Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-5g6vh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T11:54:12.214Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Oare reconsidered and the Origins of Savernake Ware in Wiltshire

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 November 2011

Vivien G. Swan
Affiliation:
Royal Commission on Historical Monuments (England), Salisbury

Extract

The purpose of this paper is to reconsider the significance of the so-called ‘Late Celtic rubbish heap’ near Oare (Nat. Grid Ref. SU 172643) in the parish of Wilcot, near Marlborough in central Wiltshire and to assess its implications for Savernake ware, a regional variety of grey culinary coarse pottery, known to have been produced in Savernake Forest, just south of Marlborough, Wiltshire. The site in question (FIG. I), 6–4 km south-west of the Roman walled town of Cunetio (Mildenhall) was dug into in 1907–8 by Benjamin and Maud Cunnington. Mr. and Mrs. Cunnington were attached to Devizes Museum from the late nineteenth until almost the mid twentieth century and became well known for their many excavations and publications, particularly on prehistoric sites in Wiltshire.

Type
Articles
Information
Britannia , Volume 6 , November 1975 , pp. 36 - 61
Copyright
Copyright © Vivien G. Swan, V. Rigby, B. R. Hartley and D. F. Mackreth 1975. Exclusive Licence to Publish: 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

1 Wilts. Arch. Mag. xxxvi (1909), 125–39.Google Scholar

2 Benjamin Cunnington was the fourth generation of antiquaries in that well-known Wiltshire family, being the great-grandson of William Cunnington, assistant to the antiquary Colt Hoare of Stourhead. However it is clear that his wife Maud, who wrote their excavation reports, was by far the more able.

3 Britannia v (1974), 262–79.Google Scholar

4 In this matter I have benefited from discussion with Mr. Peter Woods, who has confirmed the difficulties experienced on several of his excavations in Northamptonshire, when attempting to locate kilns of this type by these methods.

5 Wilts. Arch. Mag. lviii (1962), 142–55.Google Scholar

6 C.B.A Summaries 1973, 13.

7 Annable, op. cit. (note 5) and Wilts. Arch. Mag. lxv (1970), 200 f.Google Scholar

8 VCH Wiltshire I : i (1957), 104.Google Scholar

9 Wilts. Arch. Mag. xxvii (1893), 294301.Google Scholar

10 ibid., lxiv (1969), 134; ibid, lxv (1970), 215 and op. cit. (note 8), 96.

11 Webster, G., in Current Research in Romano-British Coarse Pottery (C.B.A. Res. Rept. x, 1973)Google Scholar 3; and V. Rigby in ibid., 19–21.

12 Textile Manufacture in the Northern Roman Provinces (1970), 135, 130 and 133.

13 Cunnington, op. cit. (note 1), pl. III, D, B, and A.

14 Wheeler, R. E. M., Maiden Castle, Dorset (Reports of the Res. Comm. of the Soc. of Ants., xii, 1943), fig. 103, Nos. 21 and 23.Google Scholar

15 Hawkes, C. F. C. and Hull, M. R., Camulodunum (Reports of the Res. Comm. of the Soc. of Ants., xiv, 1947), 209.Google Scholar

16 S. von Schnurbein, ‘Haltern’, in J. E. Bogaers and C. B. Ruger, Der Niedergermanische Limes (1974).

17 See British Mus. Quarterly xiv. 1 (1951), 1718 for a helmet which had been re-issued three times. The famous Hagenau (Germany) helmet is another recirculated item and instances of other types of re-used equipment are known. I am grateful to Mr. H. Russell Robinson for discussing this matter with me.Google Scholar

18 The influence of Gen. Pitt-Rivers on her excavations and publications shows strongly in many of her archaeological reports.

19 Archaeologia cii (1969), 182.Google Scholar

20 E. M. Clifford, Bagendon: A Belgic Oppidum (1961).

21 Arch. Journ. cxix (1962), 114–49.Google Scholar

22 Hawkes and Hull, op. cit. (note 15).

23 R. E. M., and Wheeler, T. V., Verulamium, A Belgic and two Roman Cities (Reports of the Res. Comm. of the Soc. of Ants, xi, 1936).Google Scholar

24 Annable, op. cit. (note 5), fig. 5.

25 Wilts. Arch. Mag. lxv (1970), 200 f., and Luckett's unpublished drawings in Devizes Museum.Google Scholar

26 Annable, op. cit. (note 5), 154.

27 Luckett loc. cit. (note 25).

28 The apparent decline of Savernake-ware bead-rim jars towards the late first century is also well substantiated by the stratified sequence at Cirencester (Glos.) and by an early second-century deposit from Wanborough, Wilts. (Greene, K. T., Wilts. Arch. Mag. lxix (1974), forthcoming).Google Scholar

29 op. cit. (note 8), 88.

30 Wilts. Arch. Mag. xli (1921), 392Google Scholar; Rept. Marlborough College Nat. Hist. Soc. xxxix (1890), 112–13 and Brooke's manuscript notes in Devizes Museum.Google Scholar

31 Wilts. Arch. Mag. lxi (1966), 930.Google Scholar

32 Since this paper was completed, Mr. Annable has discovered, among material from the same excavation, a bronze apron- or strap-mount of early military character which was stratified in the Mildenhall well, and which adds further support to the above interpretation of the deposit.

33 See J. S. Wacher, The Towns of Roman Britain (1975), pp. 32, 294 for the latest dating.

34 Antiq. Journ. xlii (1962), 114.Google Scholar

35 Trans. Bristol and Glouc. Arch. Soc. lxxviii (1959), 2443Google Scholar; ibid, lxxxiii (1964), 145–6.

36 ibid., lxxviii (1959), fig. 6, Nos. 22 and 24.

37 P. J. Woods, Excavations at Hardingstone, Northants., 1967–8 (1969), 1–9.

38 Webster, op. cit. (note 11), 2.

39 Trans. Birmingham Arch. Soc. lxxxiii (1969), 85–6 and figs. 12–17.Google Scholar

40 Britannia iv (1973), 309.Google Scholar

41 JRS xxxiii (1943), 1528.Google Scholar

42 Annable, op. cit. (note 5), fig. 5, Nos. 5 and 6.

43 The fabrics and forms produced by this centre are very similar to the Savernake repertoire and it may represent an attempt by some potters from the Savernake Forest factories to move nearer the markets of Wanborough, Cricklade and Cirencester.

44 Contrast Hodder, I., Britannia v (1974), 341–2Google Scholar, and Wilts. Arch. Mag. lxix (1974), forthcoming.Google Scholar

45 B. Cunliffe, Iron Age Communities in Britain (1974), 343, fig. A 28, Nos. 1–10.

46 Information kindly supplied by Mr. and Mrs. W. Rodwell.

47 I am most grateful to Mr. B. R. Hartley for examining the samian and for the notes upon which this report is based.

48 From notes (based on the published drawings) by Mr. D. F. Mackreth, to whom I am most grateful.