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A Group of English and Imported Medieval Pottery from Lesnes Abbey, Kent; and the Trade in Early Hispano-Moresque Pottery to England
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 November 2011
Extract
The group of medieval pottery described in this paper was found at Lesnes Abbey in June 1959, when the smaller of two stone-lined pits added against the west end of the Reredorter was cleared. The pit measured 8 ft. by 5 ft. internally, and was about 10 ft. deep. The greater part of the filling, about 7 ft. in depth, consisted of chalk and stone rubble, fragments of sandy mortar, a few pieces of worked stone, and broken roofing tiles. Below this filling was a layer of dark soil, about 2 ft. in depth, at the bottom of the pit. All the pottery was found in the layer of dark soil; there is thus no doubt that it is contemporary, and was absolutely sealed by several feet of building debris. I am indebted to the officers of the Historic Buildings Section of the London County Council for these details, and for permission to examine the pottery and prepare this report for publication.
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- Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1961
References
page 3 note 1 Museum, GuildhallCatalogue (1908), pl. lxviGoogle Scholar, 7; London Museum Medieval Catalogue (1940), 215Google Scholar, fig. 69, 5.
page 3 note 2 Information from Mr. Frere; Arch. Cant, lxix, 148–9.
page 3 note 3 British Museum Catalogue of English Pottery (1903), 69, fig. 59; Guildhall Museum Catalogue, pi. LXVI, 10.
page 3 note 4 Arch. Cant, lxxii, 35, fig. 6, 18–19.
page 3 note 5 Surrey Arch. Coll. xxxvii, 245.
page 3 note 6 Information from Mr. S. E. Rigold; Arch. Cant, lxxii, 38.
page 3 note 7 Arch. Cant, lxxii, 35, fig. 6, 20–22.
page 3 note 8 Ibid. lxxiii, 213.
page 3 note 9 Plan published by Jope, E. M. in A History of Technology, ii (1956), 285Google Scholar, fig. 266.
page 4 note 1 Arch. lxxxiii, 114–18 and 124–34.
page 5 note 1 A full account of polychrome ware and of the other types of French pottery exported to Britain, together with inventories, is being prepared for publication in the near future.
page 5 note 2 Information from Mr. C. A. R. Radford.
page 5 note 3 Arch. lxxxiii, 112.
page 5 note 4 Information from Mr. A. J. Taylor,
page 5 note 5 Arch. Cambrensis, 1935, p. 141.
page 5 note 6 P.S.A., Scot. xci, 117.
page 6 note 1 Lane, Arthur, ‘Early Hispano-Moresque Pottery: a reconsideration’, Burlington Magazine, lxxxviii (1946), 246–52.Google Scholar
page 6 note 2 Lane, op. cit. 250, pi. 11, A, top left. See also Alice W. Frothingham, Lustreware of Spain (Hispanic Society of America, 1951), 17, figs. 7, 17.
page 8 note 1 Chancery Miscellanea, file 4, no. 5 (P.R.O. reference C. 47/4/5). Quoted by L. F. Salzman, English Trade in the Middle Ages (1931), 413,415.
page 8 note 2 Public Record Office, K.R. Customs, 124/11. Quoted by Gras, N. S. B., The Early English Customs System, Harvard Economic Studies, xviii (1918), 269.Google Scholar
page 9 note 1 Frothingham, op. cit., 17, figs. 6–7.
page 9 note 2 The types are conveniently compared in Frothingham, op. cit., figs. 51–52 and in Hispano-Moresque Pottery (Victoria and Albert Museum, 1957), pls. 2–3. For colour illustrations of drug-jars see González Martí, Cerámica del Levante español (1944), passim, especially pi. xii.
page 10 note 1 R. B. K. Stevenson, The Great Palace of the Byzantine Emperors (1947), chap, ii, The Pottery.
page 10 note 2 Joan du Plat Taylor, ‘Medieval Graves in Cyprus’, An Islamica, v (1938), 55 ff.
page 10 note 3 Arthur Lane, ‘Medieval Finds at Al Mina in North Syria’, Arch. lxxxvii, 19 ff. especially 45–53.
page 10 note 4 Pottery from the Near East did occasionally reach north-west Europe in medieval times. The rim and neck of a jar of thirteenth-century Rakka ware from North Syria, painted with a band of mock inscription in black under a pale turquoise blue glaze, was found at Grosmont Castle, Monmouthshire. Archaeologia Camirensis, 1932, p. 193. Another import of this date from the same source is a small drug-jar from excavations in Lund. Kulturen. En Arsbok (1948), p. 32.
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