Monkton Court Farm evaluation, 1992

MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION, 1992* D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY SUMMARY A field at Monkton Court Farm in the Isle of Thanet was revealed as holding Late Bronze Age settlement remains after these were encountered by a pipeline trench. The additional discovery nearby of four Late Bronze Age bronze hoards within the space of one hectare, one in association with ash slag and midden material, led to an archaeological evaluation of the site funded by English Heritage. Although local geology and the results of worm action made the location and interpretation of features difficult, hut sites, pits and ditches were identified. A further two bronzes were found, also a perforated clay plaque. Both the ceramic and flint assemblages from the site will prove useful in the regional study of Late Bronze Age settlement, since they appear to have been deposited during a fairly short period of occupation, and are in association with Carp's Tongue hoards. INTRODUCTION In 1981, a small hoard of Late Bronze Age objects was found by metal detector in a field at Monkton Court Farm, Monkton, Isle of Thanet (Perkins and Hawkes 1984). Trenching for a pipeline down the southern border of the field in 1987 revealed a pit and ditch containing Late Bronze Age occupation material (Perkins 1987) and another hoard of the same period this time containing 58 objects was found in August 1990. As an example of excellent co-operation between detectorists and archaeologists, the finders, members of the Thanet and Wantsum Relic Association, contacted the Trust for Thanet Archaeology at the moment of discovery. This led to the immediate context of the hoard being investigated (Perkins 1991). Later that year and again in 1991 more bronzes were found. The widely separate locations of these finds allow them to be identified as the Monkton I, II, and III hoards respectively, see Fig. 23. When the Monkton II find spot was examined in 1990, ash slag, midden material and sherds were found in a recently plough-damaged 237 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY horizon. Because of the important archaeological implications and the site's obvious vulnerability to plough attrition, the Trust for Thanet Archaeology approached English Heritage who agreed to fund an evaluation, which was carried out between 24th August and 2nd October, 1992. An archive holding most of the finds and all records is in the keeping of the Trust for Thanet Archaeology, while the bronze hoard components are held by the Thanet and Wantsum Relic Association. The site topography and nearby archaeology The site is in open fields just north of the village of Monkton, in the Isle of Thanet, see Figs. l a, and l b, an approximate central O.S. reference being TR 277655. It is situated on a gentle slope just below the crest line of a chalk downland escarpment, at between 17 and 20 m. O.D. To the south, the down drops rapidly to an alluvial plain representing the one-time Wantsum sea channel. In the Late Bronze Age the site was probably no more than 600 m. from the shore. About 1500 m. east of the site the down rises to 40 m. O.D. Here, crop-marks reveal the presence of 85 ring ditches. These cluster north ALLUVIUM Former Wantsum Channel Fig. l a. sTouRMouTH KENT Fig.lb. Fig. I. (I a) The immediate area of the site; (1 b) east Kent, Thanet and the alluvium representing the former Wantsum Channel. 238 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 and south of, and align with a trackway crop-mark, raising the possibility that it is a cursus (Kent SMR NE 108, Thanet SMR 548). While most of the circular enclosures are probably ploughed-off barrows, several are about 40 m. in diameter, with concentric ditches, causeway entrances, and complex internal features. About 1200 m. west of the site and at the same elevation, an area of Early Iron Age settlement has been sampled by a pipeline trench (Perkins 1991 ). Ditches and pits representing a multi-phase occupation extend for 350 m. along the crest of the escarpment, see Fig. la. The site geology and its problems According to the O.S. geological survey, the site area is on the Head Brickearth, a rather general descriptive term. Subsoil throughout the site differs in both colour and texture from the red-brown sandy soil over most of upland Thanet, which is also described as brickearth. The site was examined by three sondages, see 25, 26, and 27 in Fig. 2. These gave overburdens of between 1.50 and 2.50 m. of which roughly the upper half (subsoil 1) was a yellow-brown fine silt, and the lower half a bright ochre-coloured silt (subsoil 2). Beneath this is a very soft friable discoloured chalk surface, possibly resulting from periglacial action. Comparison with sites at Ebbsfleet and Minster (Perkins 1992) suggests that subsoil 1 may be degraded Thanet Beds material, with subsoil 2 in situ remnants of the Thanet Beds. Intense worm activity can be seen in these measures right down to the chalk. This overburden does not lend itself to environmental analysis. Molluscan analysis is not viable, as there appears to be virtually no s􀁕ell survival. Samples from ditch sections yielded only a few shells of the ubiquitous and un-informative C. acicula. These are probably from modern animals. The site's present land surface is not inimical to snails and the larger species are obvious. Non-survival of sub-fossil shells must, therefore, be due to either worm action, or to an acidic soil, or both factors. When tested, soil-samples gave pH readings of 5-6. Site geology created difficulties of a fundamental nature with regard to excavation. Based on the experience of the 1990 investigation of the Monkton II hoard context, topsoil stripping was limited to 0.25- 0.30 m., at which depth ancient horizons were exposed. The excavation team had expected to see features defined clearly by colour changes. This was only the case with Features 10, 11, 12, 13, 17 and 18, these having dark humic or burnt fills. All other features were located by their either exhibiting a grouping of sherds, flints, etc., or by giving a magnetic anomaly. They had no definable vertical or horizontal boundaries and their limits were only approximated at the points where 239 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY archaeological materials were no longer found. Exceptions to this were ditches, features 7 and 8. Their lower fills composed of subsoil 1 contrasted with subsoil 2 into which they were cut. Higher in subsoil 1, flow-lines of burnt flints and sherds served to demonstrate the sections, see Fig. 3. Regarding the non-definable nature of most features, after a field visit Mr Matthew Conti, of the Ancient Monuments Laboratory commented: 'Essentially, the features found at Monkton Court exist discretely and without discernible stratigraphic links. This seems to have been caused by a mixture of the following processes: (1) Routine ploughing/subsoiling, with possible use of the very deep Girotillers; (2) A very high level of earthworm activity; and (3) Constant erosion and deposition of the silty soils'. A Girotiller was used on the site in the 1930s. According to eyewitness reports, it disturbed the ground to a depth of between 0.40 and 0.90 m. As a result, tractors could not work the field next spring, and the experiment was never repeated. That the machine passed over the bronze hoards without disturbing them indicates a massive loss of topsoil by wind and water erosion over the last fifty years. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Thanks must go to the farmer, Mr P. Smith, for allowing access to the land, to English Heritage for help and advice, and for funding the evaluation and its publication. Also, to the volunteer site workers of the Thanet Archaeological Society, and detectorists of the Thanet and Wantsum Relic Association, who assisted with both detector survey and excavation. EVALUATION Design and methods As a first step a general site area was decided, based on previous data and a planned programme of field walking and metal detecting. This area (see broken-line box in Fig. 2), was 70,180 square metres in extent. Within this box evaluation was carried out by trenching and small-scale area excavation. As shown in Fig. 2, topsoil was stripped in three excavation boxes, A, B, and C, and fifteen sections. Of these E to 240 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 _, MONKTON VILLAGE Fig. 2. The Monkton Court Farm site, trenches and features. H, J to N, and R, were 50 m. long, S and T were 30 m. long, X was 335 m. long, and Y was 200 m. All were 2 m. wide. The total area of boxes and trenches was 3670 square metres, a 5 per cent sample. Evaluation results suggest that the designated site area completely contained the site's ancient remains, other than possibly to the south of trench M. An additional and fortuitous check was provided to the south-west by the cutting of a pipeline trench close to the St. Nicholas road. This was monitored, but revealed nothing. The section system was developed from the cutting of trenches X and Y which intersected at the Monkton II (1990) hoard find-spot. It will be noted from Fig. 2 that trench X was not aligned parallel to the footpath, but obliquely, following the usual line of ploughing in that field. This was to investigate the possibility that disturbed components of the Monkton II hoard might be found scattered along the plough line (as they had been in 1990), see Fig. 6. The agency capable of so carrying and re-depositing bronzes for up to 100 m. from their point of origin seems to be the potato harvesting machine. After topsoil had been removed throughout the system of trenches to a depth of 0.25-0.30 m., all exposed surfaces were explored, visually, by metal detector, and by magnetometer (Dr A.J. Clark). A number of 241 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY features were evident as groups of pot-sherds, daub, and burnt flints. All of these and three others were detected as magnetic anomalies. In all, 24 features were identified, and since time and the work force allowed, all were investigated by full excavation or sectioning. Initial survey The general site area (broken line box in Fig. 2) was surveyed by metal detector and field walking. In both cases a 10 m. section system was used as outlined in Brown (Brown 1985). No bronzes were found, and the surface scatter consisted of worn Romano-British and postmedieval material. When the exposed subsoil surface was examined within the trench system, a general scatter of flint-tempered prehistoric sherds and calcined flints was observed. This had well-defined boundaries, being contained within the area shown in bold broken line in Fig. 2. All features, and all but one of the bronze find-spots fall within the area which, where it meets the A253, corresponds with the features sectioned by the 1987 pipeline. Three sondages were cut along the line of trench Y, see Fig. 2, 25, 26, and 27. Each measured 3 x 3 m., and was excavated to the natural surface of the Upper Chalk, which is here covered to a depth of 0.50 m. by what appears to be periglacial material. The footpath (a raised way or 'lynch' of the kind common in Thanet) was sectioned where it was crossed by trench Y. Beneath a disturbed layer about 0.40 m. in depth and containing mixed sixteenth-century - modern material, and at roughly the level of the surrounding field surf ace, was antiquity of the path, it appears to have been reduced in level to correspond with the general loss of topsoil through erosion. Investigation of the archaeological features The features are described below, and are numbered as shown in Fig. 2. Most must be assumed to have been truncated by plough attrition to an unknown degree. All depths given are from the interface of modern plough-disturbed topsoil with subsoil. Ceramic material mentioned is Late Bronze Age unless otherwise stated. Trench Y Feature 1: Apparently the fill of a small pit, perhaps 0.70 m. in diameter, and no more than 0.25 m. deep. About 20 small sherds and a few calcined flint nodules. Feature 2: A sub-circular area of subsoil rich in midden material and finds. Sections revealed its size as roughly 6.00 m. by 4.50 m. with a depth of 0.20 m. As well as bone fragments, it yielded fragments of a 242 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 perforated ceramic plaque, see Fig. 4, 1, part of a spindle-whorl in flint tempered fabric, see Fig. 4, 2, fragments of burnt daub with wattle impressions, and about 100 sherds. Possibly a sunken hut floor and its infill. Feature 3a: A small pit or large post-hole, round with vertical sides and a flat bottom, diameter 0.70 m., depth 0.80 m. It was filled with flint pebbles and contained a few small sherds and a number of animal teeth (Ovis/Capra). Adjoining this, 3b: an area about 1.20 m. across by about 0.50 m. deep containing a few sherds and a piece of slag. The fill of a pit? Feature 4: An area of subsoil 3.00 m. long by at least the width of the trench, and 0.25 m. in depth. It contained about 60 sherds, calcined flints, and fragments of burnt daub with wattle impressions. At about the centre for 0.80 m., sherds could be followed down to 0.45 m. A sunken hut floor infill, cut by a later pit? Feature 5: An area of subsoil 2.50 m. long by at least the width of the trench and 0.65 m. in depth. Several days after excavation, selective weathering of the longitudinal sections revealed a bowl-shaped profile. Stratigraphy in terms of pottery and bones (Bos.)1 was discernible. The fill down to 0.25 m. was rich in midden material, with about 150 sherds, calcined flints, and slag. Below, sherds were fewer and with a different wear pattern. This was apparently a pit which after a period of slow infilling, suddenly attracted dumping. Feature 6a: An area of subsoil containing sherds, burnt daub, slag, bones and shells. Its plan could not be determined, but its maximum extent found by section was 4.00 x 4.50 m., with a depth of 0.38 m. Central in this was Feature 6b, consisting of a 'violin-shaped' patch of burnt soil and ashes of about 3.00 x 2.00 m., and 0.20 m. in depth. It yielded about 250 sherds, of which most probably belonged to a single badly fragmented vessel, a large storage jar. Presumably these remains represent a sunken hut floor with central hearth. Feature 7: A ditch of truncated-V profile, running north-west to southeast, see Figs. 3 and 5. Section la gave the width as 2.30 m. with a depth of 1.30 m. It had been cut down through subsoils 1 and 2, and just into the surface of periglacial deposited chalk. Stratigraphy as shown and numbered in Fig. 3, la, was as follows: (4) The plough truncated remains of rammed chalk foundations; (5) A layer of soil darkened by ashes or organic material. It contained 1 A number of features yielded animal bone fragments generally in poor condition. The species present were Bos, Sus, and Ovis/Capra, with pig bones slightly predominant. Bearing in mind the number and condition of these remains a specialist report was not considered worthwhile. 