A jug of a cymoid profile and a slightly squat form. Its band lughole starts below the brim and ends where the body is its largest. The upper part of the body decorated with surrounding carvings and slight plastic panel. Burnt in a reductive atmosphere – grey earthenware. Vessel fracture: grey. Damaged: in some places, its external surface is secondarily stained with lime mortar.
Eksponaty
Mug, site 24, unit 117, 15th century
A mug of a slight cymoid profile, covered with brown coating inside. The external surface covered with carvings. Its band lughole starts at the brim and ends just above where the body is its largest. The bottom is flat with its edge marked by a roll. Burnt in oxidizing atmosphere. Vessel fracture: bricky.
Coin – one-and-a-half crown by Sigismund III Vasa, site 24, unit 110 G, 1624.
Obverse: a five-field escutcheon with Polish and Lithuanian coats of arms; Vasa’s coat of arms (a sheaf) in the middle; legend: SIGIS 3 DGREX PMDL
Reverse: an orb with a cross and number 24; legend: MONE NO REG POLO; a date coined next to the orb: 24.
Coin – Prussian liege shilling by Wilhelm Hohenzollern, site 24, unit 110 F, 1654.
Obverse: an eagle with Vasa’s coat of arms on its chest; text around: FRID WILH MAR BR. S. PR EL.
Reverse: monogram: FW; the Hohenzollerns’ coat of arms under it; text around: SOLIDUS PR. USSIAE 1654.
Jug fragment, site 24, unit 66, 16th century
A jug – only its lower part has been preserved. The bottom part is visibly separated and has a foot decorated with three rows of surrounding carvings. A fragmentarily preserved stamp ornamentation surrounds the upper part. Burnt in an oxidizing atmosphere. Vessel fracture: bricky. The external surface covered with brown enamel.
Tile, site 24, unit 66, 15th century
A bowl-shaped tile with a circular bottom and square-shaped hole. Its profiled edges are turned inside. The external surface walls are ribbed. Burnt in an oxidizing atmosphere. Vessel fracture: grey and bricky.
Pot, site 24, unit 66, 15th century
A wide-hole pot. Reductive burning – grey earthenware. Vessel fracture: grey. The output turned outside. Surrounding carvings in the upper part of the body. The largest body diameter at ⅔ of the vessel height. The lower part of the surface has some traces of pitting.
Pot, site 24, unit 66, 15th century
A pot of a cymoid profile. Burnt in an oxidizing atmosphere. Vessel fracture: bricky and beige. The short neck turns into the largest diameter of the vessel at ⅔ of its height. A surrounding pit in the upper part of the body with a wide carving under it, which is the only form of ornamentation. The simple bottom is finished with a sharp edge.
Jug, site 24, unit 117, 15th century
A jug burnt in a reductive atmosphere – grey earthenware. Vessel fracture: grey. The vessel of a slight cymoid profile with the largest body diameter at the half of its height. Its outflow turned slightly inside. Its band lughole starts there and ends at the height of the largest diameter of the body. Several rows of flat, unclear carvings in the upper part of the body. The bottom is flat with carelessly finished edge.
Jug, site 24, unit 117, 15th century
A jug of a cymoid profile with a significantly bulgy body. Its band lughole starts below the outflow edge and ends at the largest diameter of the body. The upper part of the vessel, above the largest diameter, decorated with surrounding carvings. The surface polished to shine. Precise workmanship suggests that the vessel was a part of tableware.