882-87 indicate a dwelling and per- 

 haps local manufacture of common pottery. Half a mile west of the 

 station, at a level of 20 feet above the marshes of the Yare, in Dr. 

 Beverley's grounds, a curious depression was found, 100 feet long and 5 

 feet deep, filled with irregular lumps of clay mixed with charcoal ; some 

 carbonized oak, iron nails, an iron knife and an iron blade were detected 

 also among the clay lumps, and two drains made of roof-tiles were traced 

 running down the slope to the depression. Higher up and 200 yards 

 to the west, a heap of unburnt clay bricks and some potsherds were 

 unearthed, while close by flue and building-tiles, foundations of brick 

 and concrete rubble, a roof-tile with a nail in it, and fragments of 

 Samian and other pottery occurred. Long ago, in 1820, some burial 

 urns were found in the same locality, in the Upper and Lower Chapel- 

 field, but it is not certain if they were of Roman date.^ 



4. Dunham. Fragments of Roman brick have been seen in the 

 church tower by Mr. G. E. Fox, and pieces of Roman pottery and coins 

 are said to have been found in the parish of Great Dunham. A circular 

 enamelled brooch has been found at Little Dunham hard by.^ 



5. Fring, at a spot on the west side of Feddar's Way. Here, in 

 the last decade of the eighteenth century ' some labourers in ditching 

 broke up the remains of a pavement apparently Roman, which the 

 country people broke up and carried away great part of. The owner 

 of the ground ordered the spot to be carefully covered up for the future 

 inspection of antiquaries.' Unfortunately no antiquaries have yet availed 

 themselves of the owner's wisdom.* 



6. Howe. Here Mr. Fox mentions undoubted Roman brick and 

 tile in the masonry of the church, and a gold coin of Nero has been 

 found in the parish.^ The bricks and tile might possibly have come 

 from Caister-by-Norwich, which is not quite 4 miles to the north-west. 



7. Methwold, about three-quarters of a mile north of the village 

 and a quarter of a mile west of the third milestone from Stoke Ferry on 

 the Stoke and Brandon road, at ' Little Holme,' between the convergence 

 of the String Drain and Hoggard's Dyke. Here part of a dwelling- 

 house has been actually excavated — three small rooms, each about 8 feet 



"■ A rchaohgical Journal, xxxi. 434. 



2 G. E. Fox, Archaological Journal, xlvi. 354, 355 ; H. Daveney, East Anglian Notes and Queries, 

 i. (i860) 134. I understand that nothing definite has been found since 1887, but that bricics, tiles and 

 pottery are constantly turned up in digging. 



3 G. E. Fox, Archaohgical Journal, xlvi. 359 ; Norfolk Archaeology, i. 360. The fibula is figured by 

 Dawson Turner (MS. 23,029, p. 81) and in the Norwich volume of the Institute, xxvii. xlii. 



* Gough's Add. to Camden, ii. 201 ; Archaohgia, xxiii. 370. 

 s Archaeological J ournal, x. 62 ; G. E. Fox, ibid. xlvi. 335, 362. 

 297 



