bowl
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![A beautiful responsive image](https://ciim-public-media-s3.s3.eu-west-2.amazonaws.com/wessex_mp_wilts/large_2018_6b.jpg)
![A beautiful responsive image](https://ciim-public-media-s3.s3.eu-west-2.amazonaws.com/wessex_mp_wilts/large_2018_6c.jpg)
![A beautiful responsive image](https://ciim-public-media-s3.s3.eu-west-2.amazonaws.com/wessex_mp_wilts/large_2018_6d.jpg)
Description
Summary: An incomplete late Roman Irchester bowl which was deposited with the rim facing the surface. Roughly a third of the bowl is missing. The Irchester type bowl has incurving sides, an omphalos base and an in-turned rim. Irchester bowls are generally accepted to have been hanging basins manufactured in the 4th or 5th centuries in Britain although still circulating in the early Anglo-Saxon period. The uniformity of the design suggests that the vessel was a product of one or more centralised or associated workshops, and that they were used as part of a dinner service or perhaps for hand washing. Found in Lacock in 2017.
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