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Another Bronze Age Beaker from Leicestershire

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 January 2012

Abstract

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Type
Notes
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1941

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References

page 232 note 1 Beakers from Knipton and the Melton Mowbray district in this County have been published in the Journal (xv, 59; xvii, 71).

page 232 note 2 V.C.H. Leics. i, 171, 176, misreads this note as referring to two pots.

page 233 note 1 Arch. Journ. xc, 124.

page 233 note 2 Archaeologia, lxii, figs, on pp. 337–9.

page 233 note 3 Leics. Arch. Soc. Trans. iv, 7. The cist, 3 ft. 6 in. long, was constructed of ironstone slabs on one side and rubble on the other, with two slabs for the cover; it was roughly boat-shaped, and so might be compared with a larger early Bronze Age grave at Frocester, Gloucs. (Soldier's Grave, Proc. Prehist. Soc. iv, 214). With the skeleton was a large quantity of charcoal and ashes (cf. Mortimer, Forty Years Researches, xl, and a beaker burial at Cassington, Oxon., Antiq. Journ. xiv, 274).

page 234 note 1 Unpublished: in Leicester Museum.

page 234 note 2 Evans, Ancient Stone Implements, figs. 22, 35, 36; Proc. Prehist. Soc. E. Ang. v, 79; Antiq. Journ. xi, 57.

page 234 note 3 History of Carmarthenshire, i (1935), 52Google Scholar; Arch. Camb., 1934, 181Google Scholar (Tylwch, near Llanidloes). I am indebted to Dunning for these references.

page 234 note 4 The Avon route has been suggested for handled beakers by Fox, , Arch. Camb. 1925, 23Google Scholar; cf. Antiq. Journ. xv, 282. A flint axe with expanding edge was found near Alcester (Birmingham Arch. Soc. Trans. lviii, 44).

page 234 note 5 Leics. Arch. Soc. Trans, iii, III; human bones were found near to them. Other Bronze Age finds on the upper Welland are a number of cinerary urns at Market Harborough (Nichols, History of Leics. ii, 486 and pl. LXXXIII) and a hoard of socketed axes, gouges and chisels at Husbands Bosworth (ibid, iii, pi. CLI).

page 234 note 6 Leics. Arch. Soc. Trans. xiv, 176.

page 234 note 7 Evans, Bronze Implements, 231.

page 234 note 8 Oxoniensia, iii, 7.

page 234 note 9 Coventry Nat. Hist. and Scientific Soc. Proc., May 1938, 184. He cites a Graig Llwyd axe found near Coventry (ibid, Jan. 1935, 116) and other material as suggesting a direct connexion with North Wales.

page 234 note 10 V.C.H. Leics. i, pl. opposite p. 170.

page 234 note 11 Unpublished; on loan to Leicester Museum.

page 234 note 12 Antiq. Journ. xviii, 412.

page 234 note 13 Leics. Arch. Soc. Trans. xviii, 181.