Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-7drxs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-25T02:22:26.937Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Another Bronze Age Beaker from Leicestershire

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 January 2012

Abstract

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Notes
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1941

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

page 232 note 1 Beakers from Knipton and the Melton Mowbray district in this County have been published in the Journal (xv, 59; xvii, 71).

page 232 note 2 V.C.H. Leics. i, 171, 176, misreads this note as referring to two pots.

page 233 note 1 Arch. Journ. xc, 124.

page 233 note 2 Archaeologia, lxii, figs, on pp. 337–9.

page 233 note 3 Leics. Arch. Soc. Trans. iv, 7. The cist, 3 ft. 6 in. long, was constructed of ironstone slabs on one side and rubble on the other, with two slabs for the cover; it was roughly boat-shaped, and so might be compared with a larger early Bronze Age grave at Frocester, Gloucs. (Soldier's Grave, Proc. Prehist. Soc. iv, 214). With the skeleton was a large quantity of charcoal and ashes (cf. Mortimer, Forty Years Researches, xl, and a beaker burial at Cassington, Oxon., Antiq. Journ. xiv, 274).

page 234 note 1 Unpublished: in Leicester Museum.

page 234 note 2 Evans, Ancient Stone Implements, figs. 22, 35, 36; Proc. Prehist. Soc. E. Ang. v, 79; Antiq. Journ. xi, 57.

page 234 note 3 History of Carmarthenshire, i (1935), 52Google Scholar; Arch. Camb., 1934, 181Google Scholar (Tylwch, near Llanidloes). I am indebted to Dunning for these references.

page 234 note 4 The Avon route has been suggested for handled beakers by Fox, , Arch. Camb. 1925, 23Google Scholar; cf. Antiq. Journ. xv, 282. A flint axe with expanding edge was found near Alcester (Birmingham Arch. Soc. Trans. lviii, 44).

page 234 note 5 Leics. Arch. Soc. Trans, iii, III; human bones were found near to them. Other Bronze Age finds on the upper Welland are a number of cinerary urns at Market Harborough (Nichols, History of Leics. ii, 486 and pl. LXXXIII) and a hoard of socketed axes, gouges and chisels at Husbands Bosworth (ibid, iii, pi. CLI).

page 234 note 6 Leics. Arch. Soc. Trans. xiv, 176.

page 234 note 7 Evans, Bronze Implements, 231.

page 234 note 8 Oxoniensia, iii, 7.

page 234 note 9 Coventry Nat. Hist. and Scientific Soc. Proc., May 1938, 184. He cites a Graig Llwyd axe found near Coventry (ibid, Jan. 1935, 116) and other material as suggesting a direct connexion with North Wales.

page 234 note 10 V.C.H. Leics. i, pl. opposite p. 170.

page 234 note 11 Unpublished; on loan to Leicester Museum.

page 234 note 12 Antiq. Journ. xviii, 412.

page 234 note 13 Leics. Arch. Soc. Trans. xviii, 181.