Hall, D. W. and Crowdy, A. (2003). The pottery. In: n.e. The origins of settlements at Kelso and Peebles, Scottish Borders archaeological excavations in Wester and Easter Kelso and Cuddyside/Bridgegate, Peebles by the Border Burghs Archaeology Project and the Scottish Urban Archaeological Trust, 1983--1994. Edinburgh: Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. pp. 84-106.

Title
Title
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Title:
The pottery
Issue
Issue
The name of the volume or issue
Issue:
The origins of settlements at Kelso and Peebles, Scottish Borders archaeological excavations in Wester and Easter Kelso and Cuddyside/Bridgegate, Peebles by the Border Burghs Archaeology Project and the Scottish Urban Archaeological Trust, 1983--1994
Series
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Series:
Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports
Volume
Volume
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Volume:
2
Number of Pages
Number of Pages
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Number of Pages:
168
Page Start/End
Page Start/End
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Page Start/End:
84 - 106
Downloads
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Downloads:
sair2.pdf (6 MB) : Download
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ADS, CC-BY 4.0 or CC-BY 4.0 NC.
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ADS Terms of Use and Access
Publication Type
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Publication Type:
MonographSeriesChapter
Abstract
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Abstract:
An assemblage of 6633 sherds derived from the excavations at Kelso and were mostly post-medieval with the exception of an important medieval group from Wester Kelso/Floors Castle, Trench 3. This included White Gritty Ware in a sealed context and associated with continental imports which have provided important dating evidence. A smaller assemblage of 2292 sherds was found in Peebles, and, again White Gritty Ware was the most common type. This was also the case for the small assemblage of 411 sherds from Cuddyside. The material fills an important gap in the study of medieval Scottish ceramics and specialists are now in a position to attempt an overview of Scotland's earliest native industry. The outstanding problem is the lack of kiln sites.
Author
Author
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Author:
Derek W Hall
Amanda Crowdy
Year of Publication
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Year of Publication:
2003
ISBN
ISBN
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ISBN:
0 903903 71 7
Locations
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Subjects / Periods:
Scottish Ceramics (Auto Detected Subject)
Medieval (Auto Detected Temporal)
Sherds (Auto Detected Subject)
White Gritty Ware (Auto Detected Subject)
SHERD (Object England)
Postmedieval (Auto Detected Temporal)
Source
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Source:
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BIAB (DigitalBorn)
Created Date
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Created Date:
24 Nov 2015