Notes on Two Bronze Age Discoveries 1n Leicestershire by

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Notes on Two Bronze Age Discoveries 1n Leicestershire by T. G. E. Powell (1) Bronze Age Cremation Burial from Earl Shilton In the course of sand digging in 1938, an urn containing cremated bones was found on the high ground between the Hinckley Road and Heath Lane, Earl Shilton. (6-inch O.S. Leics. XXXVI S.W. Approx. position of find-spot: 14.5 ems. North and 9 3 ems. East from S.W. corner of the sheet.) The site, now completely dug away, was close to the 400 ft. contour, and commanded a wide prospect north and east. The urn appears to have been originaey placed in a small straight-sided pit, dug just below the old ground surface, and there was a considerable amount of dark earth filling in the pit and spread ~round it. The urn stood mouth upwards. The urn (Fig. 1) is in good condition. Its measurements are: Ht. 27.7 ems., Diam. of mouth 18.5 ems., of girth 22 ems.., and of foot 9.1 ems. The paste is on the whole fine grained with gritty binding material, and the thickness of the fabric is on average l cm. The exterior surface has a smooth finish, and the colour varies from red to brown with grey patches. The vessel stands on a flat base, and the walls curve gradually upwards to the girth, above which is a deep and broad collar. The rim, above the collar, is straight but inclines inwards and terminates in a flat lip. Decoration consists of deep strokes executed in the '' stab-anddrag " technique, probably with a sharp stick. On the collar, the strokes are arranged in a double herring-bone pattern, and on the rim a single line of oblique strokes is surmounted by a herring-bone row. The flat lip is decorated with a series of deep oval impressions, and round the interior of the rim is a row of short oblique strokes. The vessel beloqgs to the general type known as '' Collared Urns " which was one of the principal ceramic forms in Britain during the middle portion of the Bronze Age. The Earl Shilton urn is typical of a sub-group localised in the East Midlands to which the urns from Syston and Mountsorrel (both in the Leicester Museum) also belong.1 1These urns, which have not been published, will be described in a forthcoming study of the pottery of the region to be published in the Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society.

52 LEICESTERSHIRE ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY ''"~''''. 1////1/!I//IJ/// \\\\\\\\\,\\\\\~ 1//1 //!///!l!lllll/1 Fig. r. Urn containing cremation burial from Earl Shilton, Leics. ( ½ ).

NOTES ON TWO BRONZE AGE DISCOVERIES 53 IN LEICESTERSHIRE The cremated bones were submitted to Dr. A. J. E. Cave, Royal College of Surgeons of England, who kindly reported on them and summarised as follows: 2 " Not more than one individual skeleton represented..., and this an adult, presumably male, but with small teeth and delicate hands and feet. The open cranial sutures indicate maturity but not senescence. Occlusal surfaces of teeth well worn (crown attrition). No osteological data available as to racial affinity, etc." The writer is indebted to Miss K. M. Kenyon, who visited the site soon after the discovery, for various notes, to Mr. Frank Cottrill for the illustration of the urn, and to Mr. R. D. Abbott of the Leicester Museum for various assistance. 2Dr. Cave's report, together with the bones and the um, is deposited in. the Leicester Museum.

54 LEICESTERSHIRE ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY (2) Socketed Bronze Axe of Breton Type from Jericho Lodge, Six Hills, Leicestershire Within recent years a socketed looped axe was found by a farm worker in a field lying to the north of Jericho Lodge, and close to the Foss Way, at a point a little under a mile south of Six Hills, in the parish of Thrussington, Leicestershire. (6-inch 0.S. Leics. XIX N.W. Approx. position of fincl'-spot: 5-4 ems. North, 2.2 ems. East from S. W. corner of the sheet.) At Six Hills the Foss is crossed by an ancient track, now a road, known as the Salters Way, which runs from the wold country in north-east Leicestershire to the river crossing at Barrow-upon-Soar. The axe was obtained by Mr. E. A. Taylor, of Nottingham, who has presented it to the Leicester Museum. The axe (Fig. z) is 13 ems. long and displays ancient breakages around the socket mouth and on one face near the cutting edge. The casting jet has not been completely trimmed off the mouth of the socket. (Diam. of socket: 2.6 x 2.1 ems.) The form of the axe, being roughly square in section, and having straight sides and cutting edge (width: 3.1 ems.), shows it to belong to a distinctive type originating in Brittany.1 Miss Lily F. Chitty, F.S.A., who has studied this axe type, and to whom drawings of the Jericho Lodge axe were sent, comments as follows: " A map of the distribution of this type in Southern Britain was published by 0. G. S. Crawford, in 1913, 2 and one with additions by Chitty and Fox in 19333 when, in his Presidential Address to the Prehistoric Society of East Anglia, Sir Cyril Fox noted the concentration of such axes near the South Coast opposite Brittany, and on the Chalk Belt, with limited diffusions thence. Prof. Stuart Piggott has observed 4 that the distribution is perhiperal to that of the Deverel-Rimbury Culture in Dorset and Wiltshire, and denotes direct connection with Brittany continuing in the Late Bronze Age. " Among nearly a dozen additions to the 1933 map,5 the recent Leicestershire find' stands out in comparative isola- IEvans, Anc. Er. Imps., II4-u6, Fig. 120. 2L' Anthropologie, xxiv, 644, 649, Fig. 4. 3Proc. Preh. Soc. East Anglia. vii, 158, Fig. roa; Map reproduced in Fox Personality of Britain, Ed. 4 (1943), Pl. X (a). ' 4Proc. Preh. Soc., 1938, 94. 5There are so~e three ~r four axes of this type reported as having been found m Yorkshire, but the records are unsatisfactory. It is u_nderstood th~t a /l'eneral study of ~his axe type, embracing the Contmental material, 1s under preparat10n by Dr. Margaret Davies.

NOTES ON TWO BRONZE AGE DISCOVERIES 55 IN LEICESTERSHIRE tion in the N.E. Midlands. The Salters Way appears to have carried Bronze Age traffic linking on to the wellknown Jurassic Route, and the Foss Way itself was clearly the Roman successor of an important line of diffusion between the Avon, Soar and Trent basins, along which this Breton Axe may well have travelled from the South." With regard to tli.e arch.eology of the Leicester region generally, it may be said that the Jericho Lodge axe is an interesting addition to the small but important collection of Late Bronze Age metal types known from the area. Tliis axe, together with the even more exotic bronzes of Central European origin found in the Welby hoard, some six mi~es east along the Salters Way,6 give testimony of the increased trading activities which grew up across Britain in the period immediately before the introduction of an iron-working economy. The writer is indebted to Mrs. Margaret Scott, B.Sc., for the illustrations a. of the axe. ' -- -, 1/, Fig. 2. Bronze socketed axe from Jericho Lodge, Six Hills, Leics. ( ½ ). 6The Welby hoard is being published in a forthcoming number of The Archaeological Journal by the present writer.