243 D.R.J. PERK.INS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY I. ■ ■ ■ • ■ ' 2 m. Im. Fig. 3. (a) (Upper) Section la of Feature 7; (b) (Lower) Section lb of Feature 8; both to same scale as shown. many flint nodules, these being concentrated at the base of the layer; and (6) Very similar to subsoil 1 except for the presence of a few sherds, flints, and chalk nodules. At the bottom and just above the primary silting was the complete skull of an ox. Feature 8: A ditch of open-U profile, running roughly north-west to south-east, see Figs. 3 and 5. Section 1 b gave the width as 4.20 m. and depth as 2.00 m. It had been cut down through subsoils 1 and 2, and for 244 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 about 0.10 m. into the periglacial deposited chalk. The stratigraphy as shown and numbered in Fig. 3, 1 b, was as follows: (4) Yellow-grey silty soil with many small chalk nodules, a few flints, and yielding a piece of Roman tile and several medieval and postmedieval brick and tile fragments; (5) As (4) but slightly more yellow in colour with calcined flint nodules and prehistoric sherds; (6) As (5) but separated by a dark silty layer 0.05 m. thick; and (7) As (6) but again separated by a similar dark silty layer and becoming chalky for the last 0.10 m. An attempt was made to follow the two ditches, features 7 and 8, and to investigate their possible intersection by cutting sections 2, 3, and 4. This is dealt with in discussion. Feature 9a: Two shallow plough-truncated foundations of rammed chalk running north-south, and possibly related to ( 4) in Feature 7. Between and beside them, the subsoil held peg-tile, fragmented ironwork, and post-Tudor sherds. Feature 9b: Beneath 9a the subsoil contained prehistoric sherds. The feature was not further investigated. The following features, 10-13, were closely grouped. They were not seen at the topsoil removal stage, but during the operation to section and reinstate the footpath, soil was removed to 0.55 m. from ground level, at which depth the dark fills of the features were observed. Feature 10: A pit of sub-rectangular plan, 0.43 x 0.35 m. and 0.20 m. deep. Its sides sloped slightly inwards to a flat base. The fill consisted of black ash-darkened soil with red burnt patches, and contained sherds, calcined flints, charcoal, chalk nodules, and slag. Near the bottom was found a bronze sickle blade, see Fig. 4, 4. Several small fragments of copper alloy were found by wet sieving a fill sample. Three being fused with silica. Feature 11: A pit of roughly circular plan, diameter 0.60 m., depth 0.35 m., vertical sides with a flat bottom. The fill of ash-darkened soil contained more than a hundred calcined flint nodules, sherds, slag, fragments of burnt bone, and a triangular stone object, presumably a whetstone, see Fig. 4, 6. Small pieces of copper alloy were subsequently found by wet sieving a fill sample. Feature 12: A pit of roughly circular plan, diameter 0.60 m., depth 0.30 m., the sides vertical with a bowl-shaped base. The fill of ash-darkened soil contained about seventy calcined flint nodules, also sherds, slag, and burnt bone. Small fragments of copper alloy were obtained from the fill by wet sieving, two of them fused with silica. Feature 13: A pit of oval plan, 1.60 x 0.70 m., bowl-shaped, with a maximum depth of 0.25 m. The fill was of soil darkened perhaps by organic material, it contained a few sherds and waste flakes. 245 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY ' 5 .11 - - - - - 10cm. 7 􀀁 8 I 9-􀀅-· I 􀀃 6 Fig. 4. Objects 1-6; finds from the Monkton Court Farm evaluation; objects 7 and 8, two bronzes from the plough-disturbed Monkton III hoard. All to scale as shown. Area Excavation Box A Feature 14: An area of subsoil of oval plan measuring about 3 x 4 m., and at least 1 m. deep. Where sectioned, its fill held a few sherds and bone fragments. Into this had been cut three smaller features detected as magnetic anomalies. These were: (14a): A pit or post-hole 0.70 m. in diameter and 0.50 m. deep with vertical sides. Its fill was slightly darker than the surrounding soil, and contained sherds, small calcined flint fragments, and waste flakes. Feature 15: A pit or post-hole 0.75 m. in diameter and 0.50 m. deep 246 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 with vertical sides. Its slightly darker fill held sherds, small calcined flint fragments, and daub. Feature 16: A pit or post-hole 0.60 m. in diameter and 0.50 m. deep, with vertical sides and a flat bottom. Finds as in 14 and 15. Feature 17: A pit of oval plan, 2.50 x 3.00 m., its sides sloping inwards at about 50° to a depth of about 0.80 m., then becoming vertical. The feature could not be excavated to a depth greater than 1.50 m. for reasons of safety and practicality. It was detected as a magnetic anomaly, but trowelling down a few centimetres revealed a dark fill containing sherds, animal bones, daub and slag. Feature 18: A pit of oval plan visible in the subsoil surface by its darker fill. It was 0.80 m. x 0.50 m., and 0.10 m. deep with a flat bottom. Only a small nodule of calcined flint found. Feature 19: This was a dense patch of daub fragments, calcined flints and sherds exposed in the subsoil surface. No shape could be distinguished, but the total area was about 4 x 3 m. with a depth of 0.20 m. Presumably the plough-damaged remains of a hut floor. Area Excavation Box C Feature 20: An oval patch of closely packed calcined flint nodules measuring about 1.80 x 1.50 m. with a maximum depth of 0.15 m. Sherds were lying on and between the flints. Feature 21: A bowl-shaped pit of oval plan, measuring 2.50 x 1.80 m. with a maximum depth of 0.30 m. It was first detected as a magnetic anomaly, and on trowelling down a slightly darker fill was observed. This contained midden material in the form of animal bones and teeth, and shells of oysters and whelks, also daub, slag, large stone fragments (Lower Greensand), chalk, and about 200 sherds. Area Excavation Box B Feature 22: An area of subsoil exhibiting small sherds and calcined flints. It was at least 3 x 2 m. in extent, and about 0.20 m. in depth. Within this, (22a) was a dense mass of large flint nodules about 1.20 m. across. Close to this was: Feature 23: A mass of burnt daub fragments about 2.50 m. long, and 0.90 m. wide. A sample of this weighing about 54 kg. (120 lbs.), was taken, and when processed, more than 60 fragments were found to bear wattle impressions, mostly about 2 cm. in diameter. Trench M Feature 24: An area of subsoil rich in sherds, flints, animal bones, and oyster shells. Cruciform sectioning revealed it to be at least 6 x 3 m. in extent, with a depth of 0.42 m. Central in this were adjoining patches of close-packed flint nodules about 1 m. across, and having the 247 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY appearance of being deliberately laid as a floor or hearth. One patch was cut by what can be best described as a 'fire pit'. This was bowlshaped, 0.50 m. in diameter, and 0.20 m. deep. It had been carefully lined and bordered with flint nodules and fragments from a greensand saddle quern. Central at the bottom was a quern fragment surrounded by a ring of eight hammer-stones. Just above this in the fill of ashdarkened soil was a mass of large sherds, probably representing the breakage in situ of a large coarseware jar. Sondage B Feature 26: At 0.40 m. from the modern land surface an horizon containing sherds was encountered. It appeared to be no more than 0.20 m. in depth. D.R.J. PERKINS THE POTTERY N. Macpherson-Grant Introduction and Assemblage Value It is a truism, but worth re-stating here, that each assemblage excavated/recovered is (relatively) unique, with its own contribution to add to an emergent picture. It can be stated from the outset that this particularly applies to the material from Monkton Court Farm. Its value may well be superseded in the future, but it has arrived at a rather crucial period in the study of Kentish first millennium B.C. ceramics - until recently poorly served by academic study. W hen the postexcavation assessment for this site was submitted it was noted that between 10-12 sites of roughly comparable date were known (as of September 1992). The actual site/assemblage quantity is almost certainly higher (under-studied museum/excavation collections or under-represented site material). It has certainly grown: there are now approximately 16-1 8 eastern Kentish sites of broadly LBA/EIA transition date, with the latest addition (June 1993) being recorded from Chislet (Fig. 19, Site 17).1 With the exception of Monkton Court Farm and to a lesser extent Highstead (Macpherson-Grant, forthcoming), most of the known sites represent assemblages recovered during small- 1 Sampled d uring an evaluation in advance of con s t ruc tion work on the Herne Bay-Stour Watermain (HBWB 93; Canterbury Museums code: 1993-45.) 248 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 scale rescue, watching-brief or limited evaluation circumstances, generally lacking in modern recovery /recording techniques and frequently from locations providing evidence for multi-period occupation. With the further exceptions of Kingston Down (Cunliffe 1980), East Northdown (Smith 1987) and Canterbury,2 all are in urgent need of re-assessment against the growing regional set of trends and implications for this period. The Highstead multi-period sequence is good, since it has provided an initial badly needed ceramic/chronological framework for the period c. 950/850-400 B.C. Its classic Period 2 assemblages come from a relatively uncontaminated enclosure and contexts producing clear evidence for bronze metallurgy and the dating proposed for these, c. 850/750-600 B.C., can (with some discussion) be essentially applied to the Monkton pottery. But, however good the Highstead sequence is, or relatively pure some contexts are in themselves, there are qualifications: the site's earlier phases are entirely ceramically dated, principally based on Continental, and a limited range of published regional, parallels. Further, a key aspect of the site is its apparent continuous occupation throughout its LBA-EIA phases; in addition, it has few reliable stratified sequences. These two points together tend to cloud clear comprehension of the transition from one ceramic phase to the next. Whilst the chronological and associated ceramic-attribute framework proposed for Highstead's sequence appears to be holding together remarkably well, the framework needs to be tested against good single-period assemblages and, particularly, linked into other nonceramic chronological schemes. Ceramically, Monkton contains an essentially single-period assemblage. Quite apart from the attributes that link it unquestionably into the Highstead Period 2-type ceramic package, even superficial assessment confirmed many formal parallels with other contemporary regional assemblages (e.g. Northdown 1971 and Canterbury). This alone is invaluable, since Monkton's relative purity will considerably crystallise the known/likely formal range associated with Highstead Period 2. In addition there is unexpected confirmation of a minor Highstead trend: the presence of a small quantity of probably non-local wares. One or two red-finished (haematite-coated) fine wares are present and there are some new forms. However, the site's main contribution is the evidence for metallurgy: metalworking slag, copper alloy sickle in situ 2 A Canterbury Archaeological Trust Archive Report: 'A Re-Appraisal of the Prehistoric Pottery from 10-11 Castle Street, Canterbury', N. Macpherson-Grant 1991. Copies available on request; see note 3 below. 