2020
DOI: 10.1017/eaa.2020.7
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Produce, Repair, Reuse, Adapt, and Recycle: The Multiple Biographies of a Roman Barrel

Abstract: By the time the Roman empire reached its greatest extent, in the early decades of the second century ad, wooden barrels were a key part of a trade network that supported a complex extended economy. These objects do not, however, routinely survive in the archaeological record and very few sites have yielded large, multi-phase, assemblages for study. Although relatively rare, individual finds and assemblages have been found sufficiently regularly to allow us to consider barrel production and use during the Roman… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 37 publications
(39 reference statements)
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“…Goodburn argues that the casks coming into London were also routinely recycled to create stylus tablets, and other objects, suggesting a clear production sequence for this process (Goodburn, 2016, 10 & Figure 6). Similar, complex patterns of use, reuse, adaption, and recycling have been proposed for material at Vindolanda, and a model for this biographical complexity suggested (Sands & Marlière, 2020). As noted above, such practices are definitively shown when vestigial, ‘out of place’, features are obvious, such as when a barrel is adapted and reformed to make other coppered items (Figure 8).…”
Section: Detectability? Recognising Repair Reuse and Recyclingmentioning
confidence: 78%
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“…Goodburn argues that the casks coming into London were also routinely recycled to create stylus tablets, and other objects, suggesting a clear production sequence for this process (Goodburn, 2016, 10 & Figure 6). Similar, complex patterns of use, reuse, adaption, and recycling have been proposed for material at Vindolanda, and a model for this biographical complexity suggested (Sands & Marlière, 2020). As noted above, such practices are definitively shown when vestigial, ‘out of place’, features are obvious, such as when a barrel is adapted and reformed to make other coppered items (Figure 8).…”
Section: Detectability? Recognising Repair Reuse and Recyclingmentioning
confidence: 78%
“…For many of these barrels their arrival at the fort was the final stage in a potentially long and complex journey, involving repeated use, possible changes in function, and having passed through multiple hands. Here, at the end of that physical journey, contents from across the empire were removed and used, and the barrel may then have rotted away, or been burnt, or reused for storage, or taken apart to be adapted or recycled (Sands & Marlière, 2020).…”
Section: Circularity? Reflecting On Beginnings Endings and Beginningsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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