( 304 )
DAETFOED ANTIQUITIES.
NOTES ON BEITISH EOMAN AND SAXON EEMAINS THEBE EOUND.
BY E. C. J. SPURRELL.
STONE IMPLEMENTS.
WHEN the Kent Archaeological Society met at Dartford, in 1868,
the knowledge and study of the more ancient stone implements was
in an early stage; almost in its infancy, being, so far as this country
was concerned, barely ten years old. And as those stone implements
were not commonly accepted as the work of man, they were looked
upon doubtfully by the old antiquary: and because one class of
them came out of deep cuttings in the ground, and from stalagmite
caverns, they were left to geologists as " fossils; " regarding that
word as dismissing the matter into the domain of geology. Yet,
for all that, the recognition of the earliest palaeolithic implements,
as human workmanship is due to Englishmen's acumen; and
although the study was revived in Erance, it was consolidated into
a science by the investigation of Englishmen once agaim In
our own district, that is, about ten miles round Dartford, quite as
much attention has been paid to the matter as in any spot in the
world, and with a greater success than anywhere else in determining
certain controverted points; such as the reality of human
agency in the formation of implements, and the larger grasp of the
subject consequent on the minute search which has traced them
continuously through a greater range in elevation and consequently
of age.
There are a few points to which I wish to draw attention.
Where Palaeolithic, Neolithic, or any implements whatever are
found in stratified deposits, the determination of their relative age
is comparatively easy. It is otherwise with those which lie on or
near the surface or in thin deposits of gravel. But there are
means of arriving at an approximation to the comparative age of
these, which it is the speciality of geologists to apply. The determination
of the true position of an implement lying in a river
gravel, which now constitutes the water-parting of two streams,
running in opposite directions, is a case in point; or the determination
of the relation of an implement found on the surface, to a
patch of gravel nearly denuded; or again the relation of implements
to any epoch of the glacial ages. I will not trouble you with
these details, but merely remark generally on the matter. Eirst
let me tell you that now, if the spots on which the older impleDARTEORD
ANTIQUITIES. 305
mentshave been found were marked on an ordinary map.of this
district, there would be no room for anything "else on it. Palaeolithic
implements have been found on the crest of our North*.
Downs, and as has been recorded in Archceologia Cantiana,
not merely scattered, but collected in special spots. If the
scattered ones may have been ice-borne, or dropped nearly in the
place on which they were found, those which like the collections
at Ash, Bower Lane, and Hayes, point to the agency of water,
whether temporary or intermittent, and in these cases there is some
relation traceable between the site of the collection and that of the
courses of our rivers ; though it may be far away from where their
diminished water course now runs.
As these implements, by wear, mineral condition, their comparative
elevation, form and make are traced step by step from
situations whose relative age is known, we arrive after due search
at their relative age. And there can be little doubt that the majority
of the implements found on our hills are the older as a higher level
. is reached. Of old and worn implements it is clear that we cannot
imagine or suppose they travelled up hill, so that if found on a hill
they are presumably older than those in a valley deposit near by,
and inasmuch as all the implementiferous gravels of our district are
the result of a severe denudation which reached its climax with the
deposit at the bottom of the modern Thames, the general rule of
height-age is safe, not but that implements, from high levels are
found in lower ones. And the denudation of 900 or 1000 feet of
our valley is respectable. Some of these implements can be
connected with the glacial ages. By the Glacial Period, as generally
understood, is meant that glaciers enveloped the country, reaching
a climax and declining. But the Glacial Age, or age of Glaciers, is
that of various invasions of this country by ice sheets, whether
from the north of England or from Norway at different times and
with great intervals. If an ice sheet ever covered the North Downs
it has left no signs behind. A glacier's sign is its moraine of
transported stones and clay. Such a moraine now exists on the
north edge of the Thames, seven or eight miles from here, and it
lies at the elevation of 200 feet above the sea, but never advanced
much further. Those river gravels which lie below that elevation
contain as an important part of their constitution material transported
from the North. Those gravels such as" the patches oh
Darenth and Swanscombe hills, which lie above that elevation,
contain no such northern drift, as it is called. Hence we are able
to say with respect to the particular glacial epoch I have mentioned
that the Darenth gravels and implements therein are pre-glaeial,
and that the implements from deposits 100 feet lower are either
intraglacial,* or post-glacial as those of Dartford Heath and Crayford
and Erith certainly are.
