ROMANO-BRITISH NORFOLK 



mentioned hoard. Probably the cemetery is wholly post-Roman. 

 For the inscribed urn see p. 312. The earthworks at Elmham 

 also appear to be post-Roman, and the place is not a Roman site, 

 so far as present evidence goes. 

 Earthenware roundel, dug out of an ancient ditch, inscribed ^ — S. 

 This is called Roman in Gentleman $ Magazine, 1792, / D ) 

 i. 209, 214, and Ephemeris Epigraphica, iii. 128, p. 144. V ^"'/ 

 But its date is probably later. Similar roundels with 

 various letters and figures have been found elsewhere (ref. in 

 Ephemeris, iii. 144, iv. 208); those which I have seen do not 

 seem to me Roman. 



Fig. 30. Bronze Object for Sus- 

 pending Bulla or Amulet Case, 

 Geldeston (full size). 



Bronze Statuette, Haynford. 



Fig. 32 



edenham. 



Enmeth . 



Felmingham 

 Feltwell . 



FiNCHAM 



Framingham 



Fring 



Hoard of coins (including Carausius) found near a supposed Roman 



road (p. 302) [Stukeley's Itinerarium, p. 14]. Possibly found in 



Cambridgeshire. 

 Hoard of bronzes and pottery : p. 307. 

 Hoard of 300 denarii ' of the early middle period.' See Caston. 



[journal of the British Archaological Association, xxxvi. 1 04.] 

 Coins — bare mention in Norfolk Archaology, vii. 359. 

 Roman tiles in church \_Archaological Journal, vi. 363]. Requires 



confirmation. 

 Perhaps villa : p. 297. 

 317 



