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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 April 2011
27 McWhirr, A. D., Viner, L. and Wells, C.. Romano-British Cemeteries at Cirencester (Cirencester Excavation Committee, 1982)Google Scholar.
28 Thanks are due to Paul Robinson, F. S. A., of Devizes Museum, who first noted the discovery of the head, to the late Professor Jocelyn Toynbee, F. S. A., who offered some preliminary comments, to Martin Henig, F. S. A., who made the connection between the publication of the Margate piece and the Cirencester example, and to the finder and owner of the head in whose private possession it remains. A summary archive is held at the Corinium Museum, Cirencester. Nick Griffiths very kindly and at short notice provided the illustration.
29 Perkins, D. R. J., ‘A Roman bronze head from Margate’, in Arch. Cant, xcvii (1981), 307–11,Google Scholar the major part being contributed by C. Johns.
30 Les Antiquités égyptiennes, grecques, étrusques, romaines et gallo-romaines du Musée de Mariemont (Brussels, 1952),Google Scholar which also cites further examples.
31 Menzel, H., Die römischen Bronzen aus Deutschland, 11: Trier (R.-G. Z. Mainz, 1966), no. 270Google Scholar.
32 Ibid., no. 180.
33 Richter, G. M. A., The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Greek, Etruscan and Roman Bronzes (New York, 1915), no. 276Google Scholar.
34 Grant, M., Erotic Art in Pompeii (London, 1975); 135Google Scholar.
35 Listed in Perkins, , op. cit. (note 29), 310Google Scholar.
36 This applies particularly to Menzel, , op. cit. (note 31), no. 183Google Scholar.