249 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY in a contemporary context, and parts of 3 bronze hoards in close topographic association to the settlement. There can be no doubt of inter-relationships here. All the metalwork falls within the bracket c. 900/800-600 B.C. Though future more detailed study/information may modify this slightly - the broad dating is precisely that independently proposed for Highstead's Period 2 ceramic phase. The linkage here is excellent and unavoidable, and precisely what was required in the first instance to begin stabilising the initial ceramic dating for Highstead Period 2. Much more important this dating can now be extended to all those sites sharing the ceramic attributes detailed below. Whilst there are the usual provisos of potting conservatism and style longevity to remember, the attributes mentioned reflect a remarkable degree of manufacturing/qualitative consistency over a wide regional area. There are variations, but underlying these is a strongly unified sense of ability and skill which has far wider implications than ceramic studies alone. In the interim, we now have a clearly identified, consistently occurring, artefactual package with mutually re-inforcing dating. Presentation This section is followed by an overview of all-period ceramics recovered during the excavation, together with any comments pertinent to site interpretation. The remainder of the report is confined entirely to the LBA/EIA assemblage which, for the moment, is best treated as a single-period entity. Comprehensive context-based presentation would obscure the main assemblage trends; this is contained within the archive report.3 Here, only the pottery from Ditch F8 is treated in this manner; the remainder from all other contexts, is presented synthetically, by ware type and vessel type. However, a figured pottery and context concordance is provided in Appendix II (p. 288). The graphic treatment of figured pottery is self-explanatory with the proviso that the line treatment for plain undecorated fine wares is essentially technical: line orientation indicates the angle of burnish recorded (e.g., Fig. 5, 5; Fig. 2, 53). Similarly pots exhibiting profuse basal gritting are provided with a bar key to emphasise this trait. Though Section 2 (p. 260) is specifically a discussion of regional parallels, these are too numerous to quote comprehensively. Again a synthetic list of figured pottery and inter-assemblage parallels is 3 Available on request from the author: Canterbury Archaeological Trust, 92A Broad Street, Canterbury, Kent, CT l 2LV, or D. Perkins, Trust for Thanet Archae ology, Crampton Tower Yard, High Street, Broadstairs, Kent, CT lO 2AB. 250 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 presented in Appendix I (p. 287) to be used in conjunction with the distribution map Fig. 19. For reasons of clarity the latter is basically confined to north-east Kent where the majority of the sites occur. Three sections highlighting non-regional parallels, chronology and regional trends follow the above, with specific reference to the broader issues than can now ( or should) be raised. Ceramic quantities The excavation produced an overall total of 2651 sherds (weighing: 25 kg. 2 gr.). The following tabulation simplistically divides this total into the period groups present: 1. Late Bronze/Iron Age transition fabrics: Total count : 2644 sherds Total weight: 24 kg. 935 gr. 2. 'Belgic' fabrics: Total count : 4 sherds Total weight: 49 gr. 3. Medieval fabrics: Total count : 2 sherds Total weight: 16 gr. 4. Post-medieval fabrics: Total count: 1 sherd Total weight: 2 gr. It should be noted that during initial assessment the possibility was raised that small quantities of Beaker and Late Bronze Age DeverelRimbury- type wares might be present as residual elements. T he possible Beaker base is illustrated (Fig. 18) but is now considered an understandable but probably erroneous attribution. Its base diameter, firing, filler characteristics and degree of wear would not be inappropriate; but it came from the lower fill of Ditch F7 accompanied by recognisable LBA/EIA transition elements and, since its fabric is similar to a minority ware of the latter date a non-Beaker allocation is more likely. The same minority ware, together with a small very coarse-gritted element, accounted for the earlier possibility of LBA DeverelRimbury- type material. All the sherds are small, and the minority ware in particular is more sparsely gritted and does not survive well. Again a later LBA/EIA transition date is now preferred - but with caution. 251 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY Fig. 18 also illustrates a putative Late Iron Age/'Belgic' grog-and-flinttempered bead-rim type jar. Though markedly different in its context, form, fabric and wear characteristics could occur in LBA/EIA assemblages. An LBA/EIA attribution is reasonable but with reservations. 'Belgic' pottery is present from Floor F2 and Ditch F7 and a jar base is illustrated (Fig. 18). The material is variably worn and indicates a settlement of broadly first-century A.O. date in the vicinity; most of the material should represent field-manuring scatters. Roman ceramics are represented solely by tile fragments ( quite large, but worn). They indicate occupation with continued agricultural usage of the site area (though no other Roman pottery was recorded). One 'Belgic' sherd and at least one piece of Roman tile from the upper fill of Ditch F8 have interpretative implications for the landscape during the Late Iron Age/Roman periods; their presence and position should also indirectly affect landscape interpretation in the intervening period following cessation of the LBA/EIA settlement. Medieval pottery suggests renewed field-manuring from the later thirteenth century (if not earlier). The Post-medieval pottery from the excavation is probably derived from the occupation/activity associated with the chalk foundations in Ditch F7. Observed material of mostly sixteenth- to later eighteenthcentury date was recorded elsewhere on the site (p. 245). The above tabulation and notes make it abundantly clear that in the area of the excavation the only significant phase of occupation took place during the earlier first millennium B.C. How long this occupation lasted is discussed in Section 4a, (p. 276), but the presence of two, possibly intercutting, ditches (F7 and F8,) means that whilst the broader ceramic dating indicates a single-period settlement, the latter itself may be of at least two-phase duration. THE LBA/EIA TRANSITION ASSEMBLAGE l . Summary of assemblage trends Here, comparative quantitative statements are confined to the fabrics only; comments derived from the statistical analysis of categories, as (b )-( d) below, are qualified by the sample nature of the excavation - and ultimately only meaningful via inter-assemblage studies. For the same reason spatial distribution studies of fabric, vessel and decoration types have not been undertaken though obvious examples will be 252 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 mentioned below. Wear distribution patterns and useful vessel frequency patterns are similarly qualified; the latter in particular are further compromised since they reflect interesting technological/ survival characteristics ( ( e) below). (a) Fabric types. A total of 15 fabric types have been identified macroscopically (backedup by low-power x 20 magnification). Some, with varying frequencies of deliberately added fillers or naturally occurring inclusions such as quartz sand and vegetal matter, are likely to represent points along the same spectrum. This total condenses into five broad classes: moderate to (normally) heavily flint-tempered, grogged/essentially grogged with sparse flint, purely organic-tempered/filled, sandy/essentially sandy with sparse flint or grog, and fine sandy. The flint-tempered wares are numerically and visually dominant: 2558 sherds within the overall recovered total of 2651. There are no purely flint-tempered fabrics (i.e., without visually detectable natural or accidentally/deliberately occurring inclusions). The last four classes are minority wares represented by only 93 sherds of which 73 come from a single purely sandy ware jar (Ditch F7, Fig. SA). For these minority wares no more than 3--4 (mostly fewer) individual vessels per fabric type are involved and are likely to represent 'one-offs' reflecting sporadic selection of alternative (? local) clay sources. But some may not, and the sandy ware jar appears to be a genuine outsider in a dominantly flint-tempered assemblage. This jar and possibly the fine sandy class are fabric types worth noting for the future. Within the main flint-tempered group, there are a further four subdivisions: flint and moderate-profusely grog-tempered, flint-tempered with a moderate-profuse organic content, and two types (which may be internally related) with only sparse-moderate flint - one containing sparse angular ironstone inclusions. None of these are major fabric types: only 308 sherds overall. Those with visually obvious quantities of grog or organic inclusions represent deliberately produced mixedtemper wares. Some of the sherds with only a fairly sparse coarse flint content are the cause of the putative LBA Deverel-Rimbury element originally suggested. (b) Manufacturing attributes. Most of the specifically productional attributes that epitomize regional Highstead Period 2-type assemblages are present: (i) Both fine and coarse ware bowls and jars with (underside) a visually obvious basal 'skin' of profuse flint grits from being made on beds of burnt and crushed flint temper (Plates I and II, 253 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY PLATE I Monkton Court Farm: Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age pottery. Vessel bases with profuse flint-temper 'skin'; typical medium-fine grade examples. (Scale in centimetres). (Photo.: A. Savage) Figs. 5, 7, 12-13 17-18). The grits often, but not always correspond with the temper grade used in an individual pot's construction;4 (ii) Thin-walled fine ware bowls generally typified b y the fairly profuse addition of finely-ground flint temper; (iii) Very large, very thin-walled storage jars (as Fig. 1 6) , some of which exhibit remnant coil-pinch finger-presses only superficially smoothed over (similar to Fig. 15, 90). This rather haphazard trait is present on storage jar sherds within the assemblage and frequently accompanies rim and base types similar to Figs. 16-17. There are also one or two new features, isolated quirks probably, rather than significant traits. The fine ware jar base 52 (Fig. 12) has its body atypica11y loaded with flint filler. Technically this is a variant of attribute (ii), but with most fine wares, though the grits are profuse, they generally have room to 'breathe' - here the body is packed with fine-medium grade temper. Usually the basal 'skin' of grits (attribute 4 An alternative explanation for the presence of these basal 'skins' is that pots were left to dry on beds of crushed flint (O'Connell 1986, 62). 254 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 PLATE 11 Monkton Court Farm: Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age pottery. Storage jar base with typical coarse-grade profuse flint-temper 'skin'. (Scale in centimetres). (Photo.: A. Savage) (i)) is confined neatly to the base underside, any overlap onto lower body walls either rarely occurring or being subsequently smoothed off; on bowl/jar base 114 (Fig. 18) the 'skin' overlaps, perhaps precisely because the body wall is low-angled (or the vessel was pushed rather firmly down into the bed of grits). The angular-shouldered coarse ware jar (Fig. 13, 70) is a classic example of remnant coil-pinching - unusual on a small vessel, though there is an isolated Period 3A example from Highstead. (c) Form types. The assemblage is characterised by generally high-shouldered fine and coarse wares with simple mostly curving upright or everted rims, typically flaring on fine wares, often stiffer, but not always, on coarse wares. Even technically closed forms such as 8 (Fig. 5) and 95-97 (Fig. 16) have this flared finish. For coarse ware rims alone, simplicity predominates both these and a wide range of finishes: flat-topped (69), internally cupped and beaded (65, 94), neatly flat-topped or internally smoothed and bevelled (often as a surface ready for decoration - 255 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY PLATE 111 Monkton Court Farm: Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age pottery. Fine ware jar 8 - detail of fine irregular combed decoration. (Scale in centimetres). (Pho10.: A. Savage) 81-82, 95, 97), thickened and rounded/beaked finishes (88, 91 ). Some shoulders are topped with short straight-angled eversions (96) - essentially bevelled; these are a consistent but generally rather rare component of larger regional assemblages. Thickened, carefully moulded rims with internal bevelling are mostly the province of fine ware or larger sub-fine ware types: fortunately present here (on 28 - poorly; on 44 - well) and by implication on 3 (see also Fig. 20). Very flaring graceful rims/profiles are somewhat rarer (12 and 45); an extreme coarse ware example is 86 which, at Highstead, would not be out of place on Monkton 90. Rounded lower-body, almost bowl-form, profiles on coarse wares appear to be regionally rare. The standard fine ware/coarse ware profile is for high-shouldered angular, mostly sub-angular/sub-rounded forms, moulded to a fairly consistent I :2, 1 :3 shoulder-body ratio. Where detectable, base diameters are again apparently constructed according to a fairly standard ratio: approximately half the rim diameter. A rarer form (but probably regionally more frequently occurring than the evidence has allowed) is the almost biconical (or here, 8, bi-globular) jar form, with a near I: 1 upper-lower body ratio. The major formal exception, but still elegantly simple is the class of wide-mouthed bowls with neat incurved 256 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 rims (Fig. 17) - and bowl 46 is a truly exceptional vessel; Nos. 47-9 are much more typical. There are one or two new forms: the perforated flaring-rimmed jar 45 (Fig. 10), the globular vessel 66, the small angular 70. Not new, but better represented here, are the large essentially fine ware jars 50-51; these two almost reach storage-jar proportions, at least in diameter. (d) Decoration and surface treatment. Decoration types simply and neatly divide into two classes: combed or incised linear decoration on fine wares, finger-tip/thumb-pressed and moulded-applied on coarse wares. Decoration on fine ware bowls and jars is entirely above-shoulder, principally consisting of a single band of incised lines, mostly 3-4 (Nos. 25-27), or a single band of combing (Nos. 1, 8-9) at or generally just above the shoulder. Two bands of incised or combed lines occur less frequently (No. 24 and (probably), 10) placed between shoulder and base of the neck flare. Groups of single spaced incised lines are also fairly rare (e.g., 4). Rarer still but diagnostically important, are above-shoulder combed (No. 3) or incised (No. 28) chevrons, generally bordered above and below