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Excavations at Copse Farm, Oving, West Sussex

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 February 2014

Owen Bedwin
Affiliation:
Archaeology Section, Planning Department, Essex County Council, Globe House, New Street, Chelmsford
Robin Holgate
Affiliation:
Field Archaeology Unit, Institute of Archaeology, 31–34, Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PY

Abstract

Two farmsteads, one of late Iron Age (second-first centuries BC) date and the other dating to the early Romano-British period (first-second centuries AD), were excavated at Copse Farm, Oving. The site is situated within the Chichester dykes on the Sussex/Hampshire Coastal Plain. The Iron Age farmstead produced pottery spanning ‘saucepan’ and ‘Aylesford-Swarling’ traditions, a transition in ceramic production which is poorly understood in Sussex. Information on the agricultural economy and small-scale industries (principally metalworking) practised at this site give an insight into the way the Coastal Plain was settled and exploited at the end of the first millennium BC.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1985

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References

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