Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-m6dg7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-15T19:19:19.024Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Gloucester Hoard of Roman Bronze

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 July 2020

Penny Coombe
Affiliation:
School of Archaeology, University of [email protected]
Martin Henig
Affiliation:
School of Archaeology, University of [email protected]

Abstract

A cache of Roman copper-alloy fragments was discovered, apparently carefully layered in a pit, in a field in Gloucestershire by metal-detectorists in 2017. The assemblage comprises over 5 kg of metal pieces, predominantly box fittings, but also smaller items of personal use such as a fourth-century belt buckle, a three-strand bracelet, a spoon and a coin (a nummus of Crispus). Most remarkable are the sculptural fragments, including several pieces of life-size statuary and the complete statuette of a dog with fine incised decoration, and part of an incised bronze inscription panel. This article considers the original form of the statuary and the use and deposition of the cache. It is proposed that these fragments represent the remains of the accoutrements of a temple or shrine in the local area, perhaps dedicated to Diana Venatrix, and that they were removed and deposited together in the late fourth century. Supplementary material is available online (https://doi.org/10.1017/S0068113X20000501) and comprises additional figures.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors, 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

With contributions by KURT ADAMS, BRIAN GILMOUR and JOHN PEARCE

Department of Classics, King's College London [email protected]

Research Laboratory for Archaeology and the History of Art, University of Oxford [email protected]

Bristol City Museum & Art Gallery [email protected]