With respect to the separation between Palaeolithic and
Neolithic- implements, as the two divisions are called into which
* Interglaoial is the interval between two glaoial periods. Intraglacial is
during tlie glacial visitation,
VOL. XVIII, X
306 DARTEORD ANTIQUITIES.
stone implements are generally divided (the terms have also become
common to distinguish human remains and even deposits with
which they are associated, but eare must be taken to keep to the
terms Btrictly, and in no way to mix up the definition of a Palaeolithic
and Neolithic implement or deposit, with the presence or
absence of extinct mammalia), it is obvious that there must be an
approximation somewhere. If the question is unsettled as yet,
whether in this country or elsewhere, it is quite clear that the
matter has not been sufficiently investigated. So long as the desire
to separate is permitted to override the desire to unite and correct,
the matter will continue to he regarded according to the hobbled
custom of the old school of thought.
The Palaeolithic implements of our district are very marked in
their characters, but there may be seen examples of very rude and
very fine implements. Yet it is clear that, if the principles by which
I have argued, that there is a great range in their antiquity, be true,
this rudeness and sameness is extended over a period of time incomparably
greater than the stages of improved forms occupied in
the extension of the Neolithic period.
That there was no break between the< two ages I feel sure, and
it will be the duty of discontented and scientific enquirers to search
for the connecting link. Perhaps it will be found in the deep
gravel bed underlying the alluvium and water of the Thames
estuary, as I believe; for clearly, the river brought down gravel
continuously from Palaeolithic times, until having become an estuary
gravel ceased to accumulate and alluvium formed. Quite lately I
received a communication from Mr. Laurence that he had some
stone implements from the bed of the Thames whose history is
perfectly satisfactory. On examining these I found that two, obtained
from the Thames near Erith by dredging, had resemblances
which placed them if not midway, in such a position that they indicate
a passage type or form between Palaeolithic and Neolithic, Their
workmanship is good, they are uninjured, and their mineral condition,
marking, and colour is perfectly agreeable to the gravel in
which they were found. I am very well acquainted with the implements
of the lowest Thames gravel and the older gravels on its
margin, and can say that they resemble nothing as yet discovered
in either, but have a likeness to both, constituting a distinct type,
EAETHWOEKS.,
There are several earth-walled enclosures in the district. There
was one, it is now only just discoverable,, on Badgersmount, Darenth
Wood, it is a rough square with rounded corners, it was 200 feet in
diameter outside the wall at the ground level; with a ditch round it
about 10 feet across and 8 feet deep. Much stone chipping covers
the place. . , . _ , .
There is another on the hill top overlooking the Church of
Swanscombe, the diameter from the top of the mound is exactly
100 feet, quite circular with a ditch. At one part are banks and
ditches difficult to explain.
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Ancient Sites in the Disuict cf Dartford,Kent.marked by F.C.J. Spurrell.
DARTFORD ANTIQUITIES. 307
There are some very extensive banks and excavations on the top
of the Telegraph Hill, Swanscombe, on either side of the old
Eoman way.
There is a camp on Mount's Wood, not, however, of great importance,
and the outline disturbed.
In Darenth Wood are banks and works on the south-east side.
Again on the south-west side, overlooking Lane End, they are of
considerable area,*
Hasted mentions banks at Greenstreet Green, and to the westward
of it. Both these I have formerly identified and marked on
the map, though now they are obliterated.
There is a faint outline of a camp (oval) 500 yards south-east of
Howbery. This is nearly obliterated.
There is a square camp with works, lying on the site of a previous
village in Jorden's Wood. It is probably Eoman, but this is
not quite clear. I cannot reconcile it, however, with any forms
known to be Saxon. Stone arrow-heads and Eoman pottery are
found in it.f
* This list will explain the numbers on the
G. Oeltio; T. Teutonic, Saxon, or Norse.
1 Urns, pottery. The Warren. R. 29
2 Tumulus. Shrewsbury House
Grounds.
3 Tumulus. Plumstead Common.
4 Leaden Coffin. East "Wickham. R.
5 Iron furnaoe and early hut holes.
map opposite, R.=Roman;
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
IS
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24.
25
26
27
28
Bostol Heath.
Tumulus, partly examined.
Tumulus. Crematory.
•Wide. Lesnes Abbey.
Urns and Coin.
Coin.