by horizontal lines. A much rarer type is 36 with single diagonal spaced lines in association with horizontal lines. A new type is the diagonal spaced combed decoration on 8. Quality of execution varies enormously: neat on 24 (and probably 4), roughly efficient short combed strokes on 1, crude irregular light combing on 8 (see also Plate III). The difference in quality may be due to the tools employed: incised lines seem generally better executed than combed examples, which consistently (at least at Monkton) give the impression of a rough-and-ready approach, in part possibly due to differential comb-tooth lengths. Another regionally rare type but consistently occurring in single/low quantities are red-finished (haematite-coated) bowls (No. 33); a second was recorded from the same context (Floor F2). No. 33 is highly unusual in having traces of red-finish on both surfaces (external application is the recorded norm). Plastic decoration on fine ware vessels is also fairly rare (34), and the rim position here, rarer still. The finish of 12 is essentially of sub-coarse ware standard, but the form and neatly moulded, incised and impressed combination of decorative elements are really that accorded to fine wares. At Monkton applied and decorated cordons, principally on large storage jars, occur fairly frequently, with impressed decoration the commonest technique employed (20, 93-94); some (92, 95) are incised decorated. Plain cordons are rare. Application quality varies: neat on 93, crude on 94-95. The clumsy angled application on 94 is epitomised elsewhere, e.g. Highstead 188 (inset Fig. 16). Here, as with jars, the decoration is entirely above-shoulder, which in the latter is commonest 257 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY on rim sides, tops and inner-rim bevels (Figs. 14-16), fairly frequent on shoulders (89-90), less frequently in neck hollows (88). Again quality varies, mostly fairly rough, but occasionally very neat, as with the 'cable' impressed rim of 81. There is nothing new here: the types are regionally standard for the period. Surface treatment categories are fairly standard: burnishing, tooled/finger smoothing, rougher scoriated wiping. There is again an above-shoulder emphasis, whatever the technique: less apparent on the fine wares but apparent all the same. For these, a smoothed surface is then burnished, mostly horizontally, but occasionally vertically (5, 62), sometimes multi-directional (e.g., jar base 3). The degree of burnish varies considerably. At Monkton it is rather poor, but this may be due to wear/soil factors. Even so, LBA/EIA fine ware burnishes rarely achieve the sometimes highly glossy finish apparent on some Iron Age bowls. Some Monkton fine ware burnishes are extremely superficial: on no. 10 treatment has barely suppressed formative finger-work along the rim overhang. Conversely, the large bowl 46, though only quite moderately burnished is an excellent and evenly-finished product. On coarse wares there is a generally consistent tendency for 'better' horizontal above-shoulder smoothing, with variably rough-crude vertical or diagonal finishes below the shoulder. The rim treatment on jar 13 is extremely minimal; the lower body finish of 90 is exceptionally coarse and the vertical grit-drag scoriation on 76, 98-100 essentially standard. Not unexpectedly internal finishes on most coarse wares are better, but sometimes only marginally. Conversely, the internal finishes of some storage jars are considerably better, with often quite high quality horizontal tooled burnishing almost down to the base. The almost fluted finger-pulls on 76, 79 and behind the cordon of 94 are very marked and regionally quite common. Cruder base finishes are epitomised by 21, but some smaller diameter jar bases are consistently neatly formed and finished, e.g., nos. 111 and 116. A new category, noted at Highstead but not initially considered to be a likely regional characteristic, is the occurrence on some storage jars of a wet slurried finish. It is most marked on Monkton 95 and its Highstead equivalent 188. On the latter the slurried appearance coincides with the condition of the applied cordon which has definitely slumped downward from its intended position. The impression received is of a roughly applied rather wet, fairly thick almost creamconsistency slip, followed by minimal smoothing. Interestingly both Monkton 95 and Highstead 188 have the same pale buff-pink oxidised firing colours. Sherds from another similar vessel at Monkton have the same firing tones and a ? 'slipped' external finish. In this instance the surface 'slip' or skin is rich in bright red iron oxide grains, which are not apparent in the fabric. It is tempting to see this as not only 258 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 indicative of slip application but, possibly, using one that is deliberately iron rich. It may be coincidence, but it remains a little odd that there should be at least three similar vessels, with a similar likely function, two of which are topographically distinctly separate, all with similar firing colours and exhibiting the appearance of being slipped, of which one does appear to have a perhaps deliberately selected clay type, apparently different from that used for the vessel itself. ( e) Assemblage condition. Any implications arising from wear-pattern studies are important particularly where potentially intercutting features such as Ditches F7 and F8 are concerned (Fig. 31, p. 307), and from the deeper pits. There are several qualifications that apply in this instance which are discussed in relation to the pottery from these ditches in Section 4a (p. 276). Here it is sufficient to note that the material from Ditch F8, Section 3 and the adjacent portion of ditch in Trench YY, containing the large dump of pottery published here as Key Group LBA/EIA 16, shows clear evidence of fairly long-term static exposure and partial burial, with a number of sherds exhibiting either unifacial wear or basically fresh sherds with only one edge markedly worn round. For the rest of the site many features show evidence of disturbance due to agricultural or other factors (pp. 239-40), so that wear-pattern data is rather qualified. However, a number of these do contain small quantities of markedly more worn sherds. Whilst these are mostly in the fabric type mentioned above that might abrade more quickly because of its reduced flint content, interestingly a similar sherd accompanies much fresher material from Layer 2 of Ditch F8. The wear pattern is very different from the bulk of pottery from both ditches, with all edges and faces worn, suggesting movement and relatively long-term exposure. More-or-less the same pattern of wear is shared by all these sherds - so that whilst interpretation is marginally qualified by the fabric type, it is possible that they are genuine indicators of fairly long-term occupation. LBA/EIA material tends to fragment and abrade in a particular way which is primarily a technological factor, with the production of principally thin-walled vessels. The resultant higher fragmentation rate coupled with variable rim profiles can make vessel frequency estimates difficult in mostly heavily flint-loaded fabrics together with either, firing temperatures that result in an extremely thin skin of surface coloration or possibly slipped finishes for some vessels, resulting in a highly distinctive wear appearance. The Monkton material is no exception, and when the first handful of body sherds were recovered in 1990, allowed for the confident period attribution given then (irrespective of the associated hoard material). 259 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY 2. Inter-assemblage parallels As noted in the Introduction parallels within the region are too numerous to quote at length. It is important to note that, quite apart from those listed in Appendix I, there is a whole range of minor characteristics and variations as well, that firmly link Monkton to Highstead and other assemblages. Here only some key examples are highlighted. (a) The pottery from Ditch F8 (Figs. 5-8). No. 1 is a variation of a simple bow type present in the Period 2 assemblage from Enclosure A24 at Highstead (Fig. 20) and in most regional assemblages. No. 3 is only the second example from the region known to the author, the combination of likely vessel size and combed decoration links it firmly to Highstead 33 (Fig. 20) from Enclosure B70. The Highstead context is slightly difficult, but there is a similar type of decoration on a smaller bowl from a Highstead Period 2 key pit group (B317, no. 231). The decorated fine ware jar 8 is, superficially, a new type, but is related to a class of large fine ware jars/bowls that occur elsewhere: Hacklinge 11 (Parfitt, forthcoming) and less closely at Highstead (Enclosure A24, No. 214). Monkton 10 should be from the same class of vessel and the type of decoration is closer to the parallels quoted. The elegant no. 12 is again superficially new but its decoration and quality of finish are a combination of elements found on Highstead 180, 189 and the bowl form is equivalent to a plain version, Hacklinge 13. (b) Pottery from other contexts (Figs. 9-18). The style of decoration on Monkton 24, but less closely the form, is paralleled across the region at Hacklinge and Folkestone (Fig. 20), and also from the Mill Hill enclosure, Deal (Champion 1980, Fig. 6, 8). Again from Mill Hill a rather larger fine ware jar figured by Champion has a similar profile to Monkton 8. Monkton 28 is another second-only, and nicely linked by a combination of decoration and form to two vessels in the Highstead pit group B317 (nos. 230, 231). For the plain fine ware bowls some parallels are given in Fig. 20, but Monkton 44 is important: its markedly bevelled rim links it to a number of bevelledrim jars from Period 2 contexts at Highstead, but here specifically is akin to decorated Monkton 28 and thus to Highstead 230 and 33. If the perforated jar 45 is equivalent to East Northdown P31 (Smith 1987, Fig. 11), then the pottery from this site is slightly less isolated from the range of Highstead Period 2-type assemblages in the region. The coarse ware jar 76 can be linked to Canterbury (see footnote 1) and to Hacklinge 16. Monkton 86 is an extreme form paralleled well from 260 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 MONKTON COURT FARM 1992 (MCF.92) : DITCH 8 KEY GROUP LBA/EIA 16 : , . ·, ... ... .......... . \ ,- '. \ ' \ \· ' \ \ . 􀀑. ' -􀀇 ... \ . ' . }., : :::: _ .. -· 􀀒􀀓- 6 8 3 - - --,ms I I 7 ; I I / I • • , ! . ' ' ' / ; r , ., / : , \ J ' . ' :i I I I ... r- I , , • / . 􀀋 '. , : r I , ' Fig. 5. Monkton Court Farm: Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age pottery - Key Group(¼). 261 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY MCF.92: DITCH B. KEY GROUP LBA/EIA 16: 9 10 11 12 13 Fig. 6. Monkton Court Farm: Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age pottery - Key Group(¼). 262 MONKTON COURT FA RM EVALUATION 1992 MCF.92: DITCH 8: KEY GROUP LBA/EIA 16 14 F. 􀀂􀀃 -=-,;,--,-- 􀀆􀀇= .•·- --,· •/, .·:,...,􀀇 -: -::r-".r:;:.· 16 15 I 􀀁 􀀂 18 21 19 j l7f􀀂 Jir 'ft?􀀄 17 20 ►\! 23 . . ·1􀀅 ...... - 􀀅":'i· Fig. 7. Monkton Court Farm: Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron A ge pottery - Key Group(¼). Highstead Enclosure B70 (no. 118 - but the precise contextual evidence is rather weak). Amongst the storage jars, 95 is much closer to Highstead 188 than the drawing suggests, particularly in terms of finish - and there is a close variant at Eddington Farm. Highstead 205 is an identical undecorated version of Monkton 96. Returning briefly to East Northdown - the pottery from this site is essentially different (albeit a small assemblage). Pot P31 could possibly equal Monkton 45, but otherwise there are no genuine linkages unless internally bevelled forms like Monkton 28 and Highstead 230 are decorated fine ware equivalents of East Northdown PIO and possibly, P ll. The assemblage of this site is essentially closer to Kingston Down, particularly with reference to the last two vessels (e.g., MacphersonGrant 1980, Fig. 11, 58). For Monkton, the bevelled rim of Kingston 93 could be equated with Monkton 96; Kingston 66 is close to Monkton 47 and Monkton 17 is identical to Kingston Down 56. This site also had several red-finished fine ware bowl sherds and Monkton 33 is shouldered, as is red-finished Highstead 32 (though the profile evidence is limited in each instance). 263 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY &r-::.::1::.::·.··· .. :•:.:,.: .... :··.·.1 MCF. 92 : DITCH 8 KEY GROUP LBA/EIA 16 ?NON-LOCAL SANDY WARE Fig. 8. Monkton Court Farm: Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age pottery - Key Group, ? non-local coarse ware (¼). 3. Non-regional parallels This is not a comprehensive survey, but is limited to a few key Thames Valley sites, principally to provide some formal and chronological parameters for the dating proposed for Monkton. A full survey coupled with a search of Continental parallels is crucial but beyond the scope of the present project, and also aspects that better serve a more synthetic overview of regional assemblages. Parallels with the first millennium B.C. 'plainware' assemblage at Runnymede are relatively few and not very close, but some elements find echoes at Monkton. For instance the sharp-shouldered concave neck of Monkton 41 could be equated with some fine ware bowl/jar forms, etc., Runnymede 48-50. Also the use of specifically combed decoration (rather than incised) in wavy lines or chevrons as on Runnymede 376-378 is broadly similar to Highstead 230 and thus indirectly Monkton, but technically the style is more curvilinear and body position different. In addition the Monkton storage jars 96-97 264 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 MCF. 92 1 OTHER CONTEXTS : DECORATED FINEWARES SMALL and MEDIUM DIAMETER BOW LS and JARS J IVl 25 I􀀄l0jJ ) 26 r􀀄 e ) 27 \ .J LARGE DIAMETER EXAMPLES L __ 33 ' - - r _ _:: ,._ 􀀏-___ ,:- -.;. - - - - -- --=- - -- -' ......