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The Roman Pottery of Kent
by Dr Richard J. Pollard  -  Chapter 2  page 28
Doctoral thesis completed in 1982, published 1988


Fig. 11. Alice Holt grey sandy and buff (‘Portchester "D") wares: numbers of types.

other wares originating in Kent were also produced in a dispersed manner, without the influence of a single market centre, the Canterbury industry being the only certain exception (see Chapter 6).
   The interpretations of the distribution maps compiled by the present author, and presented herewith, are thus based 

upon a subjective, but cautious, visual analysis, checked  where possible against quantified data providing a greater clarity to the situations plotted. This approach at least has the merit of not over-stretching the data which, as has been stated above, have been collected from sites diverse in their nature.

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