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Adams, K., Henig, M., and Pearce, J. 2018: ‘A founder's hoard from near Gloucester’, Bulletin of the Association for Roman Archaeology 24, 7884Google Scholar
Allason-Jones, L. 2011: Artefacts in Roman Britain: Their Purpose and Use, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Allason-Jones, L., and Bishop, M. 1988: Excavations at Roman Corbridge: The Hoard, English Heritage Archaeological Report 7, LondonGoogle Scholar
Allason-Jones, L., and Miket, R. 1984: The Catalogue of Small Finds from South Shields Roman Fort, Newcastle upon TyneGoogle Scholar
Allen, T., Donnelly, M., Hardy, A., Hayden, C., and Powell, K. 2012: A Road through the Past: Archaeological Discoveries on the A2 Pepperhill to Cobham Road-Scheme in Kent. Oxford Archaeology Monograph 16, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Anguissola, A. 2018: Supports in Roman Marble Sculpture: Workshop Practice and Modes of Viewing, CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arce, J. 1990: Los bronces romanos en Espana: mayo–julio 1990, Palacio de Velazquez, Parque del Retiro, Madrid, MadridGoogle Scholar
Bagnall Smith, J. 1995: ‘Votive material from Romano-Celtic temple sites’, Oxoniensia 60, 177203Google Scholar
Bagnall Smith, J. 1998: ‘More votive finds from Woodeaton, Oxfordshire’, Oxoniensia 63, 147–85Google Scholar
Bateman, N. 2009: ‘What's the point of London's amphitheatre? A clue from Diana’, in Wilmott, T. (ed.), Roman Amphitheatres and Spectacula: A 21st-Century Perspective: Papers from an International Conference Held at Chester, 16th–18th February 2007, BAR International Series 1946, Oxford, 157–63Google Scholar
Bennett, D., Campbell, G., and Timm, R. 2016: ‘The dogs of Vindolanda, part 1: morphometric techniques useful in distinguishing domestic and wild canids’, Archaeofauna 25, 79106Google Scholar
Berrendonner, C. 2008: ‘Ex aere conlato: souscriptions publiques et collectes dans les cités de l'Italie romaine’, in Berrendonner, C., Cébeillac-Gervasoni, M. and Lamoine, L. (eds), Le quotidien municipal dans l'occident romain, Clermont-Ferrand, 319–32Google Scholar
Bieber, M. 1977: Ancient Copies: Contributions to the History of Greek and Roman Art, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Blagg, T.F.C. 1990: ‘Architectural munificence in Britain: the evidence of inscriptions’, Britannia 21, 1331CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blagg, T., Plouviez, J., and Tester, A. 2004: Excavations at a Large Romano-British Settlement at Hacheston, Suffolk in 1973–4, East Anglian Archaeology 106, IpswichGoogle Scholar
Boardman, J. 1995: Greek Sculpture in the Late Classical Period, LondonGoogle Scholar
Boon, G.C. 1973: ‘Sarapis and Tutela: a Silchester coincidence’, Britannia 3, 107–1410.2307/525859CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boon, G.C. 1989: ‘A Roman sculpture rehabilitated: the Pagan's Hill dog’, Britannia 20, 201–17CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Borrill, H. 1981: ‘Casket burials’, in Partridge, C. (ed.), Skeleton Green: A Late Iron Age and Romano-British Site, Britannia Monograph 2, London, 304–9Google Scholar
Boucher, S. 1976: Recherches sur les bronzes figurés de Gaule pré-romaine et romaine, RomeGoogle Scholar
Brailsford, J.W. 1926: Antiquities from Hod Hill in the Durden collection 1, LondonGoogle Scholar
Brodribb, A., Hands, A., and Walker, D. 2005: The Roman Villa at Shakenoak Farm, Oxfordshire: Excavations 1960–1976, BAR British Series 395, Oxford10.30861/9781841718576CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bushe-Fox, J.P. 1932: Third Report on the Excavation at the Roman Fort at Richborough, Kent, Reports of the Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries of London 10, LondonGoogle Scholar
Bushe-Fox, J.P. 1949: Fourth Report on the Excavation at the Roman Fort at Richborough, Kent, Reports of the Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries of London 16, London10.26530/OAPEN_1004998CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coombe, P. 2015: ‘Copper alloy statuary’, in Killock, D. with Shepherd, J., Gerrard, J., Hayward, K., Rielly, K. and Ridgeway, V. (eds), Temples and Suburbs: Excavations at Tabard Square, Southwark, London, 194–8Google Scholar
Coombe, P., Grew, F., Hayward, K, and Henig, M. 2015: Corpus Signorum Imperii Romani, Great Britain i.10: Roman Sculpture from London and the South East, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Corder, P., and Richmond, I.A. 1938: ‘A Romano-British interment with bucket and sceptres from Brough, East Yorkshire’, Antiquaries Journal 18, 687410.1017/S0003581500009021CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coulston, J., and Philips, E. 1988: Corpus Signorum Imperii Romani, Great Britain i.6: Hadrian's Wall West of the North Tyne and Carlisle, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Croom, A.T. 2007: Roman Furniture, StroudGoogle Scholar
