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 

 This is called Roman in Gentleman's Magazine, 1792, 

 i. 209, 214, and Ephemeris Epigraphica, iii. 128, p. 144. 

 But its date is probably later. Similar roundels with 

 various letters and figures have been found elsewhere 

 Ephemeris, iii. 144, iv. 208) ; those which I have seen 

 seem to me Roman. 



(vny) 



(ref. in 

 do not 



Fig. 30. Bronze Object for Sus- 

 pending Bulla or Amulet Case, 

 Geldeston (full size). 



Fig. 29. Glass Vessel, Geldeston {\ size). 



Fig. 31. Bronze Statuette, Haynford. 



Fig. 32. Urn, Hedenham. 



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 Archceological Association, xxxvi. 1 04.] 

 . Coins — bare mention in Norfolk Archaeology, vii. 359- 

 . Roman tiles in church [Archaological Journal, vi. 363]. Requires 



confirmation. 

 . Perhaps villa : p. 297. 

 317 



