Academic literature on the topic 'Sussex Pottery'

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Journal articles on the topic "Sussex Pottery"

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SEAGER, THOMAS Mike. "From Potsherds to People: Sussex Prehistoric Pottery. Collared Urns to Post Deverel-Rimbury, c. 2000–500BC." Sussex Archaeological Collections 146 (June 5, 2008): 19–51. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10953468.

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This article summarizes our knowledge of Sussex Bronze and Early Iron Age pottery traditions from c. 2000–500 cal. BC, along with the research issues, by which this knowledge of pottery is transformed into a knowledge of people. Written by an expert in the field, who has worked in both contract and research archaeology, its aim is to provide an easily accessible, up-to-date synthesis of practical use to both the would-be and the active pottery specialist. In so doing it introduces for the first time data on pottery from 20-odd unpublished Sussex assemblages, including that from the natio
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SEAGER, THOMAS Mike. "Peterborough Ware from Westbourne. A Rare Middle Neolithic 'Ritual' (?) Deposit from the West Sussex Coastal Plain." Sussex Archaeological Collections 148 (June 5, 2010): 7–15. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10953721.

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Excavation by Development Archaeology Services at Westbourne, West Sussex, uncovered a small pit containing an unusually fine assemblage of Neolithic Peterborough ware pottery, including one of only two complete Peterborough ware profiles found in the county to date. This paper discusses their internal and external relationships. Features and pottery of these sorts are widely seen as ritual or symbolic rather than functional. The evidence from Westbourne points, however, not to ritual or symbolic practices as an explanation of Peterborough ware pits locally, but to everyday domestic routine.
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SEAGER, THOMAS Mike. "Understanding Iron Age Norton [East Sussex, UK]." Sussex Archaeological Collections 143 (June 5, 2005): 83–155. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10953310.

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Excavations by the [Sussex Archaeological] Society at Norton in the Bishopstone Valley, East Sussex, revealed a pit complex, a working hollow, a grave, a stove filled with burnt stones, a midden and a horizontal terrace of Middle Iron Age (MIA) date. The evidence suggests, in addition, that a non post-built house may have been located within the area of the excavation. Traces of Late Iron Age (LIA) activity were also found. Among the finds made were two chronologically sequential groups of saucepan pottery, a potin coin (from a MIA context), a sherd of Campanian amphora, and an assemblage of n
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Bedwin, Owen, Robin Holgate, P. L. Drewett, et al. "Excavations at Copse Farm, Oving, West Sussex." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 51, no. 1 (1985): 215–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0079497x00007106.

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Two farmsteads, one of late Iron Age (second-first centuries BC) date and the other dating to the early Romano-British period (first-second centuries AD), were excavated at Copse Farm, Oving. The site is situated within the Chichester dykes on the Sussex/Hampshire Coastal Plain. The Iron Age farmstead produced pottery spanning ‘saucepan’ and ‘Aylesford-Swarling’ traditions, a transition in ceramic production which is poorly understood in Sussex. Information on the agricultural economy and small-scale industries (principally metalworking) practised at this site give an insight into the way the
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Kenny, James, Malcolm Lyne, John Magilton, and Paul Buckland. "A Late Roman ‘Hall’ at Batten Hanger, West Sussex." Britannia 47 (January 29, 2016): 193–207. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068113x16000015.

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AbstractExcavation of the latest surviving structures of the villa at Batten Hanger in West Sussex indicates that a large aisled building was demolished in the late fourth or fifth century and replaced by a large hall 31.6 m long by 11.5 m wide, orientated approximately east–west. The survival of pad stones shows this space to have been divided into seven bays, with the more westerly bays screened off by a cross wall. The east wall of the building had collapsed outwards and was largely complete. A coin of Valentinian III suggests that occupation continued at least to the middle of the fifth ce
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Manley, John, and David Rudkin. "A Pre-A.D. 43 Ditch at Fishbourne Roman Palace, Chichester." Britannia 36 (November 2005): 55–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.3815/000000005784016973.