=- --=- 􀀎-- 􀀏- - _ __ - __ - -- 􀀅 t 24 f:;,-- 􀀃 􀀄 28 29 1 32 Red - finished 1􀀃7 31 I. :,:. w􀀇 =􀀃- t􀀃-􀀄 ' 35 34 OTHER TYPES 36 Fig. 9. Monkton Court Farm: Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age pottery - fine wares(¼). 265 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY MCF.92: OTHER CONTEXTS: FINEWARES: BOWLS \ PROFILES OTHER TYPES 38 41 42 44 ,. , .. , > 40 43 ) ) Fig. I 0. Monkton Court Farm: Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age pottery - fine wares(¼). N 0\ --.J MCF.92: OTHER CONTEXTS: FINEWARES: INCURVED-RIM BOWLS r 47 F 48 LARGE DIAMETER JARS /J""""-m 􀀂 􀀃􀀄 '=- 􀀅 f- 50 46 lllr ) 49 \ Fig. 11. Monkton Court Fann: Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age pottery - fine wares (¼). , , , , , , , ' ' 􀀆 0 ; () g 􀀇 􀀈 􀀉 tI1 􀀊 e􀀁 􀀂 - \0 \0 N D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY MCF. 92 : OTHER CONTEXTS : FINEWARES : As No.SO 􀀶 51 '"􀀁:. BASE TYPES: JARS and BOWLS 52 ' '-., --Z? • 59 57 58 lrl1l I --..--.: 60 ,...:_ 61 􀀂 \,,, \c 􀀃 "-- '=- 62 63 , , ' , , / 54 55 56 , , ' , , , , , /// , ' , Fig. 12. Monkton Court Farm: Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age pottery - fine wares(¼). 268 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 MCF.92: OTHER CONTEXTS: COARSEWARES 1 􀀂 􀀃l 􀀋:-. i.JL1'-gf'/ " ·,. i..;_.,,.,,, 64 1:􀀖􀀗r-¥/./,\J,:'.;K{{;,_􀀘ft!􀀙,i11 65 􀀊i􀀋􀀌y (--·--· & FLINT 66 MEDIUM DIAMETER JARS 72 73 SMALL DIAMETER JARS t-􀀆-- ,􀀇􀀃􀀈 ( 67 68 J;;:- 69 rr C 􀀈If 70 71 r0-􀀆--􀀇 ·:.􀀉:.-.i,•\c . . · 71 - .. · I􀀃, 􀀊-7:-􀀋-􀀌... ,. 􀀍 ,. - . 􀀄 􀀆_."'7 . :. ' ...... ... .. r-􀀉·-·􀀊...) - '- i;tJ;JY 􀀅􀀆 􀀂l ,.1􀀅7 75 I Fig. 13. Monkton Court Farm: Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age pottery - coarse wares(¼). D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY MCF. 92 : OTHER CONTEXTS 1 '\­I -- 78 76 :􀀅: :a:z:zi: [􀀂--·,.:·- j' 80 V 82 77 79 RIM DECORATED as Nos. 79 and 81 COARSEWARES: MEDIUM DIAMETER JARS --􀀄: -.􀀈 .- .... -,;:,,-;,•· 81 -􀀆- 1􀀃7 Fig. 14. Monkton Court Farm: Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age pottery - coarse wares(¼). 270 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 MCF. 92 : OTHER CONTEXTS : COARSEWARES MEDIUM- LARGE DIAMETER JARS F 85 􀀆 􀀇 .. -:,.,-.,. r.l"".--.- F􀀄.- 􀀃·'F . , .,;􀀅 r ,- ·. ..-•. .88 DECORATED STORAGE JAR CORDONS 84 87 91 ' 92 I 83 ( 7 86 89 ? 93 Fig. 15. Monkton Court Farm: Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age pottery - coarse wares(¼). ·L. HIGHSTEAD 188 􀀄 􀀅 􀀃- ---􀀈~􀀉 11 :􀀃 If! .. MCF.92: OTHER CONTEXTS: I!-"'" -- 94 􀀆,􀀇 . -- - . 95 COARSEWARES: STORAGE JARS :1;00:11􀀉z:c 97 \ Fig. 16. Monkton Court Farm: Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age pottery- coarse wares. Monkton 95 and Highstead 188 (inset) with similar finishes (¼). tI1 ;z: i tI1 tI1 N -.J VJ MCF.92: OTHER CONTEXTS : COARSEWARES STORAGE JARS: PROFILE 99 \:- BASE TYPES '. '\ I:.·\\ ; ;, •, , . . . I 1 · · • I • 1·, ·, · ./ l1 / , . \ ' ·. \ - " . . .... ,,, ·'/. , \ : I I' . :,, f ,,, ,·􀀠 I • \ I I •l • ,,,,. • 1\ I \ l \ i ; , , '/ .;,,;/1.t'(·.''--I, 􀀆 l . ' . ' / t• I !:. ' ! ,/ I ' \ · :j> : tl·•·/:-f; 'l,l't'irtl i \ . i ' I .t-> /I; ,,,f.''" ,/. ,,\\\!\;, '· 􀀧 _'1-I i!·Uditl¾l. 1 n ,􀀫 ,,, 1·1'1'·',,,.,f'.•·•· I/ : ., ,· ii': ,. !. _''I/ 1¼t '· /·ii/:;.t·f//:· ,I/, I ·':-/-t-...:.r 􀀐-:􀀑)r.:.ri/i' -· 􀀌 /"t?(-1?tt? ----=􀀣;;r;-7·· /􀀤􀀥 -1 103 \. 􀀁 􀀂 􀀃:;.._ 􀁠 102 100 101 . '< .\•,·. · 1•1 ,, , ., . 1 \• • 1· •·· .lpf; .•,'/.,·/. ·' 1 \\ \. \ ,",·J""f: t" /!1,;/,􀀏 . ·)',\\'!,·; :li'􀁡/f/, ' 1 \\ ,,: t Aif-':l,;i,1· 􀁢________: 􀀡 ltir:i1􀀇ff Fig. 17. Monkton Court Farm: Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age pottery - coarse wares (¼). 􀀃 􀀄 z(") 0 c::: 􀁣 􀁤 􀁥 􀁦 r; 􀁧 0z - \0\0 N D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY MCF. 92 : OTHER CONTEXTS • COARSEWARES : JAR BASE TYPES 104 107 110 111 \.. _ _ 112 MISCELLANEOUS ?Beaker 105 HANDLE 113 106 􀀉 ·_. \ .- /, -:,-;11, 􀀐 ... 1. /.,·· I \-,1 􀀑tr:􀀒-' 􀁅 L cfor;•i:L.,.,-' 􀀍----------------------m 114 115 116 117 \ ? Late Iron Age!Belgic' '\... t:' -/ 'Belglc' ------·· i3 Fig. 18. Monkton Court Farm: Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age pottery - coarse wares; and ? residual or intrusive material of various dates (¼). 274 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 could be seen as echoes of Runnymede 51 and 216 - in a less angular way; but apart from broader similarities between some coarse ware types and decoration, which are more likely to be conservative elements anyway, likenesses generally end (Longley 1980, Figs. 21, 29, 36). Interestingly, from another early essentially 'plainware' assemblage at Queen Mary's Hospital, Carshalton, formal similarities, though still broad, are rather closer. In view of the relatively large group of handled jars at this site, and with the handled Mill Hill 1 (Champion op. cit., Fig. 6) and a possible linkage between Mill Hill 2 and Monkton 8 in mind, it is tempting to see Carshalton 216 as ancestral to the Monkton vessel. Carshalton 7 is probably from a large storage jar and again linkage to Highstead Period 2-type jars from the region is not unrealistic. More specifically perhaps forms like Carshalton 86 could find reasonable parallels in Monkton 39 and the shoulder of Carshalton 215, in Monkton 41. Again Carshalton 215 is a rather lower-shouldered variant of Highstead 200 (Fig. 20) (Adkins and Needham 1985, Figs. 4, 7, 8). Some vessels from both Runnymede and Carshalton have bases with profuse basal grits, and this is a trait also present at Mucking South Rings (Jones and Bond 1980). At this site (and using this specific published reference, op. cit., Fig. 3) Mucking 3 is almost a decorated version of Monkton 39. Mucking 14-15 are probably storage jars broadly similar to Monkton 94-95, 97 and other similar regional forms. Monkton 24 is loosely akin to Mucking 6 and Monkton 5 could find a reasonably close companion in Mucking 4. Towards the middle of the first millennium, Petters Sports Field, Egham, provides a useful later reference point. Again allowing for a possible degree of coarse ware formal and decorational conservatism, it is interesting that there are no genuine relationships between Petters and Monkton - despite the presence at Petters of perforated slabs. Monkton 34 could be a distant relative of some undecorated fine ware bowl types e.g., Petters 117 or a smaller version of Petters 108. Monkton 39 could be seen as a distant more distinctly shouldered version of Petters 76. Beyond these though, the similarities tend to cease and Petters bowls have less flaring necks and a distinct tendency for slightly everted beaded rims which, within the Highstead sequence does not appear until Period 3B. There is also a general absence of plain incurved-rim bowls such as 46-49 and indeed Petters bowls have more in common with Highstead Period 3B types and other Iron Age types in general (O'Connell 1986, Figs. 47-49). 275 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY 4. Chronology (a) Internal archaeological sequence Due to bad ground conditions during the excavation, there are difficulties in determining the original relationship between Ditches F7 and F8. As noted above they could represent two separate phases of activity/occupation, and certainly their converging alignments would initially imply this. Within the key pottery group from Trench YY there are inter-context joins, principally with Section 3, but there are also sherds from a large storage jar in the upper fills of Ditch F8, from YY, Section 3 and Section 1 b, suggesting that whilst the epicentre of the pottery deposit was in YY and Section 3, some material was dumped/scattered at the same time along the length of Ditch 8 between Sections 3 and 1 b. This much is clear-cut. The uncertainty arises with the interpretation of Ditch F7. The large dump of pottery in YY was accompanied by soil darkened by either charcoal or decayed organic matter. This darker layer does not appear to extend along Ditch F8, but does occur in Ditch F7 (Layer 5, Section l a, Fig. 3), but as Fig. 31 indicates no trace of F7 was encountered in Section 3 or Trench YY. Either F7 terminated short of F8, in which case the dark soil associated with the ceramic dump in YY represents a different infill event, or F7 did continue, was partially contemporary with Ditch F8 in some way and that both, at a joint late stage of infill, received significant quantities of ceramic and other rubbish. Contemporaneity of some sort is borne out by the small quantities of pottery from Sections 1 a (Ditch F7) and 1 b (Ditch F8), i.e. no detectable difference in wear condition or date (with the exception of one sherd from F8, below). The original story remains unresolved. On balance the orientation of the ditches could favour two phases of activity, but with one potential exception, this is not borne out by the bulk of the ceramic record. An important qualification here is that despite the significant advances of recent years, we still do not have enough comparative regional data to fine-tune material that is chronologically close, particularly when, as probably here, it is within a 50-100 year ( or less) span. The exception is the more heavily worn small sherd from Ditch F8 and others of similar nature from the rest of the site. If these sherds are genuine indicators of events rather than differences in wear-rates stemming from variations in fabric type, then the author would propose: (i) A possible pre-Ditch F7 light-weight phase of occupation, for which no feature traces have survived. This could make F7 broadly contemporary with F8 in some way or preferably: 276 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 (ii) That the more worn sherds are associated with F7 and any related occupation. That Ditch F7 did not continue as far as Section 3 and Trench YY and that this sub-phase was of relatively short duration followed by: (iii) A main second phase associated with the larger, probably outer, Ditch F8 and more substantial occupation represented by the bulk of the ceramics. (iv) That the pottery dump from high in the fill of Ditch F8 represents cessation of occupation. This clearance or ? 'leave-taking' deposit seems to be a regularly occurring feature of Late Bronze Age settlements in the south-east (Dr Champion, pers. comm.) for which an act-essence other than simple rubbish disposal may be implied. (v) Ditch F8 was left open to infill naturally. Despite the nature of the soil and erosional/depositional character of the area inferred from soil analyses (p. 000), the presence of 'Belgic' and Roman ceramics from the final fills of Ditch F8 does suggest that it remained undisturbed as a gradually in-filling feature of the landscape until this period, if not later. (b) Ceramics For the moment simplistic temporal parameters need to be applied to Monkton and those sites most closely linked to it. Of the non-regional assemblages referred to above for parallels, the earliest, Runnymede and Carshalton are basically of 'plainware' type (Barrett 1980, 307-8), characterised by a limited range of decorated types and arguably placable between c. 1000-850/800 B.C. O'Connor's scheme of dating (O'Connor 1980, 272, Table 13) has been applied to Runnymede and will be used in the following discussion. At Runnymede both the metalwork and the pottery have been placed into LBA2-3, that is between c. 1000/900-700 B.C., but with the strong proviso that the material may be principally LBA2 (Longley 1980, 74; Needham in, 27), closer to the beginning of the Ewart Park phase of LBA metalwork and therefore between c. 1000/900-800 B.C. At Carshalton the pottery and metalwork has been placed into the tenth-eighth centuries B.C., i.e., between c. 1000-700 B.C. and spanning LBA2-3 - that is rather later within the Ewart Park metalwork tradition than at Runnymede, a possibility perhaps emphasised by some of the metalwork at Carshalton which can be dated rather more specifically to LBA 3 i.e., c. 900-700 B.C. (Adkins and Needham 1985, 32 and 45-6). Modified, Carshalton could be placed c. 1000/900-700 B.C. At Petters Sports Field, Egham, a metalwork hoard is considered to have been deposited late in the Ewart Park phase, in the seventh 277 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY century (O'Connor's LBA4). Late ditch fill material over the hoard provided C14 dates suggesting deposition in the seventh or sixth century B.C. (O'Connell 1986, 71-2). Egham therefore could be placed spanning LBA4/EIA1 and thus c. 700-600/500 B.C. The dating from the admittedly limited range of non-regional parallels can now be brought to bear. A number of vessel bases at Egham have p rofusely flint-gritted bases, an essentially Highstead Period 2-type phenomenon with earlier ancestry (as noted above). At Highstead this trait is still present in Period 3A assemblages, c. 600-550/500 B.C., but wanes in prevalence so that (for Highstead at least and generally elsewhere within the region) it is dying or gone by Highstead Period 3B, c. 550/500-400 B.C. At Egham there is a particular type of angle-shouldered fine ware bowl with slightly beaded rims; this type is not present in Highstead Period 2 assemblages, is not present at Monkton, but is present (albeit limitedly) in Highstead Period 3B (Couldrey, forthcoming, Fig. 108, Highstead 399). Within the region this bowl form is specifically Iron Age in character; it might emerge/arrive marginally earlier, i.e., within Period 3A, but it is not a characteristic of classic Period 2-type assemblages. Associated with it is the Continental trait of rustication on coarse ware vessels - a hallmark of Highstead Period 3B-type assemblages and widespread in eastern Kent. This trait appears to arrive gradually at Highstead, first significantly appearing in modest quantities in Period 3A assemblages. Whilst its chronological arrival band needs to be plotted rather more tightly, it is not a mainline Period 2-type attribute and is rarely recognised in regional