Rights Holder: Kevin Leahy
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Unique ID: FAKL-A00100
Object type certainty: Certain
Workflow
status: Published
Medieval or post Medieval lead spindle whorl. Biconical, but with a very flat form, both faces decorated with a raised cross motif with three pellets in each arm of the cross. Diameter 36.1mm, Hole diameter 10.8mm, Height 9.5, Mass 46.10g.
The dating of these whorls is open to some doubt. The best dated example was found in a drain at the Austin Friars site in Leicester, a context which contained large quantities of late/post Medieval pottery (Mellor and Pearce, 1981, Fig. 51, No. 71, 39-41) suggestive of a date range of 1450-1550. This whorl still retained its oak spindle, reducing the possibility of it being residual from an earlier context. A biconical lead whorl was found also found in a late (sixteenth to twentieth century) context at Wharram Percy, Yorkshire (Hurst, 1978, Fig. 59, 3, 29) but there, residuality cannot be ruled out. The statement in the 1958 British Museum Guide to Antiquities of Roman (p.48, Fig. 23, 4) that "biconical whorls with line and dot relief ornament are fairly common on Romano-British sites" must be viewed with some circumspection and it seems likely that these whorls came into use at a fairly late date.
Subsequent action after recording: Returned to finder
Broad period: MEDIEVAL
Subperiod from: Late
Period from: MEDIEVAL
Subperiod to: Early
Period to: POST MEDIEVAL
Date from: Circa AD 1450
Date to: Circa AD 1550
Quantity: 1
Height: 10.8 mm
Weight: 46.1 g
Diameter: 36.1 mm
This information is restricted for your access level.
Other reference: ELL 353
Primary material: Lead
Manufacture method: Cast
Completeness: Complete
Grid reference source: From a paper map
Unmasked grid reference accurate to a 100 metre square.
Author | Publication Year | Title | Publication Place | Publisher | Pages | Reference | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hurst, J.G. | 1979 | Wharram; A Study of Settlement on the Yorkshire Wolds | London | Society for Medieval Archaeology | Fig. 59, 3 | ||
Mellor, J. and Pearce, T. | 1981 | The Austin Friars, Leicester | London | Council for British Archaeology | 39-41, Fig. 51 | 71 |