23-09-2017, 11:02 | #1 |
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How Do I Identify Pottery?
Farmers son here. Did a bit of ploughing earlier on in the year and came across a few different bit of pottery while I was picking stones. Most of it is probably from the last hundred years but some bits look interesting, one piece is very thick too which is a little different. Is there an online resource that would help me identify how old they are?
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23-09-2017, 12:17 | #2 | |
Join Date: Jul 2014
Posts: 2,100
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Quote:
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24-09-2017, 12:48 | #3 |
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Here are pictures of two different pieces.
Picture 1&2 : It's flat with no curve to it; quite a thick piece; there's "glazing" on the top of it aswell so it must be from the top of whatever it's from; two raised parallel sections on it; appears to be 3 distinct "interior sections" Pictures 3&4 : Curved piece; dull white colour; again fairly thick; appears to be just one material, in one layer if you know what I mean |
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24-09-2017, 14:23 | #5 |
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 4,988
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Guessing - probably Victorian era baked clay land drains. Was that land formerly part of a big estate?
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26-09-2017, 15:59 | #7 |
Join Date: Jul 2014
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The first 2 pics look like some kind of tile, either a roof or a floor. Probably nineteenth century.
The white fragment looks like it's from some kind off vessel, my first impression is that it is from a chamber pot. The sherd is quite chunky, and chamber pots were often made this way so that they wouldn't break if dropped (eww, yucky!). It could also be from a large storage jar. Again, it's probably nineteenth century. The last sherd looks like its from a black ware vessel, which was the poor mans domestic pottery in the eighteenth & nineteenth century in Ireland. |
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