assemblages of this type. Rustication is not present in any way at Monkton (despite a thorough search). This and the absence of Highstead 399 (Egham)-type bowls provide an initial upper limit for Monkton of c. 600/550 BC. At the other end of the chronological scale there are few genuine links into this region from the earlyish 'plainware' assemblage at Runnymede, with the exception of Highstead Period 1. This is a difficult phase with very little pottery that can be associated with the construction and occupation of Enclosure B70. However, a large plain bowl profile from its primary ditch fill finds an excellent parallel with Runnymede Type 17 bowls (Longley 1980, Fig. 45). Period 1 at Highstead has arguably been placed between c. 950-850/750 B.C. which certainly embraces most of the preferred Runnymede bracket. Links from Carshalton are rather more specific, particularly the 2-handled jars, with an essentially identical example from Mill Hill. Carshalton 327 is a horizontally incised bowl, which is a further link to Mill Hill, and, as noted above, its fine ware bowls can be broadly related to regional forms; but even allowing for regional/localised variations in form and quality, the Carshalton bowls do look marginally 278 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 ancestral to Period 2-type material. Despite this the formal and decorative links between Carshalton and east Kent are distinctly closer than Runnymede and this should accord with its more specifically LBA2-3 da ting, which takes it into the date-bracket supplied for Highstead Period 2. Further assessment of inter-regional/assemblage parallels and qualifications is essential, but if coupled with differing metalwork and ceramic chronological schemes and (as preferred) using date-brackets, detailed discussion will become tortuous. An attempt to begin any even initial fine-tuning, which is no w becoming possible, will involve 0 CHESTFIELD >0 f.) EDDINGTON FARM e E) HIGHSTEAD G> 0 MINNIS BAY 􀀄 0 ST. MILDRED'S BAY 'i) 0 NORTHDOWN C) 8 EAST NORTHDOWN Gl 0 MONKTON RD., MINSTER 􀀅 RICHBOROUGH GOBERRY HILL, WINGHA M 0 CHISLET CANTERBURY ?a!) EBBSFLEET KINGSTON DOWN STURRY HACKLINGE, nr. WORTH MILL HILL, DEAL 0 5 10 Contours at 25 and 50 metres I... - ..,.I - - I km Fig. 19. North-east Kent: Distribution of transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age sites broadly contemporary with Monkton Court Farm (as of July 1993). 279 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY searching the cauldron for similar ingredients to a degree that will become a textual nightmare. It is necessary but requires a different study-area and different methods of presentation. All the sites mapped in Fig. 19 (and at least 4 off the map, including Folkestone Sand Quarry - Fig. 20, Fl-2) can, on the available attribute ranges exhibited be placed into the first half of the first millennium B.C. Some may, like Highstead, have continuous (or topographically adjacent) occupation into the Early Iron Age (equivalent to Highstead Periods 3A-3B) - this is dealt with more fully in the forthcoming Highstead report. The initial problem here centres around how many of Fig. 19's sites can be attributed to Barrett-type 'plain-ware' or 'decorated-ware' assemblages. The chronological divide between these seems to be the ninth century, with an arguable emphasis c. 900-850/800 B.C. Of the 17-18 sites plotted only Highstead Period 1 is a likely candidate as a 'plain-ware' assemblage, but the evidence is difficult, hence its compromise dating of c. 950-850/750 B.C. With further analysis some sites may contain 'plain-ware' elements, but it can be said with some confidence that no purely 'plain-ware' assemblages have been recognised to date. Most of the Fig. 19 sites, therefore, represent essentially 'decorated' -type assemblages, placeable within the bracket c. 850/800-600/550 B.C. This means that the construction and variable short/long-term occupation of these settlements mostly took place within a 200 or at most 300 year span, though clearly not all are likely to be contemporary. To summarise: 1. Monkton is a 'decorated' -type assemblage; it post-dates the watershed between this type and 'plain-ware' traditions so that its main assemblage should not be earlier than c. 850-800 B.C. 2. It has no formal types that epitomize the Early Iron Age in this region and this coupled with a total (recovered) absence of rusticated pottery suggests that the main assemblage does not post-date c. 550 B.C. and need not be dated later than c. 600 B.C. 3. It can therefore be placed between c. 850/800-600 B.C. This dating is based, partly, on ceramic typology; to this can be added the date of the hoards and the in situ sickle (Fig. 4. 4) from Pit F lO. The hoards belong in the Ewart Park phase of the Late Bronze Age metalwork (p. 293), equivalent to O'Connor's LBA3, and this deposition should have occurred between c. 900-700 B.C. The sickle is an unusual variant of the more normal 'crook-socketed' type with few reliable parallels, but the available evidence again indicates an LBA3 date (D. Perkins pers. comm.). Since the ceramic assemblage is of 'decorated'-type hoard deposition should be after c. 850/800 B.C. This 280 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 in turn could imply that the main ceramic assemblage from Monkton need not be as late as c. 600 B.C. (the end of Highstead Period 2) and could be placed earlier i.e., c. 850/800-700 B.C. with cessation of occupation around or shortly after c. 700 B.C. This, however, is qualified by the likely reasons for hoard deposition: founder's caches during the settlement's life?, propitiation? or more realistically perhaps, the changes associated with the onset of iron metallurgy, a scenario generally coupled with LBA4 and EIAl, around c. 600 B.C. and with the Highstead sequence towards the end of Period 2 and the onset of Period 3A. The in situ nature of the sickle could add rather more weight to its attached dating possibly reflecting a degree of contemporaneity, rather than any dating accompanying the hoards since (however they are internally dated) they might indicate deposition as much as 25-50 years after cessation of occupation. For the moment, the combined data indicates that the whole Monkton 'event': main occupation, abandonment and hoard deposition took place between c. 850/800-600 B.C. with the slight proviso that, if the earlier pre-700 emphasis is applicable for the ceramics and hoard deposition is indeed stimulated by the onset of iron metallurgy, then abandonment and hoard burial could have occurred around c. 700 B.C. or shortly after. 5. Regional inter-assemblage trends (a) Similarities and differences: chronological, topographic or social? Some of the traits noted above appear to have occurred, at least in the Thames Valley region and eastern Kent, over nearly half a millennium. The traits that collectively epitomize Highstead Period 2-type assemblages are for the moment confined to east Kent and appear to have a shorter currency of c. 300-350 years, though some attributes may have earlier roots. Most of these attributes are technological, technically minor manufacturing traits which, coupled with more superficial formal and decorative styles collectively represent Period 2- type material, an essentially mid-ninth to seventh century 'phenomenon' to which most of Fig. 19's sites belong. It is the recurring consistency of this inter-assemblage attribute range that allows for this statement; but 300-odd years is a long period; so how consistently produced and how contemporary are these assemblages? Assemblage consistency still requires statistical surveys and tabulated presentation, but it is sufficient to say that some attributes, e.g., profuse-gritted bases, temper characteristics, etc., will literally, in the field from across the region, Thanet to Folkestone, automatically ensure an initial c. 850-600 B.C. spot-date. This has implications of its 281 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY z 􀀅 􀀆 z - J..--JU....W.-- 0 :E Q c:( w t; _____ _ ::t: 􀀇 ::t: w z 􀀅 CJ) 􀀃- ..J 􀀈 w C, z :::i 􀀊 - () c:( ::c ,- II. - . 􀀇-_[2_t{j_ I C\I u. ""' ::c W- II) c:( ::c L :;: ,-::t: 282 U) E () ,­ ,- C\I ::c --- 0 ""' ,- ::c I 􀀉 ,- ::c N 00 l.,.) HA12 Decorated bevelled - rim finewares : HIGHSTEAD 33 I H228I I .. - 􀀇;,.-­ r:, 􀀈 . M5 􀀂7 MONKTON 28 HIGHSTEAD 230 MCF., 􀀜 No.3 #==-􀀃 fi;/--_-= --;;;? s:: ems Fig. 20. Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age pottery: some comparative decorated and plain fine ware forms from various east Kent sites. 􀀉0z 􀀊 z () 0C: 􀀋 􀀌 􀀍 􀀎 s 􀀏 - \0 \0 N D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY own, but basically means no more than the wide-spread currency of proven potting methods. Rather more startling are some temper/firing/weathering patterns from sites in north-east Kent. Material from Canterbury, Sturry, Highstead and Monkton is so identical, amongst a similar range of forms, that they could be products from the same potter or workshop. In some instances this might be the case; finishing/firing similarities between the Highstead 188 storage jar and Monkton 95 are very striking (and as settlements they are within sight of each other, only 6 km. apart). Alternatively, close comparison between the Monkton and Highstead assemblages suggests that there are too many superficial formal/decorative-technique variations, and that settlement potting self-sufficiency is more likely. Despite this, for sites along the lower Stour Valley and the western Wantsum seaway, the similarities are very strong, perhaps partly due to similar clay types used, but more certainly due to a sub-regional shared potting technology. Certainly there are considerable variations in skill/quality. Technically, according to vessel class Monkton 8 ought to be carefully finished, but its burnish is poor and the fine combing crude (Fig. 5, Plate III); by comparison the bowl 12 is graceful and precisely decorated. Compare the Monkton bowls 1, 5, 24, 39 - all basically competent, but with definite variation in formal/decorative finishes. The same trend for internal settlement variation is apparent at Highstead, where some bowls from Enclosure A24 are quite lumpy and amateurish compared to others. Between Monkton and Highstead in particular, superficially and broadly contemporary by virtue of shared attribute range, there are differences in fine ware bowl style. Fig. 20 shows their general similarities, but the Monkton bowls are rather squatter and slightly thicker-walled, whereas the Highstead equivalents are either wider-mouthed (H211) or tend to have more closed-form profiles. Potential trends in variations like these need more statistical back-up; they may be no more than localised variations. On the other hand the Monkton bowls Ml, M39 are much closer in character to the Carshalton equivalents than Highstead's examples. Is this fortuitous or a genuine chronological similarity? One of the latter may be reflected by decorated fine ware bowls from elsewhere in the region: Folkestone Fl, Hacklinge 4 and Mill Hill (Champion, op. cit., 236, Fig. 6, 8), all with twin incised horizontal bands set high on rather closed-form profiles. These are distinctly different from similar examples in north-east Kent proper - Monkton 24 being a typical example with more flaring profile and lower decorative setting. Similarities between Hacklinge and Mill Hill are understandable (they are topographically close), but the similar example from Folkestone suggests something else: certainly a sub- 284 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 regional trend but possibly, with the Umfield elements at Mill Hill in mind, chronological. A nother possibly chronological trend may lie in early identical storage jar forms at Kingston Down (op. cit., 148, Fig. 10, 55) and Eddington Farm. They both share very high-set applied cordons, atypical of the 'mid' shoulder-neck norm elsewhere. The Eddington example is on an unusually large-diameter vessel, hard-fired with excessively thin walls. This settlement has barely been sampled, but appears, like Monkton, to be of unusual size: up to 100 m. across compared to Highstead's A24 enclosure of only 40 m. Some of the fine ware bowls from Eddington are very fine with 'star dust'-like temper and walls barely 1 mm. thick. The apparent size of Eddington Farm does raise the issue of sub-regional foci and the whole question of social hierarchies. Certainly the exceptional bowl, Monkton 46 (plain though it is), indicates something more than personalised gruel/drinking-bowls. (b) Ceramic 'families' Figure 21 synthetically presents the Monkton 'family group'. Incomplete profiles are represented by a diagonal hatch; reconstructed portions are based on standard or likely parallels. Not all the members are present: nos. 5, 9 and 16. Nos. 5 and 9 are present in the original assemblage but there is not enough comparative or extant sherd data to complete likely profiles. No. 16 is not obviously present in the Monkton assemblage though cups must have been produced: one is in the small Hacklinge assemblage and there are several from the Highstead Enclosure, A24. There is a 'guest' at Monkton, the sandy ware jar A (Fig. 8) and equivalent to no. 3 in the 'family' group. Like its host, it has a profusely-gritted base, in the same quartz sand as the jar's tempering agent. Highstead Enclosure A24 also has a 'guest', a fine ware decorated cup (Highstead 192) in a glauconitic sandy ware. This ware is present in the Period 2-type assemblage from Aylesford 55 and it is distinctly possible that Highstead 192 arrived as a 'guest' from the Medway area. Monkton A is not glauconitic, but its fairly coarse quartz sand suggests either the Folkestone area or the Blean Forest. Presentation of ceramic 'family' groups is inevitably biased. Partial assemblage retrieval guarantees that the full family grouping may not 5 British Museum 1888, Boxes 3K and 3K2. Includes sherds in glauconitic sandy ware and a fine ware bowl profile decorated in a style virtually identical to Highstead 192. 