Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T05:13:40.190Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Broken Deities: The Pipe-Clay Figurines from Roman London

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2015

Matthew G. Fittock*
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, University of [email protected]

Abstract

Pipe-clay figurines are an important but under-examined category of Roman material culture in Britain. This paper presents the first typological catalogue of the 168 deity, animal and human figures imported to Roman London from Gaul during the first and second centuries a.d. As in many other collections Venus figurines are the most common type, although there is considerable diversity in form. Comparison with continental collections highlights distinctive patterns of consumption between London, the rest of Britain and Gaul, with the city displaying relatively high numbers of exotic/unusual types, as appears to be typical of Londinium in general. The spatial distribution of the figurines is mapped across the settlement, while their contexts and social distribution on habitation, trade and religious sites throughout the city are explored. Whole specimens from burials and subtle patterns of fragmentation also provide a direct insight into the religious beliefs and symbolic practices of the people of Roman London.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2015. Published by 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.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Alcock, J.P. 1981: ‘Classical religious belief and burial practice in Roman Britain’, Archaeological Journal 137, 5085CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allain, J., Fauduet, I., and Tuffreau-Libre, M. (eds) 1992: La nécropole gallo-romaine du “Champs de l'Image” à Argentomagus (Saint-Marcel, Indre), Mémoire du Musée d'Argentomagus 1, Revue Archéologique Centre France supplément 3, Saint-MarcelGoogle Scholar
Bailey, D. 1983: ‘Terracotta revetments, figurines and lamps’, in Henig, M. (ed.), A Handbook of Roman Art: A Survey of the Visual Arts of the Roman World, London, 191204Google Scholar
Bailey, D. 2001: ‘Review of J. Chapman: Fragmentation in archaeology: people, places and broken objects in the prehistory of South-Eastern Europe’, American Anthropologist 103, 1181–2Google Scholar
Bailey, D. 2005: Prehistoric Figurines. Representation and Corporeality in the Neolithic, London/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Barber, B., and Bowsher, D. 2000: The Eastern Cemetery of Roman London: Excavations 1983–90, MoL Monograph 4, LondonGoogle Scholar
Barber, B., Bowsher, D., and Whittaker, K. 1990: ‘Recent excavations of a cemetery of Londinium’, Britannia 21, 112CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beenhouwer, J. 2005: De Gallo-Romeinse Terracottastatuetten van Belgische Vindplaatsen in het Ruimer Kader van de Noordwest-Europese Terracotta-Industrie, LeuvenGoogle Scholar
Bémont, C., Rouvier-Jeanlin, M., and Lahanier, C. (eds) 1993: Les Figurines en terre cuite gallo-romaines, Documents d'Archéologie Française 38, ParisCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bertrand, A. 1863: ‘Les découvertes de Vichy’, Bulletin de la Société d'Emulation du Département de l'Allier VIII, 321–2Google Scholar
Bertrand, A. 1865: ‘Exploration archéologique de la rive droite de l'Allier’, Bulletin de la Société d'Emulation du Département de l'Allier IX, 321–59Google Scholar
Bertrand, A. 1895: ‘Découverte de ruines antiques à Moulins’, Bulletin de la Société d'Emulation et des Beaux-Arts du Département du Bourbonnais III, 146Google Scholar
Bidwell, P.T. 1980: Roman Exeter Fortress and Town, ExeterGoogle Scholar
Bird, J. 1996: ‘Frogs from the Walbrook: a cult pot and its attribution’, in Bird et al. 1996, 119–27Google Scholar
