The Bronze Age mug from South Willingham, Lincolnshire, was found in a sandpit after heavy rain in the 1960s along with this beaker.pic.twitter.com/o3Dt8xPJMO
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The Bronze Age mug from South Willingham, Lincolnshire, was found in a sandpit after heavy rain in the 1960s along with this beaker.pic.twitter.com/o3Dt8xPJMO
Another Bronze Age handled beaker, found at Denton, Lincolnshire.pic.twitter.com/zq4kIyS2aQ
An early Bronze Age handled cup from a barrow on Treligga Common, St Teath, Cornwall, in 1941; it contained traces of beeswax and sugar, suggesting that it contained mead.pic.twitter.com/45gr2oVi55
The Bronze Age Rillaton gold cup, c.1700 BC, found in 1837 in a stone cist beneath a barrow at Rillaton, Cornwall: https://www.royalcollection.org.uk/collection/69742/the-rillaton-cup …pic.twitter.com/7jBKAyL95G
The Bronze Age Hove amber cup, c.1250 BC, East Sussex: http://museumcatalogues.getty.edu/amber/intro/8/ & https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hove_amber_cup …pic.twitter.com/tBJJgIoOB1
A 1st-century BC to 1st-century AD Iron Age/Romano-British yew tankard with copper alloy fittings; found in a tin-stream at Pentewan, Cornwall, in around 1851.pic.twitter.com/OQSuMTFBqU
Love it!
One of my favourites! :D
Made of clay and it’s survived 3,500-4,000 years! Simply extraordinary.
Start of the Bronze Age associated with the arrival of the "lighter-skinned, blue-eyed migrants originating in the steppes of Ukraine and Russia"?https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/ancient-britons-overrun-by-folk-from-the-steppes-5dg3dwtgh …
make a modern version with a clear glaze,I’d buy it!
Wow, how cool is that
Remarkable. Handle suggests hot beverages?
Or for ladling?
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