Home Page Sunday 21 March 2010


Quick Search

 

or
Browse by Subject

Find Us on Facebook!

Sale Bargains &
Special Offers

Distributed Titles

Current Catalogs and Leaflets
Take advantage of our latest offers

Information on Shipping Charges

Damaged Books

Conference Timetable

Request Catalogues


e-Mailing List
Be the first to hear about new offers and new sale books - join our e-mail list! Or enter your address to unsubscribe or change your profile


Journal of Roman Pottery Studies Vol 12

edited by Geoffrey B Dannell and Pamela V Irving

This volume of the JRPS celebrates the career of Kay Hartley, described by Sheppard Frere as "the oracle on Romano-British mortaria". She has been associated with a number of important excavations, such as Heronbridge and Much Hadham, and it has been said of her that "no serious excavation report of the Roman period can be completed without either a contribution from her, or a reference to her work." 224p (Oxbow Books 2005)

ISBN-13: 978-1-84217-185-1
ISBN-10: 1-84217-185-2

Paperback. Price US $50.00
This book is generally in stock.

Table of Contents

K F Hartley: A biographical note (G B Dannell et al)
Kay Hartley: An appreciation (Sheppard S Frere)
Mancetter memories (Colin Baddeley)
Kay Hartley: Friend and teacher (Roland Sauvaget)
Kay Hartley: A personal view (Viv Jones)
The dating of Crambeck parchment ware (Paul Bidwell)
Reflections on the choice of Brockley Hill as a pottery production site (David Bird)
Varro’s dolia: Jars for fattening dormice (Joanna Bird)
Un potier du Rozier (Lozère) (Ariane Bourgeios and Michel Thuault)
Late Roman pottery kilns at Goodison Boulevard, Cantley, Doncaster: Excavations by J R Lidster in 1957 and 1962 (Paul C Buckland and John R Magilton)
Roman stone mortars: A preliminary survey (H E M Cool)
The mixed grill over-egged (Nina Crummy)
A study in scarlet: Samian pottery and the Claudian invasion (Geoffrey B Dannell)
Brough-on-Humber fine wares production (Margaret J Darling)
P-14 unmasked, and what happened next (Brenda Dickinson)
Thomas May and Castor beakers (J P Gillam)
Pots for tables; Tables awaiting pots: An exercise in speculative archaeoeconomy (B R Hartley)
The Pitt Rivers collection of Samian ware in Salisbury and South Wiltshire Museum (Robert Hopkins)
The great Essex earthquake (AD60/1)? (Raphael M J Isserlin)
A bird in the hand (Catherine Johns and Val Rigby)
Food and drink in Wales: The impact of the Roman occupation (Myfanwy Lloyd Jones)
Size matters: The role of smaller temporary camps in north Britain (Gordon S Maxwell)
Les mortiers Drag 45: Leur place dans l’étude des céramiques d’époque romaine (P H Mitard)
The Roman pottery industry of west-central Leicestershire (Richard Pollard)
‘A glass vessel of peculiar form’: A late Roman mould-blown bottle found with a burial at Milton-next-Sittingbourne in Kent (Jennifer Price)
Why save anything? (Richard Reece)
The latest ceramic mortaria in Bulgaria? (Vivien G Swan)
A collection of Samian ware found close to the first bridge at Piercebridge (Margaret Ward)
‘The hidden paw’: The mystery of the cat in Roman Britain (Janet Webster)
Roman pottery production at Gelligaer (Peter Webster)
Paternus, I or II? (Felicity Wild)
A Roman paint pot from Castor, Normangate Field, and its contents (H G M Edwards et al)
Rare tazze, paterae and a broad hint at lararium from Lactodorum (Towcester) (Charmian Woodfield)


Browse other Roman Pottery books

Browse other Roman Finds books





We respect our customers' privacy and security.
The credit-card details form in our order process is secure-server protected. This means that your credit card details are scrambled in transit, and then stored securely so that we are the only people who can access your information.
We will not give or sell your personal information to any other company; nor will we send you any unsolicited e-mail. Users who sign up to our e-mailing list may unsubscribe at any time.

© Most of the descriptions on the website have been published in Oxbow Book News and other Oxbow catalogues, and are protected by copyright. If you wish to use any of the content on this website, please contact the web administrator for advice.