Bird, J., Hassall, J., and Sheldon, H. (eds) 1996: Interpreting Roman London, Oxbow Monograph 58, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Blanchet, A. 1891: ‘Etude sur les figurines en terre-cuite de la Gaule romaine’, Mémoires de la Société Nationale des Antiquaires de France 41, 65224Google Scholar
Boekel, G.M.E.C. van 1983: ‘Roman terracotta figurines and masks from the Netherlands’, Berichten van de Rijksdienst voor het Oudheidkundig Bodemonderzoek 33, 197359Google Scholar
Boekel, G.M.E.C. van 1984: ‘Provincial-Romeinse terracottabeeldjes in Noordwest-Europa’, Westerheem 33, 103–15Google Scholar
Boekel, G.M.E.C. van 1985: ‘Roman terracotta figurines and masks from the Netherlands’, Berichten van de Rijksdienst voor het Oudheidkundig Bodemonderzoek 35, 15230Google Scholar
Boekel, G.M.E.C. van 1986: ‘Roman terracotta figurines and masks from the Netherlands’, Berichten van de Rijksdienst voor het Oudheidkundig Bodemonderzoek 36, 25404Google Scholar
Boekel, G.M.E.C. van 1993: ‘Terres cuites du Centre dans les Pays-Bas, le Luxembourg et la Grande-Bretagne’, in Bémont et al. 1993, 240–52Google Scholar
Brigham, T. 1990: ‘The late Roman waterfront in London’, Britannia 21, 99183CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brigham, T. 1998: ‘The port of Roman London’, in Watson 1998, 23–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brigham, T., and Woodger, A. 2001: Roman and Medieval Townhouses on the London Waterfront: Excavations at Governor's House, City of London, MoL Archaeology Service Series 9, LondonGoogle Scholar
Brittain, M., and Harris, O. 2010: ‘Enchaining arguments and fragmenting assumptions: reconsidering the fragmentation debate in archaeology’, World Archaeology 42, 581–94CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brúck, J. 2006: ‘Fragmentation, personhood and the social construction of technology in Middle and Late Bronze Age Britain’, Cambridge Archaeological Journal 16, 297315CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burleigh, G., Fitzpatrick-Matthews, K., and Aldhouse-Green, M.J. 2006: ‘A Dea Nutrix figurine from a Romano-British cemetery at Baldock, Hertfordshire’, Britannia 37, 273–94CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chapman, J. 2000: Fragmentation in Archaeology: People, Places and Broken Objects in the Prehistory of South-Eastern Europe, LondonGoogle Scholar
Chapman, J. 2007: ‘Integrating fragmentation into landscape archaeology’, in Popova, L.M., Hartley, C.W. and Smith, A.T. (eds), Social Orders and Social Landscapes, Newcastle, 5594Google Scholar
Chapman, J. 2008: ‘Object fragmentation and past landscapes’, in David, B. and Thomas, J. (eds), Handbook of Landscape Archaeology, Walnut Creek, CA, 187201Google Scholar
Chapman, J., and Gaydarska, B. 2007: Parts and Wholes: Fragmentation in Prehistoric Context, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Clarke, S., and Jones, R.F.J. 1994: ‘The Newstead pits’, Journal of Roman Military Equipment Studies 5, 109–24Google Scholar
Conheeney, J. 2000: ‘Inhumation burials’, in Barber and Bowsher 2000, 277–97Google Scholar
Cool, H. 2004: The Roman Cemetery at Brougham, Cumbria; Excavations 1966–67, Britannia Monograph 21, LondonGoogle Scholar
Cool, H., and Philo, C. 1998: Roman Castleford Excavations 1974–85. Volume I: The Small Finds, WakefieldGoogle Scholar
Cotton, J. 1996: ‘A miniature chalk head from the Thames at Battersea and the “Cult of the Head” in Roman London’, in Bird et al. 1996, 85–96Google Scholar
Cowan, C. 2003: Urban Development in North-West Southwark: Excavations 1974–90, MoL Archaeology Service Series 16, LondonGoogle Scholar
Croxford, B. 2003: ‘Iconoclasm in Roman Britain?Britannia 34, 8195CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crummy, N. 2010: ‘The iconography of protection in late Roman infant burials’, Britannia 41, 3793CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crummy, N. 2012: ‘The small finds assemblage from Silchester's Insula IX’, in Fulford, M. (ed.), Silchester and the Study of Romano-British Urbanism, JRA Supplementary Series 90, Portsmouth, RI, 105–26Google Scholar
