Museum of London  
Home / Places / SE9

The Postcodes Project   London's neighbourhood stories
Home Places Places Write story Recommend
 

SE9 Eltham, Mottingham, New Eltham



Bottle

Bring your own bottle


This is a typical 17th-century wine bottle. It has a round body and a long neck. It is made from green glass. The bottle was found in Eltham churchyard.

Early wine bottles

Before the 17th century, people used pottery or leather vessels instead of glass bottles. The earliest glass bottles had rounded bodies like this one. Straight bodies, like those found on modern bottles, only became common after the mid-18th century. Early bottles sometimes have seals on the body which indicate the owner's name and the date.

How were the bottles used?

Nowadays wine is bought in bottles, which are discarded or recycled after use. In the past wine was transported to Britain in wooden barrels. It was stored in these barrels at the wine merchant. If you wanted to buy some wine, you brought your own jug or bottle to the wine merchant and he filled it for you. Bottles were not thrown away but were re-used over and over again.


Museum number 73.161

Related objects


 


Our zoomable map of London requires Flash 6 or later, which you can download from here: http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflash

If you prefer to browse without Flash, you can also get to all our content using our list of places.


Adjacent postcodes


'A New and Accurate Map of the Country Twenty-Five Miles Round London', John Andrew
SE12
Mica sheets
SE18
Coin; Iceni
SE3


  Stories from SE9  
 
A postwar childhood
by Susan Ellis, 09/04/2006


Write a story view all SE9 stories

Level A conformance icon, W3C-WAI Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0   National Grid for Learning logo