Urns, etc. Blenden.
Pottery.
Leaden Coffin.
Deneholes.
Ornaments.
Foundations, etc.
Coins,miscellaneous objects
C.
T.
R.
R.
R.
R. and C.
R.
T.
R.
High
Road. "R, T., etc
Misc. R., T.
Ditto. R.
Ditto, R.
Pottery. Perry Street. R.
Pottery. R,
Coins. R, and C.
Tumulus.
Very ancient oamp.
Pottery in Denehole and on surface,
R,
Littlebrook Walls. T,
Burials. T.
Foundation burials, coins, misc.
objects on East Hill and Town
- - •- - R.
R.
T.P
R.
R.
t See Archceological Journal, vol. xxxviii,
of Dartford.
30 Coin. West Hill.
31 Tumuli.
32 Coins.
33 Foundations, miso.
34 Tumulus.
35 Tumulus not burial.
36 Square camp. 0.
Pottery. R.
34* Burials. T.
85* Foundation. R.
36* Graveyard. T.
37 Foundations. R.
38, 39 Camps or enclosures.
40 Small oamp on Badger's Mount,
4 1 ^w^lMentionedby
44 Pottery. R,
Tumuli, R.
Springhead finds. R.
Foundations. R,
Miso. pottery, etc R,
Circle camp.
Misc., etc
Foundations and remains in Denehole.
R,
Earthworks (Paul's Cray Common).
Miso. in Denehole. R,
Roman remains in the Marshland.
i plate 1, for a plan.
x2
42
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
R.
308 DARTFORD ANTIQUITIES.
There are ancient enclosures still visible on Paul's Cray-Common,
which have been figured in our volumes by Mr. Ehnders Petrie.*
The old roads of the country side can easily be inferred when
they are found to connect certain ancient sites, and when judged to
have existed previously to their having been crossed unconformably
and regardless of convenience by later ones of known date. There
are plenty of older ways than the Eoman street now called the
Dover Eoad. This road was called Watling Street by the Saxons.
A military way undoubtedly existed in Eoman times, and I think
before then.
The top of Swanscombe Hill was a most unfavourable spot for
a road; it is capped with greasy clay and is very steep. Heavybaggage
could have been carried over it with great difficulty, and in
winter it must often have been quite impracticable for an extensive
equipage. . I think it more than probable that this road was rarely
used, and that the branch leaving Dartford Brent by Greenhithe,
Northfleet, and Gravesend to Strood, superseded it during the
Eoman occupation.
No Eoman remains are found on Swanscombe Hill top, but hythe
more northerly or alternate road they are found.
The old road by the .Torden's Wood Camp is certainly pre-
Eom'an, although now discontinued even as a path in the wood.f..
There are few tumuli here. One on Shooter's Hill, one on
Bostol Heath, one in Abbey Wood, opened and found to be a crematory.
The How, which gave the name to Howbury; two in Baldwyn's
Park. One'I opened and found not to be a burial mound. •
' " Several tumuli once existed on Dartford Brent, and also in the
. woods overlooking Betsom. Near there I remember three close
together, and one is marked on the Ordnance map.
Iron smelting has left traces at Dartford Heath, Northfleet, and
at Abbey Wood,- and on Bostol Heath.
This last was a'very rude Bloomery, if such a term can be used
• to a Celtic work,, for* such I find to be its age. . This .was a small
work; much slag, however, covers the country for a couple of miles
• along the hill edge.
There are of course numerous earthworks on the country side
which do not call for special mention. Dams across valleys are not
uncommon, ancient banks which served the, purpose of dividing
land or edging enclosures. Most of these.are evidently, of historic
• date, and present no special points of interest. On Dartford Heath,
' however, there are numerous depressions and elevations which cali
' for a word; they may be classified thus, small depressions; round,
. shallow, and. rare. A few larger ones having the sameTproportipnate
width to depth as the smaller. . Square depressions and oblong
angular pits, these are mostly in rows, and placed as close as possible
together. There are also many tumuli. These vary very
.'much, but none are of large size, or exceed 4 ft. to 4 ft. 6 in height.
* Archceologia Cantiana, XIII., 8.
t See Archceological Journal, vol. xxxviii., plate i.
