Showing 563 results

Archival description
Bone
JCARCH/JES98/029 · 14th/15th century
Part of Archaeological Finds

Some butchery. Proximal radius and one ageable mandible from an adult sheep/goat. One undiagnostic bird bone.

Pottery
JCARCH/JES98/056 · Roman to 14th/15th century
Part of Archaeological Finds

Romans and St Neots and 14th/15th century

Pottery
JCARCH/JCW03/009 · Roman and 18th/19thc
Part of Archaeological Finds

1 piece is Samian, 3 are 18th or 19th century. Samian sherd is 9g with rouletted decoration. Identified by K.Anderson, this is a fragment of a Central Gaulish 18R dish (1st-2nd century AD).

Pottery
JCARCH/JCW03/015 · 19th century and Roman
Part of Archaeological Finds

1 plant pot, 1 blue and white early 19th century sherd, 1 abraded sandy-Roman.

Flint
JCARCH/JCW04/007
Part of Archaeological Finds

"A sparse scatter of unstratified and residual worked flint across the site evinces 'background' activity from the late Mesolithic/early Neolithic and the later Neolithic"

Stylus
JCARCH/JCH10/<157>a
Part of Archaeological Finds

Tr. 1: Lead stylus with one pointed and one flat end and used in a similar fashion to a pencil. Examples from Coppergate, York exist and are identical to Winchester Class 2 type styli and generally date from the 13th to 15th centuries (Ottaway & Rogers 2002, 2934). Length 104mm.

Flat disc
JCARCH/JCH10/<159>b
Part of Archaeological Finds

Tr. 2: Circular, flat lead disc with traces of two fixings; possibly a lid or similar. Diameter 24.8mm; undated.

Pottery
JCARCH/JCH10/095
Part of Archaeological Finds

[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).