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Iron Age

 

Archaeological evidence of Iron Age salt making in

Britain has been largely based on the discovery of

remnants of coarse pottery vessels and supporting

pillars recognised as being connected with salt making

and known as briquetage. Sea water or brine from

inland springs was evaporated in these vessels over

fires to give a residual lump of salt.

 

There have been extensive finds of Iron Age briquetage

in the Lincolnshire and East Anglia Fenlands and along

the Essex coastline. Here the sea water was

concentrated in pottery pans 60cm wide, 120cm long,

and about 12mm thick and the strong brine was then

evaporated in small pottery vessels supported on

pillars to give the lump of salt which was obtained by

breaking the vessels.

 

Archaeological digs at salt making sites in Cheshire

and Worcestershire have produced relatively small

amounts of briquetage when compared with the coastal

sites. It appears that the finished salt was

distributed in the characteristic coarse pottery

vessels in which it was made. The briquetage from

these vessels has thus been discovered at Iron Age

settlements over a wide area of Wales and Western

England. Clay dug between Middlewich and Nantwich has

been shown to have been used to make the pottery

fragments found at these Iron Age sites.

Archaeologists have also found evidence of iron-age

salt making in the area between Middlewich and

Nantwich.

 

 

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