A Belgic Burial-Group at Sholden, near Deal; and a Belgic Tazza from Mill Hill, Upper Deal
A BELGIC BURIAL-GROUP AT SHOLDEN, NEAR DEAL; AND
A BELGIC TAZZA FROM l\:fILL HILL, UPPER DEAL
By J. D. OGILVIE, F.S.A., and G. C. DUNNING, F.S.A.
BELGIO BUfilA.L-GROUP AT SHOLDEN
A burial of the Belgic period as found in May 1962, about 2 ft.
below the surface during the excavation of a sewer trench at Sholdeu,
nea.r Deal. The trench ran alongside the footpath from Sholden Street
to Court Lodge Farm; the position of the burial was ll0 yards east of
Sholden Street.1 The group consisted of two pottery vessels; the larger
was recovered intact, and the smaller was reconstructed from fragments.
· The cremation had already been removed by the workmen before the
pots were handed over. With the group were two bronze brooches,
one nearly complete and the other fragmentary. The finds have been
presented by the landowners, Messrs. V. C. and C. J. Mount, to Deal
Castle Museum, where they are now exhibited.
POTTERY
Fig. I. Small carinated bowl of grey ware with burnished greyishbrown
slip. The side is slightly concave, with single and double
cordons.
Fig. 2. Butt-beaker of grey sandy ware with matt grey surface.
Below the rounded and slightly thickened rim is an anglecordon
at the junction with the side. The surface is plain,
divided into zones by two single and one double cordon.
BROOCHES
Fig. 3. La Tene ID bronze brooch with slightly curved bow, D-shaped
in section, and right-angled bend at the head. The side-wings
protecting the spring are lightly ribbed above the turns of
the spring. Originally the spring had eight turns, with external
chord held by a medium-sized hook. One side of the spring
and the pin are missing. The catchplate would be triangular
when complete, and may have been solid or pierced by ornamental
openings.
Fig. 4. Damaged head-end and part of bow of bronze brooch, of the
same type as Fig. 3.
1 6-iri. O.S. Kent, sheet LVllI, N.E. National Grid Reference TR36095260.
221
A BELGIC BURIAL-GROUP AT SHOLDEN
F10. l. Ca.rinated bowl (¼).
\
'-1!1,=,,
I I
I I
1 •
1'
I I
I I
d
I 1 I 1
11
11
11
I I II
11
II
--- I:,,I ! llv 11
I
FIG. 3. Bronze broooh of 'Colchester' type m-
FIG, 2. Butt-beaker (¼),
FIG. 4. Dama.god bronze brooch (t).
Fros. 1-4. Pottery and brooches from from burial-group at Sholden.
Sholden, a new mte for finds of the Belgic period, is only I mile
north of Mill Hill, Upper Deal, well known for the two Belgic gravegroups
mth brooches, 2 and for several other finds of funerary pottery
2 J.P. Busbe-Fox, Swarling (Sooiety of Antiquaries, Research Report No. V,
1925), 18-19, pla. IV and XIII. Both groups are described and illustrated by
drawings in Dr. Ann BirchaJI's paper, quoted below, 249 and 304-5, Figs. 11-12.
222
A BELGIC BURIAL-GROUP .AT $HOLDEN
and brooches lacking details of association. All the material from Mill
Hill, formerly in the Town Hall at Deal, is now also in Deal Castle
Museum.
The butt-beaker places the Sholden burial in Dr. Ann Birchall's
third or 'Late' Belgic group of the Aylesford-Swarling sequence,
beginning about 10 D.O. and lasting until the Roman period.3 The
carinated bowl (Dr. Birchall's Type IVb) is infrequent in Kent, but
is represented in the urn.field at Cheriton, near Folkestone,4 as well as at
Aylesford.
The brooches from Sholden belong to the 'Colchester' type III
of the early first century A.n.5 This type is frequent on Belgic sites
over a wide area of Britain, from Kent in the east to Gloucestershire
in the west,6 and from Dorset7 in the south as far north as Lincolnshire.8
At Upper Deal the type is represented by one example with strongly
curved bow and catchplate pierced by an elaborate step-pattern;0
the associations of this brooch are not known, but in date it is the latest
of the long series of Belgio brooches from Upper Deal. Elsewhere in
Kent brooches of 'Colchester' type were found in two burials in the
cemetery at Cheriton; one in association with a squat pedestal-urn
(Type la) and a butt-beaker (Type VI), and the other associated with
a cordoned tazza (Type X).10 The tazza is an interesting addition to
the Belgic pottery types of Kent, since it is really a large version of
.the local form of Type IVb with the addition of a hollow pedestal.
Another tazza, from Mill Hill, Upper Deal, is described below. The last
brooch of 'Colchester' type is from the urnfield at Stone, near Dartford,
but its associations are unknown.11 Both Cheriton and Stone are,
however, 'Late' Belgic cemeteries, and both continued to be used
into the early Roman period.
The very wide occurrence of the brooches of 'Colchester' type in
3 Ann Birchall, 'The Aylesford-Swa.rling Cultlll'e: The Problem of Belgae
reconsidered', Proc. Prehist. Soc., xxxi (1965), 241-367. See also Ann Birchall,
'The Belgic Problem: Aylesford revisited,' British Museum Quarterly, xxviii
(1964), 21-29.
' Arch. Oant., 1xii (1949), 32, Fig. 3, 28 a.nd 30.
5 C. F. C. Hawkes and M. R. Hull, Oamulodunum (Society of Antiquaries,
Research Report No. XIV, 1947), 309, pls. LXXXIX-XC, 6-24.
8 Elsie l\:t. Clifford, Bagernum: A Belgic Oppi