DARTFORD ANTIQUITIES. 309
When perfect they rise to a point so that there is no comfortable
standing room. A slight and narrow ditch about one foot deep
surrounds the mound—into which, projecting from the mound, are
numerous (but an uncertain number of) very small steps with
intervals between. These mounds are found" in ahgnments, of
which there are several. Yet in no case is there more than three
or four in a straight line; one row in a slightly serpentine course
extends over a large part of the Heath. The distances between the
mounds varies greatly, from one yard to fifty or sixty, their size
and height vary equally. If these in anyway represent military
arrangements, they are so far as regularity goes sadly deficient in the
proverbial quality proper to the art. That several mediaeval camps
occupied the Heath is on record, as well as the notable one in the
Prince Eegent's time. Hence some confusion of alignment would
be a necessity, but that hardly explains the want of symmetry I
have noticed. Some years ago I dug into these mounds at various
places, and found in every case that the gravel of the Heath had
been heaped on the sod and that no mystery beyond that which
appeared to the eye lay concealed. Similarly I examined numerous
depressions or hut circles, with, however, no result as to dating them.
Apparently, therefore,, all these works on Dartford Heath are
mediseval and military > the more ancient having been obliterated.
THE Tins WALLS OJ? THE THAMES.
There were no tide walls to the river when the Eomans first
came here. The whole of what is now below the level of high
water was then dry; at least, free from salt water. It was a thick:
woodland—marshy in places with streams running into a river now^
the estuary of the Thames; the river was fresh, or but very slightly
brackish, shallow, and very much narrower than the present stream
way. In the marsh now, under the layer of tidal clay which covers
what was forest ground, are very abundant remains of Eoman
occupation; these are occasionally found in excavations over the
whole marsh land. Occasionally relics of burial are discovered and'
in a few places the sites of dwellings. At Crossness, for instance,
the quantity of scattered pottery is surprising, and much of it was
of good quality.
I t is scarcely probable that even at the latest moment of the
Eoman stay any banks were needed, and it is certain that there are
no signs of any such early banks. There are no signs of banks
even of Saxon date, except those of Little Brook and Lesnes, and
these it is likely were to haul boats into, with walls only just sufficient
to ward off storm floods and keep off foes.
The effective embankments which we now see are very modern.
All embankments have been begun by small enclosures from the
shores; piecemeal, which have by degrees united until the outer
limit was reached and the walls as we have them were perfected.
It was no stupendous, mighty, or vast work begun, continued, and
ended at a single effort. They were hundreds of years in reaching
their present limits. The earliest recorded mining of any import310
DARTFORD ANTIQUITIES.
ance in this district is that of the marsh at Lesnes, and if the Canons
began immediately after their foundation, which is unlikely, they
had not done anything important until nearly one hundred years
after, viz., in 1279.
The writers who have previously considered this question have
been under a complete misapprehension as to the state of nature
when the Eomans hved here, beheving that no change in the level of
land and sea has happened since. Even Beale Poste, when treating
of changes in the coasts of England, has noticed that ancient Eoman
towns built on estuaries have since been buried by deposits from
the water; but he thinks that this is solely due to the raising of the
bed of the river, and consequently its water level by the deposits
brought down by the stream. In this he just misses the point I
wish to insist on, that, though this would be true as to a fresh
water stream, it is not true of an estuary, the height of the
deposits of which are regulated solely by the height reached by the
tide. If, therefore, we find land surfaces, as at Crossness and elsewhere,
now deeply buried under tidal deposits, there has been submergence
of the land by the sea in order that this might happen.*
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* A fuller account of this part of the subject is given by me in Archceological
Journal, vol. xlii., p. 269, and in the Proceedings of the Geologists' Association,
vol. xl., p. 210. a
DARTFORD ANTIQUITIES. 311
There are works at Littlebrook extending into the tideway
before the modern river walls were erected. These I take to be
the Wick of some early Saxons, and to have been the celebrated
place mentioned in a deed of Ethelred A.D. 995. There was perhaps
a similar Teutonic Wick at the place afterwards occupied by Lesnes
Abbey.
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STONE.KENT
BY F.CJ S PURRE L L , 1885
Dartford was credited formerly with two ports; one of course
was at the end of Hythe Street; the other I suggest was at Littlebrook
; a road can still be traced from the "port" through the fields
to Overy Street. In early times, the Eoman way crossed the marsh
untroubled by the tide. Afterwards, the tide having advanced further
inland, the road was raised, becoming a causeway. In mediaeval
times this bank was heightened against the tide, the road running
inside it as at present.
