. The ancient stone implements, weapons, and ornaments, of Great Britain. mens in theMuseum at Vannes. Some ofthem t have small holes boredthrough them. The various types(it Brittany celts have been clas-sified by the SocieU Poli/inatJiiqne(lit In the Musee deSt. Germain is a specimen (un-bored) 9 inches long, and foundnear Paris. § I have one 7\inches long from St. Jean, Cha-teaudun. One about 61 incheslong, from the environs of Sois-sons, is in the Museum at of jade, of analogous formto these, and found near Brussels,IS engraved by Le Hon.|| Five specimens of the samech


. The ancient stone implements, weapons, and ornaments, of Great Britain. mens in theMuseum at Vannes. Some ofthem t have small holes boredthrough them. The various types(it Brittany celts have been clas-sified by the SocieU Poli/inatJiiqne(lit In the Musee deSt. Germain is a specimen (un-bored) 9 inches long, and foundnear Paris. § I have one 7\inches long from St. Jean, Cha-teaudun. One about 61 incheslong, from the environs of Sois-sons, is in the Museum at of jade, of analogous formto these, and found near Brussels,IS engraved by Le Hon.|| Five specimens of the samecharacter, of different sizes, thelongest about 9^ inches in length,and the shortest about 4 inches,are said to have been found withFiK. 52.—Buivveii Fcii. i Roman remains at Kiistrich, near Gonsenheim,*! and are preserved in the Museum at Mayence. Thesmallest is of greenstone, and the others of chloritic albite. They aresaid to have been buried in a sort of leather case, arranged alternately withthe pointed and broad ends downwards, and in accordance with their * Pror. Soc. Aid. Scot., iv. 52. t Bonstetton, Supp. au Rec. cVAiit. Sitissctf, pi. ii. 1. X Froc. Ethnol. Hoc, 1870, p. cxxxvii. \j Moitillet, Promenades, 145. (I Lnoinme Fossile, 2ncl edit. 147. II Lindciischmit, Alt. n. h. V., vol. i., Iluft ii., Taf. i. 10, &c. WITH FI,AT SIDES. 99 Both with the EngUsh and continental specimens, there appears tobe considerable doubt as to the exact localities whence the materialswere derived from which they are formed. Instruments for which such beautiful and intractable materials wereselected can hardly have been in common use ; but we have not sufficientground for arriving at any trustworthy conclusion as to the purpose forwhich they were intended. I have, however, a short celt, 3| incheslong, from Burwell Fen, and made of this jade-like material, which hasevidently been much in use, and was once considerably longer. Itappears, indeed, to be the butt-end of an instrument,


Size: 1038px × 2407px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookauthorevansjoh, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookyear1872