page 446 note 1 Two Kelto-Roman finds in Wales, Arch. Camb., 1901, esp. pp. 39–44.
page 447 note 1 See (Sir) A. Evans, ‘On a Late Celtic Urnfield …’, Archaeologia, lii, 370, pl. XIII, nos. 1, 3, 2, in that order.
page 447 note 2 References in Romilly Allen's paper, loc. cit., pp. 41, 43–4, and in Archaeologia, lxiii, 7 ff. Photographic illustrations in Fox, Arch. Camb. Reg., pl. XVII (Stanfordbury); Fox, Antiq. Journ. vi, 316 (Lords Bridge), and Boyd Dawkins, Arch. Camb., 1912, p. 104 (Mount Bures).
page 447 note 3 ‘On Late Keltic Antiquities at Welwyn, Herts.’, Archaeologia, lxiii, 1 ff.
page 447 note 4 The analysis of the Welwyn finds was inconclusive in this respect; see Archaeologia, lxiii, 29, lines 14 ff.
page 447 note 5 ‘The Belgae of Gaul and Britain’, Arch. Journ. lxxxvii, 1930, p. 319.
page 448 note 1 It is relevant to recall that the Capel Garmon district yields evidence of occupation by well-to-do folk in widely sundered periods, Neolithic and Dark Ages. See Romilly Allen, loc. cit., p. 39.
page 448 note 2 In one respect the art of Capel Garmon (and Welwyn) is pre-Belgic, and has Iron Age B (north-eastern group) affinities. The spherical iron knobs are fixed on pins, as are the coral, glass, and amber knobs on smaller and earlier Celtic art-works. Romilly Allen noticed this: Arch. Camb., 1901, p. 41 f.
page 448 note 3 Published by Dr. R. E. M. and Mrs. T. V. Wheeler, Lydney Report, 1932, p. 75, and fig. 11.