During a section made a few years ago through this road, near
Stidolph's house, I saw a human skeleton extended across the bank,
about two feet below the present surface. This of course is a
strange situation; but looking to the fact that it was a tide wall, it
is possible that the once owner of the skeleton had the duty of
repairing the bank, and having let the tide through by his neglect
was placed in the breach, thus helping to repair it while suffering
punishment. Mr. S. Smiles* has mentioned that such a mode of
dealing was a mediaeval custom. However, I know not how far the
ancient graveyard extended hereabout, so that the body, which
shewed no signs of burial, might yet have been buried in sacred
ground.
BOMA.IT EEMAIWS.
The spots on which Eoman remains have been recorded to have
been found in this district have not hitherto been numerous.
Dartford itself has generally been thought, until now, to contain no
* Lives of "Engineers,
312 DARTFORD ANTIQUITIES.
pavements or foundations; yet there are some. Beside the circular
foundation on East Hill, seen in 1822 and mentioned by Dunkin and
others, I have discovered a note in Mr. Dunkin's memoranda
(kindly furnished me by Miss Dunkin), in which he mentions a
strong pavement of plain red tessera under the corner shop nearest
to the pump at the entrance to Lowfield Street.
In 1866 I saw some foundations exposed in the High Street near
the church. As this spot was on the west side, off the line of the
Eoman way (even supposing that it ran inside the raised causeway
on which the northern row of houses stand), a building doubtless
stood there. Erom this place a small collection of Eoman relics
was presented to the Kent Archasological Society's Museum. The
town of Dartford now stands on black peaty soil; a mere swamp,
the deposit of floods and the tide, mixed of course with the debris
of old buildings.
But the Eoman level is not touched nearer than 4 or 5 feet
from the surface, and the foundations would be found still deeper.
Therefore it is no wonder that the outlines of Eoman houses are
not found in Dartford, the foundations of the present houses rarely
or never going so far as to reach the topmost tile of the Eoman
floors. Any comparison between Dartford's position compared
with other places 1700 years ago must be conducted without haste,
as becomes a thinker who is more than an antiquary.
About three years ago I saw numerous tiles and some extensive
foundations shewing wide rooms and narrow passages, with coins
all of Eoman date about 150 yards south-eastward of the inn called
the " Orange Tree." A silver coin of Yespasian was also found on
West Hill. In 1797 and 1822 numerous Eoman interments Were discovered
on East Hill on the brow opposite to the present bid graveyard
(and doubtless once extending into that), five or six stone
coffins were extracted, one at least from a vault. Mr. Dirhkin has
recorded some of these discoveries. Those in 1822 were conducted
by Mr. Landale with great care. He really loved the old relics,
though what he did with the portable ones I do not know. One of
the stone coffins was broken up in Dartford to pave a yard.
Another Mr. Landale took to his property in West BUI; this,
which was broken in extraction, he mended—the side and the lid.*
He raised it above the ground and sheltered it. Within the last
few years, however, it has been shifted about, and is begmning to
suffer from exposure and frost. It is well worked and very lightly
made. The stone is a shelly limestone. There is no inscription.
Dimensions: widest 30 inches, longest 82 inches, narrowest 18
inches. The lid iB Bi inches thick, bevelled all round, •§• inch bevel
extending 3 | to 4 inches. The bottom is bevelled 1 inch in 5
inches; the bottom is 4s inches thick 5 the depth outside 18 inches,
inside 11 inches.
I have prevailed on the renter of the ground to get it out of
* J. Dunlin has given a sketch of this, by A. J. Kempe, in his History of
Dartford.
