THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
SECOND INTERIM REPORT
By LIEUT.-COLONEL G. W. MEATES, F.S.A., E. GREENFIELD
and EDWYN BIRCHENOTTGH, M.A.
INTRODUCTION
THIS Second Interim Report deals with the results obtained during the
1950 and 1951 seasons of excavation and is concerned in particular with
the northern part of the building where an important complex of ramps
and stairways has been revealed. The Basement Room has also been
excavated a further 5 ft. towards the east in the hope of reaching its
limit in this direction. The limit has not been reached, however, and
the presence of the road and underlying sewer defers further excavation.
It is essential to obtain complete access to ah the evidence contained in
the filling of the Basement Room, as without it not only are we prevented
from working out its successive purposes, but, even more
important, we cannot complete the unique Early Christian paintings
that adorned the upper room and which are contained in the filling
below.
Both northern and southern walls of the fourth century house have
now been obtained, and most of the western edge has been defined.
As the work on the south and south-west has not yet been completed,
the results of this have not been incorporated in this Report. Work
has also been carried out on the short corridors north and south of the
Mosaic Rooms to obtain more precise dating, and this work is being
carried forward into the 1952 season. The evidence here is sparse, but
what has come to light suggests an early to mid-fourth-century date for
the mosaics themselves.
Room 15 is dealt with in detail, and a transverse section is recorded,
together with an architectural section west to east along the hne of the
main flight of steps and extending through rooms 14, 15, and 16. The
stratification in Room 15 provides a large quantity of evidence in
relation to the neighbouring rooms and especially in relation to the
Basement Room, whose chronology is rendered clearer, although its
successive purposes, while suggestive, yet remain obscure ; its conceivable
parallels may perhaps be found in the neighbourhood of the
Rhineland. A second architectural section has been recorded from
south to north throughout the house and passes through Rooms 11 and
15. This section, when compared to the west to east section, the plan,
26
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
and the diagrammatic sketch, will render the stairway complex understandable.
In ah these matters our thanks are due to Mr. D. A.
Broodbank, A.R.I.B.A., Mr. C. B. Mears, A.R.I.B.A., and Mr. Downs.
As regards dating, no attempt has been made to obtain precision
dating of the north stairway complex by interference with its construction.
The evidence provided by the fillings that sealed it in Rooms 15
and 16 and supported by the state of wear of its tile facings place it
probably in the second half of the second century, and perhaps later in
that period. A suitable examination technique for these stairways is
a complicated matter and their preservation undisturbed must first
receive weighty consideration. Generally, it may be said that as a
result of these seasons' digging, the dating and periods of construction
of the house confirm those advanced in the First Interim Report (Arch.
Cant, LXIII).
It is sthl uncertain if the plan of the house before the period of
abandonment at the end of the second century represents that of the
main dwelling, or whether at that time this part of the building was a
wing of a more extensive house whose plan we do not yet know. It is,
however, sufficiently clear that towards the turn of the third-fourth
centuries, the foundations of which we have knowledge were used for a
smaller house, compact and symmetrical, the Mosaic Rooms later
forming its central point. We have clear evidence that the Antonine
house extended north, and this extension will be found entered on the
plan. It is also continued towards the north-east, where a further
building is known to exist; and this will be investigated during the
1952 season.
Some very interesting work on the superimposed floors of Room 5
has been carried out; but beyond mentioning "that coins of Claudius II,
Allectus and Constantine I I as Augustus, were found stratified in this
room, report on this apartment and its relation to the remainder of the
Bath Block must await complete excavation.
It remains to thank all our workers who once again by their keenness
and efficiency have made the'seasons under review so successful, and to
acknowledge the continued interest and support both of the owners of
the site and of archaeologists generally. We wish particularly to thank
Miss M. V. Taylor, CB.E.,' M.A., F.S.A., and Professor J. M. C.
Toynbee, M.A., D.Phil., F.S.A., for their helpful suggestions and
provision of parallel data; to Dr. F. Oswald, D.Sc, F.S.A., for his
detailed report on the Samian ; to Mr. B. W. Pearce, M.A., F.S.A., who
again reports on the coins ; to Mr. Bernard Middleton, F.R.S.A., who
again reports on the glass; to Professor A. J . E . Cave, M.D., D.Sc, of the
Department of Anatomy, St. Bartholomew's Hospital Medical College, for
his report on the infant burial in Room 8; to Dr. H. J . Plenderleith, M.C,
B.Sc, Ph.D., F.S.A., Keeper of the Department of Research Laboratory,
27
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
The British Museum, for his report on the contents of the mortarium
found in Room 16; to Mrs. B. L. Macrory for the pottery drawings; to
Mr. A. G. Bell, I.S.O., F.G.S., who once again organized the site lectures,
and to Mr. C D. P. Nicholson, F.S.A., F.R.Hist.S., F.S.A.(Scot.),
F.S.G., for the great pains he has taken in assembling the painted wall
plaster from the filling of the Basement Room, a project which by his
patience and skill is taking shape with dramatic results, showing as it
does that the plaster decorated a room where Romano-British Christians
worshipped in the late fourth or early fifth centuries, perhaps 200
years before the arrival of St. Augustine. The two great chi rho
monograms and the row of Orante figures facing the east sufficiently
testify to the existence in the villa of the earliest place of certain
Christian worship in Britain. A report on these wall paintings will
form a separate publication in the future.
The imperative protection of the site during the winters of 1950 and
1951 was supphed by the Kent County Council who generously defrayed
the cost of necessary materials ; and a further grant of £50 by the
Administrators of the Haverfield Bequest, is gratefully acknowledged.
Finally, our thanks are due to Mr. John Matthew, the Secretary of our
Organization, for his efficient work in the field of organization and
administration.
THE NORTHERN COMPLEX
Room 11 (The Basement Room)
As has been indicated, the presence of the road and sewer prevented
any further large scale exploration of this room. It was possible,
however, to excavate five feet onwards towards the road and to obtain
an important section (PI. l a and Fig. 1). Two additional phnths were
discovered, forming a rectangle with the two discovered last season
(see plan, Fig. 2). AU four bore on their surfaces the remains of
completely carbonized wood, probably horizontal plates to support
uprights of some kind of framework fitting closely inside the walls of
the room and supporting the room above. The discovery was also
made, half-way between, and in line with, these two plinths, of a
shaUow sump or water channel lined with shaped chalk blocks. This
is a significant construction, as it seems to indicate that water was at
one time present in the Basement Room. The bottom of this sump or
channel, whose limit eastwards has not been reached, lies three feet
below the present bed of the river, and the whole had become silted to
within a foot of its top when the villa was finally destroyed. Reference
to the section at Fig. 1 will show.the method of construction of this
channel, and it is possible to give some chronplogy and to equate the
construction with the deposit of the marble busts in the room. The
sequence is as follows :
28
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
1. The second-century concrete floor was roughly cut into and the
sump or channel was dug to a depth of three feet below its level, being
lined with shaped chalk blocks.
2. The clay floor was laid over the entire concrete floor and packed
up against the box of chalk blocks.
3. During the second half of the third century, the bottom became
filled to a depth of some twelve inches with clay and fragments of brick,
and this was finaUy sealed by a thin tip of carbonized material.
4. Immediately above this ash tip was found a potsherd of dating
importance. It is described at Fig. 8, No. 33. SimUar potsherds have
been found at Colchester and SUchester, at the latter place being said
to appear during the first half of the third century. This is the only
datable object from the fining and from this single potsherd the
construction of the sump or channel is placed tentatively about the
middle of the thhd century. It was accompanied by a complete
box-flue tile similar to those in situ in Room 15, which is a third-century
construction, and a large portion of a patterned box-flue tile (Group 5
of " A study of the patterns on Roman flue tiles and their distribution "
by A. W. G. Lowther, F.S.A.) which is, however, a relic of the secondcentury
house. Bearing in mind the SVAVIS pot of mid-third-century
date which appears to have been a votive deposit when the busts were
placed in the room, it is reasonable to suppose that the deposition of the
busts and the digging of the sump or channel were contemporary events.
5. Subsequently, the chalk lining was roughly repaired by the
insertion of square bricks near the top, but by the time of the final
destruction of the vflla this lining had become greatly dilapidated,
much of the chalk having disintegrated. A group of five mortaria (see
plan at Fig. 2) was found upon the surface of the clay floor around the
sump or channel and sealed down by the carbonized destruction layers.
These mortaria, unlike the mortarium in Room 16, showed no sign of
contents, and theh disposition around the chalk lined sump or channel
suggests that they were in use at the time of destruction, though there is
nothing to show whether it was a domestic or religious use. AU five
were standing complete at the time of the destruction, and all are
fourth-century types, Nos. 39 and 40 being small colour-coated vessels,
Nos. 41, 42 and 43 large heavy vessels. No. 41 rested in No. 42 and
bore the brunt of the destruction ; it was a badly burned specimen and
is too friable for reconstruction though its type is clear. These mortaria
are illustrated at Fig. 9.
6. The destruction by fire was very evident from the quantity of
completely carbonized planks and lengths of wood that were found
lying upon the latest occupation surface. This fallen debris of the
floor and room above averaged twelve inches in thickness and contained
•chalk rubble, opus signinum, tiles and wall plaster. This plaster was
29
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
somewhat less in quantity than that recovered in 1949 ; the painted
dado shows a turn into a doorway or window, while some new and
richly coloured designs of great complexity came to hght. It is possible
that we have here the first fragments to be recovered from the east wall
of the Christian room above.
7. The first waU faU from the room above occurred soon after the
fire, and a study of the section gives the impression of a north waU of
flint and mortar up to the roof and a south wall of possibly wattle and
daub to the roof, but resting on the south wah of the Basement Room,
which is of flint and mortar. A cursory study of the waU plaster backings
from the upper room shows that many fragments were fixed
securely to daub which in turn carries the impressions of wooden laths
or perhaps planks. An exhaustive examination of the plaster backings
is a future task. Some roof tUes seem to have shd down at the time of
this first waU fall, but they are largely concentrated in the southern
part of the filling. An important circumstance was the recovery from
the first waU fall of a large number of chalk blocks shaped as voussoirs
of an arch. A section of this arch was found intact, though ah the
blocks had shpped down from the upper level where they probably
formed part of a doorway or window. An hon anvil and hammer were
found together next the south wall in this layer.
8. Parts of both north and south walls remained standing for
sufficient time to aUow a black earthy deposit to silt over the first waU
fall. This formed a layer showing very few fragments of fallen wall
debris. It averaged a foot in thickness and contained a scatter of
fourth-century pottery, of which the most important sherds come from
two bowls, colour-coated, rouletted and decorated with painted scrolls
(Fig. 8, Nos. 34 and 35). Nothing of positive date came from this layer,
but its deposit can clearly be placed very late in the century.
9. The remnants of the walls either fell or were pushed in, and the
remainder of the roof tUes shd to rest on the debris. There is no
evidence of post-Roman occupation in the black layer above, and the
presence of large flints in it gives the impression that this part of the site
was subsequently leveUed, but at what period there is no evidence to show.
