p. 44. The following works will be found useful for the student of early British antiquities:

Pictorial History of England, Vol. I. Lond. 1838.

Archæological Index to remains of Antiquity of the Celtic, Romano-British, and Anglo-Saxon periods. By J. Y. Akerman, F.S.A. London, 1847 (with a classified index of the Papers in the Archæologia, Vols. I-XXXI.).

Ten years’ diggings in Celtic and Saxon Grave Hills in the Counties of Derby, Stafford, and York, from 1848-1858. By Thomas Bateman. London, 1861. A most useful work, which will indicate the existence of many others. In connection with this see Dr Thurnam’s paper on British and Gaulish skulls in Memoirs of Anthropological Soc. Vol. I. p. 120.

The Land’s End District, its Antiquities, Natural History, &c. By Richard Edmonds. London, 1862.

Catalogue of the Antiquities of Stone, Earthen, and Vegetable Materials, in the Museum of the Royal Irish Academy. By W. B. Wilde, M.R.I.A. Dublin, 1857.

The Coins of the Ancient Britons. By John Evans, F.S.A. The plates by F. W. Fairholt, F.S.A. London, 1864. By far the best and most complete work hitherto published on the subject.

Also, the Transactions of various learned Societies in Great Britain and Ireland, among which the Archæologia Cambrensis is deserving of special mention.

For the Romano-British Antiquities may be added Horsley’s Britannia Romana, 1732; Roy’s Military Antiquities of the Romans in Britain, 1793; Lysons’ Relliquiæ Britannico-Romanæ. London, 1813, 4 Vols. fol.

Monographs on York, by Mr Wellbeloved; on Richborough and other towns, by Mr C. R. Smith; on Aldborough, by Mr H. E. Smith; on Wroxeter, by Mr Wright; on Caerleon, by Mr Lee; on Cirencester, by Messrs Buckman and Newmarch; on Hadrian’s wall, by Dr Bruce; on various excavations in Cambridgeshire, by the Hon. R. C. Neville.