Since I got my current job at a location very close to the foreshore, I imagined I would be able to lark on the daily. However, since my break is only either 30/40 mins, by the time I get there, usually there is just not enough time. But yesterday, I had the urge to lark so bad, that I just had to make it possible. And I did! However only for 10 minutes.
Mudlarking finds: Possibly Medieval, Tudor and Stuart pottery
None of it is particularly amazing, but I did get one nice piece of Surrey/ Hampshire borderware that I like. I love the yellow glaze with a subtle hint of green.
Mudlarking find: Surrey/Hampshire borderware
Mudlarking find diagram: a rough guide to the circumference of the complete vessel
I think I will use the technique of trying to recreate the vessel shape from now on. Its so interesting to think of the size and shape of the complete items. Sometimes I try to picture how much space all of the finds would take up if they were all whole. I'm pretty sure that they would not all fit inside the flat! Some of the shards are huge!
My guess for this shard is that it would have been a chamber-pot based on the rim shape and circumference. Below is an example of how it may have once looked:
Surrrey Hampshire border ware chamber-pot, 1551-1700- Museum of London
Ok so this has been on my hitlist ever since I found out it existed: Midlands Purple. I love it. It's plain and utilitarian, but it was made right near my hometown so I was desperate to find a shard for myself.
Mudlarking find: Midlands Purple shard
Mudlarking find: Inside view of large Midlands Purple shard
Mudlarking find: Outside view of large Midlands Purple shard
Mudlarking find: detail of inclusions in Midlands Purple shard
Mudlarking find: detail of inclusions in Midlands Purple shard
Mudlarking find: I know this one is a little blurry, but it gives a nice indication of how the rim was designed so that it could be more easily lifted
Mudlarking find: Another Midlands Purple shard with trace of luscious green glaze
In the Fourteenth and Fifteenth centuries technological advances meant pottery became increasingly higher fired. Also because of new cooking methods, the types of vessels produced changed, there was a new demand for pipkins, cups and lids, dripping dishes, and cisterns.
This Midlands Purple ware was produced in Chilvers Coton and Ticknall in Derbyshire. The ware has a characteristic purple hew, but also the colours can vary with tinges of grey, red, orange, brown and salmon pink.
The wares have a pimply texture which is created by the quartz sand in the clay, and could be unglazed or be dripped with black, brown and yellow-brown glazes. The workmanship is generally quite poor, and there is seldom any signs of decoration, but its still lovely in its own purpley way.
Mudlarking find: clay pipe bowl commemorating the battle of Culloden
I was
thrilled to find this little fellow. It's really exciting finding something that shows a figure. It really makes me wonder about their story, buried in the river for centuries. With this piece,
I have (with the help of a D. Higgins, thank you!) been able to identify the
find, and somewhat unravel its secrets. The figure is William Augustus, Duke of
Cumberland celebrating his victory at the Battle of Culloden.
Here is
D. Higgins description of how the full pipe would have looked:
“The bowl depicts a standing English figure
(Cumberland) with upheld sword and scroll on the left hand side and ‘I.VICTORY.GAIND’
above and a Scotsman in traditional dress with round shield and downturned
sword on the right hand side, with ‘I.BUT.DISTURB’ above. There is a Royal
Standard on the seam facing the smoker and vine scroll type leaves away from
the smoker’.
I feel
very grateful to have been given this information, and can only imagine how
impressive the complete pipe would have once looked.
Left: William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland, commander of UK Government army. Right: Charles Edward Stuart, leader of Jacobite army.
The pipe I found was made to mark the
victory at Culloden, which was the final confrontation of the 1745 Jacobite
rising- the last major battle fought on British soil. The battle took place on
16 April 1746, when the Jacobite forces of Charles Edward Stuart fought
loyalist troops known as ‘redcoats’ commanded by William Augustus, Duke of
Cumberland near Inverness. The Jacobites were decisively defeated and Charles
Stuart never again mounted any further attempts to challenge Hanoverian power
in Great Britain.
