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Victoria County History of Kent Vol. 3  1932 - Romano-British Kent - Topographical Index - Page 165

PUDDING PAN ROCK: POTTERS’ STAMPS

NOTE.—The renderings of the potter’s stamps in the main column of the above table are not to be considered exact facsimiles, but adherence to the peculiarities of the original lettering has been made sufficiently close for all distinctions of detail to be appreciated. All the potters here represented are known to have been at work in the late Antonine period, and all are attested as established at Lezoux save that Caletus and Paullus are believed to have worked also at Lubié, Mainacnus and Martinus at Lubié exclusively, and Cintusmus at St. Bonnet. Both Lubié and St. Bonnet are near Lezoux in Central Gaul, and if the attribution to them of these potters is correct activity at both must have lasted after the terminal dates of about i6o and about 130 that have been assigned to them respectively; e.g. by F. Oswald, Index of Potter’s Stamps on Terra Sigillata, 1931, p. xix; cf. dates s.v. Caletus, Cintusmus, Mainacnus, Martinus and Paullus.

Fig. 33.—PUDDING PAN ROCK: POTTERS’ STAMPS

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