rrh»0l0jjia dfatttira
— » —
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH,
SNODLAND
By R. P. JESSTTP, with contributions by N. C. COOK and J. M. C.
TOYNBEE
I—PREFATORY NOTE
In Britain, as is now well known, Roman barrows are not generally
found outside an area bounded by the Wash, the Severn, and the North
Downs. The best-known examples lie in the eastern part of this area, in
Kent, Essex and Hertfordshire. Barrows outside these areas are usually
smaller in size and less wealthy in content and presumably represent the
margin of diffusion from a main area of influence. They occur singly or in
small groups, often near Roman buildings, and they are of large size with a
steep conical profile quite unlike that of a prehistoric burial mound. The
central burial made with careful ritual is usually by cremation. Accessory
vessels of pottery and glass are very common, but there are few objects of real
luxury except at Bartlow Hills in Essex. In general these mounds were the
burial places of well-to-do merchant settlers from Belgic Gaul, and their
British connections, who together were responsible for the vigorous commercial
development of the south-eastern part of Britain during the first half
of the second century A.D. There is also the evidence of tombstones from
Stanwix near Carlisle and from Phil Bach near the legionary fortress of
Caerleon, and of one certain and another possible barrow at Lincoln, to
show that this form of burial was sometimes used in army families and for
discharged soldiers, classes among whom the attractions of Roman material
civilization might be expected to linger.
Roman barrows closely like those in Britain have long been knoivn in
Belgium, where a strictly local distribution is found in the Hesbaye, particularly
along the main Roman road from Cologne to Boulogne in its course
between Bavay and Tongres. They are always in striking situations
commanding a wide landscape, usually close to Roman settlements, and
occur singly or sometimes in small groups. In height they may reach as
much as 40 ft. and their sJiape is that of aflat-topped cone. Cremation and
its barbaric apparel is general, and the burials are noted for their splendid
furnishings of jewels, enamels, bronzes and glassware which belong to the
end of the first and the earlier half of the second centuries A.D. Tlie barrows
1
4A.
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
of Gallia Belgica, it seems, cover the remains of the owners of the grand
villas which rose with the remarkable commercial prosperity of this countryside.
Now and again they are set up over the resting-place of some veteran
soldier or administrator. In all cases they mark the Roman way of life and
manners which became a tradition among the local aristocracy. In like
manner, at a rather later date, grew that striking tradition of funerary
sculpture which specialized in scenes from the everyday life of these
successful and wealthy merchants.
II—INTRODUCTION
Some six miles south-west of Rochester and below Holly Hill, which
is almost the summit of the steep western escarpment of the Medway
Gap, the chalk downs fall away in an even spur towards the river at
Snodland. The final crest of the spur, Holborough Hill, is an oval cap
of chalk rising to a height of just over 200 ft. (Fig. 1), and on it, strongly
outlined against the sky, once stood a Bronze Age barrow, close by the
side of an ancient ridgeway which here started its descent towards a
crossing of the Medway in the valley below. Just below the brow of
the hill, and commanding a very wide view over the surrounding
countryside, was a second barrow, tall and conical in shape, which many
generations of local people had known as Holborough Knob.1 It stood
conspicuously on a shelf of the Melbourn Rock, the bed of hard creamy
chalk which marks the base of the geological division of the Middle
Chalk. The Bronze Age mound has long since been ploughed away,
and indeed its existence was only made known by recent excavation,
but the Knob, until it was removed by the present excavation, was a
popular and very well known feature of the local landscape.
In recent years the hillside below has been progressively quarried to
provide chalk for cement making and lime burning until the barrow was
left standing on the very edge of the steep quarry face. The nature of
the site was fully recognized by the landowners,2 The Associated Portland
Cement Manufacturers Ltd., and in May 1954, under the advice of
the Ancient Monuments Inspectorate of the Ministry of Works, a rescue
excavation was decided upon. The work was supervised for the Ministry
by the writer, who had for most of the time the valued co-operation of
Mr. N. C. Cook. The Company most generously met the whole cost of
labour and equipment, and in addition provided technical facilities
which set a new high standard of co-operation between industry and
archaeology. Particular thanks are due to Mr. Rex Beal, the Area
1 1-inoh Map reference Sheet 116, 140813.