Croxford, B. 2003: ‘Iconoclasm in Roman Britain?’, Britannia 34, 819510.2307/3558540CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crummy, N. 1983: Small Finds from Excavations in Colchester 1971–9, Colchester Archaeological Report 2, ColchesterGoogle Scholar
Crummy, N. 2010: ‘Bears and coins: the iconography of protection in late Roman infant burials’, Britannia 41, 379310.1017/S0068113X1000005XCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cunliffe, B.W. 1968: Fifth Report on the Excavation at the Roman Fort at Richborough, Kent, Reports of the Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries of London 23, LondonCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cunliffe, B.W. 1975: Excavations at Portchester Castle I: Roman, Reports of the Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries of London 32, LondonCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cunliffe, B.W., and Fulford, M.G. 1982: Corpus Signorum Imperii Romani, Great Britain i.2: Bath and the Rest of Wessex, OxfordGoogle Scholar
de la Bedoyère, G. 1989: The Finds of Roman Britain, LondonGoogle Scholar
Dearne, M. 1998: ‘The other objects of copper alloy’, in Dearne, M. and Lord, T.C. (eds), The Romano-British Archaeology of Victoria Cave, Settle, BAR British Series 273, Oxford, 6781Google Scholar
Dewald, F., and Eiden, L. 1989: ‘Das römische Holzkästen aus Grab 2370: Freilegung - Restaurierung - Rekonstruction’, in Haffner, A. (ed.), Gräber: Spiegel des Lebens, MainzGoogle Scholar
Durham, E. 2012: ‘Depicting the gods: metal figurines in Roman Britain’, Internet Archaeology 31, https://doi.org/10.11141/ia.31.2Google Scholar
Durham, E. 2014: ‘Style and substance: some metal figurines from south-west Britain’, Britannia 45, 19522110.1017/S0068113X14000270CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eck, W. 2015: ‘Documents on bronze: a phenomenon of the Roman West’, in Bodel, J. and Dimitrova, N. (eds), Ancient Documents and their Contexts: First North American Congress of Greek and Latin Epigraphy (2011), Leiden and Boston, 127–51Google Scholar
Fabre, G., Mayer, M., and Rodà, I. 1998: Inscriptions romaines de Catalogne III: Gerone, BarcelonaGoogle Scholar
Faider-Feytmans, G. 1957: Recueil des bronzes de Bavai, Gallia Supplement 8, ParisGoogle Scholar
Ferguson, J.T. 1918: ‘Aere Conlato’, The Classical Journal 13, 515–20Google Scholar
Fleischer, R. 1967: Die römischen Bronzen aus Österreich, MainzGoogle Scholar
Frere, S. 1972: Verulamium Excavations I, LondonGoogle Scholar
Frere, S. 1984: Verulamium Excavations III, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Frere, S.S., and Fulford, M. 2002: ‘The Collegium Peregrinorum at Silchester’, Britannia 33, 167–7510.2307/1558856CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gerrard, J. 2015: ‘The fate of statues’, in Killock, D. with Shepherd, J., Gerrard, J., Hayward, K., Rielly, K. and Ridgeway, V. (eds), Temples and Suburbs: Excavations at Tabard Square, Southwark, London, 198Google Scholar
González, J. 1986: ‘The Lex Irnitana: a new copy of the Flavian municipal law’, Journal of Roman Studies 76, 147243CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Green, H.J.M. 2017: Durovigutum: Roman Godmanchester, Archaeopress Roman Archaeology 33, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Green, M. 1992: Animals in Celtic Life and Myth, LondonGoogle Scholar
Guest, P. 2014: ‘The hoarding of Roman metal objects in fifth-century Britain’, in Haarer, F.K. (ed.), AD 410: The History and Archaeology of Late and Post-Roman Britain, London, 117–29Google Scholar
Hassall, M., and Hurst, H. 1999: ‘Soldier and civilian: a debate on the bank of the Severn’, in Hurst, H. (ed.), The Coloniae of Roman Britain: New Studies and a Review, JRA Supplement 36, Portsmouth, RI, 181–9Google Scholar
Hawkes, C.F.C. 1951: ‘Bronze-workers, cauldrons and bucket animals in Iron Age and Roman Britain’, in Grimes, W.F. (ed.), Aspects of Archaeology in Britain and Beyond: Essays Presented to O.G.S. Crawford, London, 172–99Google Scholar
Hawkes, S.C., and Dunning, G.C. 1961: ‘Soldiers and settlers in Britain, fourth to fifth century’, Medieval Archaeology 5, 170CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heald, A. 2001: ‘Knobbed spear butts of the British and Irish Iron Age: new examples and new thoughts’, Antiquity 75, 689–96CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henig, M. 1970: ‘Zoomorphic supports of cast bronze from Roman sites in Britain’, Archaeological Journal 127, 182–8710.1080/00665983.1970.11078394CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henig, M. 1974: ‘Intaglio’, in Hassall, M. and Rhodes, J., ‘Excavations at the New Market Hall, Gloucester, 1966–7Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society 93, 78Google Scholar
