Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-hfldf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-15T16:50:51.366Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Deverel-Rimbury Settlement on Thorny Down, Winterbourne Gunner, S. Wilts

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 May 2014

Extract

A preliminary report on the discovery and partial excavation during 1936 of the Late Bronze Age farmstead or settlement site on Thorny Down, Winterbourne Gunner, in South Wiltshire has already been published. Sufficient material was there recorded to prove beyond question the approximate date of the site. This was assigned to phase B of the Late Bronze Age (c. 750 B.C.), the culture being that of the Deverel–Rimbury immigrants which for convenience was described as the Cranborne Chase culture, since it was so closely connected with the sites excavated by Pitt Rivers. Further, it was emphasized that this more westerly culture was distinguishable from such sites of similar date in Sussex as New Barn Down and Plumpton Plain in that the highly ornamented globular vessel appeared to be more characteristic of the culture than are the widely diffused barrel- and bucket-shaped vessels. Such local differentiation of ceramic forms during the Late Bronze Age is a well known feature of the period, and Mr C. F. C. Hawkes in his analysis of the Plumpton Plain pottery has called attention to the fact that the Late Bronze Age immigration was not a single event, but a multiple process, in which the Deverel-Rimbury family of urns need be no more than a component.

The available evidence which is rapidly accumulating clearly points to the introduction at this period of a developed and highly organized agricultural system, one feature of which was the small enclosure or compound, a type of earthwork constructed as required either for human or for animal occupation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1941

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 114 note 1 Wilts. Arch. Mag., 1937, XLVII, 640Google Scholar.

page 114 note 2 Sussex Arch. Coll., 1934, LXXV, 137Google Scholar.

page 114 note 3 Proc. Prehist. Soc., 1935, I, 16Google Scholar.

page 114 note 4 Ibid., 45.

page 114 note 5 Excavations, IV, 1–57, and 185 ffGoogle Scholar.

page 114 note 6 Wilts. Arch. Mag., 1936, XLVII, 466Google Scholar.

page 115 note 1 Proc. Hants. Field Club, 1939, XIV, 137–51Google Scholar.

page 119 note 1 Wilts. Arch. Mag., 1937, XLVII, 644Google Scholar.

page 126 note 1 For distribution maps of the two types see MrsPiggott, C. M., Proc. Prehist. Soc., 1938, IV, 185Google Scholar.

page 126 note 2 Abercromby, , Bronze Age Pottery IIGoogle Scholar, figs. 389d, 393, 396b and 404.

page 128 note 1 Arch. J., 1880, XXXVII, 107Google Scholar; Evans', Bronze, 1881, fig. 481Google Scholar.

page 128 note 2 Proc. Som. Arch. Soc., 1854, V, 91Google Scholar; Evans', Bronze, 1881, 385Google Scholar.

page 128 note 3 Archaeologia, LXI, pt. 2, 439 ff., 458–60Google Scholar.

page 128 note 4 B.M. Bronze Age Guide, 1920, figs. 17–18 (cf. fig. 16).

page 128 note 5 Archaeologia, LXXXIII, 187 ffGoogle Scholar.

page 129 note 1 Evans, , Ancient Bronze Implements, 321–2, fig. 394Google Scholar; narrow variant fig. 395.

page 129 note 2 Archaeologia, LXI, pt. 2, 459Google Scholar.

page 129 note 3 Ibid., LXXXIII, 191.

page 129 note 4 Arch. J., XCI, 319Google Scholar.

page 129 note 5 Ancient Bronze Implements, 321, 323 (figs. 394, 396–7).

page 130 note 1 Excavations in Cranborne Chase, IV, 2022, pl. 238, 1Google Scholar.

page 130 note 2 Ibid., 18, pl. 237 (C in section).

page 130 note 3 Archaeologia, XLIII, 447Google Scholar, with fig. 153 (cf. ibid., LXI, 136, and Evans, , Ancient Bronze Implements, 322)Google Scholar.

page 130 note 4 Wilts. Arch. Mag., XXI, 262Google Scholar; XXXVII, 94 (fig.); XXXVIII, 165.

page 130 note 5 Proc. Prehist. Soc., 1938, IV, 176Google Scholar.

page 130 note 6 British Museum; there is every reason to suppose that the second belongs to the hoard like the first, which is that figured in the original publication, Archaeologia, 1809, XVI, 348, pl. L, no. 5Google Scholar.

page 130 note 7 Proc. Prehist. Soc., 1939, V, 180, 190Google Scholar.

page 130 note 8 V.C.H. Oxfordshire, 1939, I, 246–7, pl. VIIIGoogle Scholar; I, 265; Proc. Soc. Antiq., XXVII, 147Google Scholar, fig. In the former it is placed in the Middle Bronze Age section, but only on account of the typological origin of palstave and looped spearhead types in that period; its actual date is correctly given as Late Bronze Age.

page 131 note 1 Sussex Arch. Coll., 1934, LXXV, 142Google Scholar.

page 131 note 2 Wilts. Arch. Mag., 1937, XLVII, 654Google Scholar.

page 131 note 3 Ant. J., 1936, XV, 47Google Scholar.

page 132 note 1 Wilts. Arch. Mag., 1936, XLVII, 479Google Scholar.

page 132 note 2 Ant. J., 1937, XVII, 457Google Scholar.

page 132 note 3 Antiquity, 1937, XI, 135Google Scholar.

page 133 note 1 Ant. J., 1939, XIX, 81Google Scholar.

page 133 note 2 Suss. Arch. Coll., LXXII, 208Google Scholar.

page 133 note 3 Ant. J., 1928, VIII, 331Google Scholar.

page 133 note 4 Proc. Prehist. Soc., 1935, 1, 32Google Scholar.