Academy.
M. Bertrand (Revue Archéologique, September), gives an account of a very remarkable discovery of antiquities at Graeckwyl in the canton of Berne, in 1851. Two tumuli were opened, one of them yielding a bronze vase — with ornaments in relief and in the round on the neck and handles — of which an engraving accompanies the article. It is certainly curious, as M. Bertrand remarks, that a vase which from the artistic character of its ornaments can only be compared with Etruscan work, or better still with the gold ornaments from Camirus in Rhodes (in the British Museum and in the Louvre), should be found in the district of Berne, because it is not supposed that much of what is called civilization had reached that quarter till Roman times, whereas the Camirus gold ornaments, which are exact counterparts of those on the Graeckwyl vase, can be confidently assigned to the seventh century B.C. Perhaps the more archaic works of this kind are studied, the more it will be found that they prevail in the Greek islands — see, for instance, as to vases and terra-cottas, the guide-books to the first and second vase-rooms of the British Museum. From this evidence such objects could be traced to a period of activity in maritime trade which might readily have attracted patrons or traders from even higher regions of Europe than Berne.