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- The Pottery Found at Silchester
The Pottery Found at Silchester
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Excerpt from The Pottery Found at Silchester: A Descriptive Account of the Pottery Recovered During the Excavations on the Site of the Romano-British City of Calleva Atrebatum at Silchester, and Deposited in the Reading Museum
The principal aim of the excavations carried out by the Society of Antiquaries on the site of the Romano-British city at Silchester during the years 1800 1909 was the recovery of the ground-plan of the city, and proof of the successful completion of this purpose is afforded by the reports, plans, and illustrations which have appeared in bchoeologia. These reports do not include any special account of the pottery, coins, metal, hone, glass, stone and other portable objects, which have been deposited by their noble owner, His Grace the Duke of Wellington, K. G., in the Municipal. Museum at Reading, and form a well known and important collection for students of Roman antiquities. Such accounts were held over to be dealt with section by section, and when invited some time ago to prepare a descriptive account of the pottery 1 at once took the work in hand. On the completion of the work the manuscript and drawings were submitted to the Museum and Art Gallery Committee, who recommended them to the Council for publication, and to the Corporation of Reading we are indebted for their issue in present form.
Special thanks are due to Mr. T. W. Colyer, the Superintendent of the Museum, for constant co-operation, and to Mr. Mill Stephenson, F.S.A., one of the Honorary Curators of the Silchester Department, for much valuable aid in the revision ot proofs, and verification of references.
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