Satis
[Di].
Egyptian goddess. See
SATET
.
sauceboat
[Ar].
Ceramic or metal elongated vessel with a wide spout at one end and a handle at the other, characteristic of Greece and the Cyclades in the mid–late 3rd millennium
bc
, probably used for drinking rather than pouring.
saucepan pot
[Ar].
Coarse, cylindrical flat-bottomed cooking vessel shaped like a saucepan without a handle, current in central southern England in the mid–late
IRON AGE
.
saucer barrows
[MC].
Type of Bronze Age round barrow found in southern Britain, named as such by Sir Richard Colt
HOARE
in the mid 19th century
ad
because of their shape and cross-section. Saucer barrows are circular, up to 40m across, with an outer bank and ditch defining an enclosed space, in the centre of which is a low well-spread mound covering a centrally placed primary burial. Double central mounds are sometimes present. One of the range of Bronze Age round barrows that are sometimes known as
FANCY BARROWS
.
saucer brooch
[Ar].
Circular brooch, concave in section, like a modern lapel badge, generally decorated in chip-carving. Distributed in the north German lowlands and in England, and dated to the 5th and 6th centuries
ad
.
Sauveterrian
[CP].
Early Mesolithic communities of France and neighbouring parts of northern Europe dating to about 7000 bc. Named after the finds from two rock-shelters at Sauveterre-la-Lémance, Lot-et-Garonne, France. Sauveterrian flint assemblages are characterized by a lack of wood-working tools and the abundance of geometric microliths.