The only comment that can be made upon this further excavation
of the Basement Room is that while more evidence has come to light of
construction and active occupation, this is helpful in a very limited
sense to the understanding of the functions of the room. These functions,
on present evidence, are only suggestions, but the modifications,
in construction are clear. Both may be summarized as follows :
Period I. Probably late First Century.
Excavation for the room having been made down to flood-plain level,
the natural clay and flint was cut to form three ramps by which it might
30
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
be approached from the. higher level. The pah leading into it from the
south were steeply cut and faced with rammed chaUi, and both carried
wooden arrangements, the westerly being possibly a staircase. The
ramp to the north was not faced with chant, and its gentle gradient
suggests a wanting way. The room does not seem to have had any
sort of floor at this period, and its depth suggests that water from the
river may possibly then have been admitted.
ROOM I I SECTION
TTnT
M O D E R N ROAD
iTiriTiiTniTiTriTi'i'iTirriTi'iTrriTiTiTriTiTri'iTi'iTrrrrri'iTi'i'i'iTi'i
©
iiiiit
o CHALK
BLOCKS
CHA
BLOCKS
NRON HAMMER
AND ANVIL
© BLACK WITH LARGE FLINTS.
© FLOOD PLAIN GRAVEL.
POTSHERD
(3rd CENTURY)
N9 33
ElG. 1
GINGERY MORTAR.
(DECOMPOSED WALL FACING)
WALL FALL.
(FLINTS, MORTAR,TILE.ETC.)
BLACK WITH FLINTS.
(REPRESENTS PERIOD OF REST)
DESTRUCTION LAYER.
(CHARCOAL.PLASTER, ETC.)
CARBONIZED WOOD.
CLAY PACKING.
CLAY FILLING WITH
FLINT AND TILE.
Period la. Probably late First/Second Century.
The steep ramp at the south-east was blocked and a masonry
staircase took its place. This staircase, like its wooden neighbour, does
not descend to the bottom of the room, but stops short about two feet
above it.
Period II. Late Second Century.
Both approaches on the south were blocked. The room was
provided with a concrete floor, and the walking ramp on the north was
31
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
overlaid by a fourfold tiled stahcase. The walls of both room and
stairways were given a painted decoration of panels and vines in hght
colours, and the room probably functioned as a loggia or garden entrance
to the villa. It is possible that the river, by changing its course, had
provided by its silt the basis for such a garden, though this remains to
be proved.
ROOM II P L A N .
POT I
©
No S4
WEDGE
No 38.
SVAVIS ^
No 23 N» 2»»27-
BUST n PEDESTAL
BSHR2
^ POT ni
©
No 25.
o X CAT SKELETON
© ([No 41.
<-No 42
CHAMMEL
OR SUMP
PLINTH
No 39
PL NTH
M O D E R N ROAD
^
Era. 2
Period III. Mid to Late Third Century.
After a period of abandonment lasting from c. 200 to c. 250 the tiled
stairs were rendered obsolete by the construction of the high level
hypocaust on the north, involving the blocking of the stairs. The
room then became a lodging for the marble busts. The sump or channel
was dug, a clay floor was laid over the concrete floor, whhe two votive
pots were sealed down beneath the clay floor (vide First Interim Report,
Arch. Cant., Vol. LXIII).
Period IV. Fourth Century.
Two more pots were placed in the clay floor, which at this period
received three coins temp. Constantine I, into its surface. The apartment
32
PLATE I
a, Hiiwiwnt Koom, looking Kimt.
"=•
h. Basement Room. Busts in rilu, showing potter}' wedge (Xo. 38).
LULLINGSTONE ROHAN VILLA.
fare p. 32
PLATE II
a. South-west Ramp, looking West.
6. South-east Ramp, looking North.
LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA.
PLATE III
iir—jTurwr" • - ^ ^
ft **~
W^^jjjt
1 * f* ""-« > > v ' ' . >^
4 Y • C j - « S ^ M ^ * ^ _ J £ L ^ ^ M
• * ft
•r: - *
•- "sSSl*
m / -f.
*
i^gfr
'/#..
-.2
Range of deep compartments, looking North (S.W.
third-century hypocaust).
Ramp, Basement Room,
LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA.
PLATE IV
*
"' "*. *':"•'."y- x * " ^ ^ ^ \ .
• v # * i
M.
Room 15, looking N.E.
LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA.
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
above was reconstructed to provide a place of Christian worship,
and the four plinths in the Basement Room were sited to carry vertical
uprights to form a support for the wooden floor above. The terminal
date of occupation is uncertain, but it must be at least towards the close
of the fourth century. It is indeed possible that the final phase may
have been enthely devoted to Christian worship, secular habitation of
the house having ceased. And in that event, the terminal date may well
be found in the fifth century.
Room 15
A glance at the site plan (Fig. 18) will make it clear how the
stratification of this room affects the dating of the steps in the Basement
Room (Room 11). Before the insertion of the wah block between
these two rooms and the wall block between Rooms 15 and 16, the four
flights of steps formed a single unit, and in dating the steps in Room 15
we, therefore, date those in the Basement Room, which in turn whl aid
us towards a time-scale for this latter room. It is convenient to treat
this important Room 15 in phases (section and plan at Figs. 3 and 4).
Phase I. The Antonine house became derelict c. A.D. 200 and
remained so until the second half of the thhd century, during which a
silting was deposited over the steps, tailing off in thickness towards the
north and east. This silting was largely composed of fallen plaster
from the stahcase walls and contained late Antonine pottery and
Samian dated from c. 185 to c. 200, together with a coin of Antoninus
Pius sealed weU down in it. This coin is an as and is dated to A.D.
144-45, its worn condition suggesting that it may still have been circulating
at the end of the' century. The amphora stamp ACIRCI (Fig. 10,
No. 44) included among the coarse pottery in this layer also confirms
the Antonine period for the deposit {Richborough, IV, p. 242, where it
is noted as of second century date). The top level of the layer coincides
with a destruction level in the south wall, and confirms the proposition
of a partial dilapidation of the house as a result of abandonment c.
A.D. 200, of which contemporary political troubles may have been the
cause. The tiles on the steps, which are worn by considerable use, were
sealed beneath this layer and are, therefore, largely in situ, while those
on the three treads leading on into the Basement Room were found to
have been cut away, the inference being that the Basement Room
remained open during the period of abandonment.
Phase II. In the second hah of the thhd century, the site was
again occupied and some rebuilding was undertaken. Room 15 and
its pendant Room 16 were designed, the former to be heated by the
hypocaust system and connected with a large brick arch with the latter,
in which direction the furnace was intended to be sited. A thin layer
33
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
of clay was laid over the Antonine silt, being steeply channelled opposite
the arch and round by the footing trenches of the north and west walls,
which were the only ones to contain box-flues. These new apartments
cut off the Period I ramp and the Antonine rooms and corridors at the
north, leaving them robbed to theh foundations and exterior to the
remodelled house. It is uncertain whether this hypocaust was ever
put to use; carbonized material is absent and there is no sign of
calcination of the flints next the arch. The clay layer or baffle showed
no signs of heat, and supports for the floor, or any impressions of them,
were lacking. A wooden floor supported on beams is possible, but
there is no evidence of it. It would indeed seem that the room began
to be filled with a layer of rubbish almost at once. This layer was
greyish in colour and sharply contrasted with the yellowish Antonine
layer sealed beneath it. It contained third-century pottery (Fig. 11),
a little Samian dated c. 200 and later, which also occurred in the footing
trenches, and a denarius of Alexander Severus, which is dated to A.D.
222-8. This coin is in fah condition, but it may well have been
circulating for twenty or thhty years before it was dropped into this
grey filling. A pah of ox skulls were deposited at this time, one in the
channel immediately inside the arch, the other in the channel running
along the inside of the north wall (PI. VIb). It is unlikely that any
significance can be placed upon this deposit, though the ritual deposit
of an ox's skull in the triangular temple at Verulamium may have some
relevance. At Verulamium the re-edification of the temple, to which
period the skuh there belongs, is dated on shght evidence to the end of
the third century (Verulamium, p. 117), and the identity of period
agrees both there and at Lulhngstone. At Verulamium the skull was
deposited in a cavity roughly lined with roof tiles, whereas the skulls
at Lullingstone were unprotected. It is to this phase also that the
deposition of the damaged marble busts in the neighbouring Basement
Room is ascribed (Arch. Cant., LXIII, p. 13) ; and the insertion hi
the floor in front of them of the SVAVIS pot conforms in date with the
same phase in this room (Room 15).
Phase III. There seems to have been a pause in the occupation of
this room until towards the middle of the fourth century, when intensive
use of it again becomes apparent. Once more, no use seems to have
been made of the hypocaust arrangement as such, but the surface of the
grey third-century filling was adopted as a level for operations that
requhed heat. A new west wall containing a doorway was set back
from the earlier wall containing the box flues, and a small ramp of
heavy gravel was packed against it on the inside to lead down to this
level. The southern portion of the room was the site of burning or
incandescence, and in this part the lamination of burnt levels of charcoal
with layers of burnt clay and reddened sandy material indicate a
34
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
lengthy period of use. The charcoal was intermittently raked back
into the northern part of the room where it remained in layers, a shallow
gully running east and west being maintained between the burnt
area and the raked back material. In the north-east corner was an
area of rough concrete which perhaps formed a small standing, sealing
a badly burnt coin, probably Constantinian, c. A.D. 324 plus. Thirtyone
coins were recovered from the burnt and raked back zones. They
date from A.D. 330-54, the terminal date behig fixed by a coin each of
Magnentius and Conatantius Gallus lying with a minim upon the surface
of the burnt layer. It is clear, therefore, that the room began to be
used for some type of combustion a few years after A.D. 330, ceasing to
be so used probably in the sixth decade of the century. A word may be
said as to the possible activity that took place in the room during this
period. A thin hard level was encountered over the major portion of
the burnt area at an average depth of six inches below its surface, and
this hard level contained sixty-seven post-holes (plan at'Fig. 4). They
formed an irregular arc around an empty space next the southern wall,
the centre point of this semi-circle being marked by a single post-hole.
They were of two sizes, fourteen having an average diameter at the top
of three inches, the remainder of one and a half inches. At first sight
the pattern appears haphazard, but if a movable framework is postulated,
this framework having been from time to time lifted and placed
in different positions, but with its centre point unchanged, the legs of
such a structure might well produce such an apparently chaotic pattern
of post-holes. Signs of such a framework are suggested at Fig. 4 where
PHs 1, 2, 3 and 4 seem to be centred on PH 5 and may show the main
supports of a semi-" bee-hive " type of framework with its diameter
lying along the wall. Had some such contrivance been in use, it may
have been placed over incandescent material, for drying, airing and
possibly bleaching cloth, the cloths being spread over the frame, confining
the heat and excluding the ah. While it is not suggested that a
fuller's establishment was then in existence at the vhla, it is a possibility
that some such use was made of the room. It was not used for smelting
or any sort of foundry work. The use of the post-hole complex having
ceased, it became concealed by a further deposit of burnt matter,
representative of a short period only.
