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The Mildenhall Treasure: a first-hand account

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

T. C. Lethbridge*
Affiliation:
Fortune Cottage, 8 Duck End, Girton, Cambridge CB3 0PZ, England

Abstract

Introducing our articles by Richard Hobbs and Paul Ashbee (ANTIQUITY 71: 63–76) on the Mildenhall Treasure, the mass of Roman silverware which came to light in east England in 1946, I remarked that the principals are deceased. One principal did leave a first-hand account which has not been known before — Tom Lethbridge, Hon. Keeper of Anglo-Saxon antiquities in the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Cambridge. This extract from his unpublished autobiography is printed with the kind permission of Mrs Tom Lethbridge.

Type
Notes
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 1997

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References

Ashbee, P. 1997. Mildenhall: memories of mystery and misgivings, Antiquity 71: 74–6.Google Scholar
Dobinson, C.S., LAKE, J. & SCHOFIELD, A.J. 1997. Monuments of war: defining England’s 20th-century defence heritage, Antiquity 71: 288–99.Google Scholar
Hobbs, R. 1997. The Mildenhall Treasure: Roald Dahl’s ultimate tale of the unexpected?, Antiquity 71: 6373.Google Scholar
Piggott, S. 1963. Archaeology and prehistory, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 29: 116.Google Scholar