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 A HISTORY OF NORTHAMPTONSHIRE the surface.' Some of the bowls are engraved in Archceologia^ and do not differ essentially in shape from some of the Irchester specimens, while the discoveries were made in similar circumstances, which point to some connection with Roman civilization. The general appearance of some of these bowls which are skilfully made of thin metal, suggests British workmanship of the pre-Roman period, but in the opinion of the late Sir Wollaston Franks, the set from Irchester belonged rather to the Saxon period, and differed essen- tially from the Roman ; " and though it is true that the burial in trenches is unfamiliar, and may well be the survival of the Roman custom, the character of the objects accompanying the Desborough bowl warrants the attribution of the cemetery to the Christian-Saxon period. It must however be admitted that some of the graves in which skeletons have been found placed east and west,^ with signs of fire in the vicinity, but without any characteristic weapons or ornaments, may be those of Romanized Britons, and date from the fourth century, when the practice of cremation had given way to simple burial in coffins, or cists composed of stone slabs such as occurred at Desborough. The closest of parallels is to be found in Northamptonshire itself. At Cransley, about four miles from Desborough, several finds were made by the ironstone diggers between 1879 and 1882, and put on record by the local secretary of the Society of Antiquaries.* In one place human remains were found, but were too much decayed to afford any indication of the direction in which the burials had been made. With these was an iron sword-blade, fairly well preserved, 2 feet 3 inches in length and 1 1 inches in breadth at the widest part, having at the hilt a cross-piece which broke away. Besides two circular bronze brooches, a spearhead and minor relics, a curious urn about 5I inches in height came to light. ^ It has lugs or rudimentary handles at intervals round the widest part and tapers towards the mouth, while the base is rounded with little precision. A small cylindrical bronze case or canister apparently belongs to a class of which examples have been found in Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Derby- shire and in the East and West Ridings of Yorkshire. This specimen was found in a decayed and fragmentary state, but it was furnished with a lid, and the bottom had a punctured design in the form of a cross, the sides being also slightly ornamented in the same way. It was 2^ inches high, with a diameter of 2 inches ; and the use of this class of objects is now fairly ascertained, as more than one specimen' has been found with traces of thread and even needles inside, so that they may be regarded as the thread-boxes of Anglo-Saxon women. The occurrence of the cross as 1 Vol. xvi. p. 364, pi. Ixix. * Proceedings, Society of Antiquaries, vol. vi. p. 476. ' Cf. Associated Architectural Zockties (1875), Northants, p. 113. from Twywell. Catalogue of Mortimer Museum at Driffield (1900), p. 21. 240
 * Proceedings, vol. ix. pp. 93, 94.
 * Figured in Proceedings, Society of Antiquaries, vol. ix. p. 92, where it is incorrectly said to be
 * Inienlorium Sepukhrale, p. 81, pi. xiii. ; Jewitt, Grave-Mounds and their Contents, p. 285, fig. 466 ;