|
Date: |
|
Description: | 4 sherds of Roman pottery, Crambeckware or similar, of around 300-400 AD. One sherd is a fragment of a large parchment ware bowl or mortarium with a flanged rim, the fabricis orange and sandy, with a smooth yellowish surface painted with bands of orange/brown. Two sherds are redware, from the side of vessels, of a sandy light-orange fabric with burnished orange/red surfaces with infrequent fine red-brown inclusions. The final sherd is a large section of base of wither redware or greyware - its core is grey with some large soft inclusions, but othewise is of similar fabric to the previous two sherds. The largest sherd is 65.0 x 55.5 x 14.9mm, the smallest is 35.6 x 30.6 x 7.4mm. | Source: | Portable Antiquities | Creator: | Crump, Barry - Portable Antiquities Scheme | Identifier: | http://www.findsdatabase.org.uk/hms/pas_... | Language: | en-GB | Go to resource |
|
More Like this...
-
VESSEL
4 sherds of Roman pottery,…
-
Vessel
A base/body sherd of a…
-
Vessel
One sherd of Low Countries…
-
VESSEL
A base/body sherd of a…
-
Vessel
2 sherds of Medieval pottery,…
-
Vessel
Four sherds of Coarse Redware.…
-
Vessel
Two sherds of Later Roman…
-
Vessel
5 small, highly abraded sherds…
-
-
|