Drummond-Murray, J., Thompson, P., and Cowan, C. 2002: Settlement in Roman Southwark: Archaeological Excavations 1991–8 for the London Underground Limited Jubilee Line Extension Project, MoL Archaeology Service Series 12, LondonGoogle Scholar
Duhig, D. 1993: ‘The skeleton’, in Taylor 1993, 201–2CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Durham, E. 2010: Metal Figurines in Roman Britain Volumes 1 & 2, unpub. PhD thesis, University of ReadingGoogle Scholar
Durham, E. 2012: ‘Depicting the gods: metal figurines in Roman Britain’, Internet Archaeology 31, http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue31/durham_index.htmlGoogle Scholar
Durham, E. 2014: ‘Style and substance: some metal figurines from South-West Britain’, Britannia 45, 195221CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eckardt, H. 1999: ‘The Colchester child's grave’, Britannia 30, 5790CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eckardt, H. 2002: Illuminating Roman Britain, Monographies Instrumentum 23, MontagnacGoogle Scholar
Eckardt, H. 2005: ‘The social distribution of Roman artefacts: the case of nail-cleaners and brooches in Britain’, Journal of Roman Archaeology 18, 139–60CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Esmonnot, L. 1856–58: ‘Rapport sur les objets trouvés dans les fouilles à Toulon-sur-Allier’, Allier 6, 3347Google Scholar
Evans, E. 2000: The Caerleon Canabae: Excavations in the Civil Settlement 1984–1990, Britannia Monograph 16, LondonGoogle Scholar
Ferris, I. 2012: Roman Britain Through Its Objects, StroudGoogle Scholar
Ferris, I., Bevan, L., and Cuttler, R. 2000: The Excavation of a British-Romano Shrine at Orton's Pasture, Rocester, Staffordshire, BAR British Series 314, OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fulford, M., and Timby, J. 2000: Late Iron Age and Roman Silchester: Excavations on the Site of the Forum-Basilica, 1977, 1980–86, Britannia Monograph 15, LondonGoogle Scholar
Gheorghiu, D. 2006: ‘The controlled fragmentation of anthropomorphic figurines’, in Monah, D., Dumitroaia, Gh., Chapman, J. and Weller, O. (eds), Cucuteni. 120 de ani Ceretâri, Piatra Neamt, 137–44Google Scholar
Gonzenbach, V. von 1986: Die römischen Terracotten in der Schweiz: Untersuchungen zu Zeitstellung,Typologie und Ursprung der mittelgallischen Tonstatuetten, Band B, BernGoogle Scholar
Gonzenbach, V. von 1995: Die römischen Terracotten in der Schweiz: Untersuchungen zu Zeitstellung,Typologie und Ursprung der mittelgallischen Tonstatuetten, Band A, BernGoogle Scholar
Green, M. 1976: A Corpus of Religious Material from the Civilian Areas of Roman Britain, BAR British Series 24, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Green, M. 1978: Small Cult-Objects from the Military Areas of Roman Britain, BAR British Series 52, OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Green, M. 1986: The Gods of the Celts, StroudGoogle Scholar
Green, M. 1993: ‘The pipe-clay figurines’, in Taylor 1993, 194–201Google Scholar
Green, M. 1998: ‘The pipe-clay figurines,’ in P.J. Casey and B. Hoffmann, ‘Rescue excavations in the “Vicus” of the fort at Greta Bridge, Co. Durham 1972–4’, Britannia 29, 145–8Google Scholar
Hall, J., and Wardle, A. 2005: ‘Dedicated followers of fashion? Decorative bone hairpins from Roman London’, in Crummy, N. (ed.), Image, Craft and the Classical World: Essays in Honor of Donald Bailey and Catherine Johns, Monographies Instrumentum 29, Montagnac, 173–9Google Scholar
Hamilton, N., Marcus, J., Bailey, D., Haaland, G., Haaland, R., and Ucko, P. 1996: ‘Can we interpret figurines?Cambridge Archaeological Journal 6, 285–91CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hammer, F. 2003: Industry in North-West Roman Southwark: Excavations 1984–8, MoL Archaeology Service Monograph 17, LondonGoogle Scholar
