The mortarium, a shallow, spouted, gritted dish, is an entirely novel and widely-used vessel in Roman Britain. This vessel is traditionally envisaged as a material manifestation the transition to 'Roman' food preparation techniques and hence, changing cultural identity and behaviour. However, the high prevalence of mortaria at some rural s sites. which display evidence for cultural continuity from the Iron Age in other aspects, suggests that the mortarium may also have been appropriated to fulfil pre-existing criteria.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo
International audiencethe use of mortaria, utensil used for grounding, pounding but also mixing ingr...
This article presents an analysis of three dining-related assemblages of pottery from Roman Leiceste...
This thesis incorporates a reassessment of Roman pottery from non-Roman contexts in southern Scotlan...
This thesis explores food and foodways, and changes in foodways over the Roman period, it has two ma...
The paper deals with the results of a study on food habits during the Archaic Age in the Messapian s...
This paper presents the results of forty years of fieldwalking undertaken by Michael de Bootman on ...
In the last two decades scientific techniques have opened up new avenues in archaeological studies o...
Mortaria were used in Pannonia in the entire Roman period, but they changed in form and material fro...
My research examines how Roman-style material culture was used to express identity, how this changed...
International audienceThe excavation of the site of Cuciurpula (South Corsica, France) revealed a si...
International audiencethe use of mortaria, utensil used for grounding, pounding but also mixing ingr...
This article presents an analysis of three dining-related assemblages of pottery from Roman Leiceste...
This thesis incorporates a reassessment of Roman pottery from non-Roman contexts in southern Scotlan...
This thesis explores food and foodways, and changes in foodways over the Roman period, it has two ma...
The paper deals with the results of a study on food habits during the Archaic Age in the Messapian s...
This paper presents the results of forty years of fieldwalking undertaken by Michael de Bootman on ...
In the last two decades scientific techniques have opened up new avenues in archaeological studies o...
Mortaria were used in Pannonia in the entire Roman period, but they changed in form and material fro...
My research examines how Roman-style material culture was used to express identity, how this changed...
International audienceThe excavation of the site of Cuciurpula (South Corsica, France) revealed a si...
International audiencethe use of mortaria, utensil used for grounding, pounding but also mixing ingr...
This article presents an analysis of three dining-related assemblages of pottery from Roman Leiceste...
This thesis incorporates a reassessment of Roman pottery from non-Roman contexts in southern Scotlan...