Roman — Roman; 4th century
Bottle
This small ceramic bottle was found in 1946 on a building site in Bermondsey. It contained over 300 Roman coins, These were presumably the savings of somebody who buried them for safe keeping but who, for a reason we shall never know, did not return to recover them.
The coins were not of high value at the time - the equivalent of modern pennies put in a money box - and the container is an everyday bottle made to the south of London near Farnham, Surrey. Nevertheless they are interesting because many of them can be dated to the 380s and 390s CE. This is at the very end of the period during which Britain was part of the Roman empire. Coin hoards of this date are not common. Perhaps the bottle was left behind simply because, once Roman government had come to an end, coins no longer had much value and were less often used in everyday transactions.
The hoard is also important because we have very few Roman finds of any type from this part of Bermondsey. In Roman times the site was probably a small island of higher ground among mudflats and river channels, but we have no specific details about the type of habitation there.
- Category:
- Roman
- Object ID:
- 46.37/1
- Object name:
- bottle
- Object type:
- Artist/Maker:
- —
- Related people:
- Related events:
- Related places:
- Production date:
- Roman; 4th century
- Material:
ceramic, earthenware
- Measurements/duration:
- H 155 mm, DM 115 mm (overall), WT 750 g (overall), H 151 mm, DM 45 mm (rim), DM 125 mm (waist), DM 60 mm (base) (overall)
- Part of:
- —
- On display:
- —
- Record quality:
- 100%
- Part of this object:
- —
- Owner Status & Credit:
Permanent collection
- Copyright holder:
digital image © London Museum
- Image credit:
- —
- Creative commons usage:
- —
- License this image:
To license this image for commercial use, please contact the London Museum Picture Library.