[14] Conyers had previously described the red, lustrous (Samian) ware, and also the vessels termed Castor ware, with figures of animals and foliage, but which he did not find in the kilns.
[15] Stone ware, the kind imported from Cologne, was commonly called Cullen. In 1626, too, Abraham Cullen took a patent for the making of these stone pots. It is this kind of ware to which Conyers refers.
[16] Wright.
[17] “The New Forest, its History and Scenery,” by John R. Wise (Smith, Elder, & Co.), p. 214.
[18] “Archæologia,” xxxv. 91.
[19] Vol. ii. p. 36.
[20] Vol. v. p. 159, and vol. vi. pp. 52 to 67.
[21] This curious and unique potter’s mould is in my own possession.
[22] For a further account of this ware see p. 51.
[23] “Col. Ant.,” vol. v. p. 193.