Phase IV. This use of the room having ended c. 350-60, the walls
were repaired and a floor, probably of wood, was fitted, the waUs being
embellished with a fine scheme of coloured frescoes including a zig-zag
decoration and a large Chi Rho monogram set within an ornate wreath
of leaves and buds. This recalls those that decorated the neighbouring
Christian Room, which was decorated with a row of orante figures
within a portico on the west wah and a second large Chi Rho monogram
set within an even finer -wreath at the west end of the south waU. These
35
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
are the two rooms that were undoubtedly dedicated to Christian
worship. The narrow builder's trench for this wall repah cut through
the laminated burnt levels and contained a coin of Constantius II as
Augustus, Fel. Temp. Rep., legionary spearing fallen horseman type,
A.D. 345-61, thus dating this wah repah. That the floor fitted over the
" drying " surface below was probably a wooden one is indicated by a
pah of carbonized planks that were found lying on the " drying " floor.
These planks lay the length of the room from west to east, parallel with
each other, north and south of the guUy and midway between it and the
north and south wahs. The absence of any carbonized cross-members
ROOM IS • S E C T I O N G - H.
CARBONIZED PLANK
irri'i'i'i'i'i'i'iTi'i'i'i'l'i'iri'iTrT
CARBONIZED PLANK
\///U\
CLAY SEAL
SURFACE OF
6th TREAD
COIN'OF
ALEXANDER
SEVERUS
TILE
FALL.
NATURAL CLAY
ftND FLINT
STEPS BEFORE SECTION
LINE SHOWN DOTTED. I
COIN OF
ANTONINUS PIUS.
SAMIAN cA.D. 2 00
No. S.I.
WALL FALL.
E ^ PAINTED PLASTER AND WALL FALL.
™ - BURNT LAYER, CONTAINING
I/////1 COINS c.330 TO e.3SO.
FEET
FIG. 3
IIIMII 3rd CENTURY DEPOSIT.
i'A'S'N ANTONINE DEPOSIT.
or thin flooring may be accounted for by theh removal immediately
before the final fire ; many hon nails were found, theh distribution
being thickest on the line of the gully. These planks and the gully
were sealed by the fallen painted plaster and this in turn was covered
by the flint and mortar wah fall; the latter contained a little the,
but there was not enough to indicate positively the type of roofing
employed over the room. There was no sign of ceiling plaster. The
length of use of the room in Phase IV as part of a Christian establishment
is not known. It was ultimately destroyed by the fire that
destroyed this north complex of rooms. A coin of Arcadius (A.D. 383-
408) was found in the top of the burnt level of Phase III. This coin
36
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
R O O M 15.
PLAN OF FOURTH CENTURY LEVELS.
ROOM
It RAMP UP ° ° x ° s°
^PLANK \ TROUGH /PLANK/
3RD CENTURY ARCHED + ! i - H"
OPENING UNDER
| O O M 16.
VZft K CENTURY. EggiJ ZK CENTURY. ESS HZ CENTURY.
IS33 GRAVEL. •'.-. POST HOLES. + COIN.
12 6 O I 2 3 4 S
INCHES FEET ^
Ei«. 4
37
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
hes completely outside the date scale of Phase III, which is accurately
attested by the thirty-one mutually supporting coins. It is clearly an
intruder, and may weh have fallen between the boards of the floor in
Phase IV. If this is so, then the existence of the floor as such in A.D.
383 plus must be envisaged, which would place the final destruction of
the Christian estabhshment probably in the last decade of the century
and not in A.D. 367 as was heretofore thought to be the ease.
Room 16
As in the case of its neighbour Room 15, this room was formed in the
second half of the thhd century by the insertion of the block containing
the arch and the continuation eastwards of the north wall of Room 15.
The second century fihing over the steps, and over that part of the
second-century room that was included in Room 16, was allowed to
remain undisturbed except for a channel leading eastwards on the axis
of the arch. This channel seems to have been intended to convey heat
from a point stih further towards the east, and as the ground has been
cut away by construction of the road ah vestige of a furnace will have
disappeared. The existence of this channel demonstrates that Room 16
was never the site of a furnace, and the system of heated apartments
along a single axis is paralleled at South Darenth (Arch. Cant., XXII,
PL G—The chalk ramps there may have influenced the draught, being
similar in purpose to the clay baffle in our Room 15). The pottery
recovered from the undisturbed second-century filling is illustrated at
Figs. 12 and 13 (excluding Nos. 80 and 81). The contents also included
much fragmentary wah plaster which, by its orange, red and green
decoration, had clearly slipped into the fihing from the walls of the stair
and corridor and is an additional indication of the period of abandonment
of the Antonine house.
The floor of the second-century room extended over much of the
area up to the stah and corridor, and consisted of a layer of crushed
brick. The north wah was built upon it, and it continued on the
exterior of Room 16. It is clear that this floor is contemporary with the
stair and corridor, and its Antonine period is founded upon the pottery
at its level, which includes a datable Samian Form 67 (Fig. 6, No. S2).
The remainder of the pottery is of native manufacture and necessitates
a wide date-scale, but it does not appear to continue beyond the second
century. The grey (thhd century) pottery-bearing layer, which was
so conspicuous a feature of the stratification of Room 15, is absent from
Room 16,' being replaced at a simhar level by a disturbed filling that
seals the yellowish second-century layer. Modern post-holes have
made this filling stratigraphically valueless.
Near the west wah, at key-stone level of the arch, was an uneven
floor of clay containing traces of the, representing the occupation level
38
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
in this room during the last years of the villa's existence. The keystone
bricks of the arch were cut down, certainly after A.D. 345, and the
four courses of flints running over the arch represent the base of the
partition wah that was then remodehed. The mortar binding these
four courses is strongly impregnated with pounded the, whhe for the
whole height of the arch below it is white. The clay floor was laid
down somewhat earher than the wah rebuild, as it is interrupted by the
narrow wah trench ; but that it is a fourth-century construction is not
open to doubt. The pottery recovered from its surface also conforms
to that in use late in the century and is hlustrated at Fig. 13. The
complete mortarium (No. 81), agreeing in type with Nos. 39 and 40
stratified and dated in the Basement Room, was found resting in an
upright position on the floor and next the west wah. It sthl preserves
its original contents (Appendix V) and had been repaired with rivets
before its final use. The thick zone of charcoal representing the
destruction is sealed by the flint and mortar wah fah, but Period IV
wall plaster is absent, indicating that the walls of this room, unlike its
immediate neighbours, remained undecorated. Above this wah fall
the ground has suffered disturbance and no trace remains to indicate
the type of roofing in use. As in the case of the Basement Room
(Room 11) the presence of the modern road and sewer prevents complete
excavation.
Room 14
At the time when the stair complex was in use, this room may have
formed the northern end of the west corridor of the Antonine house, a
thick layer of rubbish of that date having accumulated outside the west
wah and the north-west corner. The entrance was then in the west
wah, its tread consisting of two horizontal wooden members butted
against a longitudinal mortar core placed centrally (PI. Via). This
entrance was made obsolete in the fourth century reconstruction by
removal of the timbers and theh replacement by courses of heavy
flints. New doorways were then made, one internally into Room 15,
and the other externahy in the north wah (PL Via). The floor level was
retained at the same height as the previous corridor floor, and by the
insertion of a partition wah on the south, a small square apartment or
vestibule was evolved, which continued in use throughout the remaining
life of the house. The floor seems to have been surfaced with a thin
spread of gravel, and it partially sealed the footing trench of the
partition wall between Rooms 14 and 15.
The interest of this room hes in its possible use, late in Period IV,
as a vestibule attached to the Christian estabhshment. Its floor bore
a thin scatter of coins indicating its use in the second half of the fourth
century. The nine coins at floor level include three minims, two Fel.
39
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
Temp. Rep. coins, and one of the House of Theodosius (c. 379-95).
These were associated with the final occupation of the house, and the
remaining three coins are Oonstantinian and were probably in contemporary
use. The floor ran over a refuse pit in the north-west corner,
which may be dated by its sealed coins to a short time before the other
pit referred to in the First Interim Report (Arch. Cant., LXIII, p. 11).
The pit was dug after c. A.D. 337, and by the absence of Fel. Temp. Rep.
ROOM 14 • SECTI ON J • K..
EDWARD t PENNY
qrrflflTTrTITm
M E D . A E V A L S U R F A C E
•Mmm.
ROMAN FLOOR
LEVEL
BOORWAY
INCHES FEET
RaaH YELLOW MORTAR AND CHALK (FALLEN WALL FACING)
r r S l FLOOR LEVEL.GRAVELLY WITH TILE.CONTAINING MINIMS
^ " ^ AND COINS SECOND HALF 4 t h CENTURY.
rrozg FOOTING TRENCH WITH MORTAR AND CHALK FILL,
1 3 3 2 3 CONTAINING WALL PLASTER.
WM MORTAR AND SOIL MAKE-UP.
m CLAY AND FLINT.
(HILLWASH)
. CLAY AND FLINT.
(HILLWASH)
, BROWN SANDY WITH
' CHALK.
GREYISH SAND
AND MORTAR.
BLACKISH WITH
CHARCOAL
SANDY
CLAY SEAL
• i WOOD ASH.
[ K M I BLACK SILT WITH FLINT AND TILE
12S!J CONTAINING COINS A.D.337-345.
E«;°3 GRAVEL.
|T»7J PRIMARYSILTING-DARK GRAVEL
<>-*-* CONTAINING COLOUR- COATED
ROSETTED WARE.
© WALL FALL.
(g, BLACK WITH POTTERY
^ 2niHo 4 t h CENTURIES.
m SANDY CLAY WITH
W TILE.
/ a NATURAL CLAY AND w FLINT.
Eict. 6
coins, which are otherwise common on the site, it may be said to have
been filled in and sealed over before c. A.D. 345. The coins, stratified
beneath the final clay seal, are mutually supporting, except for a radiate
of Tetricus II, which doubtless was a survival. The primary fill of the
pit contained a sherd of colour-coated rosette-stamped ware, and its
general sealed contents included three specimens of small thick cookingpots
roughly handmade (Fig. 14, Nos. 82-4), indicating the use of
hand-made pottery at this period. The presence also of fragments of
40
PLATE V
— «v'
t—ngjSa.
Room 15, looking South,
mtmjL^^f^^'
rm. A
b. Room 15. Post Hole complex.
LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA.
[facep. 40
PLATE VI
' *&.
~w/^
Room 14, looking North.
m
b. Room 15. Ox skull in situ.
LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA.
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
animal bones and skuhs showing knhe cuts, and also of the knives
themselves, which wih be hlustrated with the iron work in a later
report, suggest that the room may have been used as a kitchen or
preparation room for the secular house before its transformation into a
vestibule for the Christian estabhshment.
The room seems largely to have escaped the final fire, and the
presence of fallen tiles on its floor indicate the type of roofing. A few
fragments of wah plaster were found in the footing trench next Room
15, and came from there ; Room 14 does not seem to have had decorated
wahs. The two fourth-century entrances bear the imprints of the
wooden treads, and the sides of the entrance leading into Room 15 are
shaped to take massive doorway plaster and indicate that the door
probably opened outwards into Room 14.