DARTFORD ANTIQUITIES. 313
its corner for the Society to look at. Eoman remains consisting
of foundations of buildings are mentioned by Beale Poste as
existing in Crayford. Erom what he says, and from the existence
of sundry bits of tile there, I take the spot to be on the site of
Swaisland's printing factory. Pieces of brick may be seen occasionally
on the left bank of the new river (the Cray) in the
bordering fields north of the bridge. Erom this place beads and
sherds are found E. and N. on the slopes on the hill of which
Eardmont stands. Eoman relics have been found close to the
Crayford railway station. A leaden coffin was found close to the
direct line of. the Eoman highway in the Bexley Eoad, near the
Iron Church. Abundant remains have been found in old deneholes
and shallow pits near Perry Street, Crayford, and also in the brick
earth pit at Slades Green, where were graves and numerous bits
of pottery all Eoman. There are two sites of villas or house
foundations unrecorded also—one on the edge of the stream immediately
opposite St. John's, and another on the left bank of tho
Ebbsfleet in the bend of the stream, three-quarters of a mile
E.S.E. of Northfleet Church. Around Betsom, and especially on
the east slopes of the hills overlooking that place, were many
tumuli, apparently Eoman. On the cutting for the railway one
mile south of Southfleet Church a pit was found with Eoman
remains in it. Pottery was found also in the square camp in
Jorden's Wood. I found pottery also near Bourne House, Bexley,
the only previous find there having been nearly two miles off at
Blendon.
Some fifty years ago a row of cinerary pots full of bones were
dug up at Welling, close to the high road. Two or three of these
are now in the Canterbury Museum.
Several coins have been found in sundry places not previously
recorded, at Bexley Heath, Dpton, on the high road near the
junction of the two roads, Erith* High Street, and the Stone
Lunatic Asylum. At East Wickham a Eoman burial—viz., a lead
coffin in a wood case, another body lay near. Beneath the whole
district of the Marshland, Eoman pottery, burials and sites of
dwellings are found, especially at Crossness. I have repeatedly
found fragments of pottery on the shore of the Thames along the
whole line of marshes between Woolwich and Gravesend.
The well-known Eoman remains at Springhead so often
described by Mr. Eoach Smith, and others need not be particularly
mentioned here, except to say that new discoveries of minor
importance are continually being made. But I must say that I
cannot consider that these finds, per se, constitute any right in this
spot to the title of Yagniacae, no relics in any way pointing to that
town having been found. Even their comparative abundance is of
* I haveto acknowledge the kindness of Mr. H. W. Smith in telling me
of several places, previously unknown to me, whence he has procured some
miscellaneous objects of Roman date, viz.:—Near the City of London Lunatic
Asylum; Swan Lane, Crayford; High Street, Erith; and the hillside under
Eardmount in Crayford.
314 DARTFORD ANTIQUITIES.
no value, as Mr. Geo. Payne seems to think from the remarks
introductory to his excellent maps of Kent issued by the Society of
Antiquaries. Indeed, so far as that goes, more abundant and
important remains have been found in the town and East Hill of
Dartford than Springhead. Yet no one would give the former the
name of YagniacsB in consequence merely of that.
SAXON EEMAESTS.
The Anglo-Saxon remains as known at present are very limited,
there being but four places in which evidence of interment has
occurred and two riverside works which can be assigned to a
Teutonic or Norse origin.
The earliest recorded remains are swords and relics apparently
from graves in the powder works at Dartford. Then comes the cemetery
at Darenth. This extends on both sides of the Chatham and
Dover Eailway Embankment; on the hillside, where it crosses the
stream, and if, as seems certain, it is to be found under the embankment
as well, the length must be nearly a quarter of a mile by 200
yards broad. Attention was first attracted by the report of skeletons,
pots, and brooches having been found in digging foundations for
the Home for little boys. Subsequently, cottages being required
northward of the railway, the Eev. Mr. Coates watched the
diggings, and conducted a few personally. I saw some of the work
in 1867, and all in 1868, and I think that as no record has been
preserved, my notes of the matter are still new enough to present
at this time. The slope of the hill is rather rapid, and in
consequence of a hedge having stopped the regular washing of the
soil (chalk), the graves were extremely superficial, the skulls and
pottery having been broken in many places by the plough, and
some of the relics strewn on the surface. In any case, the graves
were very shallow, having been dug deep enough to rest the body
on the solid chalk merely. They were not cleverly dug, some being
so short as to cramp the body, and others being irregular in shape.
The bones were decayed in very varying amounts, so also were the
iron implements found—some utterly reduced to rust, while others
when ground down by the labourers took a good edge. The position
of the bodies was chiefly looking directed to the eastward, with the
heads to the west, but I observed that there was much variation in
direction, and that the more northern graves pointed more to the
true north than those to the southward—there appeared to be a
rotation in the line of direction, the result of indifference. The
bodies being laid on their backs, there was generally a flint stone or
two, a lump of chalk, or perhaps a crumbling clod, placed under the
back of the head, to raise it. The graves were very close together,
almost breaking into one another. The total number opened on
this side of the embankment while I was able to attend was about
sixty. Apparently the wealth of the persons buried increased
towards the N.E. of the ground. Very many of the graves
contained apparently nothing in the way of ornaments, utensils, or
weapons, and were the resting-places of the corpses of poor people.
