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An Enamelled Skillet-Handle from Brough-on-Fosse and the distribution of similar vessels
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 November 2011
Extract
The enamelled skillet-handle illustrated (FIG. I) was found in 1972 at Brough-on-Fosse, Nottinghamshire, by Mr John Hart. The handle adds a further example to the rare group of vessels with cham plevé enamelling which include the Rudge cup and Amiens skillet. The Brough skillet-handle measures 3 in. (7·8 cm) in length and is enamelled on the upper side; the reverse is plain. The enamelled decoration consists of a panel of vine-leaf ornament repeated five times. The enamel has flaked, but it appears that red was used in the centre of the vine leaf surrounded by a deep blue and then a green. These vessels are conveniently referred to as being enamelled, but recent analyses have shown that, in common with late Iron Age enamelwork, these are not true enamels but only coloured glass, which has not fused with the bronzework.
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- Copyright © C. N. Moore 1978. Exclusive Licence to Publish: The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies
References
1 Vide Appendix, No. A, I.
2 ibid., No. A, 2.
3 Hughes, M. J., Proc. Prehist. Soc. xxxviii (1972), 98–107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar Mr Hughes has pointed out (in litt.) that there can be uncertainty about the original colour on an ‘enamel’ and that green enamel can be a decomposition product of red enamel.
4 J. S. Wacher (ed.), The Civitas Capitals of Roman Britain (1966), 27 f., pl. 7. VCH Nottinghamshire ii (1910), 11–15Google Scholar, is the only detailed account of finds made previously on the site.
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14 Vide Appendix, No. D I.
15 ibid., No. F 4.
16 ibid., No. D 3. The inscription on the vessel is ]CITR, presumably referring to Hispana Citerior. The date of the change of the name of the province Tarraconensis could provide a terminus ante quem.
17 ibid., No. F 9.
18 ibid., No. F I.
19 ibid., No. E 2.
20 ibid., No. F 2.
21 ibid., No. F 4.
22 ibid., No. F II.
23 ibid., No. F 12.
24 ibid., No. F 6.
25 ibid., No. F 7.
26 ibid., No. F 8.
27 ibid., No. F 9.
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39 Schrieber, Toreutik, 391, and D. E. Strong, Greek and Roman Silver (1966), 169 and fig. 30 k. Strong placed a second- to third-century date on handles with wavy ends (167), but he admits the ‘rarity of closely dated pieces rules out any attempt at absolute chronology’.
40 Strong, op. cit. (note 39), fig. 30a-b.
41 op. cit. (note 34).
42 op. cit. (note 6), 333.
43 op. cit. (note 5), 145.
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