Accession No
1908.60 F.3
Description
Five pieces of fish bone. Two straight and three circular.
Place
Europe; British Isles; England; Cambridgeshire; Barton; University Farm; Barton Moats
Period
Saxo Norman Medieval
Source
Cambridge Antiquarian Society [donor]; Walker, Frederick George (Reverend) [excavator]
Department
Arch
Reference Numbers
1908.60 F.3; MAA: 1908.385.23; AR 1908.85.23
Cultural Affliation
Material
Animal; Fish; Bone
Local Term
Measurements
Events
Context (Display)
Mounted on patterned paper-wrapped display board with handwritten label reading 'A 1908.60 F/ REMAINS OF FISH. BLACK ASH DITCH, BARTON.'; written in pencil on reverse: 'remains of fish. Black Ash Ditch. barton, c./08'.
Event Date
Author: Jodi Zhang
Description (Physical description)
Description for 1908.60 F[.1-3]: 'Cod bones, perch scales, vertebrae.'
Event Date
Author: maa
Context (Display)
Old display label found with object reads: 'A 1908.51-75/ OBJECTS FROM THE EXCAVATIONS AT BARTON, C., 1908. (Superintended by the Rev. F.G. Walker) The Cambridge Antiquarian Society. See: Walker: Proc. C.A.S., vol. XII.'
Event Date
Author: Jodi Zhang
Context (References)
Walker, F. G. (1908). ‘Report on the Excavations at Barton’. Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society, vol. 12(4). pp. 296-313.
Event Date 1908
Author: Jodi Zhang
Description (Physical description)
Accession Register for 1908.60 [A-K]: 'Fragments of animal, bird and fish bones; oyster, snail and other shells; egg-shells; seeds of barley, vetch and bean, hazelnuts; fragments of burnt straw, wattle and daub, glass, etc.'
Event Date 1908
Author: Imogen Gunn (admin)
Context (Field collection)
Black Ash Ditch. Excavated by Rev. Frederick George Walker, sponsored by the Cambridge Antiquarian Society, in 1908.
Event Date 1908
Author: maa
Context (Amendments / updates)
In his 1908 article, Rev. F.G. Walker dated most of the finds from his Barton Moats excavation to the Iron Age (‘late Celtic’) and Roman periods, which was then reflected in their Accession Register and Annual Report entries. In 1956, John G. Hurst ('Saxo-Norman Pottery in East Anglia.' Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society, vol. 49. p. 50) identified the site and most of the finds as being Saxo Norman in date and, presumably on this basis, in 1978 Mary Cra’ster amended the 1908 Accession Register entry to read ‘Saxo Norman’. When this record was digitised, however, it was entered as ‘Saxo Norman; Iron Age’; it has now been updated and ‘Iron Age’ removed.
Event Date 12/2/2024
Author: Imogen Gunn (admin)
Description (Physical description)
Five pieces of fish bone. Two straight and three circular.
Event Date 14/2/2024
Author: Jodi Zhang
FM:309494
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