2 The Holborough barrow was inoluded in 1936 in a list of barrows compiled
for the guidance of future field work ; Dunning and Jessup, Antiquity, Morch,
1936, p. 51.
2
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Fio. 1. ENVIRONS OF HOLBOROUGH [/ace p. 2
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
Supervisor, to Mr. B. Buxton the Works Manager, and his Deputy, Mr.
Morgan, to Mr. Coston and the geologists and chemists of the Company's
Research Laboratories, and to Mr. Ralph Cook, their Surveyor.
Much help in the reconstruction of finds was given by Mr. and Mrs.
Noel Hume. At Guy's Hospital, Professor J. Whillis, Dr. Keith
Simpson, Dr. C. W. T. Shuttleworth and Mr. E. W. Baxter most kindly
examined the human and animal remains. For examining glass and
glass-slag thanks are due to Dr. D. B. Harden, and to Professor H.
Moore and Dr. D. K. Hill of the Department of Glass Technology,
University of Sheffield. Dr. A. J. Turner of the Linen Industry Research
Association, and the British Leather Manufacturers' Association, kindly
reported on materials from the secondary burial, and Dr. E. W. J.
Phillips of the Forest Products Research Laboratory on charcoals and
rust-patterns of timber. The Steel Company of Wales through Dr.
A. J. K. Honeyman made an expert examination of certain ironwork.
For examination of soil samples we are indebted to Mr. Coston, Dr.
H. E. Quick, Mr. A. G. Davis, and Miss Camilla Lambert of the Botany
School, Cambridge. Information from these specialist sources is
incorporated in the text of this Report, which is published with the aid
of a subvention from the Ministry of Works.
Ill—GENERAL SURVEY
(1) EAELY REFERENCES
An early reference to Holborough is that in a grant of A.D. 838 by
Egberht (with the consent of his son Ethelwulf, sub-king of Kent) of
four ploughlands at Snodland and Holborough to the Bishop of
Rochester.1 It recites :—
. . . ET UNAM MOLINAM IN TORRENTE QUI DICITUR
HOLANBEORGES BURNA ET IN MONTE REGIS
QUTNQUAGINTA CARRABAS LINGNORUM . . .
The present mill on Holborough stream stands near enough upon
the site of its Saxon predecessor. Of more particular interest here is
the early mention of the King's Mount, It cannot be identified
precisely, but in any consideration of its whereabouts, the claims of the
large barrow at Holborough must surely be paramount. It lies close to
the boundary between the Hundreds of Shamel and Larkfield, and set
prominently as it is on the hillside it would have been an almost certain
choice for a land-mark. Its contents, as shown by the present excavation,
denote the burial-place of a man of some rank and fortune, and it
may well be that before the middle of the ninth century tradition and a
1 Birch, Cart. Saxonicum, No. 418, I, pp. 584-6.
3
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
respectable antiquity had combined to award him a style to which he
was not in truth entitled.
It is convenient to mention here that the graves of a pagan Saxon
cemetery approached very close indeed to the barrow (see Fig. 1) but
did not trespass upon it.
The second element of the place-name is a well-known derivative
from the OE. beorg, a hill or mound, especially a grave-mound. The
field-name of Borough Hill was still used to denote the whole area in the
Title Apportionment map of 1834. The first element, according to one
expert view, is derived from the OE. hoi, a hollow. It may also be a
personal name, but in the present context Hoi or Hola seems as elusive
a personality as the Saxon Snodd whose people were responsible for the
settlement of the nearby village of Snodland.
(2) PREVIOUS EXPLORATION
The first suggestion that the hill above Holborough was a Roman
burial mound came from the Kentish topographer, William Lambarde.
