NHER 60462 (Monument record) - Roman hoard of pottery and metal tools and objects

The Norfolk Heritage Explorer is a filtered version of the Norfolk HER intended for casual research. Please to consult the full record.

See also further .

Summary

An excavation was carried out in September 2015 to investigate a Roman artefact assemblage partially exposed by metal-detecting two days earlier. The excavation revealed a Late Roman hoard consisting of a Roman coin of the House of Valentinian and numerous pottery vessels and metal objects. The pottery recovered included 12 complete or near-complete ceramic vessels, including mortaria, jars, flagons, beakers, a bowl, and a dish. The metal finds consisted of a variety of tools including a pitchfork, spade fragments, L-clamp, mattock or axe-adze, axe, sickle, and a rare farrieri's butteris, as well as lead weights, a steelyard weight, a copper alloy pan with replacement handle, a skillet handle, adjustable cauldron hanger, an unidentified sheet object, and fragments of a pewter object.

Protected Status/Designation

  • None recorded

Location

Map sheet TF81NE
Civil Parish TITTLESHALL, BRECKLAND, NORFOLK

May-July 2015. Metal-detecting.
Finds previously recorded under this number is now recorded under NHER 63130.
A. Beckham (HES), 6 November 2015.

September 2015. Excavation. [1].

On 27th September 2015, a metal-detectorist uncovered the top of an artefact assemblage while detecting this area. A site visit was undertaken by [2] the following day, and confirmed the presence of a Roman hoard. On the 29th September 2015 a controlled excavation was carrried out by the finder and professional archaeologists in order to understand the context of the hoard recover and the objects before the assemblage suffered plough damage.
The excavation recovered a Late Roman hoard consisting of pottery and metal objects. The pottery included 12 complete or near-incomplete vessels produced in a variety of wares. The metal objects included a variety of iron tools including a pitchfork, spade, L-clamp, mattock, axe, sickle, and a rare farrier's butteris, as well as other copper alloy and pewter objects. A worn copper alloy coin of the House of Valentinian was the only numismatic recovered. [2] has suggested the hoard was deposited very late in the Roman period, and that a variety of activities are suggested by the tools present (S19).

The following finds were recovered during the excavation, and are numbered according to the corresponding Portable Antiquites Scheme record:

1. Fine ware flagon (S15).
2. Nene Valley globular beaker (S15).
3. Brampton-type greyware globular narrow-mouthed jar (S16).
4. Oxfordshire-type greyware narrow-mouthed flask (S16).
5. Lead alloy steelyard weight with iron suspension loop.
6. Copper alloy pan or patera with part of an iron replacement handle secured with two rivets (S9).
7, 8, 9, and 13. South Midlands shell-tempered ware bead and flanged bowl (S17).
10a. Nene Valley greyware dish (S16).
10b. Brampton-type greyware globular narrow-mouthed jar (S16).
11 and 14b. South Midlands shell-tempered ware jar (S15).
12. Brampton-type greyware globular wide-mouthed jar (S16). This vessel contained 1 pottery sherd and calcined bone fragments within. The bone could not be identified as either animal or human [3].
14a. Brampton-type greyware globular jar (S15).
15a/15b. Oxfordshire white slipped type mortarium (S18).
16a. Two-pronged iron pitchfork (S11).
16b. Iron hinge bar with fixing holes (S8) and (SZ).
16c and 16k. Incomplete iron spade sheath and fragment (S6).
16d. Lead plano-convex weight (S14).
16e. Iron butteris with elaborate anthropomorphic socketed copper alloy handle. Butterises were used by farriers to prepare horse's hooves before shoeing.
16f. Unidentified copper alloy sheet object (S20).
16g. Lead plano-convex weight half (S12).
16h. Incomplete iron L-clamp (S3).
16i. Copper alloy skillet or patera handle (S7).
16j. Iron mattock or combination axe-adze (S5).
16l. Iron axe (S4).
16m Pewter object fragments.
16n. Iron sickle.
16o. Iron adjustable cauldron hanger (S10).
17. 1 Roman coin. A nummus of the House of Valentinian.
18. Lead alloy plano-convex cake (S13).
Other: 23 pottery sherds including 1 Samian ware sherd.