285 D.R.J. PERKINS, . MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY be fully recoverable nor honestly portrayed. For instance, Enclosure A24 at Highstead has a type of large and medium diameter straightwalled coarse ware tub. This may be individual to Highstead; it is not obviously present in the Monkton assemblage and so is excluded as a missing member of the family group. In a regional 'collective-family' sense, Monk:ton has introduced 3 new members: No. 6 - the large diameter fine ware bowl, the 'absent' perforated fine ware jar (Fig. 10, 45), and the very large diameter bowl no. 10. This and no. 8 give a sense of cultural 'tone' to the group as do the range of smaller plain and decorated bowls. No. 15 is essentially a bowl with a cup-class profile and height-diameter ratio. Another new Fig. 22. Monkton Court Farm: Transitional Late Bronze/Early lron Age pottery. Reconstruction of some key coarse and fine ware vessels. 286 CD ® @ Guest@ COARSEWARES MONKTON COURT FARM: MAIN CERAMIC 'FAMILY' ELEMENTS © ® BowlC, \\\ \\ /\ \ / '---------------J -----------------' ® @ Perforated jar G) @) @ FINEWARES 0 ---- @ 10 • • -- 20 ••I ems ,.... ,,"' , _______ .. Cup􀀄 Fig. 21. Monkton Court Farm: Transitional Late Bronze/Early Iron Age pottery - Ceramic 'family' members. 'Kitchenware' -types present: Large storage jar(!), large cooking-pot (2), medium-size cooking-pot (3), small bowl (4) 'Tableware' -types present: Large fine ware jar (6), decorated jar and bowl (7-8), large bowl (10), small plain and decorated bowls (11-15). Missing members (5, 9, 16): absent or non-reconstructable. Coarse ware 'Guest A' - see Fig. 8. NB: Reconstructed vessel portions: diagonal/dotted lines. MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 member, but not portrayed because of uncertain vessel class, is represented by the coarse ware handle Fig. 18, 117. It may be from a handled bowl. An additional new member not portrayed for obvious reasons is Monkton 3; if it is similar to Highstead 33 (Fig. 20), it ought to be, as a reconstructed form, similar to family member 8. Summary The site has been dated to c. 850/800-600 B.C. There is a little regional evidence suggesting that the settlement was founded and occupied during the eighth century with abandonment and hoard deposition around c. 700 B.C. or a little after. However, if the argumentation for specifically eighth-century occupation is ultimately unacceptable, and a seventh-century one preferred, the available data suggests that the main phase of occupation was pre-600 B.C. Any occupational activity after c. 600 B.C. seems unlikely. The available ceramic evidence suggests that Monkton represents a 2-phase occupation. There are no indications that the first phase was of any significant duration, and both phases are best placed within the date-bracket supplied. APPENDIX I Figured pottery and regional inter-assemblage parallels. Note: for location of site/assemblage numbers quoted, see Fig. 19. Unqualified site numbers indicate identical/close formal or decorative parallels. Parallels quoted are not comprehensive, and generally refer to assemblages that, to date, have received detailed post-1987 reviews. Parallels with: Eddington Farm (Site 2): Nos. 10 and 77. Highstead Periods 1, 2 and 3A assemblages (Site 3); Nos. 12, 3, 8, 21, 25,28-31,33,44,47-9,60,63,69, 71-2, 77-8,81,83,90,and 116. Northdown (Site 6): 5, 11, 15, 57, 74 and 77. Canterbury (Site 12): 4, 31-2, 74 and 76. Hacklinge (Site 15): 24-5, 31, 57, 76 and 88. Qualified parallels: No. 8: Form and horizontal incised decoration: similar examples from Sites 6 and 15. No. 10: Decoration: similar examples from Highstead. No. 12: Form is similar to a plain bowl from Hacklinge; general quality and some decorative elements, at Highstead. 287 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY No. 25: Form only at Eddington Farm. No. 45: Rim at Highstead; also there is a bodysherd from ? similarly perforated vessel at East Northdown (Smith 1987, Fig. 11, P31). No. 76: Finish: heavy vertical scoriation from grit-drag occurs on a more globular Highstead Period 2 form (Highstead 248). No. 82: Rim and decoration: at Northdown on a much larger diameter storage jar. No. 88: General form parallel with Site 3. No. 95: Form paralleled at Eddington Farm, and the decoration at Northdown. APPENDIX II Figured pottery and site source concordance Nos. 1-23: Key Pottery Group LBA/EIA 16: Ditch F8. Nos. 24, 26, 53, 55, 58, 60-2, 68, 74, 90, 92, 99, 102, 104, 112-3, 115 and 117: Floor F24 with hearth and 'fire-pit'. Nos. 25, 34, 50, 54, 57, 63, 82, 87, 93, 95, 101, 107 and 110 (and intrusive 'Belgic' jar base, Fig. 18): Floor F6 with hearth. Nos. 27 and 29: Pit/post-hole F14. Nos. 28, 33, 37, 72, 86, 89, 103 and 116: ? Floor F2. Nos. 30, 78, 100 and 105:? Floor F19 - plough-damaged. Nos. 31-2, 56, 73, 85, 106 and 114: Large oval pit F21. NB. No. 32 has joining sherds from Features F14 and F22. Nos. 36, 66 and 80: Daub spread F22. Nos. 38-40, 43, 46, 48-9, 51, 59, 65, 70-1, 75, 81, 84, 88, 108 and 111: Pit F4. Nos. 42, 44, 47, 69, 83, 94: Small pit F l 3. No. 41: Small pit F ll. No. 52: Small pit FI. Nos. 64, 77, 91 and 97 (? Beaker jar base and ? LIA/B jar, Fig. 18) Ditch F25. No. 67: ? Floor F2. No. 79: Unstratified Box A: topsoil/subsoil interface. No. 90: Small pit Fl2. No. 98: Ditch F26. No. 109: Small pit F3. Nos. 45, 76 and 96: various site locations - as no. 79. 288 MONKTON COUR T FARM EVAL UATION 1992 BRONZE HOARDS, SINGLE FINDS AND METALLIC EVIDENCE The distribution of the Monkton hoards and single finds As stated in the introduction, this evaluation was motivated by the successive discovery of the Monkton I and II hoards in 1981 and 1990. Both hoards have been described and illustrated in Arch. Cant. (Perkins 1984, 1991), and their find-spots are herein shown in Fig. 23. During fieldwork in 1992, detectorists of the Thanet and Wantsum Relic Association, who had been present when the Monkton I hoard was discovered, pin-pointed a find-spot different to that indicated by the finder in 1983. Since they were collectively adamant, and agreed a nearby power pole and landscape sightings as points of reference, the writer accepts this new location which is approximated in Fig. 23. The effect of this is to discount any possibility that the Monkton I bronzes derive from the Monkton II hoard as plough scatter, as the hoards are separated by the raised farm track, a feature extant long before modem plough erosion had reached the hoard horizon. As shown in Fig. 23 the customary direction of ploughing west of the track is slightly oblique to it. Two single bronzes and three fragments found in 1990, were all more Fig. 23. Monkton Court Farm: The distribution of hoards, single bronzes and finds of slag. 289 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY or less on the line of ploughing that coincides with the Monkton II hoard, reinforcing the original theory that they were carried from the disturbed hoard by potato harvesting machines. During the period of preparation for the evaluation in 1991/2, T.W.R.A. members carried out further detector sweeps of the site, and six finds were made in two tight groups, see Fig. 23. The customary direction of ploughing in the field makes it unlikely that the groups are associated with one another or with Monkton I, so it seems possible that this is the emergence of Monkton hoards III and IV. The finds are described below, although only two bronzes have so far been in the hands of the writer for long enough to allow illustration and discussion. ?Monkton III: two socketed axes and two ?ingot fragments. They were found close to the base of an electricity py lon, raising the possibility that a hoard was disturbed when slots for the py lon's concrete footings were cut. Of the axes: 1. Socketed axe, looped, with collar and rib-moulding, squarish mouth, rectangular body, and crescentic cutting edge, see Fig. 4, 7. 2. Socketed axe, looped, with collar and vestigial rib-moulding, squarish mouth, rectangular body, and crescentic cutting edge. Two deep scores across one side are probably recent plough abrasions, see Fig. 4, 8. ?Monkton IV: At least two bronze fragments, one of them part of a sword blade about 15 cm. in length. It appears to derive from a weapon in the Ewart Park tradition. Bronzes discovered during the evaluation Two bronzes were found during the evaluation. The first of these was a fragment of socketed axe, the (crescentic) cutting edge and about onethird of the body, see Fig. 4, 3. This was found by metal detector after Box A had been cleared of topsoil. It was located about 2 m. north-west of the Monkton II find-spot and 2-3 cm. below the topsoil-subsoil interface. This fragment does not match any of the three upper-body fragments from the Monkton II hoard. The second bronze was a vertically-socketed sickle with elliptical socket having two rivet holes, see Fig. 4, 4. This was found in the basefill of a small pit, Feature 10 in Trench Y. The pit fill stratum was staged in content, texture and colour, and contained burnt red-orange soil, tiny copper fragments, many small charcoal fragments, and 50 or so nodules of calcined flint. This seems indicative of burning within the pit rather than the dumping of ashes, as there were no unburnt or weathered layers. Whatever the function of this 'fire-pit', it seems 290 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 likely that the sickle blade was placed therein to burn out fragments from a broken handle, or perhaps to anneal it before reworking or sharpening. Some small patches of red discoloration in the green patina of the socket would seem to indicate the latter. Possible evidence for metal casting or working on site This is limited to: (i) The small fragments of copper alloy mentioned above; (ii) Slags. Thirty fragments of slag were recovered from 13 features, see Table 2. Small bronze fragments and nodules. A number of these were found during the trowelling down of the fills of Features 10, 11, and 12, and in the microscope search of wet-sieved samples from these features. Most are less than 3 mm. long. Some are angular and plate-like and appear to be fragments. Others are globular or pear-shaped and one consists of a group of tiny radiating arms with globular ends. The latter forms are not unlike what might be expected from the sudden cooling of splash droplets of molten metal. The nodules were examined by broad-beam X-ray fluorescence. This and the analysis of slags from the site was carried out at the University of East London, Department of Archaeological Sciences, by Dr L.R. Day assisted by the writer. Estimates of composition are as given in Table 1 below: TABLE 1. Estimated compositions of alloy nodules from Features 10, 11, and 12 Sample From Mass Copper Tin Lead Iron Silicon No. Feature: (g.) % % % % 1 10 0.037 56.7 22.9 - 10.4 present but unquantified 2 11 0.472 79.5 14.5 2.2 3.7 none detected 3 12 0.231 77.7 5.5 14.0 2.6 present but unquantified 12 0.900 56.0 32.0 10.6 0.8 do. 5 12 0.122 25.4 36.2 36.2 2.0 do. 6 12 0.024 53.3 17.5 27.6 1.4 none detected These results were obtained from objects that were surfaced with, or more or less entirely composed of corrosion products. Their composition bears little relation to that of the metals from which they derived, and the iron and silica are from their soil context. Analysis at least demonstrates their metallic nature, however, and, allowing for d_ep􀁄etion by corrosion of the less electropositive elements, an alloy snrular to that in general use in the Late Bronze Age is indicated. 291 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY Slag nodules These were found distributed on the site as shown in Table 2 below: TABLE 2. The Distribution of slag finds on the site Feature No. Layer No. Number of Total mass Sample Nos. nodules nodules (g.) 3 2 I 5 6 5 3 I 140 I 6 3 I 5 7 7 (Section I) 6 I 90 5 7-8 2 5 155 25,26, 27, 28, 29 7-8 3 4 70 II, 12, 13, 14 10 - I 10 23 19 2 I 20 2 21 2 3 140 8, 9, 10 22 2 8 101 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22 24 2 2 35 3,30 Trench Y 1-2 I 25 24 Box A 1-2 I 10 4 PLATE IV A typical slag fragment, note fused surfaces. 