By medieval times the area of the room had been made level with
the truncated wah tops, and a shver penny of Edward I was found
lying on the surface of the west wall.
APPENDIX I
THE SAMIAN POTTERY
The analysis of Samian set out below is based upon finds up to the
end of 1951. A total of ninety-three individual vessels have been
identified, and they are analysed in the following table :
A complete absence of the typical Flavian/Trajanic Form 27 is significant
and gives the impression that the earhest cultural occupation must
be a second-century one, though the fibulae and much of the coarse
pottery are first-century types ; perhaps the earhest occupation was
purely a native one. It will also be noted, that of the seventy-two dated
vessels, thirty-four lie in the two decades c. 180-200. And on the
assumption that the twelve examples of Form 37 survived into that
twenty years, no less than 63 • 9 per cent, of the datable Samian lies
therein. This may be regarded as indicating a late Antonine occupation
ending c. 200, the three later examples probably being referable to
the third-century occupation. Examples SI, S2 and S3 figured in this
Report are rare and merit immediate ihustration. The sherds showing
decoration are also figured, but a full range of illustrations is reserved
for the final survey of the Samian at a later date.
41
Zf
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£ OS o
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to
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to
M
Period Total
Form 30
Form 37
Form 15 •
Form 18
Form 18/31
Form 31
Form 33
Form 35
Form 36
Curie 15
Form 79
Form 80
Form 44
Form 44/81
Form 81
Form 32
Curie 11
Form 38
Mortarium 43
Mortarium 45
Form 67
Barrel shaped
tumbler
VTTIA NVMOH aNOISONITim SOLL
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
NOTES ON THE SAMIAN
By DR. F. OSWALD, D.SC, F.S.A.
In general, I think, the Samian falls mostly within the period of
Niederbieber (A.D. 190-260), and of this, mostly between A.D. 190 and
200, Avith survivals, especially of the decorated fragments from the
Rheinzabern kilns. There is also a complete absence of the cup
Form 27, its place being taken by Form 33.
51 (Fig. 6). Form 67, with cut glass technique. Cf. Oelmann,
Niederbieber, O. and P., LXXVII, 6 and Lud. VSb at Rheinzabern.
Probably Rheinzabern ware, c. A.D. 200. Good glaze and high neck as
at Rheinzabern.
52 (Fig. 6). Form 67. Very thin Motto beaker, showing in the
central zone portions of letters CA.B formed by white barbotine dots,
between two rows of similar dots. Cf. Oelmann, Niederbieber, with
white barbotine, Taf. V, 23, 24 and see Behn, Romische Keremik, 10,4
and O. & P., LXXIX, 15. There is a very full collection of mottoes
on wine vessels in Loeschcke's "Roman monuments of the wine
industry on the Moselle, Saar and Rhine in the German Wine Museum
at Trier, 1934." In this article the only motto which seems to me to
meet the case, viz : . . .CA at the end of the phrase and the imperfect
B (not I) at the beginning of the motto is on p. 44 viz.: A ME DVLCIS
AMICA BIBE in the Wine Museum at Trier, and the white dotted
spots occur on a small jug at Niederbieber (Oelmann, Niederbieber,
Abb. 10-5, p. 33 and his Plate V, Fig. 25, and notably on the fine vase
with the figure of TREBERIS, the city goddess of Trier, surrounded
by a ring of these white spots with centre dot, found in the Trier
potteries, his p. 5 Abb. 3). c. A.D. 200.
53 (Fig. 6). Ribbed barrel-shaped tumbler, the upper part with
ribs or close-set horizontal mouldings in zones above and below the
plain swollen centre of the vessel. Figured and described by J. A.
Stanfield, " Unusual Sigillata ", Archaeological Journal, 1929, p. 130,
Fig. 6, Nos. 29-33. Also recorded at Shchester and Corbridge by T.
May, Pottery of Silchester, 1916, XXXI, p. 27. I found some examples
of this rare vessel in the potteries of Lezoux in 1931, now in the
Margidunum cohection of Nottingham University. Late Antonine date,
c. A.D. 190-200, or may be somewhat earlier.
54 (Fig. 6). Form 37. Good glaze and neat execution. Ovolo of
REGINVS ; his use of striated rods instead of beadrows, as on 37
REGINVSF, Knorr, Cannstalt, 1905, PL XXXVIII, 3. Eagle
(Oswald 2166) used by REGINVS and many Rheinzabern potters,
c. A.T>. 140-50.
43
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
J
/
(
\
N
\
—1
SJOOOOOOO©
©
oo
ooo
sweooeoo
•
•
L )
ooo
/
MHWyWCT.
I
Sib S20
PIG. 6 (J)
44
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
55 (Fig. 7). Form 37. Intersecting circles, each arc containing an
eight-rayed rosette with a central hollow used by REGINVS and a
short stalked pinnate leaf, filling space between the intersecting circles,
much used by REGINVS. Probably by REGINVS.
56 (Fig. 7). Form 37. Ovolo probably by REGINVS, c. 150-60.
57 (Fig. 7). Form 37. Medahion enclosing a small gladiator
(Oswald 1027 and Ludowici 146 in his Katalog, V, p. 41), used by
CERIALIS and other potters. The medallions are separated from
each other by stout rods of fine pinnate leaves as on Ludowici No. 84,
p. 87 of Katalog V, used by CERIALIS and some other Rheinzabern
potters. This piece is probably by CERIALIS of Rheinzabern, c.
A.D. 140-50.
58 (Fig. 7). Form 37. Medahion enclosing grapes on a stalk, used
only by CERIALIS as on p. 94 of Ludowici's Katalog, V, No. 28.
59 (Fig. 6). Form 37. With ovolo of CERIALIS of Rheinzabern
(Ludowici Katalog, V, p. 148, No. 100), c. 140-50.
510 (Fig. 7). Form 37. Rhomboid beads forming right-angled
triangles, each enclosing an astragalus, used by CERIALIS and
IVVENIS. Probably the work of CERIALIS, c. A.D. 140-50.
511 (Fig. 7). Form 37. Columns in series, exactly as on Form 37
used only by LVPVS (Ludowici Rheinzabern Katalog, V, p. 109, his
No. 300).
512 (Fig. 7). Form 37. Protome of lion to left, exactly similar to
Oswald 1494, even to the striations on the upper part of the right
fore-paw (Lezoux, Dech. I, 720) as on a 37 mould stamped
CARANTINIM. By CARANTINVS, Antonine, c. A.D. 150.
513 (Fig. 7). Form 37. Lower part of basket (by CINNAMVS of
Lezoux). Rather thin ware. Antonine, c. A.D. 150.
S14(Fig. 7). Form 37. Clearly the work of DIVIXTVS of Lezoux.
The small medallions with a hohow central core occur on a 37 stamped
DIVIX.F at Carhsle (May and Hope, Catalogue of Roman pottery in
the museum, Tuhie House, Carhsle, No. 63), and the same medalhon
with central rosette at Leicester (Jewry Wah Site). The two goat's
legs belong to a Pan (Oswald 717A) and the Acanthus occurs on a 37
stamped DIVIX.F (May and Hope op. cit., No. 64) with the same small
rosettes on the bead rows as in the medallions, A.D. 140-50.
S15 (Fig. 7). Form 37. Two conjoined dolphins above basket.
Probably by CINNAMVS. Sharply modelled head with hah forming a
crest, not identifiable. Antonine.
S16. (Fig. 6). Smah rouletted Form 30. Cf. O & P., LXXV, 15,
Heiligenberg. Also made at Lezoux. It is probably part of a bowl
Oelmann's Type 16 at Niederbieber, figured in his Taf. 1,16. c. Antonine,
probably later, c. A.D. 200
45
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
517. Form 15. Profiling similar to O. & P. XLIII, 37. Flavian,
but it might be Trajanic, or possibly a survival.
518. Form 18. Height of wall c. 30 mm. Cf. 0 . & P., XLV, 15,
good glaze. Possibly Flavian, or probably later ; date uncertain in
spite of theh similarity.
519. Form 18. Part of rim. Perhaps Flavian.
S20 (Fig. 6). Form 18/31. Height of wah 46 mm. Similar to
18/31 Wiesbaden Kasteh 0. & P., XLVI, 3, good glaze. Graffito, X,
in chcle. Probably Trajanic or later.
a
S7 S II
I
S I*
S IO
cm ^3
S12 S)$ S 8 S 13 So
PlG. 7 (i)
521. Form 18/31. Simhar to S20. Probably Trajanic or later.
522. Form 18/31. Height of side 33 mm. Cf. 0. & P., XLV, 15
at Gellygaer, Domitian-Trajan. Probably Dornitian or later.
523. Form 18 or 18/31. Fragment of base with double notches in
chcle. Possibly Trajanic.
524. Form 31 (Sb). Cf. 0. & P., XLVII, simhar diameter, height
of side 57 mm., thicker moulding. Antonine.
525. Form 31 (Sb). Cf. 0. & P., XLVII, 7, Rheinzabern.
Antonine.
526. Large Form 31 (Sb). Of. 0. & P., XLVII, 5 and 7, but with
thicker moulding, and -with bevel just below the moulding. Oelmann,,
46
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
Niederbieber Taf. I, IC. Cf. also Oswald, Samian of Margidunum
(University of Nottingham), Pis. LI and LII, 31 (Sb) from the third
century weh R, at 10 ft. Date c. A.D. 200.
527. Form 31 (Sb). Probably the same dish as S24, bevel just
below the thick moulding. Rheinzabern ware, c. A.D. 200.
528. Large Form 31 (Sa). Rather simhar to O. & P. XLVII, 5,
Rheinzabern, c. A.D. 180-200, and cf. Oswald, Samian Ware of Margidunum
Pis. LI and LII, diameter c. 240 mm. in thhd century
well R.
529. Large 31 (Sa) with internal offset, cf. 31 (Sa) in third century
weh at Margidunum, c. A.D. 200-250.
530. Large 31 (Sa). Height of side 54 mm., thick moulding as at
Niederbieber (Oelmann Taf. I, lb), c. A.D. 200-250.
531. Large 31 (Sa). Straight sided wall, c/. Niederbieber (Oelmann
la) c. A.D. 200.
532. Large 31 (Sb). Similar to O. & P., XLVII, 7, Niederbieber,
with a bevel below the thick moulding. Probably same as S26. c. A.D.
200.
533. Large 31 (Sb). Thick moulding, c. A.D. 200-250.
534. Large 31 (Sb). Diameter 276 mm. Cf. O. & P., XLVII, 5,
smah moulding. Probably Antonine, c. A.D. 150.
535. Large 31 (Sb). Probably late second century, insufficient
for exact dating.
536. Large thick 31 (Sb). Cf. Oswald, Samian of Margidunum,
LII, 2, in weh R (10 ft. deep), but with thicker moulding. Date about
A.D. 200.
537. Form 31. Large moulding, but insufficient for exact dating.
Probably thhd century.
538. Large 31 (Sb). Probably the same as S26, with bevel just
below the thick moulding. Rheinzabern ware, c. A.D. 200.
