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Twelfth-Century Pottery from Exeter

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 November 2011

Extract

Excavations on the bombed sites in the centre of Exeter were carried out in 1945–7 on behalf of the Committee for War-damaged Exeter: their main objective was to gain an understanding of the history and plan of the city in Roman times, but the remains of later periods were also to be investigated as opportunities arose in the course of the work. An important group of early medieval pottery was found in 1946, and it is considered to deserve publication apart from the main report on the excavations.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1951

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References

page 180 note 1 The excavation report is to be published by the History of Exeter Research Group of University College, Exeter, in co-operation with the Exeter City Council, in 1951–2.

page 181 note 1 Proc. Devon Arch. Expl. Soc. i (1931), 139Google Scholar, pl. xi.

page 181 note 2 Proc. Somerset Arch. Soc. xlix, 46, fig. 4, 3–19.

page 181 note 3 Ibid. lv, 170. fig.

page 181 note 4 Ibid, lxxxv, 121, pi. vii, 7, 9, 14.

page 181 note 5 Antiq. Journ. xi, 255, fig. 6.

page 181 note 6 Oxfordshire Arch. Journ. lxxxiv (1938), p. 91Google Scholar, 3, 1.

page 182 note 1 Proc. Somerset Arch. Soc. lxxxv, 123, pl. vii, 2, 22.

page 182 note 2 Oxoniensia, v, 42; x, 97; xi-xii, 165. Berks. Arch. Journ. 1, 52.

page 184 note 1 In the Sussex Archaeological Society's Museum at Lewes.

page 184 note 2 Arch. Journ. lxv, 129, pl. iv, 3.

page 185 note 1 Bull. Soc. Préhistorique Fran¸aise, vii, 164.

page 185 note 2 Ibid., fig. 6, A.

page 185 note 3 Bull. Soc. normande d'Études préhistorijues, xxvii, 127.

page 185 note 4 Ibid, xxiii, 60, fig. 12.

page 185 note 5 Revue archéologique, xxiv, 67.

page 187 note 1 Cunningham, W., Growth of English Industry and Commerce during the Early and Middle Ages (1915), p. 197Google Scholar; Bull. Inst. Hist. Research, xxi, 145–6. It may be added that Rouen appears to have supplied wine to London and the Cinque Ports until the mid-thirteenth, century. AtPevensey, Stonar, Canterbury, and London have been found decorated jugs of types with precise analogies at Rouen, which presumably were brought over by the wine trade.