Charles Stuart’s, (affectionately known as ‘Bonnie Prince
Charlie’s’) Jacobite army mainly consisted of Catholics, whilst the British
Governments Hanoverian loyalist forces were mostly Protestants. The battle was
quick and bloody, finishing in less than one hour. Around 1200-1500 Jacobites
were killed or wounded, compared to only around 300 UK Government soldiers.
Left: Example of UK Government army soldiers uniform. Right: Example of the Highland units Jacobite soldier uniform.
The prince himself had invaded Britain to put his own father back on the
throne of Great Britain and the army had worked their way south to London. However,
by the time they had reached Derby it became very apparent that they
weren’t going to get the support they expected. And so, they began their
march north again, hoping to fight the British governments’ armies back on
their own soil in Scotland. By the time they had arrived back in Culloden in the morning of the 15th April, they stood there waiting for
the opposition to approach Inverness. Unbeknown to the Jacobites, that morning
was the Duke of Cumberland’s 25th birthday, and he had no intention
of fighting a battle. He remained in his camp at Nairn and issued brandy and
cheese to his men to celebrate. So it wasn’t until the morning of the 16th
April after the Jacobites had made an aborted night march against the
government camp that the battle itself began, and Charles's dreams of victory evaporated.
Ignoring the advice of his best commander,Lord
George Murray, Charles chose to fight on flat,
open, marshy ground where his forces would be exposed to superior government
firepower. Charles commanded his army from a position behind his lines, where
he could not see what was happening. Hoping Cumberland's army would attack
first, he had his men stand exposed to Hanoverian artillery. Seeing the error
in this, he quickly ordered an attack, but the messenger was killed before the
order could be delivered. The Jacobite attack, charging into the teeth of
musket fire andgrapeshot fired from the cannons, was uncoordinated and met with
little success.
The
Jacobites broke through the bayonets of the redcoats in one place, but they
were shot down by a second line of soldiers, and the survivors fled. Murray
managed to lead a group of Jacobites to Ruthven, intending to continue the
fight. However Charles, believing himself betrayed, had decided to abandon the
Jacobite cause.
At a time when the etiquette of
warfare was considered very important, Cumberland was able to dispense with it
by labelling the Highlanders inhuman savages. The brutish way in which
Cumberland went about dismantling Highland culture by disarming the clans,
banning the wearing of Highland dress, suppressing certain surnames and the use
of the Gaelic language amounted to an early example of ethnic cleansing. Cumberland
set about destroying the social nexus of the clan that was at the heart of
Highland society. After the battle, as a result of his ruthless treatment of
the rebels William Augustus was known as the ‘Butcher’.
After Culloden, Cumberland
emerged a powerful and opinion dividing character. He was despised by the
Highlanders and remains perhaps the most villainised historical figure of his
age, yet idolised in England and the Lowlands.
Due to his unpopularity in the Highlands, Cumberland was frequently satirized.
As for Charles's, his subsequent
flight has become the stuff of legend and is commemorated in the popular folk
song The Skye Boat Song and also the
old Irish songMo Ghile Mear.
Hiding in the moors of Scotland, he
traveled about, always barely ahead of the government forces. Though many
Highlanders saw Charles, and indeed aided him, none of them betrayed him for
the £30,000 rewardoffered.
Assisted by supporters such as the pilot Donald Macleod of Galtrigill, Captain
Felix O'Neill of theO'Neills of
the Fews dynasty andFlora
MacDonald, who helped him escape pursuers on theIsle of Skyeby taking him in a small boat
disguised as her Irish maid, "Betty Burke,” he evaded capture and left the
country aboard the French frigateL'Heureux,
arriving back in France in September.
Left: Flora Macdonald. Right: Charles Edward Stuart dressed as Betty Burke.
ThePrince's
Cairnmarks the traditional spot
on the shores ofLoch nan UamhinLochaberfrom which he made his final departure
from Scotland. With the Jacobite cause now lost, Stuart would spend the
remainder of his life — with one brief secret visit to London — in exile.
The 'Princes Cairn' today
Images: National portrait gallery, wikipedia, 1745association, clanmacfarlanegeneology.