He wrote in the second edition of his Perambulation of Kent, as follows1:
" As touching that Holboroe (or rather Holanbergh) it lieth in
Snodland . . . and tooke the name of Beorgh, or the Hill of buriall,
standing over i t ; in throwing downe a part whereof (for the use
of the chalke) my late Neighbour, Maister Tylghman discovered in
the very Centre thereof, Urnam cineribus plenam, an earthern pot
filled with ashes, an assured token of a Romane Monument. . . ."
Lambarde found little patience with history in the open air. His
first concern, as a lawyer, was with history written in documents, and
his unusually detailed account of this discovery is explained by the fact
that he lived nearby at Lower Hailing when it was made. It was, too,
a convenient proof of the value of place-name study, an exercise to
which he was closely devoted. Unfortunately it cannot now be known
whether the earthen pot he recorded came from a secondary burial or,
as seems more likely, from a ritual pit of the kind disclosed by the
present excavation.
Indications of an early excavation on the north side of the barrow
which may perhaps be that of Maister Tylghman are noted below.
In 1844 the barrow was opened by Thomas Wright, a well-known
antiquary of his day. There are several accounts2 of his work which
provide an entertaining picture of the background of early Victorian
1 William Lambarde, Perambulation of Kent (1696 ed.), p. 407.
2 See R. F. Jessup, " Holborough : a retrospect," Arch. Cant., LVIII (1945),
pp. 68-72, with detailed references.
4
PLATE I
"\ 4 H (a) From the South-West
(b) From the South-Kast
THE BARROW BEFORE EXCAVATION
I face p . 4
PLATE II
(a) The Barrow from the S.W. with trees removed, the ditch visible in the
quarry face
(ft) N.E. quadrant removed, showing line of silted ditch
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
archaeology in the field. The results of the excavation may be quickly
summarized. A few fragments of pottery came from the body of the
mound. A trench between five and seven feet wide cut through the
mound simultaneously from east and west disclosed what Wright
described as a floor of fine earth about four inches deep. Upon it was
a thin coating of wood ash, and in it a considerable number of very long
nails, a few pieces of fire-stained pottery, and part of a Roman brooch.
The floor was thought to be the site of a funeral pyre, and the nails,
quite rightly, as we think, to be relics of the wood bier. The antiquities
have long since disappeared, but both this and the Elizabethan discovery
provide good presumptive evidence that the mound was a
Roman barrow.
Other explorations have since been made in the mound, one as
recently as the nineteen-twenties, but it is probable that in them
nothing of material interest was found. It should be noted here that
the numerous Roman antiquities from " Holborough " formerly in the
Raven Collection, which was purchased by the late G. M. Arnold and is
now dispersed, came not from the barrow but from a local chalk pit.
(3) ROMAN SETTLEMENT IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD
In saying that there was scarcely a field close to the banks of the
Medway here in which traces of Roman buildings or burials had not been
found, Wright was not overstating the case. He had collected Roman
tiles and potsherds, as have many people since, on the hillside below the
barrow. Recent air photographs show in the area north-west of the
barrow indications of buildings which appear to belong to the pattern
of Roman settlement. About half-a-mile southward on the river bank
traces of an extensive villa have been recorded from time to time since
1844.1 The antiquities recovered range in time from the end of the
first century to the fourth. A terra-cotta architectural mask, and the
counter-plate of a bronze belt-buckle with portrait medallions relieved
in niello, seem to indicate that the building and its inhabitants were of
some consequence. The building evidently long served as a convenient
quarry for the repair of the adjoining church. Nothing of interest is
now to be seen, either on the site or in the river channel. A stone
sarcophagus found in Church Field in 1933, a small cremation cemetery
disclosed in 1923 in the garden at the back of " Holboro' Garage," £ mile
to the westward, and other unpublished finds, show that this riverside
plain was used equally for burial. (Fig. 1.) The same settlement
pattern appears also on the eastern bank of the river between Aylesford
and Burham.
1 N. C. Cook, " Roman Site in the Church Field, Snodland," Arch. Cant.,
XL (1928), p. 79.
