270 List of Prehistoric, Roman, and Pagan Saxon Antiquities. 



[4a]. A long or oval barrow on down just S. of Imber village. A. W. 

 I. Station III. Not on O.M. Does not now exist. M.E. 

 Cunnington, 1913. 

 Earthworks. Large oblong enclosure in British village 1 mile N.W. of 

 Imber Church, E. of Wadman's Coppice. O.M. 45 SE. 

 Ditch runs N.W. to S.E. for \ mile from corner of W. Lavington 

 parish. O.M. 45 SE. 

 Finds, Bronze Age. Hoare found interment of skeleton with drinking 

 cup without any barrow, within the " British Village " at Wadman's 

 Coppice. O.M. 45 SE. ; A. W. I. 87 ; W.A.M. xxi. 259 fig. 

 Roman. "British Village" 1 mile N.W. of Imber, E. of Wadman's 

 Coppice. Pottery, animals' bones, fragments of Bath stone found by 

 Hoare. O.M. 45 SE. ; A. W. I. 86. 

 British village shown on A.W. I. 89 Station III. W. of Salisbury R., 

 S.W. of Penning Barn (in Lavington), apparently near East Farm 

 Cottages. Not in O.M. 46 SW. 



KEEVIL. 



Finds, Neolithic. Ground flint celt, found near foundations of old 

 Church in " Couple Church Field " 1913. In possession of Rev. E. 

 P. Knubley, of Steeple Ashton. 



Roman. In field W. of village, Roman coins and pottery of various ages 

 (some Norman), &c. W.A.M. xxxiii. 430. 



KENNETT, EAST. 

 Barrows. 



1. Long barrow f mile S. of Church. O.M. 35 NW. ; Smith, p. 179, 

 XI [. H. VIII. a.; Stukeley Abury 46. See Appendix Long 

 Barrows. 



[la— c]. Close on the N. or E. side of the Long barrow, A. W. II. Station 

 X shows 2 round barrows close together, with one on the S. or 

 W. side. Smith p. 180 XII. H. VII. b, c, shows one on each side 

 only. 



(b) Wide low barrow much ploughed down on N. of Long barrow. 

 Opened? Not in O.M. 35 NW. 



(c) Wide low barrow, much ploughed down on S. of Long barrow. 

 Not in O.M. 35 NW. Opened dr. 1854. A grave 5ft. deep by 

 5ft. long, with skeleton, drinking cup, bronze knife dagger, and 

 perforated stone axe hammer, vaulted over with sarsens. " In a 

 small adjacent barrow (1 b) bones of deer, wild boar, and birds 

 in very large quantities." Arch. Journ. xxiv. 29 ; Proc. Arch. 

 Inst. Salisbury, 110, figs. 12 — 14; Evans' Bronze, 226; Evans' 

 Stone 173 ; Proc. Soc. Ant. 2nd Ser. IV. 339 ; Arch, xliii. 452 PI. 

 XXXIII. 2. [Little or no sign of these 2 barrows now, 1913. 

 M.E.C.] 



