- Collection type
- Object
- Description
- Irregular shaped flint flake with 4 dorsal flake scars and no retouch. The flint is a dark grey colour. There is no patina. [MN 08/12/2008]
- Geographical reference
- England Oxfordshire Tadmarton Holywell
- Person
- Maker Unknown Maker
- Field collector Alexander James Montgomerie Bell
- PRM source Alexander James Montgomerie Bell
- Date / Period
- Archaeological period: Neolithic, uncertain
- Date collected
- By 1911
- Acquisition information
- Donated: 1911
- Materials and processes
- Material Flint Stone, Process Flaked
- Dimensions
- Width: max 28 mm, Thick: max 6 mm, Length: max 23 mm distal to proximal ends
- Object numbers
- Accession number: 1911.30.1.1
- Research and responses
Holywell [SP 3927 3561] is located approximately 2.4km SW of the village of Tadmarton. The village is in the parish of Tadmarton and the district of Cherwell. The exact find spot for these objects is unknown. [MN 08/12/2008]
The Alexander James Montgomerie Bell collection of flint tools from nearby the Tadmarton Holy Well are recorded on the Oxfordshire Historic Environment Record [HER] under PRN 4207. [MN 08/12/2008]
The Victoria County History of Oxfordshire [volume 9] contains a reference to the holy well at Tadmarton, although there is no mention of the flint tools found by Bell.
Parishes: Tadmarton', A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 9: Bloxham hundred (1969), pp. 150-159. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=101920 Date accessed: 08 December 2008. [MN 08/12/2008]
Percy Manning in his 1921 survey of Oxfordshire noted several archaeological sites and finds in the parish [page 258], but not the lithic tools recovered by Alexander James Montgomerie Bell. A copy is in RDF: Researchers File: Manning. Full article reference: Manning, P and Leeds, E. T. 1921. An archaeological survey of Oxfordshire. Archaeologia 71: 227-265. [MN 08/12/2008]
- Associated publications
- For general information on the Museum's collections of Oxfordshire archaeological material including lists of sites, grid references etc see Archaeological Material from Oxfordshire in the Collection of the Pitt Rivers Museum by Simon Thorpe, this is an unpublished spiral bound report dated June 1996 [copy in RDF: Researchers File: Thorpe]. [MN 08/12/2008]
1911.30.1.1
Irregular shaped flint flake with 4 dorsal flake scars and no retouch. The flint is a dark grey colour. There is no patina. [MN 08/12/2008]
1911.30.1.1
Digital asset copyright: Pitt Rivers Museum, University of Oxford
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