5
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FIG. 2. PROFILE BEFORE EXCAVATION
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FIG. 4. GENERAL PLAN [jace p . 0
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
IV—THE SITE
(1) METHOD OE EXCAVATION
The mound, which was ovoid in plan, a little over 100 ft. in diameter
and 18 ft. in height, (Plate 1 and Fig. 2), was thickly covered by trees
and undergrowth, and its surface burrowed by the holes of an extensive
rabbit-warren. After the trees had been cleared, indications of four
previous and apparently widespread diggings could be seen, the up-cast
from the trench of one forming a false crest to the mound.
A start was made to remove the obvious recent fillings, but this
proved unsatisfactory by reason of disturbances caused by deeply
penetrating tree-roots, by the rabbit runs, and not least by blast
damage from a war-time rocket projectile which fell nearby. A cutting
15 ft. wide and 130 ft. long was therefore made right through the barrow
across its apparent centre on a bearing of 47 degrees true. When a key
section had been obtained, the excavation was continued in quadrants
in the usual way. The barrow was excavated completely—it contained,
by calculation, a volume of 2,400 tons—and its buried ditch, which was
almost complete, was then located and totally excavated.
(2) STRUCTURAL FEATURES
The structure of the barrow proved to be simple. (Figs. 3 and 4.)
The core, which was symmetrical and rose to a maximum height of
11 ft. above the natural chalk, consisted of a mass of well consolidated
chalky loam showing numerous tip-lines. It contained occasional
worked flints with a bluish-white patina, Eocene pebbles and ironstained
flints derived from local solution-pipes in the chalk, and
marcasite nodules and a fossil sea-urchin (Holaster subglobosus) from the
Lower Chalk. The materials were thus of strictly local provenance.
No macroscopic remains were identifiable ; a report on the snail shells
will be found on page 60.
Above the core and sealing it were irregular dumps of dark loam and
of " curly burr," the local name for Melbourn Rock. Owing to the
widespread damage to the surface, it was not possible to identify a
consistent outer envelope.
The core contained two sherds of prehistoric pottery, several oyster
shells, small bits of tile, and a very few abraded sherds of Roman pottery
which are not further identifiable. A chipped fragment of Samian ware
also came from this source. The relics are thus exactly what would be
expected from scrapings of the neighbouring surface soils.
The line of Thomas Wright's excavation was clearly marked, crossing
the barrow from approximately east to west. It had been loosely
refilled with dirty chalk, but in part with clean chalk (Plate Villa)
7
40
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
derived from a small inner bank, which delimited the barrow. At
the bottom of the filhng, on the surface of the undisturbed chalk was
found a timber of his collapsed revetment containing an iron coachbolt,
and pieces of a contemporary wine-bottle. His excavation
proved to have been extensive. The original outline of the south side
of his trench was traced into the natural chalk ; it missed the main
burial (Plate Via) by httle more than 4 feet. The calculated centre of
the barrow fell within the area of Wright's excavation.
The next features of structural interest are the inner bank, and the
ditch. The small inner bank of clean broken " curly burr," 15 feet in
width and never more than 3 feet in height, had spread considerably
under the weight of the mound. Little of its course remained intact.
There was no trace of a revetment in the sections remaining, which were
not laid out with particular reference to the surrounding ditch. On the
west side, a wide irregular berm was left between ditch and bank, while
on the north and east the bank was thrown up almost on the edge of the
ditch. The bank was devoid of relics. Retaining walls inside the
mound have been seen in several of the Gaulish barrows.1 It seems
very likely that they represent a stage in the copying of classical Roman
mausolea.
A wide ditch is an imposing feature of many Roman barrows. No
certain trace was here visible on the ground or from the air. Trial
trenches made at three points proved its line, however, and after the
removal of the mound its ovoid course became clearly visible. It was
not centred on the mound, the irregularity of its plan being due, it seems,
to the difficulty of accurate digging in the hard Melbourn Rock. Some
of the southern section had been lost in recent quarrying, but apart from
this, it was fully excavated and all the filling removed. No causeway
existed in the area examined. It had been cut through on the northern
side by chalk-diggers, whose hole continued into the side of the mound
(Plate Hlb) ; from the nature and condition of the filling it seems
reasonable to suppose that the hole may have been the work of Maister
Tylghman about 1596.
