42 
ROMAN POTTERY FOUND IN BRITAIN. 
plates VI., 8, VIII., 5, as occurring somewhere in the early 
Flavian period, A.D. 69—76. 
15. Calyx-shaped Cup, with expanded square-edged lip ; an 
expansion below the middle; and low carefully turned 
foot-ring. 
Hard light brown-red paste. 
The form resembles that of two cups found in a tile-built 
grave of about the II. Century at Remagen, recorded in Bonn. 
Jahvb ., no (1903), grave No. 41. 
16. Shallow round-sided Bowl, with bead lip, and obliquely 
expanded, moulded foot-ring. 
The form lies between those of the sigillata bowls, forms 31 and 37. 
Fine hard light brownish-red past, surface polished. 
The flat stand-ring is a constant feature of the sigillata- 
imitating Belgic plates, though examples on which it is wanting 
occur. 
17. Shallow Bowl, with slightly incurved sides. 
A bead moulding on the inside lip ; an off-set or plain moulding, two con¬ 
centric rings, and roulette hatched wreath on the inside of the slightly domed 
base. 
Hard, slightly sandy paste, fumed to a nearly black colour ; polished inside, 
but retaining the ribs of turning on the outside. 
The roulette-hatched wreath is imitated from the Arretine 
sigillita plate of the Augustan period-, Loeschcke, Westfalen. 
Mitteil, Y., p. 262, plate XIY., 72b. 
Cf. Koenen, p, 73, IX., 23, 24, Earty Empire. 
18. Dish or Platter, with slightly incurved sides. 
A groove round the inside base, and low-foot ring. 
Coarse paste containing quartz grains ; bright red, polished outside, brown 
at the core. 
19. Rim Fragment of large Dish or Platter, of similar 
form, but without foot ring. 
White paste, coated with dull light red slip. 