Henig, M. 1984: Religion in Roman Britain, LondonGoogle Scholar
Henig, M. 1993: Corpus Signorum Imperii Romani, Great Britain i.7: Roman Sculpture from the Cotswold Region with Devon and Cornwall, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Henig, M. 1995: The Art of Roman Britain, LondonGoogle Scholar
Henig, M. 2007: A Corpus of Roman Engraved Gemstones from British Sites (3rd edn), BAR British Series 8, OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henig, M., and Cannon, P. 2000: ‘A sceptre-head for the Matres cult and other objects from west Berkshire’, Britannia 31, 358–6210.2307/526929CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hobbs, R. 2005: ‘Why are there always so many spoons? Hoards of precious metal in late Roman Britain’, in Crummy, N. (ed.), Image, Craft and the Classical World: Essays in Honour of Donald Bailey and Catherine Johns, Montagnac, 197208Google Scholar
Hostetter, E., and Noble Howe, T. 1997: The Romano-British Villa at Castle Copse, Great Bedwyn, BloomingtonGoogle Scholar
Hurst, H. 1999: ‘Civic space at Glevum’, in Hurst, H. (ed.), The Coloniae of Roman Britain: New Studies and a Review, JRA Supplement 36, Portsmouth, RI, 152–60Google Scholar
Huskinson, J. 1994: Corpus Signorum Imperii Romani, Great Britain i.8: Eastern England, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Janietz, B. 2000: Ein Depot zerschlagener Grossbronzen aus Augusta Raurica: die Rekonstruktion der Gewandfiguren, AugstGoogle Scholar
Johns, C. 1996: The Jewellery of Roman Britain, LondonGoogle Scholar
Kahil, L. 1984: ‘Artemis’, LIMC 2, 618753Google Scholar
Kaufmann-Heinimann, A. 1994: Die römischen Bronzen der Schweiz V: Neufunde und Nachträge, MainzGoogle Scholar
Kaufmann-Heinimann, A. 1998: Götter und Lararien aus Augusta Raurica: Herstellung, Fundzusammenhänge und sakrale Funktion figürlicher Bronzen in einer römischen Stadt, AugstGoogle Scholar
Keevill, G.D. 1992: ‘A frying pan from Great Lea, Binfield, Berkshire’, Britannia 23, 231–310.2307/526115CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirk, J. 1949: ‘Bronzes from Woodeaton, Oxfordshire’, Oxoniensia 14, 145Google Scholar
Kleiner, D. 1992: Roman Sculpture, New Haven and LondonGoogle Scholar
Kolb, I. 2015: ‘Bronze in epigraphy’, in Deschler-Erb, E. and Casa, F. Della (eds), New Research on Ancient Bronzes: Acta of the XVIIIth International Congress on Ancient Bronzes, Zurich, 343–8Google Scholar
Krause, M.-F.M. 2014: ‘Grossbronzen von Aventicum (Avenches)’, in Müller, S. (ed.), Gebrochener Glanz: römische Großbronzen am UNESCO-Welterbe Limes, Bonn, 52–5Google Scholar
La Rocca, E., and Parisi Presicce, C. 2010: Museo Capitolini: le sculture del Palazzo Nuovo 1, RomeGoogle Scholar
Le Bohec, Y. 1994: The Roman Imperial Army, LondonGoogle Scholar
Leibundgut, A. 1980: Die römischen Bronzen der Schweiz III: Westschweiz, Bern und Wallis, MainzGoogle Scholar
Liversidge, J. 1955: Furniture in Roman Britain, LondonGoogle Scholar
Mägele, S. 2013: ‘A colossal portrait of Hadrian and the imperial group from the Roman baths at Sagalassos’, in Opper, T. (ed.), Hadrian: Art, Politics, and Economy, London, 5061Google Scholar
Manning, W.H. 1985: Catalogue of the Romano-British Iron Tools, Fittings and Weapons in The British Museum, LondonGoogle Scholar
Mattusch, C. 1996: The Fire of Hephaistos: Large Classical Bronzes from North American Collections, Cambridge, MAGoogle Scholar
Mattusch, C. 2014: Enduring Bronze, Los AngelesGoogle Scholar
Menzel, H. 1966: Die römischen Bronzen aus Deutschland II: Trier, MainzGoogle Scholar
Menzel, H. 1986: Die römischen Bronzen aus Deutschland III: Bonn, MainzGoogle Scholar
Merrifield, R. 1996: ‘The London hunter-god and his significance in the history of Londinium’, in Bird, J., Hassall, M. and Sheldon, H. (eds), Interpreting Roman London: Papers in Memory of Hugh Chapman, Oxford, 105–13Google Scholar
Müller, S. 2014: Gebrochener Glanz: römische Großbronzen am UNESCO-Welterbe Limes, BonnGoogle Scholar
Neal, D.S. 1974: The Excavation of the Roman Villa at Gadebridge Park, Hemel Hempstead 1963–8, Reports of the Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries of London 31, LondonCrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'Connell, M.G., and Bird, J. 1984: ‘The Roman temple at Wanborough, excavation 1985–1986’, Surrey Archaeological Collections 82, 1168Google Scholar
Panhuysen, T. 2014: ‘Ein aussergewöhnlicher Hortfund aus Maastricht’, in Müller, S. (ed.), Gebrochener Glanz: römische Großbronzen am UNESCO-Welterbe Limes, Bonn, 5861Google Scholar
Petts, D. 2003: Christianity in Roman Britain, StroudGoogle Scholar