The ditch (Plates II, III, IVa and Figs. 4 and 5) was dug generally
about 7 feet deep into the Melbourn Rock which preserved its basal
outline so well that after a severe rain-storm it was possible to see the
original pick-marks. The bottom was square-cut with a width varying
from 18 in. to 3 feet, the sides rising very steeply on the outer bank
but more evenly on the inner bank to a width of 10-13 feet at the
original lip.
1 e.g. at Penteville, Glimes, Cortil-Noirmont and Hottomont. See, for
instance, F. Courtoy, " Le tumulus de Penteville," Ann. de la Soc. arch, de Nam/ur,
XLI (1934), pp. 3-27. This and other straotural features may be studied in
the excellent scale models of the barrows in the Cinquantenaire Museum, Brussels.
8
ROMA N 5 AkR-0 W
HOLBOHOllfiH, 5NODLAHD, KtMT
DITCH HCTIONS U I OK C8BIR.H. HAW
SflOTH
cute TOPSOIL
ntDiim/riHE CHALK riLLMa
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COARSE CFULX SILT
DITCH 5ECTIOK I
FIHt SILT
WEST fe*«1
TOPSOIL MUCH DISntBEO BY TfcEE tOOTS
FINE CHALK SUV .*
COARSE CHALK. 4ILT
,£).*_-POTSHER.D
DITCH SECTIOHm
£<-FTNt CLEAH SILT
S CA U <5F FEET
FIG. 5 [ face p . S
PLATE III
((/) S.W. quadrant. (The ditch is 13-feet wide at the lip)
|li) Northern wet or, with line of earlier excavation
THE DITCH
\fart p. i
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!£$» . .;
• / . Jj . •
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(«) Ditch, Section I (b) The main burial with wood coffin
PLATE V
•
(a) The dome covering the grave partly excavated
(d) Smashed amphorae at N. side of grave
THE MAIN BURIAL
PLATE VI
&
(a) Central area showing post-holes of enclosure round Main Burial
and edge of Wright's excavation
(6) Secondary Burial : Lead Sarcophagus in grave
CALCULATED CENTRE
OF MOUWP ( -y-
SPKIXD OT SMASHED POTTERY
GR.IDDED AR.EA
(SEE ENLARGED PUH)
P I T 1
R.OM AN b A ^ r l OW
H O L 6 0 P - O U C H S H O P L A N D , K E N T,
P L A N OF C t H T U L AfU A,
FIG. 6 t/d . JM
m
Vii
\
I. 3. 5. 7.
IVOR NOEL HUME .
I154-.
Fia. 12. THE FOLDING CHAIB : THE TWO PABTS OIC THE FBAME
24
EXCAVATION OP A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND;
& m
SCALE: INCHES.
IVOR Noeu HUME .
I15H-.
25
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
find that the folding chair in one or other of its forms sometimes figures
in Roman burials and often in funerary art. One or two notable
examples may be cited. A sarcophagus from Simpelveld in Limburg is
decorated inside with life-like sculptures, including a chair and other
furniture which are clearly intended to be of benefit to the deceased
and her spirit, for the outside is unornamented1; it dates from late in
the second century and contains a cremation burial. In a family tomb
at Weyden near Cologne is a sarcophagus with reproductions in stone
of two chairs which was recently noted by Miss J. M. C. Toynbee in her
discussion of the Lullingstone busts.2 A sculptured relief of a young
girl and mourners from Rome in the Townley Collection at the British
Museum3 shows a folding stool in considerable detail, while two reliefs
from Ghirza4 in the interior of Tripolitania depict a very grand personage
seated on a remarkable folding chair and accompanied by attendants
as if at a funerary banquet. The list could easily be extended.
Two kinds of folding chairs may be distinguished. There is the
heavy chair with wide and massive cruck-splayed legs hinged about a
very prominent central pin (in some instances the hinge appears to be
a vestigial structure), and supporting a deep cushion with fringe or
pelmet. The second group consists of much lighter chairs with straight
thin rectangular legs, centrally hinged, and these chairs usually carry a
less bulky and simple form of cushion. When the chairs were open for
use, the occupant sat upon them in the fashion of a modern deck-chair
and not as a camp-stool.