539. Form 33. No external central groove. Possibly Hadrianic.
540. Form 33. Height of side 62 mm. Cf. O. & P., LI, 10, with
external groove, good glaze. Probably later than Trajanic.
541. Form 33. External groove centrally, cf. O. & P., LI, 10.
Domitian-Trajan ; more probably second century, for there are no
traces of the cup Form 27.
542. Form 33; Much flaked, good glaze and probably similar to
S41.
543. Form 33. Insufficient for exact dating, but somewhat simhar
to S41 and S42 in glaze and contour. Cf. O. & P., LI, 10. Perhaps
Trajanic or later.
544. Form 33. Insufficient for exact dating. Perhaps Trajanic.
545. Form 33. Lower part, flaked on inside. Too fragmentary
for identifying or dating ; perhaps Hadrianic.
47
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
546. Form 33. Fragment of side, cf. 0. & P., LI, 14.
547. Form 35. Smah. High glaze, stalks of barbotine leaves.
Perhaps Lezoux ware,, cf. 0. & P., LIII, 3, Newstead. End first century
into second century.
548. Form 36. Smah. Stalks of barbotine ivy leaves on flange,
internal groove. Uncertain date, possibly Trajanic.
549. Large 36, with barbotine ivy leaves, cf. Pan Rock 36, O. & P.,
LIII, 15. Late Antonine, perhaps A.D. 170.
550. Smah 36. Fragment of rim with stalks of barbotine leaves.
Cf. 0. & P., LIII, 12, Treves pottery, Hadrianic.
551. Small 36, with stem of barbotine leaves, good glaze. Cf.
O. & P., LIII.
552. Form 36. Imperfect, indeterminate. Probably second
century.
553. Form 36. Part of flange, plain, no barbotine, probably
second to thhd century.
554. Form 36, with rectangular footstand, flange with barbotine
ivy leaves. Cf. 0. & P. LIII, 17, Niederbieber I, 46. c. A.D. 200.
555. Large 36. Probably Lezoux ware. Flange rim, plain.
Probably thhd century.
556. Curie 15. Fragment of rim, smaher size, diameter c. 120 mm.
Cf. O. & P., LVI, 4, Heiligenberg. Probably Antonine.
557. Quite insufficient to determine the nature and form of the
vessel positively, but it is probably part of the base of a 79. Cf. 0. & P.
LVIII, 1, or more probably like the 79 from Niederbieber (Oelmann,
Niederbieber 5b, which he erroneously designates as a 32), but any
exact determination is impossible in the absence of the rim. Date
perhaps c. A.D. 200.
558. Form 44. Lezoux ware, figured by Curie (Newstead, XL, 20
in section, and in the group on Plate XLI, 1, p. 200), bright glaze, whilst
the Newstead example had a dull red glaze, probably due to weathering.
It is late Antonine, probably A.D. 160-70.
559. Large 44 or 81. With rectangular footstand, chcle of striations
on inside of base. Cf. 0. & P. LXI, 8. c. A.D. 200.
560. Plain rim with very faint and indistinct moulding, possibly of
a thin 32. Cf. 0. & P. LXIII, 10. Date, c. A.D. 200.
561. Flange of bowl Curie 11 with stalk of barbotine leaf. Possibly
Flavian, cf, 0. & P. LXXI, 10.
562. Fragment of possibly flange of Curie 11. Possibly Trajanic
or later.
563. Mortarium 43. Lower part, like 22 of Oelmann, Niederbieber,
from which the fine grit of the interior has been rubbed off. The two
fluted grooves are visible on the exterior.
564. S65. Mortarium 45. Four fragments of two different
48
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
examples, the thickest of the flanges shows part of a hon's tah in
barbotine. End second century to thhd century.
566. Mortarium 45. Fragment of lower part of plain flange, no
external groove as in most Lezoux examples ; a slight internal groove.
End second century to thhd century.
567. Mortarium 45. Fragment of lower part of plain flange, no
external groove ; but internal groove present. Good glaze, fine quartz
grit in interior. Cf. 0. & P., LXXIV, 4, Niederbieber. End second
century or beginning of third century.
568. Mortarium 45. Lower part of plain flange, quartz grit on
interior as at'Niederbieber. End second century to thhd century.
569. Small fragment of base of an 18 with a circle of fine striations,
the so-called " engine turning " ; graffito E underneath, undated.
POTTERS' STAMPS
570. Partial stamp FL (ORVS F inside a chcle of striations, the
so-cahed " engine turning ", as Niederbieber, on a Form 46. c. A.D. 200.
571. SIICA equals SIIDA(TVS F of Heiligenberg (the D is often
rendered as C in illiterate stamps). This stamp is on a large 33. c.
A.D. 130-40, perhaps later.
572. This belongs to the class of meaningless potters' marks. It
is on a Form 33. i \I\IWI-\-1 which cannot be identified.
573. Stamped LIBERTI M on flat base, too wide for a 33, and
therefore probably on Form 80, as at Rouen or Barentin. Although
LIBERTVS is typically a Trajanic potter, he evidently worked on into
Hadrian's reign.
574. Base of 18/31 stamped SACRILLI M. SACRILLVS of
Lezoux, Antonine period, c. A.D. 150-60. This stamp is fairly frequent
in Britain, e.g., it occurs on the Pan Rock (SACRILLIM), on the
plain rim of Form 37 (Richborough Report, II, p. 66), and on the plain
rim of a 37 by DOECCVS at Baldock.
APPENDIX II
THE COARSE POTTERY
In Rooms 14, 15 and 16, the stratigraphical sequence is founded
upon positive coin and/or Samian evidence, and the coarse pottery
from these dated levels is hlustrated in groups. The pottery from
Room 11 and the miscellaneous pottery is associated with the final
destruction of the house, the series of mortaria in Room 11 being of
especial interest, as it indicates the mortaria forms that were in use and
that may be met with very late in the fourth century. The same
49
4
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
remark apphes to the two large storage jars (Nos. 91 and 92) which,
together with No. 12 (First Interim Report, Arch. Cant., LXIII, p. 21),
form a class of vessel which has not, it is believed, appeared previously
in a dated series.
From a study of this coarse pottery, three points emerge :
(1) Native ware, often of Patchgrove type, tends clearly to persist
towards the end of the second century.
(2) Handmade cooking pots of rough construction and fabric were
hi use, probably more widespread than is at present apparent,
as early as the second quarter of the fourth century.
(3) Fourth-century mortaria, and colour-coated ware both plain
and with applied painted designs, continued in use without
modification towards the close of the century, and there is no
evidence of theh gradual substitution by coarser ware, though
there is evidence of theh individual repah, indicating perhaps
a difficulty in replacement (No. 81 is a case in point).
ROOM 11 (THE BASEMENT ROOM). (Figs. 8 and 9.)
33. Bulbous beaker of fine, hard pink ware, with grey-green shp
on interior and exterior. Decorated round the bulge diagonally en
barbotine.
Ref. May, Silchester Pottery, PL LII, No. 83, p. 122, where the
attribution is to the first hah of the thhd century.
From the sump or water channel.
34. Pedestal bead rim bowl with short upright neck and bulging
under towards base. Round the bulge a band of scroll in white paint
bordered with bands of rouletting. Hard weh baked pink ware with
deep red shp. Second half fourth century.
Ref. May, Silchester Pottery, PL LVI, No. 99, p. 128.
From between wah fahs.
35. Pedestal bead rim bowl with short upright neck and bulging
under towards base. Round the bulge a band of scroh in white paint
bordered above and below with bands of rouletting. Hard well baked
pink ware with hght red shp. Second hah fourth century.
Ref. as for 34.
From between wah fahs.
36. Conical necked bulbous beaker in fine weh baked pink ware.
Greenish brown metallic glaze on exterior. Mid to late fourth century.
Ref. Lockleys, Fig. 12, No. 6, p. 373 for form.
From cohapsed debris of Christian room.
37. Large wide-mouthed two-handled flagon of hard red brown
ware with orange red burnishing on exterior. Zones of horizontal
grooves below base of handles, and vertical toohng on neck. Handles
adjoin the lip. Mid fourth century.
50
LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
34 mwMWmm
FIG. 8 ($)
51
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
"•"""" iV*
:<>".o?.
m
* • "a •* P '* V • •«• o*
^ F b
4-3
FIG. 9 (I)
52
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
From collapsed debris' of Christian room.
38. Large store jar with heavy bead rim. Weh fired brown ware
with grey Patchgrove type core. Dark grey shp on interior and
exterior. Burnished on interior of bead and for three-quarters of an
inch below bead on exterior. Single band of horizontal stabbing on
neck below zone of burnishing. Zone of vertical burnishing towards
base. Its Flavian date is confirmed by Mr. A. W. G. Lowther, F.S.A.,
who kindly examined it.
Used as wedge for the pedestal of Bust II on step (PL lb).
Group of five complete mortaria from floor of Basement Room at
final destruction of house :
39. Mortarium. Smah hght red vessel. Quartzite grit on interior.
Right angled flange with downward rounded edge. Mid fourth century.
Ref. Richborough, I, PL XXVIII, No. 97.
40. Mortarium. Smah light red ware with blue core. Cream slip
on interior and exterior, quartzite grit on interior. Top of bead and
edge of flange decorated with shallow grooves. Right angled flange
with downward rounded edge. Mid fourth century.
Ref. Richborough I, PL XXVIII, No. 97. This vessel is a completed
reconstruction of No. 32 (First Interim Report, Arch. Cant., LXIII,
p. 20).
41. Mortarium. Badly burned specimen. Drooping flange, high
bead out-turned at top. Quartzite grit on interior. Mid fourth
century.
Ref. Richborough I, PL XXVIII, No. 98.
42. Mortarium. Large pink ware with cream slip on interior and
exterior. Quartzite grit on interior. Right angled flange, the downward
sloping edge of which is decorated with a shallow groove. Mid
fourth century.
Ref. Richborough I, PL XXVIII, No. 101.
43. Mortarium. Large pink ware with cream slip on interior and
exterior. Quartzite grit on interior. Right angled flange with downward
sloping edge. High bead out-turned at top. Mid fourth century.
Ref. Richborough I, PL XXVIII, No. 101.
ROOM 15. POTTERY FROM LATE ANTONINE DEPOSIT. (Fig. 10.)
44. Amphora Stamp. ACIRCI. Upwards on curve of thick
chcular handle tapering towards base.
Ref. Richborough IV, p. 242, where it is second' century.
45. Outcurving rim of large olla of Patchgrove fabric. Light
brown soapy slip on exterior. Dark grey on interior, with burnishing
on inside of rim. Horizontal rilling and toohng on neck down to
slightly angular shoulder. Flavian, probably persisting weh into
second century.
53
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
4*
^ 4 8
^
1 45 146
50
¥b
47
7 49 O
X
*ts4 ^55 ^\56 H^7
58
FIG. 10 (i)
54
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
f bb J
LtfX'Mtt'COGt'ttWl*. W>k'^ VS>«-
FIG. 11 (£)
55
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
46. Bead rim bowl, well fired grey ware. Soapy slip on exterior.
Persisting Belgic type.