Higgins, R. 1976: ‘Terracottas’, in Strong, D. and Brown, D. (eds), Roman Crafts, London, 105–9Google Scholar
Hill, J.D. 1995: Ritual and Rubbish in the Iron Age of Wessex: A Study on the Formation of a Specific Archaeological Record, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Hill, J., and Rowsome, P. 2011: Roman London and the Walbrook Stream Crossing: Excavations at 1 Poultry and Vicinity, City of London Parts 1/2, MoL Archaeology Service Monograph 37, LondonGoogle Scholar
Howe, E., and Lakin, D. 2004: Roman and Medieval Cripplegate, City of London: Archaeological Excavations 1992–8, MoL Archaeology Service Monograph 21, LondonGoogle Scholar
Jenkins, F. 1957: ‘The cult of the Dea Nutrix in Kent’, Archaeologia Cantiana 71, 3846Google Scholar
Jenkins, F. 1958: ‘The cult of the “Pseudo-Venus” in Kent’, Archaeologia Cantiana 72, 6076Google Scholar
Jenkins, F. 1977: Clay Statuettes of the Roman Western Provinces, unpub. PhD thesis, University of KentGoogle Scholar
Jenkins, F. 1978: ‘Some interesting types of clay statuettes of the Roman period found in London’, in Bird, J., Chapman, H. and Clark, J. (eds), Collectanea Londiniensia: Studies in London Archaeology and History Presented to Ralph Merrifield, London, 149–62Google Scholar
Marangou, C. 1996: ‘Figurines and models’, in Papathanassopoulos, G. (ed.), Neolithic Culture in Greece, Athens, 146–51Google Scholar
McIsaac, W. 1974: ‘Roman coarse pottery’, in Tatton-Brown 1974, 155–79Google Scholar
Merrifield, R. 1977: ‘Art and religion in Roman London – an inquest on the sculptures of Londinium’, in Munby, J. and Henig, M. (eds), Roman Life and Art in Britain: A Celebration in Honour of the Eightieth Birthday of Joycelyn Toynbee, BAR Series 41, Oxford, 375406Google Scholar
Merrifield, R. 1987: The Archaeology of Ritual and Magic, LondonGoogle Scholar
Merrifield, R. 1995: ‘Roman metalwork from the Walbrook – rubbish, ritual or redundancy?Transactions of the London and Middlesex Archaeological Society 46, 2744Google Scholar
Milisauskas, S. 2002: ‘Interpretations and narratives of the Neolithic of southeast Europe’, Antiquity 76, 887–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, M., Schofield, J., and Rhodes, M. 1986: The Roman Quay at St. Magnus House, London: Excavations at New Fresh Wharf, Lower Thames Street, London 1974–78, London and Middlesex Archaeological Society Special Paper 8, LondonGoogle Scholar
Milne, G. 1985: The Port of Roman London, LondonGoogle Scholar
Milne, G., and Wardle, A. 1993: ‘Early Roman development at Leadenhall Court, London, and related research’, Transactions of the London and Middlesex Archaeological Society 44, 23172Google Scholar
Monteil, G. 2004: ‘Samian and consumer choice in Roman London’, in Croxford, B., Eckardt, H., Meade, J. and Weekes, J. (eds), TRAC: Proceedings of the Thirteenth Annual Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference Leicester 2003, Oxford, 115Google Scholar
Murphy, P., Albarella, U., Germany, M., and Locker, A. 2000: ‘Production, imports and status: biological remains from a late Roman farm at Great Holts Farm, Essex’, Environmental Archaeology 5, 3548CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nanoglou, S. 2005: ‘Subjectivity and material culture in Thessaly, Greece: the case of Neolithic anthropomorphic imagery’, Cambridge Archaeological Journal 15, 141–56CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nanoglou, S. 2006: ‘Regional perspectives on the Neolithic anthropomorphic imagery of northern Greece’, Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 19.2, 155–76CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pearce, J. 2013: Contextual Archaeology of Burial Practice: Case Studies from Roman Britain, BAR British Series 588, OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Penn, W.S. 1964: ‘Springhead: the temple ditch site’, Archaeologia Cantiana 79, 170–89Google Scholar
Perring, D. 1991: Roman London, GuildfordGoogle Scholar