DARTFORD ANTIQUITIES. 315
In all the graves that I saw small particles of charcoal were
scattered amongst the remams. In a few cases a double handful
of charcoal was found in a heap near the middle of the body, which
apparently occupied the middle of the grave. This, I suppose, with
Kemble, to shew the use of the anti-Christian mode of burial by
cremation in an attenuated and symbolical form, when the people,
being Pagan, and desiring the modes of Pagan burial, were debarred
by the law from carrying them out, except by some form of
compromise.
Most of the objects found were presented to the Kent
Archaeological Society, and are now in its Museum.
The ornament on the cup-shaped brooch is a cross, and it might
be said that it was a sign that the wearer was a Christian. I think,
however, that would be too hasty a judgment from the evidence
afforded by the ornamental tracery of a brooch to prove that. I am
under the impression also that the elements-of camament or superstition
of which the cross is composed are essentially Pagan, and
that the peculiar signs which the arms of the cross carry are united
in the Darenth case as a rare and single instance. The which is
there seen is the simple conventional form for a head or face. In
various forms it occupies the centre or leading position of a series
of ornamental lines m very many Teutonic personal ornaments of
different shapes. Sometimes the whole ornament is in the form of
this figure. It is seen in Saxon (Teutonic) ornaments, singly,
double, quadruple (but unjoined), and septuple. There is a
remarkable case of it in the British Museum, placed inside the four
arms of a cross, but no one would think, I suppose, that the cross
in this case was Christian from the peculiarity of the face emblem
obliterating to the eye the importance of the cross.
There is an example from Ashendon, Buckinghamshire. It is
very curious. In a groundwork of crossed lines in separate blocks,
like those round the edge of the Darenth specimen, are four of these
signs placed equidistant from the centre and the margin, and from
each other. Within them are seven radiating lines—two of these
touch the "face " figure, the rest do not, clearly shewing that the
316 DARTFORD ANTIQUITIES.
cross was not intended, although nearly formed by a mere accident.
These crosses are all " Greek," not Latin, in shape'.
. Therefore, this figure is a mark which has been used on the field
of ornament, and connected accidentally with the centre in consequence
of dividing the field by radiating lines.
That this " face " figure is mystical, I believe, is shewn from its
recurrence in various unexpected situations. A form of it was used
in coinage, and particularly in that of Offa, where it has been
described as meaning merciorum by contraction and the use of the
Saxon CD, but that is not so. To the "m" is added .eyes, and the
stem is carried downward in a marked manner, i.e., the nose. The
sign of contraction, so called, at the top of the face may have been
so, but it is found where no contraction is required. In Offa's
coins this sign remains as a Pagan emblem cunningly introduced
by way of a contracted word and- as a set-off. to the sign of the
Christian cross, which is also used, for Offa was at best but a
political Christian.
As to the form of the so-called cup-shaped brooches rare in Kent,
it has been said by Ackerman that it was the result of copying the
cup-shaped coins of the Byzantine Emperors, but the earliest
scyphate coin known is of the date 979 A.D., and the Saxon cupshaped
brooches are all earlier. It is more likely that the idea came
to Byzantium from the West; if it were not certain that it was
merely a moneyer's device in so constructing the coins.
SAXON GRAVES AT LITTLEBEOOK.
In the beginning of January 1883 Mr. Percy'.Hassell.sent me
word that some graves have been opened near.LittlebrQcik, Dartford.
I went at once to see them, and found that seven or eight
skeletons had been disturbed in removing gravel from the edge of
the top of the hill overlooking Littlebrook Earm, by the side of the
roadon the eastward. Yery few relics, a few small bits of pot of
Saxon forms were all I saw. Mr. Hassell tells me that some of the
graves were placed due east and west three feet apart, but that the
feet were nearer than the heads, so that in the result there was
another case of rotation in direction, different to that at Darenth
caused by mere carelessness. There were other graves and some
still remain.
These graves, from their position on the brow of the hill overlooking
the river-walls 'of the Wick of Littlebrook, appear to be
those of the inhabitants and sea-faring visitors (not usually rich
people) belonging to the Saxon port of that name, which appears to
have enjoyed much fame in the tenth century.