47. Rim of oha outbent and recessed to receive a lid. Hard well
fired, coarse gritty cream ware.
Ref. Richborough I, PL XXV, No. 53.
48. Pedestal bowl with out-turned rim. Hard weh fired dark grey
ware. Horizontal double groove on neck with single groove above
bulge. Persisting Belgic type.
49. Beaker with everted rim and indented sides. Burnishing on
rim and exterior of neck. Double horizontal groove below neck and
above indentations.
Ref. Richborough III, XXXIX, No. 305.
Group of shallow Pie Dishes, hard well fired dark grey ware :
50 and 51. No bead.
52 and 53. Bead appearing.
54 to 58. Distinct bead.
ROOM 15. POTTERY FROM THIRD CENTURY DEPOSIT. (Fig. 11.)
59. Pedestal vase, with outcurled rim. Five indentations on
sides. Hard weh fired dark grey ware. Burnished on top of rim, outside
neck, and below indentations to base. Horizontal groove at base
of neck and above indentations. Late thhd century.
60. Hemispherical bowl, hard weh fired ware with outcurling rim.
Horizontal line of oblique stabbing to simulate rope design, and a wavy
line below, with horizontal double groove beneath. Graffito (not
identified). The shape of this vessel shows early characteristics, but it
here appears in a thhd century context.
61. Small beaker of hard weh fired grey ware. Outcurled rim.
Zones of burnishing on shoulder and base, with four horizontal burnished
lines between the zones.
62. Oha. Hard weh fired light grey ware with reddish sandy
surface on exterior. Cornice rim with slightly pointed downward edge.
63 and 64. Pie dishes or flanged bowls. Deeper than 54 to 58,
and bead has been drawn out and down, making a flange with an
inoipient rim.
65. 011a of Patchgrove type. Hard well fired grey orange ware
with cordons on neck. A survival.
66. Storage jar of Patchgrove type. Heavy outcurling rim with
zone of stabbing on shoulder. A survival.
ROOM 15. POTTERY FROM THE LATEST FOURTH CENTURY LEVEL.
(Fig. 11.)
67. Oha. Out-turned rim with external groove. Hard well fired
red ware with brown shp on exterior. Zones of darker brown burnishing
below neck and above base with a single simhar zone between.
56
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
68
FIG. 12 (J)
57
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
J 73
'
V
V79
FIG. 13 (£)
58
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
ROOM 16. POTTERY FROM LATE ANTONINE DEPOSIT. (Figs. 12 and 13.)
68. Oha. Patchgrove ware, hard well fired, hght brown. Large
outcurled rim. Soapy surface on interior and exterior. Horizontal
rilling on neck derived from cordons. Zone of burnishing on shoulder.
69. Oha. Patchgrove ware, with large outcurled rim. Well fired,
brown. Soapy surface on interior and exterior. Horizontal rilling
onTtieck. Burnishing on top of rim.
70. 011a. Patchgrove ware, with outcurled rim, somewhat smaller
than 68 and 69. Soft, soapy, light brown ware. Horizontal rilling
on neck with zone of stabbing on shoulder.
71. Cooking bowl. Patchgrove ware, with outcurled rim. Hard
well fired brown orange ware with light grey slip. Rough on interior.
Exterior soapy and burnished with tooling. A close group of six
vertical lines, painted brown, at opposite ends of one diameter. Base
has tooled cross on underside. A native type with early characteristics.
72. Cooking vessel. Bead rim recessed for lid. Hard well fired
brown ware with sandy, red-grey surface on exterior.
73. As for 72.
74. One handled mug. Hard light grey ware. Zone of coarse
tooled lattice lines on exterior, with horizontal tooled and burnished
lines towards base. Handle roughly chcular in section.
Ref. Richborough III, PL XL, No. 322.
75 to 79. Shallow pie dishes. Distinct bead. No. 75 with external
tooled lattice, which is a rare feature at Lullingstone on these vessels.
ROOM 16. POTTERY FROM LATEST FOURTH CENTURY LEVEL. (Fig. 13.)
80. Flanged bowl. Hard weh fired grey ware, with orange shp on
interior. The interior is also decorated with an acute lattice design
with parallel bands of horizontal lines apphed over the lattice. Second
half fourth century.
Ref. Lullingstone First Interim Report, Nos. 11 and 28 (Arch. Cant.,
LXIII, pp. 16 and 20).
81. Colour coated mortarium. Hard weh fired pink ware with red
slip. Quartzite grit on interior. Square rim with high bead. Broken
and repahed before final destruction of house indicated by three sets of
two holes, two sets drilled in rim and one set drilled midway between
rim and base. Second half fourth century.
Ref. Richborough I, PL XXVIII, No. 99, p. 102. The contents of
this vessel are discussed at Appendix V.
ROOM 14. POTTERY FROM P IT DATED C. A.D. 337 to c. A.D. 345. (Fig. 14.)
82. Smah handmade cooking-pot. Coarse grey ware, well fired
with rough tooling on exterior.
Ref. Richborough III, PL XL, No. 333. Fourth century.
59
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
r
1 86
\
\
S9 JL
93
85
7 87
• ^
FIG. 14 (J)
60
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
(
91 a
V r 92
I 1
FIG. 15 ($)
83. Squat handmade cooking-pot. Coarse, hard grey ware.
Carinated shoulder, very rough interior. Exterior smoothed by tooling.
Fourth century. •
84. Handmade cooking-pot, roughly made, soft, brown ware, with
burnishing on exterior of body.
85. Globular cooking-pot of hard gritty grey ware. Rough
interior, interrupted zone of tooled lattice line on exterior. Probably
wheel made, but simhar to 82, 83 and 84. Fourth century.
61
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
86. Cooking-pot of roughly made soft brown ware. Everted rim,
outcurling, with burnishing on hp. Slight cordon below rim.
Probably wheelmade, but simhar to 84.
87. Beaker. Hard grey ware. Everted rim with one groove
below neck and another below shoulder. Burnished rim and shoulder.
88. Flanged bowl. Hard weh fired grey ware. Smooth surface
on interior, exterior rough. Tooled horizontal shallow grooves on
exterior. Fourth century.
89. Flanged bowl. Hard brown ware. Smooth surface on interior
and exterior. Wavy band of toohng on exterior. Rim drawn out at
right angles to body and vertically.
90 Mortarium. Hard weh fired pinky cream ware, with quartzite
grit on interior. Tooled groove on bead and above zone of grit.
Fourth century.
MISCELLANEOUS POTTERY FROM LATEST FOURTH CENTURY LEVELS.
(Figs. 14 and 15.)
91. Dolium or large storage jar. Hard grey ware, weh fired,
heavy bead rim. On shoulder, a band of combed feathering and a
band of curvilinear feathering divided by a burnished zone. At girth,
four zones of interlacing wavy lines, and a fifth immediately below
bead.
Ref. Alice Holt, p. 12. PL 1. Fourth century.
92. Dolium or large storage jar. Hard well fired, grey ware,
heavy bead rim. Zone of vertical and curvilinear combing between
two zones of burnishing. Bead rim as for 91 but a smaller example.
Fourth century.
Ref. as for 91.
93. Oha, with outbent moulded rim. Weh fired sandy buff ware
with zone of regular horizontal rilling on body. Fourth century.
Ref. Richborough IV, PL XCIII, No. 470, p. 269.
APPENDIX III
THE GLASS
By BERNARD C. MIDDLETON, F.R.S.A.
The yield of glass resulting from the work during the period under
review has been no less rewarding than that of the first year, though
numerically it was inferior. As before, the glass may conveniently be
divided into two main categories, (a) vessels, (b) window-panes. The
season's yield was 404 fragments of the former, and 422 of the latter ;
also five beads and one ring(?) stone (No. 54).
62
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
No complete vessels were found ; neither were there fragments of
mihefiori or other comparatively rare first century polychrome wares.
Owing to the general lateness of the levels these could not be expected.
However, a number of the fragments are interesting. Of these the most
important is No. 45, an Antonine goblet with stem and base. This
type may with some probabihty be cited as the prototype from which
the wine glass with drawn stem developed.
Several fragments are wheel-cut, some of the work being good, the
remainder indifferent. This technique, together with apphed threads
of the same colour as the vessels, and the moulded star-shaped device
on the base of a bottle (No. 46 (4) ) are the only forms of decoration to
be found in the collection.
As is generally the case the majority of the glass is green, varying
in tone from yellow-green to blue-green. The most important of the
few blue pieces is No. 55, part of a pillar-moulded bowl—a common
early form, but not hitherto discovered on this site. A fah number of
fragments of colourless glass were found, most of these apparently
belonging to bowls ; as is usual with colourless glass (or so I have
noticed), most of it is suffering from " milky " weathering.
Not all the rims and other interesting fragments are pubhshed in this
Report, but those selected are intended to be representative of the whole.
The greater part of the window-glass is comparatively thin (about
xg- in.), often smooth on both sides and generally yehow-green in
colour. The thicker, obviously moulded pieces are more often
blue-green. A few pieces are colourless.
One fragment (No. 44) is evidence of a triangular pane simhar to
those found in the first year. These pieces are of interest because, as
far as I know, nothing of a similar kind has been pubhshed in this
country before.
The dating of the examples is that of their dated levels or stratification.
The date of theh manufacture or use cannot, at present, be more
closely assessed.
For the purpose of convenience and condensation the following
abbreviations are used in the Catalogue : " ADR "—Approximate
diameter at rim; "ADB"—Approximate diameter at base ; " ( a ) "—
colour of glass ; " (b) "—degree of iridescence or type of weathering ;
" (c) "—decoration ; " (d) "—technique of manufacture. Other
abbreviations are self-evident. Rim measurements marked with an
asterisk should be regarded as a closer approximation to the original
dimension than those not so marked. The designation of some vessel
forms must necessarily be arbitrary owing to the smahness of the
fragments.
I am indebted to my wife for her help with the work involved in the
preparation of this short interim Report.
63
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
CATALOGUE
44. Window-pane, fr. of rim.,\va.. thick, (a) pale blue (a) moulded,
with tool marks on upper surface. One edge chipped to an angle of
45 degrees from moulded rim. This piece is remarkably similar to
fragment B, No. 43, Fig. 9 in the First Interim Report. (Not
illustrated.)
45. Goblet, frr. of body, stem and base. ADB. 1|4 hi.* (a) tinted
yeh.-gr. (b) milky weathering (c) apphed thread of same colour on under
side of body. Late Antonine. (Fig. 16, No. 45.)
46 (1). Bowl, fr. of rim. ADR. 2 | in.* (a) tinted yeh.-gr. (b)
milky weathering (c) series of shahow incised hnes starting § in. below
rim. Late Antonine. (Fig. 16, No. 46 (1).)
46(2). Bowl, fr. of rim. ADR. 4 in. (a) colourless (b) mod. Many
minute bubbles. Late Antonine. (Fig. 16, No. 46 (2).)
46 (3). Bowl, fr. of rim. ADR. 4j in.* (a) tinted yeh.-gr. (b)
milky weathering. Late Antonine. (Fig. 16, No. 46 (3).)
46 (4). Bottle, prob. straight-sided, fr. of base, (a) mod. bl.-gr.
