Metalware

Pewter porringer and spoon. The underside of the porringer has been inscribed with the name A DE BOVRCE.
Two ovoid pewter flasks with sloping shoulders and flat-top screw-caps have been recovered. The one in better condition (no. 502; Ht. 191 mm) features griffen-like protomes on the shoulders and a decorative touchmark on the base. The mark, which appears to be unknown, features a galloping centaur with a drawn bow shooting rearwards over his hind-quarters. The second flask (no. 1104) is smaller and in a more advanced state of deterioration. It was found in I999 lying on top of some sand bags, thus illustrating once again the movement of artefacts within the sandbank. Pewter flasks, or bottles, of broadly similar shape were found on the Mary Rose.

Tudor woodcut showing a family eating from single and double-eared porringers.
Of particular interest was a pewter bowl with trefoil 'ears' and a domed bottom. Tableware bowls of this general type were known as porringers. Also of interest is a crudely punched, illegible mark, or monogram, on one ear, and the owner's name A DE BOVRCE on the underside. Local historian John Roberts, has identified de Bource (with several orthographical variations) as a sixteenth century Jersey name. This is not to say that the Alderney wreck was a Jersey ship (see Chronology, nationality and identity).

Screw-top pewter flask. Body crushed and holed. Centaur touchmark on underside.
The only other tableware item was the pewter plate that is illustrated in the accompanying illustration.
In 2004 a large, badly crushed, copper-alloy basin was recovered from the site, that is believed to have come from the vessel's galley.

Badly crushed basin from wreck

Anne Smith with a bronze mortar
