Items
Subject is exactly
Vessel
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Ipswich Ware Vessel Rim fragment of Ipswich Ware vessel. There are no signs of decoration on this fragment. -
Hambleton-type Ware Vessel Rim and handle fragment of Hambleton-type Ware vessel with mottled green glaze. The vessel has been decorated with incised wavy lines around upper part of the body, near the rim. There is also pinching just below the rim. There are two thumb impressions on either side of the base of the handle which help to secure it to the body of the vessel. The handle has been decorated with vertical and wavy lines. -
Brandsby Ware Vessel Partially complete, reconstructed Scarborough Ware pellet jug with orange-brown glaze. The jug has been decorated with small applied clay dots (coloured dark brown) arranged in vertical lines around the body. -
Stamford Ware Vessel Reconstructed rim and body fragment of Stamford Ware vessel. The fragment has no glaze or decoration. -
Blackware Vessel Rim fragment of Blackware vessel. The fragment has no glaze or decoration. -
Redware Tripod Vessel Partially complete, reconstructed Red Earthenware tripod vessel. The vessel has patchy external amber glaze and may have been a cauldron. -
Earthenware Vessel Rim fragment of Earthenware vessel with amber glaze. The fragment has holes in the rim which may have been for the handles. -
Heworth-type Earthenware Vessel Reconstructed rim and handle fragment of Heworth-type Earthenware vessel. The fragment has green-brown glaze which appears to only be on the rim and internal surface of the vessel. The remains of the handle is attached at the rim, and is of the typical folded style. -
Anglian Vessel Reconstructed rim fragment of Anglian vessel. The fragment has no glaze or decoration. -
Redware Vessel with Pierced Sides Fragment of Redware vessel with mottled green glaze. The glaze is on the internal surface of this vessel and one of the sides has been pierced with multiple holes. -
Earthenware Sugar Mould Partially complete, reconstructed Earthenware sugar pottery vessel. This unusual vessel is a conical mould used during sugar production. During the process, liquid from pressed sugar cane was boiled into a syrup and then ladled into sugar moulds (like this example). The liquid cooled and crystallised into a sugar loaf inside mould, and excess liquid dripped out of hole in the base into a jar beneath. -
Ryedale Ware Vessel Rim fragment of Ryedale Ware vessel with green glaze. The rim and the area below the rim both have a band of decoration of two rows of short, vertical lines with a horizontal line between them. -
Ipswich Ware Vessel Body fragment of Ipswich Ware vessel. -
Humber Ware Vessel Rim and handle fragment of Humber Ware vessel with yellow-green glaze. The vessel has been decorated with small groups of crude incised lines on the body and handles. It has a double handle. -
Leg from Vessel A zoomorphic clawed foot with fringe of hair running down back of leg. -
Iron Pan Deep-sided vessel, or pan, made from one piece of iron sheet. It is roughly circular and has a slightly convex base and convex sides. It originally had a handle, but only the terminal plates are still in situ: one is complete and roughly triangular with two nails at the top and one at the base: the other is incomplete, only the upper part surviving, with three nails in it. The pan has been repaired in anumber of places: to cover small holes there are seven small nails or rivets with roughly rectangular heads and split shanks which are bent over in opposite directions on the underside of the pan. There are two plates, one iron and one lead, which repair larger holes: the nails holding them in place and those which hold the handle terminals have irregularly shaped heads, except one in the incomplete handle terminal, which is rounded: the shank tips are roughly hammered over on the outside of the pan, except for one in the incomplete handle terminal which was inserted from the outside and hammered over on the inside. On the inside of the rim are a number of hammer or punch impressions. -
Wood Vessel Fragments of two circular bases, five staves and tangentially split organic bands 23mm wide, 9mm thick. One base is complete, the other survives only as a fragment; both are radially split, have squared edges and are 270mm in diameter. The staves are slightly wider at the bottom with squared basal grooves, widths ranging from 69–118mm, and all are radially split. One stave has the remains of a rounded lug with sloping sides rising above the rim edge.