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The Pottery from the Sites on Plumpton Plain

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 May 2014

Extract

A substantial series of pottery was submitted to me from both the Plumpton Plain sites. Its examination has emphasized the distinction of date between them. It will appear that Site A belongs to the earlier part of the Late Bronze Age, from perhaps about 1000 B.C., whereas Site B cannot be dated before about 750 B.C., and covers the transition to the Early Iron Age in the period approximately centred on 500 B.C.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1935

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References

page 46 note 1 Childe, , Bronze Age, 173–8Google Scholar; Danube in Prehistory, 296–318.

page 55 note 1 On the Kinson urnfield: Proc. Dorset Arch. Soc., LIV, 80 Google Scholar (fig. 4), 85.

page 55 note 2 E.g., Arch. in England and Wales 19141931, 139 Google Scholar, fig. 58, 1 ( Woodminton, : W.A.M. XLIII, 322–3Google Scholar, pl. 111, 1).

This is usually considered the standard ‘barrel’ type, but it is only a slight elaboration of the simpler constricted-neck form, which is itself of course, present in the ‘Deverel-Rimbury’ sepulchral series; e.g., loc. cit., pl. 11, 2, 6.

page 55 note 3 Childe, , Danube in Prehistory, 336 Google Scholar, fig. 192, right.

page 55 note 4 Doppelfeld, , Prähist. Zeitschrift XXV (1934), 9 Google Scholar (abb. 28), 21.

page 55 note 5 Philippe, ‘Cinq Années’ (see p. 46 above), 53.

page 55 note 6 Vogt, Spätbronzezeitliche Keramik der Schweiz (Mem. Soc. Helv. Sc. Nat. LXVI, I), taf. VII, Reihe (series) XIa.

page 56 note 1 Doppelfeld, , Prähist. Zeitschrift XXV, 9 Google Scholar.

page 56 note 2 Arch. in England and Wales 19141931, 158 Google Scholar, fig. 2, left: cf. 160.

page 56 note 3 Déchelette, , Manuel, II Google Scholar, ch. XI.

page 56 note 4 Philippe, ‘Cinq Années’ (see p. 46), pl. XIV.

page 56 note 5 British Museum.

page 56 note 6 Vogt, Spätbronzeseitliche Keramik der Schweiz, taf. XI–XIII.

page 56 note 7 Ibid., taf. V.

page 57 note 1 Doppelfeld, loc. cit. abb. 54.

page 57 note 2 Vogt, loc. cit., taf. VIII, Reihe XV.

page 57 note 3 Antiq. Journ. XI, 416 Google Scholar, fig. 3, 1a.

page 57 note 4 E.g., All Cannings Cross, pl. 28, 12–13.

page 57 note 5 Excavations in Cranborne Chase, vol. IV.

page 57 note 6 S.A.C., LXXV, 142–3Google Scholar, figs. 7–9, 12.

page 57 note 7 Fox, , Arch. Cambridge Reg., 1622 Google Scholar; Childe, , Bronze Age, 224 ff.Google Scholar; Hawkes, , in Arch. in England and Wales, 19141931, 119 ff.Google Scholar

page 58 note 1 Abercromby, , Bronze Age Pottery II, 8 Google Scholar, and e.g. nos. 9, 51-5, 97-104, 112, 113c-116.

page 58 note 2 See Arch. Journ., XCI, pt. 2, 319 for assigning this to this phase as against Mr Estyn Evans' association of it with the immigration that brought in the West Alpine bronze types ( Archaeologia, LXXXIII, 187202 Google Scholar).

page 58 note 3 See Antiq. Journ., XIII, 442 ffGoogle Scholar. (exx. in list); cf. the native biconical urn (Abercromby 11, no. 389) in the Deverel barrow itself. Examples of the old native cord-ornament surviving on contemporary Late Bronze Age ware were found in the Giants' Hills long-barrow ditch, and the same and even probably vestigial beaker ornament at the Mildenhall site (to be published in Antiq. Journ. XVI). Playden, (Antiq. Journ. XV, 151 ff., 467 ff.Google Scholar; see p. 44 above) shows the same thing in finger-nail ornament (ib. 163, fig. 6, A 1; cf. 469–70).

page 58 note 4 Antiquity IV (1930), 157172 Google Scholar: Man, 1931, 209 Google Scholar.

page 58 note 5 Its ‘Bronze Age IV’ pottery includes, besides West Alpine connexions and ‘Bronze Age III’ survivals, definite links with the Pougues-Dompierre group of urnfields ( Déchelette, , Manuel II, 155–6, 386 Google Scholar, fig. 154; Childe, , Bronze Age, 215–6Google Scholar), which are shown by Vogt (op. cit. 24–5) to have come west from the Pfalz and Alsace in ‘Halktatt A.’

page 58 note 6 Arch. in England and Wales, 1914–31, ch. IX.

page 58 note 7 Evans, no. 81.

page 59 note 1 Antiq. Journ. IV (1924), 220–4Google Scholar (Brit. Mus.).