170 The Official Guide to the 
a people who had not advanced beyond the bronze 
age stage. This collection includes a variety of 
articles that would only be known to a people 
indulging in many luxuries, and having considerable 
acquaintance with the fine arts. ‘There will be found 
among them buckles, rings, brooches, tweezers, pen- 
dants, figures of gods, men, and animals. Very 
many of these antiquities were found at Caister 
Camp four miles from Norwich, close by the railway 
running from the city wa Ipswich to London. ‘This 
camp, thirty acres in extent, is still intact in form, 
- Bronze Bust oF GETA FOUND AT CAISTER, NEAR NORWICH. 
Norfolk Archeology, Vol. [V., p. 232+ 
parts of the walls being visible, where the earth has 
not been piled up upon them. Among these Caister 
antiquities are a bust of Geta, a Roman Speculum or 
mirror, a figure of Bacchus, a terra-cotta relief of a 
head of Diana, etc. The bust of Geta has at the 
back a stump of a pin with which to fasten it to some 
object. The mirror is one of a few examples which 
have been found by antiquarians. ‘There 1s one at 
