138 SEPULCHRAL POTTERY. 



73. A COVER. Chesilborne. 4|in. diam. Mentioned by 



Canon Greemveld and in Archceologia, Vol. 43, by Dr. 

 Thurnam. Rev. C. W. Bingham. 



74. CIN. URN. Milborne S. Andrew, afin. by 3in. Four 



knobs ; contained fine ashes. The Rev. W. W. Gresley. 

 74A. Victoria Park, Dorchester, 1900. 4|in. Oval rim, 5in. by 

 3|in. 



75. CIN. URN. Barrow near "The Five Maries," Chaldon 



Herring. i4^in. by 9|in. Flower pot shape, five small 

 bosses ; contained burnt bones. 



76. Horton Heath. A fragment, apparently about i8in. by 



i Sin. The ornamentation is somewhat elaborate, but 

 the vessel is most noteworthy, because it has been 

 brought roughly to a polygonal plan. The surface has 

 been flattened into vertical flat faces two to three inches 

 wide. It is considered one of the most remarkable 

 pieces of pottery in the Museum. Dr. Smart. 



77. CIN. URN. Winterbourne Whitchurch. 9|in. by 6in. Two 



bosses remain. Shipp Collection. 



78. CIN. URN. Winterbourne Abbas. i6in. by iain. A fine 



typical urn with overhanging rim, ornamented with cord- 

 pattern three rows of slanting lines ; contains a quantity 

 of bones. Mr. Manfield. 



79. CIN. URN. Deverel Barrow, Milborne S. Andrew. 9|in. 



by 7in. Flower pot shape, plain except for one line 

 round it of small dents. The barrow contained 24 inter- 

 ments. (See introductory remarks, also Miles' account 

 of excavation and Warne's Celtic Tumuli, p. 9.) A stone 

 cover adjoins. Mr. Mansel-Pleydell. 



80. A fragment from Laurence Barrow, Dorchester, destroyed 



in 1885, when two bronze daggers and many worked 

 flints were found. Miss Davidson. 



8 1. CIN. URN. From near the Cromlech, Portesham. n|in. 



by 8in. This barrow was opened August, 1894. Wavy 

 lines made with a four-toothed tool and three shallow 

 grooves below. Mr. Manfield. 



