Hard sandy fabric similar to the vessel from [001]. This appears to be a base angle sherd.
21 shards, including one Central Gaulish Samian dish dated mid 2nd century AS and four sherds from a Hadham oxidised ware vessel dated mid 3rd-4th century AD. A black slipped dog dish from this context dates to the 2nd-4th century AD and the remaining sherds are also probably of this date range.
Two sherds probably post-Roman are separated.
Jackfield-Staffordshire red
Burnt residue on interiors
Plant pot
1 medieval with stabbed handle
Some butchery
English stoneware
F.16: a mixed context. This contained a sherd of 13th to 15th century grey coarseware (21g), and a sherd of 16th to 17th century German stoneware (45g).
[095], F.33: a 16th century or 17th century context. This was dominated by glazed red earthenware (34 sherds, weighing 494g), and also contained a quantity of Frechen stoneware (22 sherds, weighing 574g); three fragments bearing embossed decoration – including portions of two coats of arms – were identified. Also present were five sherds of bichromatic red earthenware (30g), six sherds of Babylon-type lead-glazed earthenware (71g), two sherds of tin-glazed earthenware (4g) and six sherds of plain red coarseware (216g), plus two residual sherds of 15th to 16th century Seigburg stoneware (33g), and two sherds of 13th to 15th century grey coarseware (15g).
F.33: a 16th or 17th century context. This contained two sherds of Broad Street-type green-glazed fineware (230g), a sherd of Babylon-type lead-glazed earthenware (9g), a sherd of glazed red earthenware (14g) and two sherds of plain red coarseware (30g).
9 pottery pieces weighing 99 grams
1 rim decorated with diagonal fingernail slashes. 1 decorated body, 2 body with plaster-like residue on outer sides.
Sixteen sherds come from a single vessel that is smoothed internally as well as externally.
Including plant pot and large storage jar
Some with green glaze. All Essex Red wares including graffito slip.
1 rim sherd. Mostly 14th and one 15th century Red ware
Rusticated Beaker pottery found with worked flints (see JCW04-013). Four decorated sherds that can be refitted to make one large body sherd. Rows of fingertip rustication interspersed with double rows of narrow, vertical reed/quill impressions. As well as fresh breaks the fragments also include 'false-rim' fractures where the pot has separated along the joints between coils.
Can be dated to the early 2nd millennium BC, and most likely from a domestic context.