(b) mod. (c) moulded marks, seemingly forming part of a four-pointed
star and corner device. Late Antonine. (Fig. 16, No. 46 (4).)
46 (5). Bottle, straight-sided, fr. of side. Width of side approx.
If in. Apparently tah, narrow variety of the " common square ".
(a) mod. bl.-gr. (b) mod. Late Antonine. (Not ihustrated.)
47. Bowl, fr. of rim. ADR. 2 ^ in. (a) colourless (b) incipient.
Thhd century. (Fig. 16, No. 47.)
48. Bowl, fr. of side, (a) mod. yeh.-gr. (b) incipient (e) fine,
apphed threads of same colour, unmarvered. Inner surface crissled.
Prob. fourth century. (Fig. 16, No. 48.)
49. Bottle, fr. of lip and neck. ADR. 1-j— in.* (a) mod. bl.-gr. (b)
incipient. Tool marks on top surface of lip. First-second century.
{Fig. 16, No. 49.)
50. Bead, roughly circular. Diam. -| in. (a) dark blue. Unstratified,
prob. fourth century. (Fig. 16, No. 50.)
51. Bowl, fr. of rim and side. ADR. 2^. in.* (a) tinted yeh.-gr.
(b) outer surface pitted (c) shahow, wheel-cut line. Unstratified, prob.
fourth century. (Fig. 16, No. 51.)
52. Vessel, fr. of side, (a) tinted yeh.-gr. (b) mod. (c) apphed,
unmarvered thread of same colour, cross-tooled. Unstratified. (Fig.
16, No. 52.)
53. Bowl,fr. of rim. ADR. 3 | in. (a) colourless (b) milky weathering.
Fourth century. (Fig. 16, No. 53.)
54. Stone, prob. for finger-ring, (a) mod. bl.-gr. Well made.
Fourth century. (Fig. 16, No. 54.)
55. Bowl, pillar-moulded, fr. of side, (a) dark cobalt-blue (b)
heavy, with pitting (e) pillar of same colour ; pressure from outside has
64
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
1 * 7 ^ 4-6W W(,W
sod)
S4-W
^
SI
SS
4-6U) \ 4-6 «
ffc'h '•
**. y,
*9
4-6<*> 4-8 r 52
53
56
W
57
580)
\ 66(0
saw
Ssf.
I.- &7 **
59
V
65(2)
6 f
7+o;
74-U)
FIG. 16
Glass Vessels. Scale : f except where otherwise indicated.
65
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
resulted hi slight bump on the inner surface. Antonine. (Fig. 16,
No. 55.)
56. Bowl, frr. of rim. ADR. 4 | in.* (a) mod. yell.-gr. (b) incipient.
Rim ground flat. Fourth century. (Fig- 16, No. 56.)
57. Bottle, fr. of rim, neck and handle. ADR. 2 | in.* (a) mod. bl.-
gr. (b) mod. Rim formed by pressing the metal outwards, and then
folding it back on itself to give double thickness. Antonine. (Fig.
16, No. 57.)
58 (1). Flask (?), possibly part of one end, thefr. being a segment of
an ellipse, (a) colourless (b) milky weathering and shght iridescence
(c) apphed thread of same colour. Third-fourth century. (Fig. 16,
No. 58 (1).)
58 (2). Bowl or cup, fr. of rim. ADR. 3 in.* (a) mod. bl.-gr. (b)
mod. Fourth century. (Fig. 16, No. 58 (2).)
59. Jug, fr. of rim. ADR. 2 | in.* (a) mod. yeh.-gr. (b) incipient.
Unstratified. Prob. late second-early fourth century. (Fig. 16, No.
59.)
60. Bottle, flat-sided, fr. of base, (a) mod. bl.-gr. (b) mod. Antonine.
(Not hlustrated.)
61. Bottle, flat-sided, fr. of base, (a) mod. bl-gr. (b) incipient.
Antonine. (Not illustrated.)
62. Bottle, flat-sided, prob. four-sided, fr. of neck and slwulder.
Diam. inside base of neck 1| in. (a) hght bl.-gr. (b) mod. first-early
second century. (Not hlustrated.)
63 (1). Bottle, flat-sided, fr. of base and side. Average thickness of
metal •§ in. (a) mod. bl.-gr. (b) considerable. Fourth century. (Not
ihustrated.)
63 (2). Cup,'fr. of base and side. ADB. 1 f-J- in. (a) light yell.-gr.
(b) incipient. Fourth century. (Fig. 16, No. 63 (2).)
64. Bowl, fr. of side. Approx. diam. at lower thread 3-pg- in. (a)
light bl,-gr. (b) mod. (c) applied, unmarvered threads of same colour.
Fourth century. (Fig. 16, No. 64.)
65. Bowl or cup, fr. of side near base. Fr. .§ in. wide and high.
(a) colourless (b) heavy (c) many shallow, parahel incised lines, certainly
running horizontally. Unstratified. (Not ihustrated.)
66 (1). Bowl, fr. of rim. ADR. 7 | in.* (a) mod. yell.-gr. (b) considerable.
Many small bubbles. Rim ground flat. Fourth century.
(Fig. 16, No. 66 (1).)
66 (2). Bowl, fr. of rim. ADR. 6 | in. (a) tinted yeh.-gr. .(b)
incipient. Patches of massed, minute bubbles. Rim ground flat.
Fourth century. (Not illustrated.)
67. Cup, fr. of base and side. ADB. 3T
0B in. (a) tinted yeh.'-gr.
(b) mod. Sides vertical at turn from base. Third-fourth century.
(Not ihustrated.) • ' • • • •
66
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
O I A G P . A M A T I C S K E T C H OF * n>
»
M 3
Obverse and Reverse
Obv. IMP. C. M. AVR.
SEV. ALEXAND AVG.
Bust r. laur. dr.
Rev. IOVI CONSERVATOR!.
J . s t . 1. cloak
over r. arm holding
thunderbolt and sceptre.
Obv. IVLIA MAMAEA
AVG. Bust r. diad.
Rev. VESTA. V st 1. with
palladium and sceptre.
Obv. IMP. C. POSTVMVS
P.P. AVG. Bust r. rad.
dr.
Rev. PAX AVG. P. st.
1. with branch and
trans, sceptre JPJ
Obv. IMP. C. CLAVDIVS
AVG. Bust r. rad. dr.
Rev. GEND7S EXERCI
G. st. 1. with patera and
comucopiae
Indeterminate.
Obv. Bearded head r. rad.
dr.
Rev. PAX AVG. type.
Obv. C. P.E. TETRICVS
CAES. Bust r. rad. dr.
Rev. PIETVS AVGG.
Pontifical instruments.
Obv. IMP. C. ALLECTVS
P.F. AVG. Bust r. rad.
• cuir.
Rev. PROVIDENTIA
AVG. P. st. 1. holding
baton and cornucopiae;
at foot globe S1 P
CL
(Camulodunum)
Obv. IMP. C. ALLECTVS
P.P. AVG. Bust r. rad.
Rev.'PAX AVG. P. st. 1.
with branch and tr.
sceptre.
Indeterminate.
Rev. SPSS ?
Obv. CONSTANTINVS
AVG. Bust r. diad. dr.
Ref.
141c 1
360 1
318 1
and
note
48 1
1
100 1
255 1
111 1
33 1
1
Cohen
20 2
69
50
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
Emperor
Urbs Roma
Constantinopolis
Hybrid
Overstrike
Helena
Theodora
Date
A.D.
330-37
330-37
1
Coin
>»
yy
yy
yy
yy
yy
M
yy
»>
(small)
yy
(small)
Obverse and Reverse
Rev. BEATA TRANQVILLITAS.
Globe on
altar insc. VOTIS XX
3 stars above. .PTR,
.STR.
Obv. CONSTANTINVS
MAX AVG. Bust r.
diad. cuir.
Rev. GLORIA EXERCITVS.
One standard.
Obv. as above.
Rev. Two standards TRP.
Obv. CONSTANTINVS
PF AVG Bust r. laur.
cuir.
Rev. PROVIDENTIAE
AVG. Camp gate
Obv. CONSTANTINVS
AVG. Bust r. laur.
Rev. SARMATIA DEVICTA.
Victory r. with
captive.
Obv. DIV CONSTANTINVS
P.T. AVGG.
Bust r. veiled.
Rev. Emp. in quadriga
hand in aky.
Usual type. TRS., TR.P.,
TR.S., w PLG., SLG.?
Usual type. TRP., TR.P.,
TRS., TRSV.
Constantinopolis—Urbs
Roma.
Obv. Bust r. diad.
on Rev. Constantinopolis.
Rev. EEL TEMP REP
legionary on head helm-
1.
Obv. FL IVL HELENAE
AVG. Bust r. dr.
Rev. PAX PVBLICA. P.
st. 1. with br. and tr. sc.
TRP.
Obv. EL. MAX. THEODORAE
AVG. Bust r.
dr.
Rev. PIETAS ROMANA
Empress nursing child
PLG.
Ref.
250 1
255 1
452 1
487 1
760 1
11
5
1
1
4 2
4 2
70
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
Emperor
Crispus
Constantine II
as Caesar
Date
A.D.
317-26
317-37
Coin
M 3
>>
>>
t>
>t
>j
tt
»»
.»
t>
>t
Obverse and Reverse
Obv. IVL CRISPVS
NOB. CAES. Bust 1.
laur. cuir.
Rev. BEAT. TRANQLITAS
.STR.
Obv. CRISPVS NOBIL.
C. Bust 1. laur. cuir.
Rev. as above. PLON
Obv. CRISPVS NOB.
CAES. Head r. laur..
Rev. CAESARVM NOSTRORVM
VOT T R / / /
Obv. CRISPVS NOB.
CAES. Bust r. laur.
cuir.
Rev. as above VOT
TRS. X
Obv. CRISPVS NOB.
CAES. Bust 1. laur.
cuir., spear and shield.
Rev. VIRTVS EXERCIT.
Standard with
two captives.
S| HE
rsisc
Obv. IVL. CRISPVS
NOB. CAES. Bust 1.
laur. cuir., spear and
shield.
Rev. as above.
Obv. CONSTANTINVS
D7N. NOB. C. Bust r.
laur. cuir.
Rev. BEAT TRANQLITAS
T 1 P
PLON
As above, but N.C. Bust
1. rad. cuir. PLON
Obv. as above, head r.
laur.
Rev. CAESARVM NOSTRORVM
VOT X or
VOT PTRV STR (2)
As above, but bust r. laur.
dr. cuir.
Obv. as above, but bust 1.
laur. cuir.
Ref.
22
29
36
42
165
174
5
8
38
40
165
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
5
1
5
71
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
Emperor
Constantius 11
as Caesar
Cons tans
as Caesar
Constantine 11
as Augustus
(probably)
Constantius II
as Augustus
Date
A.D.
330-7
325-37
333-7
337-40
337-61
Coin
M3
yy
i»
JJ
>»
yy
JJ
JE 4
M 3
Obverse and Reverse
Rev. PROVEDENTIAE
CAESS. Camp gate,
PTR6,STRV(2),STR.