Mr. H. W. Smith, of Belvedere, has a few ornaments from
graves at Crayford, some from the fields above the left bank of the
New Eiver north of the bridge, and some from Swan Lane,
among them a beautiful little button of bronze thus described:—
it is exactly an inch across the base, tapering to £ inch and % inch
high. At the top are four engraved leaves within a circle, the stems
inwards. On the outer side is a very characteristic wavy pattern in
DARTFORD ANTIQUITIES. -. SV?
raised Knes. A plate is soldered over the base with'a hole in the
centre and a loop over that for the thong. There were also .found
brass and bronze spurs, buckles, bits, and curb chains, but their
present possessors I know not.
DENEHOLES.
These caves abound in this particular neighbourhood, and from
Lambarde downwards have received notice from all local historians.
Yet none have delivered a clear account of them. During the
many years I have examined the subject, and especially since the
last meeting of this Society in Dartford, I have arrived at very
definite conclusions.
There are varieties in form, all, however, having a narrow shaft
to obtain the sole access to the cavern. There is (1) a simple cave
of a beehive shape, (2) a small cluster of little caves, three in
number, round the bottom of the shaft, and (3) a series of excavations
founded on the principal idea of rectangular crossing of short
tunnels. The whole are found here ; and though in parts of Kent,
as at Lenham and elsewhere, a few departures from the simple
plans before mentioned have been found, they are exceedingly rare.
Perhaps the finest specimen known, certainly the best I know, is to
be seen at Stankey Wood, Bexley. It is 70 feet deep and contains
four pillars, besides two which have fallen.
The situation of these caves is anywhere almost in the northern
half of the county. Eew rocks are suitable for digging caves in,
and chalk stands first. The chalk is reached through 100 pr 120
feet of superincumbent soil, and it is penetrated in still more
numerous instances by shafts without an overlying soil at all.
The age of these holes extends from the Neolithic to a recent
or, I may say, the present age ; but few are of the time when stone
or bone was employed to dig them. The majority belong to the
age of iron, but they extend through the Eoman period, and were
largely used by that people as rubbish pits, which have hereabouts
furnished many a Eoman relic.
The principal features connected with Deneholes is that each is
separate from the other, however near they were dug. If by any
chance fear was entertained that one should break into the other,
work was stopped or a swerve was made. All the holes are so far
as the rock will permit very circumscribed in area, closely and
neatly excavated. They are of large size, usually of the cubic
content of a haystack of the present day, and as variable. The
oldest forms are smallest. Some have received additional excavation,
which has generally shewn itself by a peculiarity easily detected.
As to the use of these; I am now in a position to point
out, that although once not able to speak with any sort of conviction
or decision, I am now. The careful surveys by myself and
excavations I have, in conjunction with friends, worked at; together
with the admirable excavations in Essex by the Essex Eield Club,
conducted by my friend Mr. T. Y. Holmes, enable me to speak
more decidedly.
318 DARTFORD ANTIQUITIES.
They are secret hiding-places. They are the hiding-places for
grain. Such has been the customary mode of hiding grain over the
whole of the old world. In Spain it is the method in use now. In
Erance it has for some centuries died out; but it is universal in a
sense that it has been the custom, if not the present one, in every
part of the world. The main point of interest with us here is the
great size and depth of the pits. The depth I have accounted for; a
reason for the size I find to be that forage, straw, hay, etc., were garnered
in these pits besides grain, as shewn by Diodorus in his excerpt
from Pytheas' travels. In the countries where the custom is most
common, the fields are always green, or there are none. In England,
during the long winter, the cattle needed hay, and during the
periods of history and before it, hay stacks were the first things a
raider and an enemy burnt. But in a cave, so easily hidden, this
could not be done; and history has proved that this use of these
caves has been common to many countries. Pliny's remarks about
the deep caves with veins like mines has reference to another set of
excavations. That the chalk excavated was scattered about and
found useful in manuring the land is a mere consequence of
the necessity for its unobtrusive disposal and the observation of
beneficial results.*
* See an artiole on Deneholes by F. C. J. Spurrell, Archceological Journal,
vol. xxxviii., p. 391. Also Report of the Denehole Explorations by the Essex
Field Club, Buokhurst Hill, Essex, 1887, in which are several papers bearing on
the subjeot.