130 Haakon Schetelig. [No 8. 
figs 155 and 156.') For typologiecal reasons the ave of the silver- 
plated brooeh must be about the same as that of the one above, 
fig. 154, but the eruciform brooch certainly belongs to å more ad- 
vanced stage of the de- 
j - velopment. All knobs are 
) cast in one piece with the 
RR brooch and the side-knobs 
are flat on the underside, 
while the top-knob has pre- 
served the full roundness. 
Also the dimensions of the 
mg plate and the relatively 
broad proportions of the 
rest of the brooch indicate 
a more advanced develop- 
ment than observed in the 
broocehes figs. 146 and 153. 
For typological reasons one 
might be inelined to con- 
elude that one of the two 
brooehes found in the grave 
here in question was al- 
ready an old specimen at 
the time when they were 
buried with their possessor, 
but even upon this sup- 
position, the date of the 
grave cannot probably be 
fixed later than about the 
middle of the 5th cent. or 
shortly after that time. The 
eruciform brooch should 
most likely be referred to 
a time about 450 A. D. 
- Å small eruciform brooeh 
was found in association 
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V 
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with the fine silver-plated brooch fig. 149 above.?) It is of the 
1) Eidsten, Brunlanes pgd. Jarlsberg. OC. 19235 and 19237. Ab. 1898, 
p. 88—91. 
2) Jutland. Copenhagen Museum OC. 5813. 
