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caitlinrgreen's profile
Dr Caitlin Green
Dr Caitlin Green
Dr Caitlin Green
@caitlinrgreen

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Dr Caitlin Green

@caitlinrgreen

History, archaeology, place-names & early lit. Main research on post-Roman Britain & Anglo-Saxon England; also long-distance trade, migration & contact.

Cornwall/Lincolnshire
caitlingreen.org
Joined August 2014

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    1. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Feb 7

      For interest, a topographic map of the area around St Ives Bay, showing the two significant rivers emptying into the bay, both of which have important sites producing 5th-/6th-century eastern Mediterranean imports on them: http://en-gb.topographic-map.com/places/Hayle-3844143/ …pic.twitter.com/kI5W5mZNHA

      2 replies 13 retweets 26 likes
      Show this thread
    2. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Feb 9

      Interestingly, the only Roman villa currently known from Cornwall, at Magor Farm nr Camborne (excavated 1931–2), was located on the northern river valley emptying into St Ives Bay… http://www.pastscape.org.uk/hob.aspx?hob_id=426186 …pic.twitter.com/jmEOBcpQI8

      1 reply 10 retweets 35 likes
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    3. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Feb 9

      Fragments of a painted plaster wall and a tessellated pavement found at the 2nd–4thC Roman villa at Magor Farm, Cornwall; now in @Cornwall_Museum.pic.twitter.com/nJ6YAhX1lI

      1 reply 11 retweets 39 likes
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    4. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Feb 9

      The Hayle estuary also has notable Roman finds, including this copper bowl containing a hoard of Roman coins, found at Hayle, Cornwall, in 1825 by workman building the causeway.pic.twitter.com/WKKJ3HgUan

      2 replies 20 retweets 61 likes
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    5. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Feb 10

      Perhaps of particular interest given the 5th-/6th-century eastern Mediterranean finds from St Ives Bay are a number of 4th-century Roman coins from eastern mints also found at Hayle, e.g. https://finds.org.uk/database/artefacts/record/id/101765 …pic.twitter.com/LuR8CH5MCw

      4 replies 16 retweets 49 likes
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    6. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Feb 11

      Looking across the entrance to the Hayle Estuary from roughly the position of the buried early medieval chapel at Lelant.pic.twitter.com/qXmHqQta8C

      1 reply 8 retweets 51 likes
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    7. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Feb 11

      A 5th-century memorial stone from Hayle found next to a cist grave under a mound in 1843: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/cisp/database/stone/hayle_1.html …pic.twitter.com/ZBUeQFYyUS

      2 replies 11 retweets 45 likes
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    8. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Feb 13

      An interesting blog on the conservation work being undertaken by @HayleHeritage on the 5th-century Cunaide Stone from Hayle, Cornwall: http://www.hayleheritagecentre.org.uk/cunaide-undercover/ … (h/t @StephenCWLL)pic.twitter.com/6TZ2NpJ8nU

      2 replies 8 retweets 35 likes
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    9. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Feb 23

      Fragments of spindle whorls made out of African Red Slip Ware found at Tintagel, Cornwall; now in @Cornwall_Museum.pic.twitter.com/vkwWjSSTca

      2 replies 12 retweets 34 likes
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    10. NancyWilliamsPainter‏ @painter_nancy Feb 23
      Replying to @caitlinrgreen @Cornwall_Museum

      Seem unlikely trade items, utilitarian and could be duplicated in local material, more suggestive of movement of people than of goods?

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Feb 23
      Replying to @painter_nancy @Cornwall_Museum

      They were made in Cornwall out of broken ARSW, I believe :)

      2:31 AM - 23 Feb 2018
      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        1. New conversation
        2. NancyWilliamsPainter‏ @painter_nancy Feb 23
          Replying to @caitlinrgreen @Cornwall_Museum

          Sill seems odd. Broken slip ware would be very difficult material to work, especially for something that would need the balance of a spindle whorl.

          1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        3. NancyWilliamsPainter‏ @painter_nancy Feb 23
          Replying to @painter_nancy @caitlinrgreen @Cornwall_Museum

          Spoke to my husband, who’s a potter. Working broken pieces of pottery would be prohibitively difficult; you could make the center hole maybe one out of twenty times. No one would do it since there were local materials at hand.

          1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        4. NancyWilliamsPainter‏ @painter_nancy Feb 23
          Replying to @painter_nancy @caitlinrgreen @Cornwall_Museum

          Two possibilities; 1. African women in Cornwall who would have spun daily and brought their spindles

          1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        5. NancyWilliamsPainter‏ @painter_nancy Feb 23
          Replying to @painter_nancy @caitlinrgreen @Cornwall_Museum

          2. My husband has a friend who makes similar objects as weights used in jars of pickled foods. She makes and sells the jars and teaches pickling techniques. So these may have come in jars of some food that was the actual trade good

          1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        6. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Feb 23
          Replying to @painter_nancy @Cornwall_Museum

          A really interesting idea, thanks! :) Fwiw, we do have recycled pot whorls from other sites e.g. recycled Roman samian ware ones from Dinas Powys & here: https://finds.org.uk/database/artefacts/record/id/652987 …

          1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        7. NancyWilliamsPainter‏ @painter_nancy Feb 23
          Replying to @caitlinrgreen @Cornwall_Museum

          Was it coil worked pottery and the bottom somehow broke off fairly cleanly? I’m sceptical of these as well; my husband said if you tried drilling the hole maybe one out of twenty would work and how would you shape it?

          1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
        8. NancyWilliamsPainter‏ @painter_nancy Feb 23
          Replying to @painter_nancy @caitlinrgreen @Cornwall_Museum

          We’ve all broken crockery, imagine trying to fashion something out of the shards. It’s too brittle

          1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        9. NancyWilliamsPainter‏ @painter_nancy Feb 23
          Replying to @painter_nancy @caitlinrgreen @Cornwall_Museum

          Also the center hole ( and so any center dowel ) is much too big; I’ve used a drop spindle, it would be very awkward to work with and would limit the amount of yarn you could wind before unwinding

          1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
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