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62 Pas-de-Calais :
Journal of Roman Pottery
Studies
Vol 3, 1990 page 124
674 Tuffreau-Libre, M & Jacques,
A, ‘La céramique gallo-romaine du ler siècle dans le sud de
l’Atrébatie’, Gallia 43, fasc. 1, 1985, 127-145.
exc,syn/rur,vil,mjc/lst/typ
blg/tng/trb/btb/crb/grf/grc/lcg/buf
A detailed paper on the 1st century pottery from a number of
sites at and in the region surrounding Arras. The range of wares
has many similarities with that published in Camulodunum, although
there are also obviously local wares, such the North Gaulish
necked jars with burnished rings around the neck. The paper
includes useful comparative discussion on the types of pottery
found contemporaneously in cemeteries, villas and in the town.
Journal of Roman Pottery
Studies
Vol 5, 1992 page 147
+1196 Delesfre, X,
'Arras (Nemetacum, Atrebates) Baudimont', Gallia Informations,
1989.2, 162-3.
exc/twn/3rd-4th
obj
Summary of an excavation in a quarter of the Roman town. It
includes a picture (fig. 12) of an ithyphallic monkey in what
appears to be a dark fabric which is described only as "en
terre cuite".
Journal of Roman Pottery
Studies
Vol 5, 1992 page 155
*1244 Tuffreau-Libre,
M, 'La céramique gallo-romaine de Baralle', in Hosdez, C and
Jacques, A 1989, La nécropole à incinérations
deBaralle (Pas-de-Calais), Nord-Ouest Arch6ol 2, 205-223.
exc,syn/cem/Claudian-Trajanic/usf sts/mro/mca/buf/osd/wht/rsw/grf/tng/trb/ppr/crb/rst/stv
The 100 or so cremations are catalogued earlier in the report
(25-179). Here Tuffreau-Libre discusses (amongst other things)
the associations between the fine wares, their date-ranges, sets
out a type series, discovers the associations between
vessel-types and makes comparisons with other cemetery and
occupation-sites (cf JRPS 3, entry no. 674).
Tuffreau-Libre describes the changes in the grave-assemblages
over time and makes comparisons between Baralle and two earlier
cemeteries, Noyelles-Godault and Vimy. She ends by assessing the
(high) value of coarse pottery dating-evidence in cemeteries and
drawing attention to significant changes in the last quarter of
the first century, when numbers of pots in graves decreased and
a new repertoire of forms is found.
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