172 The Official Guide to the 
In the wall case is arranged a series of Romano- 
British Urns, a class of antiquities which has obtained 
more or less attention in Norfolk since the days of 
Sir Thomas Browne, who wrote his celebrated treatise 
on Urn SLurial wpon some urns discovered at 
Walsingham and Brampton. ‘These urns witness to 
the Roman practice of cremation. 
ROMAN URN FROM HEDENHAM. 
Norfolk Archeology, Vol. VI. . p 154-156. 
In a case below, alongside the Roman antiquities, 
is a collection of antiquities for the most part Saxon, 
‘some of them from Felixstowe, where Felix, the fide 
Bishop of East Anglia, landed in the seventh century. 
Among them are two torque rings, of beautiful work- 
manship, encrusted with a fine green patina, believed 