Information from PAS import and (S19).
E. McDonald (HES), 19 April 2021.

  • --- Photograph: I & RS. Digital finds image.
  • <SZ> X-ray: Unknown. 2016. X-rays of objects from a Roman hoard recovered from NHER 60462. Film.
  • <S1> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2016. Drawing of a Roman butteris. Film. 2:1.
  • <S1> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2016. Drawing of a Roman flagon. Find Illustration. Film. 1:1.
  • <S10> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2019. Drawing of a Roman cauldron hanger. Find Illustration. Film. 1:2.
  • <S11> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2019. Drawing of a Roman pitchfork. Find Illustration. Film. 1:1.
  • <S12> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2016. Drawing of Roman plano-convex weight. Find Illustration. Film. 1:1.
  • <S13> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2016. Drawing of a Roman plano-convex cake. Find Illustration. Film. 1:1.
  • <S14> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2016. Drawing of a Roman plano-convex lead weight. Find Illustration. Film. 1:1.
  • <S15> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2016. Drawings of Roman pottery vessels. Find Illustration. Film. 1:2.
  • <S16> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2016. Drawing of Roman globular narrow-mouthed jar, narrow-mouthed flask, dish, globular narrow-mouthed jar, and wide-mouthed globular jar. Find Illustration. Film. 1:2.
  • <S17> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2016. Drawing of a reconstructed Roman bead and flanged bowl. Find Illustration. Film. 1:2.
  • <S18> Illustration: Gibbons, J.. 2015. Drawing of a Roman mortarium vessel. Find Illustration. Film. 1:2.
  • <S19> Correspondence: Rogerson, A. 2021. Email about Roman hoard NMS-E9C30B. 19 April March 2021.
  • <S2> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2016. Drawing of a Roman flagon. Finds Illustration. Film. 2:1.
  • <S20> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2016. Drawing of an Roman unidentified copper alloy sheet object. Find Illustration. Film. 1:1.
  • <S3> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2016. Drawing of a Roman L-clamp. Find Illustration. Film. 1:1.
  • <S4> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2016. Drawing of a Roman axe. Find Illustration. Film. 1:1.
  • <S5> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2016. Drawing of a Roman mattock or comination axe-adze. Find Illustration. Film. 1:1.
  • <S6> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2016. Drawing of Roman spade sheaths. Find Illustration. Film. 1:1.
  • <S7> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2016. Drawing of a Roman patera handle. Find Illustration. Film. 1:1.
  • <S8> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2016. Drawing of a Roman hinge. Find Illustration. Film. 1:1.
  • <S9> Illustration: Gibbons, J. 2015. Drawing of a Roman patera. Find Illustration. Film. 1:1.
  • ANIMAL REMAINS (Roman - 364 AD to 409 AD)
  • COIN (Roman - 364 AD to 409 AD)
  • POT (Roman - 364 AD to 409 AD)
  • WEIGHT (Roman - 364 AD to 409 AD)
  • AXE (TOOL) (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • BUTTERIS (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • CLAMP (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • HINGE (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • HOARD (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • HUMAN REMAINS (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • MATTOCK (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • MOUNT (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • PAN (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • PITCHFORK (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • POT (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • POT (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • POT (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • POT (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • POT (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • POT (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • POT (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • POT (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • POT (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • POT (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • POT (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • POT (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • SICKLE (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • SKILLET (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • SPADE (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • STEELYARD WEIGHT (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • UNIDENTIFIED OBJECT (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • UNIDENTIFIED OBJECT (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • WEIGHT (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)
  • WEIGHT (Roman - 370 AD to 409 AD)

Related NHER Records (0)

Record last edited

Jul 28 2024 3:44PM

Comments and Feedback

Your feedback is welcome; if you can provide any new information about this record, please contact the Norfolk Historic Environment Record.