No. 7 is of light brown ware with cup-shaped mouth. It is from the great ditch, on the west side of the enlarged fort, near the sewer mouth. No. 8 belongs to a large reddish-brown jug. It also came from the great ditch on the west side, and perhaps represents a type slightly later than some of the

Figure 33

FIG. 33. NECKS OF JUGS
Nos. 1, 2 AND 3, DITCH OF THE EARLY FORT. No. 4, PIT LXV. No. 5, PIT LVI. No. 6, PIT LXXVIII, No. 7, GREAT DITCH, WEST FRONT. Nos. 5, 9, 10, 11 AND 12, SURFACE FINDS. No. 13, PIT LXXXII. No. 14, SURFACE FIND. No. 15, PIT XLV

preceding. It may be noted that the same type occurred in soft buff ware, like that of Plate XLVI., Fig 33. Similar jugs occur among the vessels from the pottery of Heldenbergen, which are believed to date for the most part from the Hadrianic period.[1] No. 9 is of hard-baked light-brown ware. The

1 'Romische Töpfereien in der Wetterau,' Westdeutsche Zeitschrift, xviii. Taf. 3, iv. 3.

262