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On an Anglo-Saxon Fibula in the Museum of the Society

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2012

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Abstract

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Appendix
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1868

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References

page 481 note a As the late Hon. R. C. Neville's researches at Linton Heath seem to show, the large cruciform fibula were worn by both sexes. Arch. Journ. 1854, xi. p. 95–115. Their use by women also appeared probable from the discoveries in the mound near Driffield, Yorkshire. See the writer's paper in Mr. J. T. Akerman's Pagan Saxondom, p. 37.

page 481 note b Archatohgia, xxxiii. p. 326.

page 481 note c Monumental Architecture and Sculpture of Great Britain, 1834, p. 44, and Fragmenta Sepulchralia, p. 56. In this last unpublished work Mr. Bloxam gives numerous wood-cuts of the objects found in the graves, which in the first instance, and for some time afterwards, he supposed to be “Romano-British.”