. The Intellectual observer. NO. II.—PEAKEISH AND ALEIIANNIC POTTERY. No. II., in which Figs. 4 and 5 are Alemannic vases from thecemetery of Selzen. It will be seen that they resemble exactly inform those East Anglican urns we have given in our plate, andthe same ornamentation is also found among our Anglo-Saxonpottery. These urns are described as being usually made ofthe clay of the neighbourhood, in most cases turned on a lathe,but many of them imperfectly baked. They are found in graveswhere the body had not undergone cremation, and were usedfor containing articles of a miscellaneous descr


. The Intellectual observer. NO. II.—PEAKEISH AND ALEIIANNIC POTTERY. No. II., in which Figs. 4 and 5 are Alemannic vases from thecemetery of Selzen. It will be seen that they resemble exactly inform those East Anglican urns we have given in our plate, andthe same ornamentation is also found among our Anglo-Saxonpottery. These urns are described as being usually made ofthe clay of the neighbourhood, in most cases turned on a lathe,but many of them imperfectly baked. They are found in graveswhere the body had not undergone cremation, and were usedfor containing articles of a miscellaneous description. In one * La Normandie Souterraine, ou Notices sur des Cimetieres Eomains et desCimetieres Francs explores en Normandie, par M. lAbbe Cochet. Second Paris, 1855.—Sepultures Gaidoises, Romaines, Franques, et Normandes,faisent state a La Normandie Souterraine par M. lAbbe Cochet. , 1857.— Le Tombeau de Childeric I lloi des Francs, par M. lAbbe Paris, 1859. Anglo-Saxon Pottery. 125


Size: 1609px × 1553px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, bookpublishe, booksubjectscience