Crag Hall, cists

Crag Hall, cists

HER Number
360
District
Newcastle
Site Name
Crag Hall, cists
Place
Jesmond
Map Sheet
NZ26NE
Class
Religious Ritual and Funerary
Site Type: Broad
Cist
Site Type: Specific
Cist
General Period
PREHISTORIC
Specific Period
Bronze Age -2,600 to -700
Form of Evidence
Find
Description
In 1844, while levelling the ground in the garden of Crag Hall, the gardener found two cists beneath stone lids. Within them were four food vessels "containing bones and fine earth". Only one food vessel was found complete, described as bipartite, with a central groove and 4 or 5 unpierced stops. The second is incomplete, tripartite, with two cavetto zones, and lines of circular impressions in the zones and below the rim. Both vessels were presented to the British Museum by Sir Walter Trevelyan Bt. of Wallington. In 1844 Dr. Headlam, the property owner, presented to the Society of Antiquaries drawings by John Bell of the complete vessel and one of the broken ones, and actual fragments of - presumably - the other two.
Easting
425370
Northing
567510
Grid Reference
NZ425370567510
Sources
<< HER 360 >> J. Bell, Black Gate, Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle
Archaeologia Aeliana, 1855, Donations, 1, IV, pp. 2-3
F.W. Dendy, 1904, An Account of Jesmond, Archaeologia Aeliana, 3, I, pp. 15-16
J. Abercromby, 1912, Bronze Age Pottery, I, no. 159, pl. xxxviii
M.H. Dodds, 1930, Northumberland County History, Vol. XIII, pp. 11-12
J.D. Cowen, 1966, A Food Vessel from Crag Hall, Jesmond, Archaeologia Aeliana, 4, XLIV, pp. 222-225
A.M. Gibson, 1978 , Bronze Age Pottery in the North-East of England, British Archaeological Report, Vol. 56, p. 70, no. 61
R. Miket, 1984, The Prehistory of Tyne and Wear, p. 36 no. 1