292 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 The slag finds have been subjected to analysis by broad-beam X-ray fluorescence. Freshly broken surfaces of each slag nodule were scanned, and the estimates obtained in terms of means and standard deviation are given below in Table 3. The nodules are extensively vitrified and filled with entrapped gas bubbles (see Plate 4) and are grey-green in colour, with occasional 'rusty' patches. Similar material has been found in the nearby Highstead site (N. Macpherson-Grant pers. comm.) and at Fengate, (Dr. Stuart Needham pers. comm.). The possible origin of the material is dealt with in discussion. TABLE 3. Estimates of slag contents (main constituent elements) by XRF Aluminium Silicon Potassium Calcium Titanium Manganese Iron % % % % % % % Means: 12.8 61.9 6.3 8.2 1.3 0.5 8.5 ± lcr: 1.6 4.2 1.2 3.1 0.2 0.1 1.5 DISCUSSION The Monkton hoards and their affinities The bronzes from Monkton belong in the main stream of the Ewart Park phase, Late Bronze Age 3, with the addition of Carp's Tongue sword elements. Four of the Monkton socketed axes are faceted, an insular form that may have originated in East Anglia (O'Connor 1980, i, 135). Others, with their ribbed-wing and pellet motifs are typical of Butler's 'south-eastern type' (Butler 1963). Hoards containing the type are confined to the coasts of Sussex and Kent, the Thames Estuary, the lower Thames Valley, and coastal areas of Essex and Suffolk (O'Connor, ii, 823/4). While the Carp's Tongue material would appear to derive from northwest France, Butler considered the south-eastern type characteristic of north-eastern France and Belgium (Butler 1963, 84). There are certainly obvious affinities between Monkton II axes 13, 18, 21 and 31 (Perkins 1991, Fig. 3), and axes 8, and 6 and 8 in the Plainseau and Dreuil hoards (O'Connor ii, Figs. 64, 65B, 66). Such evidence emphasises the strong cultural and commercial links that must have existed during the later Bronze Age between south-eastern England and north-eastern France - Belgium. Links which, the bronze hoards seem to testify, were stronger than those with northern and western England. With the advent of the metal detector, so many hoards and single finds are coming to light that distribution maps are likely to be obsolete 293 I D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY MIDDLE BRONZE AGE HOARDS A MIDDLE BRONZE AGE SINGLE PINDS " / LATE BRONZE AGE HOARDS e LATE BRONZE AGE SINGLE PINDS • \P ERPORATED CLAY PLAQUES 0 =========i 25 Ion, Fig. 24. The distribution of Middle and Late Bronze Age hoards, single finds, and perforated clay plaques in Kent and the south-east. before they get into print. Fig. 24 shows the situation in the south-east at the time of writing. The hoard clusters can be interpreted as showing the locations of wealthy communities, situated on and exploiting the major cross-Channel trading highway. If so, Thanet would seem to be far from least amongst such influential areas, with the Wantsum seachannel perhaps constituting a vital link by reason of contemporary limitations in ship design and down-wind only sailing. An up to the moment listing of Thanet's bronze hoards and single finds is given below in Table 4, and their locations together with associated settlements are shown in the overall discussion section of this report, see Fig. 32. Bronzes 17 and 18 in the preceding table are illustrated as nos. 1 and 2 in Fig. 25. The socketed axe, no. 17, has a squarish, indented mouth in a round deep collar and rib-moulding. The body is square, with a slightly curved cutting edge. It was picked up by a ploughman in a field north-west of the village of Acol. A subsequent search by metal 294 MONK TON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 TABLE 4. Thanet Bronze Hoards and Single Bronzes No.in Bronze Hoards and Nature of References Settlement Fig. 32 single finds (sf): hoard/find: remains present: Middle Bronze Age: ;} South Dumpton Down, palstaves, Perkins 1992 MBA,EIA Broadstairs bracelet St. Mildred's Bay, Westgate palstaves Perkins 1988 MBA,LBA Mutrix Farm, Westgate palstaves Lewis 1736 no excavation 14 St. Lawrence College, 'Picardy' pins Hawkes 193 no excavation Ramsgate 14 Hollicondane, Ramsgate bracelets Piggott 1949 no excavation 14 Ellington, Ramsgate (sf) flanged axe no excavation 15 Quex Park, Birchington palstaves Powell-Cotton site destroyed 1924 16 Epple Bay, Birchington (sf) palstave no excavation 21 St. Lawrence, Ramsgate palstaves no excavation 22 Gore End, Birchington palstave, flat axe no excavation Late Bronze Age: 5 Monkton Court Farm, Ewart Park-Carp's Perkins 1990 LBA remains Monkton, Hoards I, II, ?III, Tongue, axes, only ?IV sword fragments etc. 6 Ebbsfleet, Minster, Hoard I do. LBA, EIA 6 do. Hoard II axes, razor, Perkins 1992 do. buttons do. 6 do. Hoard III hammer, ingot, sword fragment 7 Minnis Bay, Birchington Ewart Park-Carp's Powell-Cotton LBA Tongue hoard 1939 9 - Shuart, St. Nicholas Bun ingots Perkins I 988 MBA 17 Somali Farm, Birchington (sf) socketed axe no excavation 18 Chilton, Ramsgate (sf) spearhead enclosure crop-mark 19 Kingsgate Bay, ?hoard, one spearhead (looped) no excavation item examined, but others mentioned 23 Abbey Farm, Minster, fragments of RB villa site possible widely Carp's Tongue scattered hoard sword blade and winged axe detector found nothing. The spearhead, no. 18, is pristine, its edges and the rivet hole burr are still sharp, and it exhibits fine file marks from finishing. Such condition would be in keeping with its having been contained in some way, as in a pot, or at the centre of an undisturbe d hoard. It was found by metal detector, after ploughing on a chalk 295 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY -:• 1 2 -0 Fig. 25. Two recent metal detector finds from Thanet; 1, a socketed axe from Acol; 2, a spearhead from Little Cliffsend Farm, both at scale shown. 296 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 downland hilltop at Little Cliffsend Farm, Chilton, Ramsgate. The findspot is close to or within a feature manifest by a sub-circular crop-mark some 50 m. in diameter. Metal working evidence In 1990, the discovery of ash slag nodules apparently buried with the Monkton II hoard raised the possibility that bronze casting/working had been carried out on the site, and this was not least among reasons for the 1992 evaluation work. In the event, excavation yielded no positive evidence such as moulds or crucibles. Neither the slag nodules or the bronze droplets constitute such evidence. Ash slag can be produced by localised hot-spots within a large fire such as when a hut burns down, and bronze droplets could be derived from the accidental melting of an artefact. THE LITHIC ARTEFACTS Elizabeth Healey INTRODU CTION D.R.J. PERKINS The lithic artefacts (summarised by class in Table 5) were found in most contexts excavated, and they were also found during field walking (details of context are held in the archive). The flint artefacts are presumed to be contemporary with the Late Bronze Age pottery and hoard. Standard analytical methods have been applied to the flint, despite its apparent ad hoe nature, in the hope that differences from earlier assemblages would be revealed. The raw material used includes glauconitic flint and a good quality brown or brown-grey flint with fresh cortex and some flint with an abraded cortex (?pebble flint). Most of the raw material occurs as large nodules. The most probable source of most of the raw material is the brickearth, but the different condition of the cortex on some pieces suggests another origin as well. The re-use of previously corticated material suggests that little effort was put into obtaining flint. Its condition is generally fresh, though some trampling or plough damage was noted. 297 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY TABLE 5: Monkton Court Farm - Flint quantities by class, excluding burnt and thermal material. Core Flake Chip Retouched Hammerstones Unclassifiable Total 11 357 3 16 10(?1) 5 430 Retouched class includes : 5?6 scrapers, I point, I denticulated, 1 edge-retouched Recovery method : Excavated: 331 Field-walked: 99 TECHNOLOGY Much of the flint gives the impression of having been smashed up at random, but there are a few regular cores and some flakes which resulted from a pre-determined reduction strategy. On several occasions pieces appeared to have come from the same nodule, but time did not permit a search for conjoins. TABLE 6: Attributes of Flakes Dimensions (Sample size : 217) Length Breadth Thickness Range 14-86mm 10-80mm 2-33mm Mean 34.2mm 22.1mm 8.65mm. Standard deviation 12.8 11.8 4.6 Striking platform types (Sample : 226 flakes) Cortex : 2.2% Plain : 52.2% Corticated : 2.2% Dihedral/facetted : 4.8% Cortex and scar : 4.4% Shattered : 21% Uncertain : 4.4% Distal termination (Sample : 232 flakes) Normal : 46% Thick : 17.7% Cortex : 0.9% Relict margin : 1.7% Not observed : 2.6% Cortex (Sample : 227 flakes) No cortex : 40.6% Unweathered cortex : 36.7% Rolled cortex : 22.3% Uncertain : 1.3% Re-used flakes (flaked through cortication) : 15.9% 298 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 The cores are relatively small (Fig. 29) compared to much of the flakes and 'waste' material lying around and were not particularly systematically reduced. The dimensions of all the pieces were ascertained and are summarised in Table 6. Amongst the retouched pieces (of which a full catalogue is held in the archive), scrapers are the most frequent form; three are of the classic/standard shape and typical of most later Neolithic/Early Bronze Age scrapers (Fig. 27, nos. 1-2, 6); the others (Fig. 27, nos. 3-4) are perhaps of greater interest. Both have flattened contours; no. 3 is made on the ventral face of a flake and 1 􀀇-. I''1 -VI- 5 § I 􀀂 2 4 Fig. 26. Monkton Court Farm, lithic artefacts. Knives: 1, 2; Piercers: 3, 4; Bifacial: 5, scale½). Contexts: 1 and 3 from F. 5; 2 and 4 from F. 6; 5 from F. 14. 299 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY I c;;? 2 4 6 Fig. 27. Monkton Court Farm, lithic artefacts. Scrapers: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 (scale½). Contexts: 1 and 2 from exposed horizon in Box A; 4 from F. 15; 7 from F. 14. 300 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 1 I c::::::::s:G:r 4 5 Fig. 28. Monkton Court F arm, lithic artefacts. Scrapers and misc. retouched: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 (scale½). Contexts: 1 from F. 7; 2, 3, 6, from F. 5; 4 from F. 9; 5 from field walking. 301 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY 1 2 3 Fig. 29. Monkton Court Farm, lithic artefacts. Cores: 1, 2, 3 (scale½). Contexts: 1 from F. 7; 2 from F. 24; 3 from F. 22. 302 MONKTON COURT FARM EVALUATION 1992 has denticulated retouch, whereas no. 4 is on a flake, and has worn areas on its edges. The bifacially-flaked knife (Fig. 26, no. 1) can again be paralleled in later Neolithic assemblages but the other pieces with lateral retouch (e.g., Fig. 26, no. 2) are less diagnostic; several of these have denticulated retouch which appears to be a feature of the assemblage. There is also a fragment of a bifacially-flaked piece (Fig. 26, no. 5). The piercers in Fig. 26, nos. 3-4 (and possibly Fig. 28, no. 1) are not diagnostic. Calcined flint nodules were found throughout the site in the exposed subsoil surface and in most of the excavated features. Of particular interest is the group of hammerstones from a hearth in Trench M (Fig. 2). They are of a similar size and shape and appear to have been deliberately deposited together with burnt flint. DATE The collection appears to represent at least two and possibly three flintworking traditions. The earlier and most tentative group is hypothesised from the re-use of corticated struck flint, although no completely corticated artefacts were found. The second group is probably later Neolithic/Early Bronze Age in date. It is difficult to attribute with any degree of certainty anything other than some of the scrapers and the knife to this period, though it is likely that the more regularly worked cores and flakes are part of this industry too. The third group of artefacts is distinctive because of its lack of standardisation. It is difficult to tell whether the pieces with retouch have been deliberately worked or are the result of spontaneous retouch or other post-production factors. Even allowing for residuality, the probability that much of the flint is later Bronze Age in date must be considered, especially as contextually it is closely associated with the pottery. However, definition of later Bronze Age industries is difficult and few discrete assemblages have been recognised. They seem to be 'characterised' by unsystematic or haphazard core reduction techniques (Pryor 1980; Bown 1986, 63; Bond 1988, 25), with no specific blank types in mind (Richards 1990, 194), leading to expedient selection of blanks for tool manufacture. Ford (1987) has shown that in central southern England at least, flint flakes become cruder (broader and thicker) towards the end of the Bronze Age and that there is a higher incidence of hinge terminations and associated edge recessions on cores (this results from continued percussion when the flaking angle has become too steep to detach flakes - Harding 1990, 218). There is also alleged to be a paucity of distinctive implements or at least formal tools (Ford et al. 1984; but see Herne 1991, 72) and a restricted range 303 D.R.J. PERKINS, N. MACPHERSON-GRANT AND E. HEALEY of tools; scrapers from later Bronze Age sites tend to be of expedient or unclassifiable classes (Riley 1990, 226). Burnt flint nodules and querns are often found with later Bronze Age pottery, for example at Fargo Wood W34 and Robin Hood's Ball (Richards 1990, 232). Of particular interest is a midden at Runnymede, Area 16, where pottery, burnt daub and clay were found with concentrations of crushed burnt flint, lower 'quernstones', pebble hammers and flint tools. The burnt flint and hammerstones in F24 here, also seem to be a regular association in other later Bronze Age contexts, for example at Fargo Wood. It has been suggested that the hammers and the querns were used to break up the burnt flint for use as temper in pottery (Needham and Sorensen 1988, 124). The assemblage from Monkton Court Farm seems to fit into the general milieu of later Bronze Age assemblages, when flint is used in an increasingly ad hoe and varied manner, perhaps related to the availability of metal and flint (Herne 1991, 72-5); indeed, most of the later Bronze Age lithic industries seem to occur where raw material is immediately available. It is likely, therefore, that such assemblages will differ from assemblages in which lithics are an essential part of the tool kit and may enter archaeological deposits in a different way from that by which flint is presumed to have been deposited in earlier periods (Bowden et al. 1991), so that a different approach to its recovery, analysis and interpretation may be necessary. QUERNS AND WHETSTONES Fragments of sandstone were found at the intersection of ditches 7 and 8, and in the hearth of Feature 24. They have worked surfaces and are probably pieces of broken saddle querns. All are hard, coarse, and glauconitic. While there is some variation in colour and grain size from piece to piece, they probably all originate in the greensand of the Wealden District, of which there is an exploited outcrop in the cliff-line at Folkestone. None of the fragments is of a size large enough to suggest overall dimensions. Sandstone of another kind was present in terms of a large number of fragments turning up in almost all features investigated. These were derived from '

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The Carmelite Friary at Sandwich