468 The Grave-mounds of Derbyshire, and their Contents. 



neighbourhood (at Bonsall), of which. I may yet take occasion 

 to speak in the pages of The Student. 



Of beads and. necklaces some extremely beautiful examples 

 have been found ; of these, the necklace from the barrow at 

 Wyaston (page 467,) will be sufficient for my present pur- 

 pose. It consists of twenty-seven beads, five of which are 

 of amber, carefully rounded into a globular shape, the largest 

 an inch in diameter, and the remaining twenty-two are of 

 glass or porcelain, variegated in different colours. Another 

 necklace was formed of garnets, etc., set in gold, and was of 

 extremely elegant pensile form. 



Combs, rings, earrings, and armlets have occasionally been 

 found, and have been of the usual forms. 



Of enamelled ornaments some choice examples have been 



exhumed. One of these, a pendant ornament, was found in a 



barrow on Middleton Moor, and others, though fragmentary, 

 which are here engraved, at Benty Grange. In the same 



