| Border Ware
Defining Attributes
A coarse earthenware with a fine-grained, pale
gray to whitish paste. A variant with a light reddish paste, sometimes
streaked with the white – gray clay, is known as Red Border ware.
Lead glaze colors range from apple green to yellow, with some vessels
appearing olive green or brown. Generally Border ware vessels are
glazed only on the interior surfaces.
Chronology
In the Chesapeake, researchers have identified
a light gray pasted, apple green-glazed ware as "Surry ware"
and used this as a marker for occupations pre-dating 1650 (Miller
1983). Additional research suggests that Border wares are found
on later sites, including the King’s Reach site (18CV83) in Calvert
County, Maryland that dates to 1690 – 1715 (Pogue 1997).
During the first half of the 17th
century (ca. 1600 – 1640), Border wares are found in the forms of
flanged dishes, wide flanged bowls, deep bowls, drinking jugs, and
porringers. Yellow and green glazes predominate, but olive green
and brown glazes also occur. Red Border ware is found only in a
skillet form during this time period (Pearce 1992:95-96). By the
middle of the 17th century (ca.
1640 – 1700), Border wares have become one of major everyday wares
on London area sites, and the most common forms are tripod pipkins,
flanged dishes, bowls, chamber pots, and porringers. New forms such
as mugs, colanders, chafing dishes, bottle costrels, and upright
candlesticks are also found. Red Border wares make up a slightly
larger proportion of these later assemblages than in earlier ones,
and are found in many of the same forms as Border ware. During this
period, new styles of rims on pipkins and porringers appear to be
influenced by ceramics in the Low Countries. Ribbing on the bodies
of chamber pots, pipkins, and porringers gradually lessens, and
plain forms are made. Pinched or "pie-crust" rims appear
on some vessels for the first time (Pearce 1992:96-101).
Red Border wares are found, as a minor ware, in
association with the white Border wares in English archaeological
assemblages from London and the Surrey-Hampshire area. There does
not seem to be a time or context difference between the two wares
(Pearce 1992). Description
Fabric
The fabric is composed of a chalky, compact paste of either a pale
gray to white or light reddish color, and measures 3.0 on the Moh’s
hardness scale.
Glaze
Lead glaze in yellow or green is thinly applied, with inconsistent
coloring. The green glazes were produced by the addition of powdered
copper and manganese to a clear lead glaze. Sometimes dark brown
or red spots are seen within or under the glaze, and are produced
by iron-rich compounds. Sometimes a vessel would have the glaze
applied to the interior surface, and when swirled around some spillage
would occur over the vessel sides. Brown lead glaze appears with
more frequency after 1650 to the end of the 17th
century.
Decoration
Infrequent incised geometric line decoration, pie crust rims, and
raised cordons occur. Encrustation or rustication from bits of clay
can be occasionally found on cups and mugs.
Form
Flanged dishes, wide and deep bowls, drinking jugs, single handled
tripod pipkins, pitchers, cups, mugs, tankards, bowls, porringers,
colanders, and chamber pots are the most prevalent forms manufactured.
Notes
The 17th century
Border wares developed out of the Medieval Coarse Border Wares made
during the 15th and 16th
centuries along the borders of Surrey and Hampshire counties, southwest
of London. The Surrey-Hampshire whitewares were the most common
Border wares, and were important to the London market during most
of the 17th century. From the mid-17th
century into the early 18th century
they were one of the main sources of good quality household pottery
in London. Competition from the tin-glazed wares and the rising
prominence of white salt-glazed wares from the Staffordshire potteries
caused the Surrey-Hampshire whiteware industry to go into a decline
(Pearce 1992:102).
This ware is not as well defined for archaeological
sites in the Chesapeake, and may sometimes be confused with Dutch
coarse earthenwares of the same time period. On sites dating towards
the end of the 17th century, the
yellow glazed Border wares may be confused with a similar ware known
as Midlands Yellow. This pale buff to white pasted ware is usually
glazed on both surfaces, while Border wares are generally only glazed
on their interior surface. Because of their similarities, caution
should be used when identifying these ware types.
References
Miller
1983; Noël
Hume 1970; Pearce
1992; Pogue
1997
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