Philpott, R. 1991: Burial Practices in Roman Britain: A Survey of Grave Treatment and Furnishing A.D. 43–410, BAR British Series 219, OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Planson, E. (ed.) 1982: La Nécropole gallo-romaine les Bolards, Nuit-Saint-Georges, Editions du Centre Nationale de la Recherche Scientifique, ParisGoogle Scholar
Rayner, L., Wardle, A., and Seeley, F. 2011: ‘Ritual and religion’, in Hill and Rowsome 2011, 404–8Google Scholar
Rever, M.F.G. 1826: ‘Extrait d'un mémoire sur quelques figurines antiques découvertes à Baux, département de l'Eure’, Société des Antiquaires de Normandi 3, 189205Google Scholar
Richardson, B. 1986: ‘Pottery’, in Miller et al. 1986, 96–9Google Scholar
Richmond, I.A. 1962: An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in the City of York, I Eburacum, Roman York, British Archaeological Association 28, LondonGoogle Scholar
Rook, A.G. 1968: ‘The Romano-British cemetery at Welwyn; obit 1967’, Hertfordshire Past & Present 8, 32–7Google Scholar
Rook, A.G. 1973: ‘Excavations at the Grange Romano-British cemetery, Welwyn, 1967’, Hertfordshire Archaeology 3, 130Google Scholar
Rouvier-Jeanlin, M. 1972: Les Figurines gallo-romaines en terre cuite au Musée des Antiquités Nationales, Supplément à Gallia 24, ParisGoogle Scholar
Rowsome, P. 2008: ‘Mapping Roman London: identifying its urban patterns and interpreting their meaning’, in Clark, J., Cotton, J., Hall, J., Sherris, R. and Swain, H. (eds.), Londinium and Beyond: Essays on Roman London and its Hinterland for Harvey Sheldon, York, 2532Google Scholar
Rushworth, A. 2009: Housesteads Roman Fort – The Grandest Station: Volume 2: The Material Assemblages, SwindonGoogle Scholar
Sheldon, H. 2000: ‘Roman Southwark’, in Haynes, I., Sheldon, H. and Hannigan, L. (eds), London Under Ground: The Archaeology of a City, Oxford, 121–50Google Scholar
Shepherd, J.D. 1998: The Temple of Mithras, London: Excavations by W.F. Grimes and A. Williams at the Walbrook, English Heritage Archaeological Report 12, LondonGoogle Scholar
Stead, I.M., and Rigby, V. 1986: Baldock: the Excavation of a Roman and Pre-Roman Settlement, Britannia Monograph 7, LondonGoogle Scholar
Tatton-Brown, T. 1974: ‘Excavations at the Custom House site, City of London 1973’, Transactions of the London and Middlesex Archaeological Society 25, 117219Google Scholar
Taylor, A. 1993: ‘A Roman lead coffin with pipeclay figurines from Arrington, Cambridgeshire’, Britannia 24, 191225CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, A. 1997: ‘A Roman child burial with animal figurines and pottery, from Godmanchester, Cambridgeshire’, Britannia 28, 386–93Google Scholar
Tudot, E. 1860: Collection de figurines en argile: œuvres premières de l'art gaulois, avec les noms des céramistes qui les ont executes, ParisGoogle Scholar
Wardle, A. 2000: ‘Non-ceramic finds’, in Barber and Bowsher 2000, 348–55Google Scholar
Wardle, A. 2001: ‘The Roman finds’, in Brigham and Woodger 2001, 92–8Google Scholar
Wardle, A. 2003: ‘The accessioned finds’, in Cowan 2003, 150–93Google Scholar
Wardle, A. 2011: ‘Finds from the Walbrook deposits’, in Hill and Rowsome 2011, 329–49Google Scholar
Wardle, A., Shepherd, J., Symonds, R., Riddler, I., Lloyd-Morgan, G., and Hammerson, M. 2000: ‘Catalogue’, in Barber and Bowsher 2000, 142–263Google Scholar
Watson, B. (ed.) 1998: Roman London: Recent Archaeological Work Including Papers Given at a Seminar held at the Museum of London on 16 November 1996, JRA Supplementary Series 24, Portsmouth, RIGoogle Scholar
Westman, A. 1998: ‘Publishing Roman Southwark: new evidence from the archive’, in Watson 1998, 61–6Google Scholar
Wilson, P.R. 2002: Cataractonium: Roman Catterick and its Hinterland: Excavations and Research 1958–1997, CBA Research Report 12, YorkGoogle Scholar
Woodward, A., and Leach, P.J. 1993: The Uley Shrines: Excavations of a Ritual Complex on West Hill, Uley, Gloucestershire 1977–1979, LondonGoogle Scholar