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Norfolk dig uncovers Anglo-Saxon oven | Norfolk dig uncovers Anglo-Saxon oven |
(1 day later) | |
A structure uncovered by archaeologists in Norfolk has been confirmed as a 1,300-year-old "rare, multifunctional oven". | A structure uncovered by archaeologists in Norfolk has been confirmed as a 1,300-year-old "rare, multifunctional oven". |
The Anglo-Saxon oven was found during an annual dig in Sedgeford, near Hunstanton. | The Anglo-Saxon oven was found during an annual dig in Sedgeford, near Hunstanton. |
Supervisor Dr John Jolleys said it would have been used to bake bread, malt barley and dry grain. | Supervisor Dr John Jolleys said it would have been used to bake bread, malt barley and dry grain. |
A second oven and a Saxon pot have also been discovered. | A second oven and a Saxon pot have also been discovered. |
The volunteers initially thought the oven dated back to the Roman times, but the discovery of part of the Ipswich ware pot dated the oven to between AD650 and 850. | |
'Very significant' | 'Very significant' |
"We've worked out how it works," said Dr Jolleys. | "We've worked out how it works," said Dr Jolleys. |
"It's almost certainly a rare, multifunctional oven, with a shelf like a pizza oven for bread, and you could have finished off the malting process for barley and dried grain." | "It's almost certainly a rare, multifunctional oven, with a shelf like a pizza oven for bread, and you could have finished off the malting process for barley and dried grain." |
The pot was made in the Ipswich area and was "robust but crude and used like amphorae in the Roman empire for transport," he added. | The pot was made in the Ipswich area and was "robust but crude and used like amphorae in the Roman empire for transport," he added. |
The archaeologists uncovered about 80% of a second oven, which they plan to excavate fully next year. | The archaeologists uncovered about 80% of a second oven, which they plan to excavate fully next year. |
Dr Jolleys said geophysics suggest there may be two other ovens yet to be uncovered. | Dr Jolleys said geophysics suggest there may be two other ovens yet to be uncovered. |
"[The oven's] not for a family, it's for a settlement and I think between 50 and 100 people would have lived here," he said. | "[The oven's] not for a family, it's for a settlement and I think between 50 and 100 people would have lived here," he said. |
"I think we have found an area which could be very significant in our understanding of the evolution of Anglo-Saxon communities, as society becomes organised into settled communities as part of the early kingdoms of England." | "I think we have found an area which could be very significant in our understanding of the evolution of Anglo-Saxon communities, as society becomes organised into settled communities as part of the early kingdoms of England." |
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