Accession No

2007.434 B


Description

Three bags of roof tiles, mortar, and flat stone, the latter presumably used as slates. Roof tiles of light buff or red fabric with grey core, some with burnt traces of fire.


Place

Europe; British Isles; England; Cambridgeshire; [Huntingdonshire]; St Neots; Hall Place


Period

Saxo Norman Medieval Post Medieval


Source

Addyman, Peter Vincent [excavator and donor]


Department

Arch


Reference Numbers

2007.434 B; SN61 [Excavation no.]


Cultural Affliation


Material

Ceramic


Local Term


Measurements

313mm


Events

Context (Field collection)
Excavated by Peter V. Addyman, for the Ministry of Public Buildings and Works, 1961-1962. See archive (Doc.301) for site plans, etc. See finds tag (stored with objects) for excavation context.
Event Date 1961
Author: Jan-Henrik Hartung


Context (References)
Addyman, P. V. and Majora, J. (1972). 'An 18th-Century Mansion, a Fishpond, and Post-Medieval Finds from St. Neots, Huntingdonshire'. Post-Medieval Archaeology 6. p.69-106
Event Date 1972
Author: Annie McKay


Context (References)
Addyman, P.V. (1973). ‘Late Saxon Settlements in the St Neots Area. III: The Village or Township of St Neots’. Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society, vol. 64. pp. 45-100
Event Date 1973
Author: Imogen Gunn (admin)


Context (Acquisition Details)
Material excavated by Addyman in the 1960s and only recently donated to the Museum, when it was catalogued in bulk records. The finds from the Late Saxon settlement (see PCAS vol. 64) and those late Medieval and Post Medieval finds from a fishpond and 18th century house (see Post-Medieval Archaeology vol. 6) may sometimes share a single record, which will ultimately need to be split further.
Event Date 2007
Author: Annie McKay


Description (Physical description)
SN61 (Box 3) containing pottery.
Event Date 2007
Author: Annie McKay


Description (Physical description)
Three bags of mixed red and yellow-brown tile pieces.
Event Date 22/8/2018
Author: Annie McKay


Description (Physical description)
Three bags of roof tiles, mortar, and flat stone, the latter presumably used as slates. Roof tiles of light buff or red fabric with grey core, some with burnt traces of fire.
Event Date 29/1/2024
Author: Jan-Henrik Hartung


FM:281073

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