Alan H

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Posted: 14 Jul 2023


Taken: 13 Jul 2023

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Incense Burner (IMG 8716)

Incense Burner (IMG 8716)
Date: 2nd to 3rd century AD
Material: Ceramic
Findspot: Coventina’s Well

These incense burners are made from rough clay normally used for tiles. They are highly decorated and inscribed with dedications but have a home-made feel to them in their design and finish. The lettering is uneven, and almost crude on one example, with the name of Coventina spelt differently on each one (which happens on some of the stone altars too). These would have been a less expensive offering to Coventina than a stone altar, so allowing devotees with less income to participate in her worship.

When the thuribles (incense burners) were discovered, how to decipher the inscriptions became the subject of much discussion. John Clayton, who found them, conducted a public debate via the letters section of the Newcastle papers with a Liverpool antiquarian, which became rather heated.

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