64 Knccp Hill Camp. 



Pieces of a coarse brick or concrete, rough on one side, smooth 

 and polished on the other. Yery similar pieces were found 

 in the Late Celtic rubbish heap at Oare ( Wilts Arch Mag.^ 



vol. xxxvi., p. 125). Eemains of floorin 



? 



Fifteen roundels of Eomano-British or Late Celtic pottery. All 



about one inch in diameter. 

 A " roundel," or counter, made of grey ware from the base of a 



vessel with low circular pedestal. The counter (?) is 2in. square. 

 A reel-shaped spindle whorl of grey pottery, made out of the 



base of a small vessel with circular foot or pedestal : diameter,. 



IJin. (Fig. 5). 

 Half of another spindle whorl of grey pottery. 

 Canine tooth, polished and with a hole bored through it for 



suspension. 

 Small pebble that had been used for polishing or burnishing. 

 Oyster shells. Iron slag. Pieces of sawn antlers of the red 



deer. 

 Piece of chalk, roughly shaped and hollowed. Possibly a lamp. 



2fin. X 2in. x IJin. (Fig. 16). 

 Numerous fragments of seventeenth century glazed pottery ; 



green, yellow, and marbled, representing the ordinary domestic 



pottery of the period. 

 One piece of brown speckled ware of imported German stoneware^ 



of late seventeenth or early eighteenth century manufacture. 

 A seventeenth century \d. token, in very fair condition : — 



GEACE . NAISH . OF . THE . = a Castle 



DEVIZES . 1652 = three cloves 

 (No. 71. Williamson.) 



A number of broken stems and bowls of clay tobacco pipes. 

 Three of the bowls are stamped with the name of Jeffrey 

 Hunt, a known maker of tobacco pipes in the seventeenth 

 century. He was admitted a freeman of the City of Bristol 

 in 1651. 



Four stems are stamped Thos. Hunt. Thomas Hunt, a relation 

 of the above Jeffrey Hunt, was also a known maker, and was 

 admitted a freeman of the City of Bristol at the same date. 



