. The Wedgwoods: being a life of Josiah Wedgwood; with notices of his works and their productions, memoirs of the Wedgwood and other families, and a history of the early potteries of Staffordshire. • These were the origin of our tumblers; the glasses then madeI being rounded at the bottom, so that they must be filled while held, and[could not be set down until emptied, without spilling. t This pot-work is the only one either of the Anglo-Saxon or Anglo-iNorman periods which has ever been discovered, and is therefore of greatlinterest and importance. A notice of the discovery will be found in t
. The Wedgwoods: being a life of Josiah Wedgwood; with notices of his works and their productions, memoirs of the Wedgwood and other families, and a history of the early potteries of Staffordshire. • These were the origin of our tumblers; the glasses then madeI being rounded at the bottom, so that they must be filled while held, and[could not be set down until emptied, without spilling. t This pot-work is the only one either of the Anglo-Saxon or Anglo-iNorman periods which has ever been discovered, and is therefore of greatlinterest and importance. A notice of the discovery will be found in theI Reliquary, vol. ii. p. 216. C 18 THE WEDGWOODS. nearly black; and one great peculiarity is, that many of thepitchers, or jngs, are covered with a green glaze. They are.
Size: 1496px × 1669px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, bookidwedgwoodsbei, bookyear1865