Cloth Seal, Alnage, County Portcullis
Cloth Seal, Alnage, Portcullis, Image & Found by Goggles.
Found in the North Lincolnshire area.
A two disc seal showing a portcullis (possibly crowned) with chain and inscription (largely missing) around ...EG(E?). The riveted side is blank.
See:- PROVENANCED LEADEN CLOTH SEALS by GEOFFREY EGAN, Sub-Department of Medieval Archaeology, University College, University of London. submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, 1987, "Crown-over-Portcullis Series of County Seals. This group is one of the largest recorded. The basic design is: crown over chained portcullis (usually with a lattice of 3X3 squares) with various abbreviations, usually for 'sigillum ulnagii pannorum venalium in comitatu... ' (seal of alnage of saleable cloths in the county of... ) in Lombardic letters. Stamps with Roman-letter legends have ER to the sides of a portcullis with a lattice of 3X3, 4X3, or 4X4 squares and an abbreviated version of 'sigillum pro comitatu... '(seal for the county of... ). The most common abbreviations are: (for Lombardic-letter legends) S'VLN'PAO'VEAL'I CO'...;(for Roman-letter legends) ... PRO-COMITA ... ...Even where (presumably genuine) portcullis seals had edge legends, few stamps registered fully. Those on which the place of origin is legible, seem, on present evidence, to have been in the minority."
The remaining letters in the inscription appear to be Lombardic and occur at the end where the name of the county would be expected. Unfortunately '..E?EG' does not tally with any known county or abbreviation. The series is believed to have originated in the sixteenth century and may have continued into the early years of the reign of James I.
Also see Nos.48&49, Fig.18, Egan, 'Lead cloth seals and related items in the B.M. (B.M.occ.papers 93)'.
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