Phillips, E.J. 1977: Corpus Signorum Imperii Romani, Great Britain i.1: Corbridge, Hadrian's Wall East of the North Tyne, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Pollard, A.M., Bray, P., Gosden, C., Wilson, A., and Hamerow, H. 2015: ‘Characterising copper-based metals in Britain in the first millennium AD: a preliminary quantification of metal flow and recycling’, Antiquity 89.345, 697713CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Potter, T.W. 1997: Roman Britain (2nd edn), LondonGoogle Scholar
Read, S., Henig, M., and Cram, L. 1986: ‘Three-horned bull’, Britannia 17, 346–7CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Riha, E. 2001: Kästchen, Truhen, Tische: Mobelteile aus Augusta Raurica, Forschungen in Augst 31, AugstGoogle Scholar
Rolland, H. 1965: Bronze antiques de Haute Provence, Gallia Supplement 18, ParisGoogle Scholar
Rolley, C. 1984: ‘Artio’, LIMC 2, 856–7Google Scholar
Rosso, E. 2006: L'image de l'empereur en Gaule romaine: portraits et inscriptions, ParisGoogle Scholar
Sauer, E. 2003: The Archaeology of Religious Hatred in the Roman and Medieval World, StroudGoogle Scholar
Schwarz, P.-A., and Berger, L. (eds) 2000: Tituli Rauracenses 1: Testimonien und Aufsätze zu den Namen und ausgewählten Inschriften von Augst und Kaiseraugst, AugstGoogle Scholar
Simon, E., and Bauchhenß, G. 1984: ‘Diana/Artemis’, LIMC 2, 792855Google Scholar
Spry, N. 2008: ‘Where was Gloucester's amphitheatre?’, Glevensis 41, 1216Google Scholar
Stead, I., and Rigby, V. 1986: Baldock: The Excavation of a Roman and Pre-Roman Settlement, 1968–72, Britannia Monograph 7, LondonGoogle Scholar
Stefanelli, L.P.B. 1990: Il bronzo dei Romani, RomeGoogle Scholar
Thompson, F.H. 1970: ‘Dodecahedrons again’, Antiquaries Journal 50, 93–6CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tomlin, R.S.O. 2018: Britannia Romana: Roman Inscriptions and Roman Britain, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Tomlin, R.S.O., and Hassall, M.W.C. 2003: ‘Roman Britain in 2002 II: inscriptions’, Britannia 34, 361–8210.1017/S0068113X00008394CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Toynbee, J.M.C. 1964: Art in Britain under the Romans, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Ward Perkins, J., and Claridge, A. 1976: Pompeii AD 79, LondonGoogle Scholar
Watson, J. 1997: The Reconstruction of a Roman Jewellery Box from Mansell Street, London, Ancient Monuments Laboratory Report 88/97, LondonGoogle Scholar
Webster, J. 2002: ‘In aere suo censerini: fragments of a large-scale statuette from south-east Wales’, in Aldhouse Green, M. and Webster, P., Artefacts and Archaeology: Aspects of the Celtic and Roman World, Cardiff, 161–73Google Scholar
Wedlake, W.J. 1982: The Excavation of the Shrine of Apollo at Nettleton, Wiltshire, 1956–1971, Reports of the Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries of London 40, LondonGoogle Scholar
Wheeler, R.E.M., and Wheeler, T.V. 1932: Report on the Excavation of a Prehistoric, Roman and Post-Roman Site in Lydney Park, Gloucestershire, Reports of the Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries of London 9, LondonGoogle Scholar
Willer, F. 2014: ‘Recycling: ein alter Hut’, in Müller, S. (ed.), Gebrochener Glanz: römische Großbronzen am UNESCO-Welterbe Limes, Bonn, 210–11Google Scholar
Williams, D. 2007: ‘Green Lane, Wanborough: excavations at the Roman religious site 1999’, Surrey Archaeological Collections 93, 149265Google Scholar
Wilson, P.R. 2002: Cataractonium: Roman Catterick and its Hinterland: Excavations and Research, 1958–1997 2, YorkGoogle Scholar
Worrell, S. 2005: ‘Roman Britain in 2004 II: finds reported under the Portable Antiquities Scheme’, Britannia 36, 447–72CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Worrell, S. 2006: ‘Roman Britain in 2005 II: finds reported under the Portable Antiquities Scheme’, Britannia 37, 429–66CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Worrell, S., and Pearce, J. 2011: ‘Roman Britain in 2010 II: finds reported under the Portable Antiquities Scheme’, Britannia 42, 399437CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Worrell, S., and Pearce, J. 2012: ‘Roman Britain in 2011 II: finds reported under the Portable Antiquities Scheme’, Britannia 43, 355–93CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Worrell, S., and Pearce, J. 2014: ‘Roman Britain in 2013 II: finds reported under the Portable Antiquities Scheme’, Britannia 45, 397429CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woodward, A., and Leach, P. 1993: The Uley Shrines: Excavation of a Ritual Complex on West Hill, Uley, Gloucestershire 1977–9, LondonGoogle Scholar
Zadoks-Josephus Jitta, A.N., Peters, W.J.T., and van Es, W.A. 1969: Roman Bronze Statuettes from the Netherlands II: Statuettes Found South of the Limes, GroningenGoogle Scholar
Supplementary material: PDF

Coombe and Henig supplementary material

Coombe and Henig supplementary material

Download Coombe and Henig supplementary material(PDF)
PDF 1 MB