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SPINDLE-WHORLS, DISCS, SLICKSTONES, ETC.
[CHAP. XX.

been found, there was no weapon nor trace of metal, unless it were what was imagined to be some gold lace. The ornamentation of this cup is different from that of the Devonshire specimen, and the workmanship appears to be ruder. It was described at the time as of wood, but was probably of shale, as has been suggested by Dr. Wake Smart.[1] Some fragments of cups of shale with flat handles were found in the Romano-British village at Woodcuts.[2]

Bottom of Cup.
Fig. 366.—Rillaton, height 31/4 inches.

It is, however, but right to mention that a wooden cup with a handle at the side, and which had been turned in a lathe, was found in a barrow in Schleswig,[3] in a coffin made from the trunk of an oak, together with a skeleton wrapped in woollen cloth, a bronze dagger, and other objects. Professor Worsaae attributes these objects to the Early Bronze Age. Mr. Kirwan has cited another instance of a somewhat similar cup, found with "coal-money."

It is true that these instances afford no actual guide as to date, but
  1. Warne, l. c.
  2. "Exc. on Cranborne Chase," vol. i. pl. xlviii.
  3. Arch. Journ., vol. xxiii. p. 35.