Wilts Obituary. 



83 



Bibliographical List of Books, Pamphlets, and Articles, 

 by Lt.-Gen. Pitt-Eivers.* 



Excavations in Cranborne Chase, near Eushmore, on the borders of 

 Dorset and Wilts. 4to. Privately printed. 



Vol. I. 1887. Pp. xix. and 254. Contents: — Excavations in the 

 Bomano-British village on Woodcuts Common, and Komano-British 

 Antiquities in Eushmore Park. 



Plates I. to LXXIV. 



Vol. II. 1888. Pp. xix. and 287. Contents : — Excavations in Barrows 

 near Eushmore — In Bomano-British village, Botherley — In Winkelbury 

 Camp— In British Barrows and Anglo-Saxon Cemetery, Winkelbury Hill. 



Plates LXXV. to CLIX. and many tables of measurements, &c, un- 

 paged. 



Vol. III. 1892. Pp. xvi. and 308. Contents: — Excavations in 

 Bokerly and Wansdyke, Dorset and Wilts, 1888—1891. With obser- 

 vations on the Human Eemains by J. G. Garson, M.D. 



Plates CLX. to CCXXXIIL, with portrait of the author as frontispiece. 



This volume was reviewed in the Archceological Journal, vol. xlix., 

 pp. 314—318. 



Vol. IV. 1898. Pp. ix., 30, and 242. Contents :— Address to the 

 Archaeological Institute at Dorchester (with one extra plate and two cuts 

 in text) — Excavation of South Lodge Camp, Eushmore — Of entrenchment 

 and pits on Handley Hill — Of Wor Barrow and angle-ditch on Handley 

 Down — Of Martin Down Camp — Of Bomano-British Trench in nursery 

 garden, Eushmore — Gen. Pitt-Eivers' Craniometer. 



Plates CCXXXIV. to CCCXVII. 



For review of this volume see Wilts Arch. Mag., vol. xxx., p. 147. 



In these four volumes are embodied the results of the whole of the 

 excavations undertaken by their author in Dorset and Wilts. They in 

 fact are the literary fruit of the work of the last twenty years of his life. 

 No archaeological work has ever been treated in England with anything 

 like the same thoroughness and exactness as the General's excavations 

 are in these volumes. In the three hundred and seventeen plates an 

 enormous number of objects are illustrated with the most scrupulous 

 accuracy — forming a gallery of reference for the humbler and less 

 " important" objects met with in a Eomano-British settlement, such as 

 is not to be found in any other book. In addition to these, maps, plans, 

 sections, and relic tables are most lavishly given, and the four volumes, 

 together forming the "magnum opus" of their author's life — printed, as 



* This list is as full as the Editor has been able to make it, though it 

 probably is by no means a complete list of the author's writings. 



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