DRINKING CUPS. 



97 



some of which it is said to have contained, though it is quite 

 possible they may have got into it accidentally J ; and one some- 

 what similar, and quite plain, was discovered by the Rev. W. C. 



Fig. 84. i. 



Lulds in a barrow at Collingbourne Ducis, Wilts, with the burnt 

 bones of a child 2 . A vessel made of shale, found on Broad Down, 

 near Honiton 3 , the amber cup from Hove, near Brighton 4 , and 



1 Nenia Cornubise, p. 246, where it is figured. 



2 Wilts Archaeological Magazine, x. p. 90. 



3 Arch. Journal, vol. xxv. p. 296 ; Trans. Devon. Assoc., vol. ii. p. 635 ; Evans, Stone 

 Impl. p. 399. The so-called vessel of wood found in a tree-coffin in the King Barrow, 

 Stowborough, was probably, like that from the barrow on Broad Down, made of shale. 



4 Sussex Arch. Coll., vol. ix. p. 120 ; Arch. Journal, vol. xiii. p. 183 ; vol. xv. p. 90 j 

 Evans, Stone Impl. p. 403. 



H 



