[13] Lasteyrie (F. de), Description du trésor de Guarrazar, 1860.

[14] De Baye (J.), The industrial arts of the Anglo-Saxons, p. 45.

[15] Faussett (B.), Inventorium sepulchrale, p. 78, Pl. 1.

[16] Arch. Journal, IV, p. 253. Another similar brooch from Abingdon is in the British Museum. See Akerman (J. Y.), Remains of pagan Saxondom, Pl. iii.

[17] Archæologia Cantiana, II, Pl. iii.

[18] Catalogue of Anglo-Saxon antiquities, p. xv.

[19] Green (J. R.), Short history of the English People (1875 ed.), p. 21.

[20] The Alfred Jewel, p. 45. 1901. Others consider that the jewel was the head of a book-marker or pointer.

[21] M. Molinier (Histoire générale des arts appliqués à l’industrie, IV, p. 93) is of the opinion that the enamel is English, and not, as some hold, of Byzantine origin. See also Victoria County History of Somerset, I, p. 376. 1906.

[22] Archæologia, XXIX, p. 70, Pl. x.