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Prehistoric Salt-Boiling

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Extract

Just over sfty years ago the puzzling Red Hills on the coast of Essex were arousing considerable interest among English prehistorians (PLATE XXII (a) and (b)). Already in the spring of 1906, under the chairmanship of J. Chalkley Gould and supported by the Essex Field Club, the Society of Antiquaries of London had formed a ‘Red Hills Exploration Committee’, which counted among its members not only archaeologists but also geologists, botanists and chemists, and had ample means at its disposal. Eminent specialists and scholars examined suitable hills with the utmost care and published their findings and conclusions in comprehensive papers.

But in what consists the peculiarity and the riddle of these Red Hills, which obviously date back to prehistoric times and have since time immemorial lain in close proximity to the coast of England? The striking way in which they are built of loose red burnt clay unmistakably points to a human-made origin. As a rule these mounds rise by only as much as 18 in. to 6 ft. above their surroundings, and their extent varies between a few square yards to several hundred. How did these numerous and extensive heaps of burnt clay come about in prehistoric times?

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 1961

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References

1 F. W. Reader (1907-9, 1909-11), Excavation Reports of 29 March, 1908, and 17 February, 1910, to the Red Hills Exploration Committee, Proc. Soc. Antiqu. London, 11 Ser., 22, 164-207 and 23, 69-96.

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4 F. W. Reader (1907-9), op. cit. 188.

5 R. A. Smith (1918), ‘The Essex Red Hills as Saltworks’, Proc. Soc. Antiqu. London, 11 Ser., 30, 53.

6 Ibid., 36-37.

7 Ibid., 50-51.

8 8 Ibid., 46-47.

9 K. Riehm (1958), ‘Neue Einblicke in die Tecfanik der vorgeschichtlichen Salzsiedekunst’, Forschungen und Fortschritte, 32, 47-49.

10 K. Riehm (1959), ‘Genormte Tonbehälter zuir Formsalzfertigung in der Vorzeit’, Ausgrabungen und Funde, 4, pl. 1.

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12 Archaeol. Journal, VII (1850), 69-70.

13 Ibid., 175-176.

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17 R. A. Smith (1918), op. cit., 50-51.

18 H. H. Swinnerton (1932), op. cit., 346

19 Ibid., 246.

20 Ibid., 248, fig. 9, nr. 7.

21 Ibid., 250, fig. 9, nr. 9(a).

22 Ibid., 244, fig. 6.

23 F. T. Baker (1959-60), ‘The Iron Age Salt Industry in Lincolnshire’, Lincolnsh. Architectural and Archaeological Society, vol. 8, New Series, 26-34.

24 F. W. Reader (1907-9), op. cit., 75; H. Wilmer (1907-9), ‘Late Celtic Remains on the Coast of Brittany comparable with the Red Hills’, Proc. Soc. Antiqu. London, 11 Ser., 32, 207-214; R. A. Smith (1918), op. cit., 49 footnote; C. F. C. Hawkes (1933), ‘Early Settlement at Runcton Holme’, Proc. Prehist. Soc. East Anglia, VII, 258-262.

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27 M. Tessier (1960), ‘Découverte de gisements préhistoriques aux environs de la Pointe-Saint-Gildas’, Bull, de la Soc. prèhist, franc. 57, 428-434.

28 L. de Fleury (1888), ‘Dépôts de Cendres de Nalliers (Vendée)’, fico. Archéol., 3 Ser., 349-357.

29 L. N. Solovjev (1950), ‘Selisce s tekstil’noj keramikoj na probereze zapadnoj Gruzii’, Sovjetskaja Archaeologija, 14, 276-282.

30 J. B. Keune (1913), Lothringen und seine Haupstadt Metz, 45 ff.

31 I. Harter (1938), Étude monographique sur le Briquetage de la Seule, MS of a paper read at the Congrès Lorrain des Sociétés Savantes de l’Est de la France at Nancy, 6-8 June, 1938.

32 A. Springer (1918), Die Salzversorgung der Eingeborenen Afrikas vor der neuzeitlichen europäischen Kolonisation, Inaugural-Dissertation Jena.