A HISTORY OF NORFOLK 



BiCKERSTONE . 

 BiLLINGFORD . 



Brampton . . 



Brancaster 

 Brandon . 

 Brettenham 



Brundall . 

 Buckenham 



Burgh next 



Aylsham 



Buxton . . . . 



Caister-by-Nor- 



WICH 



Caister-by- Yar- 

 mouth 

 Caldecot 

 Carbrooke 



(Great) 



Carleton 



St. Peter 



Castleacre 



Alleged Roman bricks (as if a villa near) in south-east angle of 

 ruined church [East Anglian Notes and Queries, i. (1862) 239]. 

 Very doubtful. 



Alleged road and 'numerous antiquities including urns' [Norfolk 

 ArchiBology, iv. 312 ; Archaologia, xxiii. 368]. Very doubtful. 



On the borders of Buxton parish and near Oxnead park, much 

 pottery, including Samian (CRACVNA F), glass, coin of Faustina 

 in an urn, coins of Postumus and Tetricus, bones and ashes of 

 human bodies. Close by, a kiln, consisting of a floor, 6 feet 

 9 inches square, of brick earth burnt red and hard on the spot, 



- with 34 holes in it, and below three similar floors, each filled 

 with urns. These were excavated by Sir Thos. Browne [Con- 

 cerning some Urnes found in Brampton Field in liitj, in his 

 ' Posthumous Works ' ; Blomefield, vi. 430 ; Gough's Camden, 

 ii. 193. Aubrey in his Monumenta Britannica, ii. p. 34 (MS. 

 Bodl. Aubrey 15) has a drawing, which indicates a kiln like that 

 figured by C. R. Smith, Collectanea Antigua, vii. plate i]. Since 

 then, other excavations have been made in the same place and 

 more urns and bones found, with flint layers protecting the urns 

 [Archaological fournal, iii. 249]. Dawson Turner [MS. 23,026, 

 p. 99] figures a bit of Castor ware and a pit of a Samian pelvis 

 found here, or near, and [MS. 23,053, pp. 193 foil.) some pottery, 

 a bronze lamp and bronze statuettes of Juppiter and (perhaps) 

 Minerva — but the lamp (as the Curator of Norwich Museum 

 tells me) came from Pompeii and the pottery is Greek of the third 

 century B.C. See also Buxton and Oxnead. There may have 

 been a villa or village where these parishes meet. 



Fourth century fort : p. 304. 



Vase of thin bronze with holes in it, in the British Museum. 



Fibulae, rings, keys, pottery, many coins (Vespasian, Nerva, Trajan, 

 Hadrian, Marcus, Sept. Severus, Carausius, Allectus and Con- 

 stantinian, including ' Third Brass ' of Dalmatius and Decentius — 

 some perhaps belonging to a hoard). Blomefield put Combre- 

 tonium here [Blomefield, i. 441 ; Archaeological fournal, iv. 252, 

 xxvi. 401 ; Norwich vol. of the Institute, liii. 



Dwellings : p. 297. 



Pottery found in making the Norwich and Yarmouth railway [Nor- 

 folk Archaeology, iv. 315]. The earthworks mentioned by Harrod 

 are not Roman [ibid. xi. 139]. See Lynford. 



One or two bits of pottery seem to have been found here, perhaps 

 waifs from the adjoining parish of Buxton [Archaological fournal, 

 iii. 246 ; Dawson Turner, MS. 23,026, p. 151 (urn found 1845)]. 



Pottery, on the edge of Brampton parish [Browne's Urnburial, ii., 

 iii ; Dawson Turner, MS. 23,026, p. 219]. See Brampton. 



i Probably town : p. 288. 



j- Perhaps village : p. 293. 



Romano-British burials alleged in Norfolk Archtsology xii. 20. 



Spearheads said to be Roman, really pre-Roman bronze [Journal of 

 the British Archaeological Association, vi. 158 ; Dawson Turner, 

 MS. 23,054, pp. 2, 10]. The little head in metal figured by 

 Dawson Turner [p. 5], a type of young Hercules, may perhaps 

 be comparatively modern work. 



Hoard of 4 gold coins (Gratian, Maximus, Honorius) and 10 

 silver (Julian to Arcadius and Honorius) found in 1807 in an 

 urn of dark ware with wavy lines of white [Norwich vol. of the 

 Institute, pp. xxvii., liii. ; Norfolk Archaology, iv. 315]. 



The imperfectly rectangular earthwork between the church and the 

 ruins of the Saxon and Norman castle has generally been taken to 

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