Search records

'The neolithic pottery of the Isle of Man and its relationship to that of surrounding areas: a study in production, decoration and use'

Date(s): 1997

Creator(s): Burrow, Stephen Paul

Scope & Content: PhD thesis submitted to Bournemouth University. Burrow analyses the stages in the life history of the vessels studied, namely choice of materials, resource procurement, vessel building, decoration, use and discard. Comparisons with practices current in the 'Irish Sea province' (neighbouring parts of England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales) indicate that the nature of the relationship between Manx and non-Manx pottery altered throughout the Neolithic period. The author asserts that by the end of the Neolithic the Isle of Man had abandoned its innovative practices (having a unique ceramic repertoire) and adopted instead the more widely accepted Beaker pottery style.This research project focuses on the Neolithic pottery of the Isle of Man and its relationship to that used in neighbouring parts of England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales (the Irish Sea province). The Manx pottery has not been studied as a complete corpus since the early 1930s, since which time the quantity and diversity of material available has increased dramatically. This project therefore served the initial function of cataloguing, recording and illustrating the available material. In addition, since the Manx pottery was last studied, the aims and methodologies of ceramic analysis have changed significantly, with many more approaches to the data being available to the analyst. This study was therefore able to explore the Manx data from a variety of perspectives so as to produce a biographical view of the pottery used during the Middle, Late, and final phases of the Manx Neolithic from production through to discard. The stages in the life history of the vessels which were analysed were: choice of materials, resource procurement,vessel building, decoration,use and discard. At each of these stages the approach adopted to ceramics by Manx potters and pottery users were compared with practices current in other parts of the Irish Sea province. This comparison indicated that the nature of the relationship between Manx and non-Manx pottery altered throughout the Neolithic. In the Early Neolithic the Manx did not adopt pottery, despite it being a common place in the rest of the Irish Sea province. In the Middle Neolithic, Manx pottery compared closely with that of surrounding areas,albeit with evidence for an individual approach to decoration. This contrasts greatly with the situation in the Late Neolithic when the Isle of Man adopted a unique ceramic repertoire which differed greatly in terms of form, decoration, and the roles which it served,from that current elsewhere. By the end of the Neolithic, the Isle of Man had, however, abandoned these innovative practices and adopted instead the more widely accepted Beaker pottery style. Throughout this study the reasons behind these changing relationships were explored within a broader social context.

Language: English

Extent: 2 volumes

Item name: thesis

Collection: Manuscript Archive

Level: ITEM

ID number: MS 09986

Record class: Private

Access conditions: No regulations or restrictions are implemented on this material. Advance notification of a research visit is advisable by emailing library@mnh.gov.im

Comments

Optional, not displayed

Manx National Heritage (MNH) will always put you in control of the information we send you. Read our privacy policy

Archive catalogue