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ABSTRACTThis article details the first unambiguous evidence for occupation in the Late Iron Age, dating to around 10 b.c.-a.d. 25, at the site that was to develop into the Roman Palace at Fishbourne (near Chichester, Sussex). The collection of sealed and well-dated imported and local pottery, accompanied by food refuse and a copper-alloy scabbard fitting, suggests significant activity at the site a generation prior to the Roman Conquest of a.d. 43. The material was found in the bottom of a ditch that had been deliberately back-filled. As such this discovery opens a new chapter in the remarkabl
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Drewett, Peter, C. Cartwright, S. Browne, et al. "The Excavation of a Neolithic Oval Barrow at North Marden, West Sussex, 1982." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 52 (1986): 31–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0079497x00006575.

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An extensively plough-damaged oval barrow of the third millennium bc was excavated. The entire mound had been removed by ploughing. No burials were found under the site of the mound but disarticulated human skeletal material was found in the ditches. The main flanking ditches appear to have silted in naturally with evidence of Beaker activity and Romano-British agriculture in the higher levels. Some evidence of deliberate back-filling, including the burial of carved chalk objects, was found in the ditches at the east end. A single Saxon hut was excavated in the north-east corner of the barrow
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SEAGER, THOMAS Mike. "Two Early First Millennium BC Wells from Selsey, West Sussex and their Wider Significance." Antiquaries Journal 81 (June 7, 2001): 15–50. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0003581500072139.

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Two early first millennium BC site assemblages from Selsey Bill, West Sussex, UK, are considered, one of Late Bronze Age date and one of Early Iron Age date. Detailed examination of two large features suggests both a common function for the features and a functional similarity between the sites to which they belong. Data from them are tested against a contemporary, regional database. In terms of site activity and settlement form, both belonged to the same cultural tradition. But differences in inter-regional relationships, outlook and resource strategies are identified. The change, paralleled
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Wysocki, Michael, Seren Griffiths, Robert Hedges, et al. "Dates, Diet, and Dismemberment: Evidence from the Coldrum Megalithic Monument, Kent." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 79 (July 17, 2013): 61–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ppr.2013.10.

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We present radiocarbon dates, stable isotope data, and osteological analysis of the remains of a minimum of 17 individuals deposited in the western part of the burial chamber at Coldrum, Kent. This is one of the Medway group of megalithic monuments – sites with shared architectural motifs and no very close parallels elsewhere in Britain – whose location has been seen as important in terms of the origins of Neolithic material culture and practices in Britain. The osteological analysis identified the largest assemblage of cut-marked human bone yet reported from a British early Neolithic chambere
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Henning, Michelle. "ANTHROPOMORPHIC TAXIDERMY AND THE DEATH OF NATURE: THE CURIOUS ART OF HERMANN PLOUCQUET, WALTER POTTER, AND CHARLES WATERTON." Victorian Literature and Culture 35, no. 2 (2007): 663–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1060150307051704.

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MR. POTTER'S MUSEUM OF CURIOSITIESwas a small Victorian museum that contained unique anthropomorphic tableaux made by the taxidermist Walter Potter (1835–1918). Its glass cases were crammed with small “stuffed” or “mounted” animals, such as birds, squirrels, rats, weasels, and rabbits, wearing miniature clothes and placed in models of the human settings of Potter's time. They play sports, get married, fill schoolrooms and clubs, but they also illustrate well known sayings, rhymes, and rural myths. From the 1860s the tableaux were displayed in Bramber, Sussex, in the southeast of England. In 19
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Sussex Pottery"

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Hamilton, Susan Dorothy. "First millennium BC pottery traditions in Southern Britain." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 1993. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.324616.

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Books on the topic "Sussex Pottery"

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Walker, Raymond F. Thomas Weller, potter of Brede, his forebears and descendants. s.n.], 1996.

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C, Edwards J. E., Lakin D, and Museum of London, eds. Border wares. HMSO, 1992.

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The Roman Pottery Production Stie at Wickham Barn, Chiltington, East Sussex (British Archaeological Reports (BAR)). Archaeopress, 2001.

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Book chapters on the topic "Sussex Pottery"

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"HOP JUG: Belle Vue Pottery, Rye, Sussex, 1899." In English Pottery. Cambridge University Press, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511597244.060.

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