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The Handle of a Toilet-knife in the Form of a Bust of Minerva from the North York Moors
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 November 2011
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- Copyright © Martin Henig 1997. Exclusive Licence to Publish: The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies
References
101 NGR 521 842. There were no associated finds. I am very grateful to Robert Wilkins FSA for his usual superb photographs.
102 Boon, G.C., ‘Tonsor humanus: razor and toilet-knife in antiquity’, Britannia xxii (1991), 21–32, esp. 27 flf.;CrossRefGoogle ScholarHenig, M. and Paddock, J.M., ‘Metal figurines in the Corinium Museum, Cirencester’, Trans. Bristol and Glos. Arch. Soc. cxi (1993), 89–92 no. 9, fig. 3Google Scholar ; M. Feugère, ‘Les spatules à cire a manche figuré’, in W. Czysz, C.-M. Hüssen, H.-P. Kuhnen, C.S. Sommer and G. Weber, Provinzialrömische Forschungen. Festschrift für Günter Ulbert zum 65. Geburstag (1995), 321-38.
103 Webster, G., ‘The bronze handle of a Romano-British butteris’, Antiq. Journ. xlviii (1968), 303–4.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
104 Boon, op. cit. (note 102), 22-4.
105 M. Henig, ‘The bronze figurine’, in L. Watts and P. Leach, Henley Wood, Temples and Cemetery. Excavations 1962-69 by the Late Ernest Greenfield and Others, CBA Res. Rep. 99 (1996), 131–3, figs no, 161; idem, The Art of Roman Britain (1995), 39 illus. 19.
106 ibid., 38-9, illus. 20; Henig and Paddock, op. cit. (note 102), 89-90, no. 7, fig. 3.
107 M. Henig, Religion in Roman Britain (1984), 65-6 illus. 23.
108 Turnbull, P., ‘Stanwick in the northern Iron Age’, Durham. Arch. Journ. i (1984), 41–9.Google Scholar
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