72 ACCOUNTS, ETC., OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM, 



Pottery bowl of black ware with burnished lattice pattern, 

 found in Old Broad Street, City of London ; given by the late 

 F. G. Hilton Price, Esq., dir.s.a. 



Black pottery fragment of urn, with grotesque mask in 

 relief, found in Tokenhouse Yard, City of London, 1865 : given 

 by F. W. Rudler, Esq.. i.s.o. 



(3.) Anglo-Saxon and Foreign Teutonic : — 



A remarkable bronze bowl of early British character, with 

 two of three escutcheons for attaching chains for suspension, 

 the bronze and iron mounts of a wooden bucket, an iron spear- 

 head and other objects found at Ewelme, Oxon, on the site of 

 a cemetery ; given by T. H. Powell, Esq. The bowl is figured 

 and described in Proc. Soc. Ant., xxii. 72. 



Bronze bowl with one of the enamelled bird-shaped 

 escutcheons, spear-heads and knife, and seven bone draughts- 

 men, found together at West Ham, near Basingstoke, Hants.,, 

 and described with illustrations in Proc. Soc. Ant., xxii., 81-3 ; 

 given by Dr. S. Andrews. 



Plaster-cast of the runes on a broken and buried piece of 

 one of the upright stones of the Brodgar circle, Stenness, 

 Orkney, discovered in 1907; given by the Council of tha 

 Viking Club, through Albany F. Major, Esq. 



Circular brooch of pewter, probably of the 10th century, 

 found near the Priory Gate, Castle Acre, Norfolk, and figured 

 in Proc. Soc. Ant , xxii. 56 ; given by E. M. Beloe, Esq., f.s.a. 



Openwork pommel of pewter found in London ; given by 

 the late F. G. Hilton Price, Esq., die.s.a. 



A series of Alemannic antiquities, comprising weapons and 

 ornaments from grave-rows in Hohenzollern and neighbourhood,, 

 collected by H. Edelmann, of Sigmaringen, and given by the 

 Rt, Hon. Sir John Brunner, m.p., and Sir Henry Howorth,, 



K.C.I.E. 



Bronze openwork disc, gilt and inlaid with garnets, probably 

 from north-west Europe and of the 7th century. 



Openwork buckle-plate of bronze from a Merovingian 

 cemetery at Cunfin, Dept. Aube, and a bronze equal-armed 

 brooch, both of the 7th century ; given by Jas. Curie, Esq., E.S.A. 



(4.) Mediceval and Later : — 



(a.) British. — Morse ivory draughtsman carved in relief with 

 an angel raising the pall from a bier and two weeping figures, 

 with traces of colouring, 12th century ; given by the National 

 Art Collections Fund. 



Silver ring-brooch with filagree scrolls, found at Maldon, 

 Essex, late 13th century ; given by E. Timperley, Esq. 



Bronze matrix of seal of William de la Pole, Marquis of 

 Suff'olk, 1445-50, with the arms of Dreux and canton of 

 Brittany. 



