Showing 563 results

Archival description
With digital objects Archaeological Finds
Print preview View:

Pottery

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

Some with green glaze. All Essex Red wares including graffito slip.

Pottery

Some with green glaze. Late Roman and 16th century Surrey.

Pottery

1 rim sherd. Mostly 14th and one 15th century Red ware

Bone

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

Pottery

Romans and St Neots and 14th/15th century

Pottery

Six sherds of pottery, consisting of three Nene Valley colour coated wares and three sandy greywares. One of the sherds of Nene Valley ware is decorated with white painted swirls and berries, dating it to the 3rd century AD.

Pottery

Two sherds of Nene Valley colour coated ware and one Hadham oxidised ware. None of the sherds were diagnostic but the Hadham ware is dated mid 3rd-4th century AD and the Nene Valley ware is dates AD 150-300.

Pottery

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.

Flint

Primary flake with marginal retouch on the distal end

Pottery

F.05: this contained two sherds of 16th to 19th century plain red coarseware (13g).

Pottery

F.51: a mixed context. This contained three sherds of 18th century Chinese export porcelain (5g), a sherd of late 18th or early 19th century creamware (3g), a sherd of 16th to 18th century tin-glazed earthenware (6g), a sherd of 18th or 19th century lead-glazed earthenware (2g), a sherd of 18th century Staffordshire-type slipware (11g) and two sherds of 16th to 17th century German stoneware (107g).

Pottery

F.24: this contained a single sherd of abraded grey coarseware (5g), which is most probably Roman in date.

Results 1 to 50 of 563