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II.—Account of the Discovery of Roman and other Sepulchral Remains, at the Village of Stone, near Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire. By John Yonge Akerman, Esq. Secretary

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 June 2012

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Extract

In the year 1847 Dr. Diamond communicated to the Society of Antiquaries an account of some excavations which he had superintended at Ewell near Epsom, when he exhibited various remains found in certain shafts sunk in the solid rock. The particulars of these discoveries, and Dr. Diamond's opinion thereon, have been printed in the Archæologia.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1851

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References

page 21 note a Vol. XXXII. p. 451.

page 21 note b Gli Antichi Sepolcri, ovvero Mausolei Romani ed Etruschi trovati in Roma, etc. Folio, Roma, MDCCLXVIII. The plate of this tomb is incorporated in Montfaucon.

page 21 note c Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries, vol. i. p. 328.

page 23 note a Vol. XXX. p. 545.

page 23 note b Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries, vol. i. p. 270.

page 23 note c These fibulæ, described as “a pair of ancient scales,” were purchased by the Honourable Mr. Neville at the sale of the Stowe collections. They are engraved in the Journal of the British Archæological Association, vol. v. p. 113.

page 23 note d Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries, vol. ii. p. 59.

page 23 note e Archæologia, Vol. XXXIII. p. 326.

page 25 note a An engraving of this bucket, from a Daguerreotype, taken shortly after its discovery, is here given. Its near resemblance to the common milking-pail still in use will be remarked. The edges of the staves are connected by wooden pins. Mention of the situla, or bucket for the well, occurs in Plautus, and various other ancient writers. It could not have differed widely from those in use at the present day, for the art of making wooden vessels, with staves and hoops, was known in the time of Pliny, who says, “Magno et collecto jam vino differentia in cella. Circa Alpes ligneis vasis condunt, circulisque cingunt.” Hist. Nat. lib. xiv. c. 21. Pignorius, De Servis, p. 266, edit. 1656, gives us a representation of an ancient sculpture in marble, dug up at Augsburg in 1601, on which are seen the Vinitores stowing away casks formed like those used by the moderns. It may be sufficient, however, to cite the examples of hooped vessels in the sculptures of the Trajan and the Antonine columns, or the.marble of Gruter, p. 818, No. 5.

page 25 note b Vol. i. p. 3.

page 26 note a Vide, inter alia, Suetonius in Domitiano, c. 17.—Festus, s. v. Vespœ et ibid. s. v. Puticuli.

page 27 note a The skins of beasts were used in lustrations. “Pellis Jovis. Sive pellis victimæ quæ Jovi immolabatur. Immolabant autem victimas Jovi Milichio et Ctesio, quarum pelles pellis servabant, Jovis nomine eas appellantes.” Suidas, s. v. Δι;ὀς Kὠδιον

page 27 note b The bottom, says Stukeley, contained “the purest garden mold; and in that the corpse or skeleton of a woman, the skull of which I had in my hand, and well knew to be a female.” Paleographia Britannica, part ii. p. 9.—How much it is to be regretted that this place was not explored by competent persons, and that an account of its then state was not drawn up by an antiquary less visionary than Stukeley.

page 28 note a That this vault was a tomb of the Roman period I think there can be no doubt, to whatever use it may have been converted in the middle ages. That it may have been used and tenanted by some recluse at a much later period, is very probable. The two niches would suggest the form of the recess for the Piscina, and it will be seen that a cross has been carved above one of them. Their identity however with the niches in the tombs cut in the rock of the mountain called Bingemma, is very apparent, as may be observed by reference to plate CCLXIII. figs. 1 and 2, in The Voyage Pittoresque en Sicile, etc.

page 28 note b Clutterbuck, in his History of Hertfordshire, gives the accounts of former writers, but offers no conjecture of his own. Vol. iii. p. 562.

page 28 note c This is a proof that these pits were objects of interest to the antiquaries of the days of Camden, while our ignorance of their present state is a reproach to us. In the Transactions of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, vol. iii. p. 17, is an account, with views and plans, of some chambers at Baden, supposed to have been used by the Secret Tribunals of Germany, but which appear to be Roman, and of sepulchral origin, to whatever purposes they may have been afterwards applied in the middle ages.

page 29 note a Britannia, vol. ii. p. 52.

page 30 note a Hist, of Essex, vol. i. p. 229, fol. 1768.

page 30 note b History of Kent, vol. i. p. 211.

page 30 note c Ibid. p. 226.

page 32 note a Lavatrinum et culinam conjungit. Varro, de L. L. 4, 25. Vet. gloss, ὰφδρων culina; atque ὰϕεδρων cloaca, sive latrina est. Eadem glossa ὰποπατος culina. Isidorus quoque culinam, in glossis latrinum, secessum interpretatur. Sorani, Thesaurus Eruditionis Scholasticæ, a Gesnero, Lipsæ, fol. 1726.

page 32 note b Aggenus Urb. in Sext. Jul. Frontinum de Agr. qualitate com. de controv. s. xi. Amsterdam, 1661, p. 301.