Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-c47g7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-19T19:07:31.303Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

An Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Westbere, Kent

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 January 2012

Extract

The purpose of this paper is to record as far as is now possible the relics from a small but interesting Saxon cemetery which was found in 1931 during the working of a gravel pit in the parish of Westbere, some 3½ miles north-east of Canterbury.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1946

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

page 11 note 1 The cemetery is mentioned in Kendrick and Hawkes, Arch, in England and Wales, 1914–1931 (1932), p. 306; Arch. Cant, xlv (1933), xliii; Ant. Journ. xiii (1933), 237; Antiquity, vii (1933), 451; and dealt with rather more fully by Leeds, Early Anglo-Saxon Art and Archaeology (1936), pp. 43–4; and by Hodgkin, History of the Anglo-Saxons (2nd ed. 1939), 1, 92, and Pl. 19.

page 12 note 1 1-in. map War ed. Sheet 117A, 640796. 6-in. map, Kent, Sheet XXXVI, SW. The site is marked on the current edition of the 25-in. plan. War-time service requirements and enemy action have altered the configuration of the pit, which is now over-grown and abandoned.

page 12 note 2 Wallenberg, , Place-Names of Kent (Uppsala, 1934), p. 515Google Scholar. By Hasted's time the name had become Haseden (Hasted, History of Kent, 8vo ed. ix (1800), 69).

page 12 note 3 A seventh-century barrow at Stodmarsh, a sixth-century burial at Hoath (V.C.H. Kent, 1 (1908), 357, 385) and a burial with a silver sword pommel at Grove Ferry (P.S.A.L. xv, 178) are the chief evidence.

page 13 note 1 At Oaklands, V.C.H. Kent, iii (1932), 174.

page 14 note 1 It should be noted that Dr. Ince used different reference numbers in his correspondence with Mr. Leeds.

page 17 note 1 It is pertinent to remark here that not all claw-beakers are of seventh-century date as Åberg suggested: those with flared rims belong to the close of the fifth and to the sixth century. See Leeds, Early Anglo-Saxon Art and Archaeology (1936), pp. 50 and 76.

page 18 note 1 G. Behrens, Germania, Jahr xiii, 4 (1929), p. 195. For this reference I am indebted to Mr. D. B. Harden, F.S.A.

page 20 note 1 A somewhat similar pot without a neck from Gilton, Ash, is illustrated in Inventorium Sepulchrale, p. xlvii, fig. 3.