Obv. as above, bust r.
laur. cuir.
Rev. GLORIA EXERCITVS
1 standard
?R.P., 1 *SLG.
Obv. as above, bust r.
laur. cuir.
Rev. GLORIA EXERCITVS.
2 standards
TRS.
Obv. CONSTANTI)NVS
rVN. N.C. Bust r. laur.
cuir.
Rev. 1 standard PLON.
Obv. PL. IVL. CONSTANTIVS
NOB. C.
Bust r. laur. cuir.
Rev. GLORIA EXERCITVS.
2 standards
TR-P, TR-S.
Obv. legend as above,
bust 1. laur. dr. cuir.
Rev. PROVIDENTIAE
CAESS. Camp gate.
QAURL, TRS.
Obv. PL. IVN. CONSTANTS
NOB. C. Head
r. laur.
Rev. GLORIA EXERCITVS,
1 standard
•TRP.
Obv. CONSTANTINVS
MAX. AVG. Bust r.
diad. cuir.
Rev. GLORIA EXERCITVS.
1 standard
•TRP.
Obv. CONSTANT)NVS.
AVG. Bust r. laur. dr.
Rev. GLORIA EXERCITVS.
2 soldiers
guarding one standard.
Obv. D.N. CONSTANTD7S
P.P. AVG. Bust
r. diad. dr.
Ref.
114
122
113
104
167
250
47
3
2
1
3
2
1
1
1
5
72
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
Emperor
Constans
as Augustus
Date
A.D.
340-5
340-61
337-50
Coin
M 2
M 3
J»
JS
>>
(small)
yy
>y
M 3
tt
tt
Obverse and Reverse
Rev. EEL. TEMP. REPARATIO
legionary
spearing fallen horseman.
CPLG.
Obv as above.
Rev. Emperor on galley.
Obv. as above.
Rev. Phoenix on rocks.
?TRP.
Obv. as above.
Rev. GLORIA EXERCITVS.
1 standard.
Obv. CONSTANTIVS
P.F. AVG. Bust r.
diad. dr.
Obv. FL. IVL. CONSTANTIVS
P.F. AVG.
Obv. CONSTANTIVS.
P.F. AVG. Bust r. diad.
dr.
Rev. VICTORIAE D.D.
AVGG. QNN. 2 victories
facing. ^
TRS.
Obv. D.N. CONSTANTIVS
P.F. AVG. Bust
r. diad. dr.
Rev. SPES REIPVBLICE.
Emp. st. 1.
with globe and rev.
spear.
Obv. • -TP7S. Bust r.
Rev. FEL TEMP REPARATIO.
legionary
type.
Obv. D.N. CONSTAN
(S. P.F. AVG.). Bust
r. diad. dr.
Rev. FEL TEMP REP.
Emp. on vessel.
Obv. as above.
Rev. GLORIA EXERCITVS.
1 standard.
?TRP.
Obv. as above.
Rev. VICTORIAE D.D.
AVGG. QNN. 2 victories.
D , G
TRS TRS
Ref.
34 1
58 1
1
99-100 1
93 2
293 1
188 1
1
10 1
65 1
2
73
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
Emperor
Constantius
Gallus
Magnentius
(or Decentius)
House of
Constantine
Valentinian I
'
Date
A.D.
351-4
350-3
364-75
Coin
M 3
M 2
M 3
>t
tt
Obverse and Reverse
Obv. D.N. CONSTANTIVS
NOB. C. Head r.
bare.
Rev. FEL TEMP REPARATIO.
Legionary as
above. D |
/ / C ON
Obv. D.N. MAGNENTIVS
P.F. AVG. Head
bare bust dr.
Rev. GLORIA ROMANORVM.
Emp. on horse
spearing fallen Dacian
with broken spear and
shield.
Obv. as above.
Rev. VICTORIAE D.D.
N.N. AVG. ET CAES.
Barbarous.
Obv. ? AHIIGVII. Head
Rev. IONNVDITC (for
D.D. N.N. AVG. ET
CAE). 2 victories holding
shield.
FEL. TEMP. REP.
Legionary sp. f. h.
CPLG, ?ESLG.
GLORIA EXERCITVS.
2 standards.
GLORIA EXERCITVS
1 standard, one may be
the labarum, one TRS.
Two victory type.
Obv. D.N. FL. VL. . . .
Bust r. diad. dr.
Rev. GLORIA EXERCITVS.
1 standard.
Obv. D.N. VALENTINIANVS
P.F. AVG.
Bustr. diad. dr.
Rev. GLORIA ROMANORVM.
Emp. with
labarum dragging captive
r.
OIFIIS, OIFII
LVGS LVGS
Ref.
52 2
21 1
68 2
1
8
1
10
2
1
12 3
74
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
Emperor
Valens
Gratian
House of
Valentinian
Valentinian II
Victor
(probably)
Arcadius
Honorius
Date
A.D.
364-78
367-83
375-92
383-8
383-408
393-423
Coin
M 3
yy
M 4
M 3
M 4
M 3
M 4
tt
tt
tt
tt
Obverse and Reverse
Obv. D.N. VALENS P.F.
, AVG. Bust r. diad. dr.
Rev. SECVRITAS REIPVBLICAE.
Victory
moving 1. SCON,
?SMAQP, ?Aq. mint
Obv. D.N. VALENS P.F.
AVG. Bust r. diad. dr.
Rev. GLORIA ROMANORVM.
SCON.
Obv. D.N. GRATIANVS
AVGG. AVG. Bust r.
diad. dr.
Rev. SECVRITAS as
above.
Obv. D.N. GRATIANVS
AVGG. AVG. Bust r.
diad. dr.
Rev. GLORIA NOVI
SAECVLI. Emp. st.
front, with labarum
shield.
GLORIA ROMANORVM
SECVRITAS REIPVBLICAE
Obv. D.N. VALENTINIANVS
P.F. AVG. Bust
r. diad. dr.
Rev. SALVS REIPVBLICAE.
S. with
trophy dragging captive
£ |
AQP
Obv. (D.N. FL. VICTOR
P. F. AVG.). Bust r.
Rev. (SPES ROMANORVM).
Camp gate.
Obv. D.N. ARC(ADIVS
P.F. AVG. Bust r. diad.
dr.
Rev. VICTORIA AVG)
GG. Victory moving 1.
As above.
Obv. D.N. HO)NORI(
VS. P.F. AVG. Bust r.
diad. dr.
Ref.
47 8
2
1
13 2
1
3
33 1
1
1
1
1
75
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
Emperor
House of
Theodosius
Indeterminate
Post Roman
Edward I
Date
A.D.
1302-7
Coin
M 4
J>
JJ
)»
M 3
Minims
Minimissimi
AR
Obverse and Reverse
Rev. SALVS REIPVBLICAE.
S. dragging
captive 1. and carrying
trophy, probably Rome
mint.
Rev. VICTORIA
AVGGG. 2 victories
facing.
Rev. VICTORIA AVGG.
1. victory
Rev. SALVS REIPVBLICAE.
Indeterminate.
Penny. Rev. CIVITAS
LONDON
Ref.
1
2
2
5
14
11
2
1
THE COINS—SUMMARY AND PERCENTAGES
Roman
Second Century
Third Century, early
Third Century, late
Constantine I
House of Constantine
House of Valentinian
House of Theodosius
Minims and Minimissimi
Total identifiable
Roman indeterminate
1949
Nil
Nil
6
22
29
6
3
6
71
10
Totals
1950-51
2
3
. 8
59
49
20
15
13
169
14
1949-51
21 i\
an
27681/
18 I
. 18j
240
24
Percentages
7-9
66-3
25-8
100-0
76
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
APPENDIX V
THE MORTARIUM CONTENTS (ROOM 16)
By DR. H. J. PLENDERLEITH, M.C, Ph.D., F.S.A.
(Keeper, Department of Research Laboratory, British Museum)
We have examined the dark grey material from the mortarium and
find that it consists of lumps ranging in size from coarse powder up to
about 2-5 cm. X 1-5 cm. X 0-5 cm. The colour is due to a surface
coating mainly organic in nature—dust and/or earth. A freshly
scraped or ignited fragment has a grey green colour and it consists of a
blue pigment embedded in white matrix.
The matrix was shown to be calcium and magnesium carbonates
probably derived from a dolomitic limestone. The blue substance is a
frit, shown by spectrograph to contain copper, silicon, calcium, tin,
lead, hon, nickel, and manganese—clearly a sample of paint such as
might be used in fresco painting.
APPENDIX VI
THE INFANT BURIAL (ROOM 8)
During the cleaning down of the L-shaped wah in Room 8, a shallow
hole was discovered in the surface of the northern arm of the wah. This
hole had been cut through the Period I I concrete floor and the Period
IV opus signinum floor above and contained certain human bones which
were submitted for examination by the kindness of Professor Zeuner to
Professor A. J. E. Cave, whose report is appended below.
The interest of the find lay in the objects accompanying the burial.
They consisted of four minims, two minimissimi, a fragment of decorated
cast bronze, probably from a vessel, a sherd of undatable coarse pottery,
and a few grains of carbonized wheat. One of the minims was of Fel.
Temp. Rep. type, and certainly places the burial in the second half of
the fourth century, though probably later than earlier in that period.
And as Christian worship is now known to have been flourishing in the
house at that time, this evidence in a neighbouring room of the persistence,
or perhaps recrudescence, of such burial ritual is doubly
interesting. It should be stated, however, that no certain evidence
exists that the burial did not occur after the destruction of the house ;
but as the date of this event is not yet known, the point must for the
moment remain unanswered.
77
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
NOTE ON BONES FROM ROMAN VILLA AT LULLINGSTONE, KENT
By PROFESSOR A. J. E. CAVE, M.D., D.Sc.
(Medical College of St. Bartholomew's Hospital)
These bones were received for report from Professor Zeuner on
5th December, 1951. They were found beneath the flooring of a room
in a Roman vhla dated to the late fourth or early fifth century A.D.
The material comprises:
(1) Non-human remains: one complete bone and one mere
fragment of animal (?ungulate) origin. (These items have
been marked " A " and require identification by a professional
zoologist.)
(2) Human remains of, probably, a newborn chhd. The skull is
represented by the frontal, parietal (right and left), occipital
and right temporal bones (none perfect), the right maxilla,
the incomplete sphenoid and an ethmoidal fragment. In
addition there are present the shafts of three ribs and the
shafts of the right humerus and ulna.
These baby-bones afford no clue as to the sex or the precise age of
the individual represented. The age may he anywhere between the
last month of pre-natal life and the end of the first month of infancy.
Most probably, however, the bones represented a neo-natal stillbirth,
for they agree in anatomical particulars with corresponding bones of
newborn babes with which they have been compared. The bones
present show no signs of ante-mortem injury or disease.
The archaeological evidence of floor-burial is characteristic of the
Roman period ; such procedure seems to have been a common practice
in disposing of still-bhths and, less certainly, of the bodies of very young
infants.
78
THE LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA
I
P e r i o d I
la
V////S/////A „ 2
BW9999WM •> 3
©I I ®
2ZJ53
\u
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