|
Date: |
|
Description: | A Medieval or Post Medieval (12th to mid 19th centuries) cooking vessel leg: In plan the leg is an elongated triangle with the tip forming the foot. The upper terminal has obliquely angled face which has a broken edge, and the actual surface is smooth and forms the interior surface of the vessel. In section the leg is sub-trapezoidal with the back face being the narrow face. The exterior face has a vertical ridge. The surface has a mottled mid to dark green patina with patches of a carbon build up. The interior surface is a shiny mid grey colour. The leg measures 59.57mm tall, 39.13mm wide and 24.12mm thick. It weighs 150.44g.It is uncertain what type of vessel this leg comes from, but Egan (1998) comments that commonly used cooking vessels in the Medieval period include skillets, ewers, and cauldrons. According to Butler, Green and Payne (2009), "From aboutAD 1100, cast copper alloy vessels...were commonly used for downhearth cooking, with the vessel sitting among the embers or suspended over the fire. All but the poorest medieval or post-medieval households would have had at least one metal cooking vessel....These vessels gradually passed out of use between 1700 and 1850, superseded by cast iron pots...".Butler, R., Green, C. and Payne, N. 2009 'Cast copper-alloy cooking vessels' Finds Research Group AD700-1700 Datasheet 41Egan G. 1998 The Medieval Household Daily Living c. 1150-c.1450 Museum of London, London, The Stationary Office
Original Image | Publisher: | http://finds.org.uk | Source: | Portable Antiquities | Identifier: | https://finds.org.uk/database/artefacts/ | Go to resource |
|
More Like this...
-
VESSEL
Medieval or Post Medieval (12th…
-
VESSEL
A Medieval or Post Medieval…
-
VESSEL
Medieval or Post Medieval (12th…
-
VESSEL
Medieval or Post Medieval (12th…
-
VESSEL
A possible Medieval or Post…
-
VESSEL
Medieval or Post Medieval (12th…
-
VESSEL
A Medieval or Post Medieval…
-
VESSEL
A Medieval or Post Medieval…
-
VESSEL
A Medieval or Post Medieval…
-
VESSEL
A Medieval or Post Medieval…
|