The graceful forms in which the lighter variety of domestic chairs
could be made is evident in the delightful frescoe of Psyche buying oil
in the shop of the Erotes5 still to be seen on the wall of the House of
the Vettii in Pompeii. Representations of Psyche, with butterfly wings,
seated in a doleful attitude, sometimes on an ordinary stool but sometimes
on a folding stool, occur on some of the Roman lead coffins from
Syria and Palestine (e.g., Plate Xlb. Brit. Mus. G. & R. Dept., 1921,
12-13); these stools also denote a domestic use. The handsome Bartlow
Hills chair (Plate Xlla), which was of light construction (it is noticed
further below) had within its framework a pair of bronze strigils and
what may have been an oil-jar. There is therefore just a possibility
that it was used as a bath-seat, but as several other votive and domestic
bronzes, a lamp, and glassware were also buried in the cist, the matter
cannot be certain.
It was essential that the magistrates' chairs, which generally
1 Olwen Brogan, Roman Qaul, 1053, p. 177 and Pig. 40. 2 Arch. Cant., LXIII (1951), p. 42, with detailed references. 8 No. 2315. i Published by Mrs. Olwen Brogan, F.S.A., in a leoture to the Sooiety of
Antiquaries, 18th February, 1954. 5 See Ot. M. A. Richter, op. cit.
26
PLATE XI
roSVl
XCOU;^
s r
(o) Folding chairs represented on Coins
8F3TO
('') Folding chair depicted on a lead sarcophagus from Syria
{My courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum)
(o) Bartlow Hills, Essex
FOLDING CHAIRS
[Photo : Musfe Curtiiis, LUge
(b) Fouron-le-Comte, Liege
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH; SNODLAND
accompanied the officials when they appeared in pubhc, should be
readily portable, and the folding X-shaped seats could be conveyed easily
in chariot or litter to the forum, bath or lecture-hall. The more ornate
examples with griffin- and lion-head terminals, as seen, for example, in
the Consular diptychs, seem to be of developed, later, types, and certainly
belong to the realm of " official " art. The general features of
the curule chair persisted over a long period : the" round-backed seat
of King Edward in the Bayeux Tapestry may mark a stage in its
survival, and it has indeed been suggested that the chairs of medieval
bishops were derived from the Roman curule chair. By way of footnote
it may be remarked that curule chairs were occasionally awarded as an
exceptional favour to officers and officials who had not attained the full
rank of magistrate.
A special variety of the lighter folding chair, the sella castrensis, was
used on campaign by army officers of high rank, and it is this use which
is commonly portrayed in Roman art, usually in an " ideal" setting.
On a silver drinking cup from the first century Boscoreale Treasure,1 for
example, Augustus sits upon such a stool to receive homage from the
barbarians; the thin, flat, strip-like crossed legs, the hinge, and the
fringed cushion are clearly indicated. On the Arch of Constantine, the
Emperor is depicted on a folding chair with massive bowed, crossed legs,
as alms are distributed to the people after the triumph of M. Aurelius
in 176.2 The same monument, in the representation of the Emperor
receiving a wounded German, shows the rectangular framework of a
folding chair with its straight, thin, flat legs, and on it a cushion ornamented
with lions' heads.3 A further example of military use occurs
on the Column of Aurelius ; here the Emperor sits on a folding crosslegged
chair of simple type to watch the progress of his cavalry after
offering a sacrifice to ensure the smooth passage of a river.4
The representation of chairs on coins is also instructive. The curule
chair appears frequently on commemorative issues. The denarius of
P. Fourius Crassipes struck c. 87 B.o. to commemorate the corn distribution
made under this aedile, and the denarii of Q. Pompeius Rufus,
c. 57 B.C., and of C. Considius Paetus, c. 45 B.o., may be cited as typical
examples.6 The sella castrensis, depicted in position upon the tribunal
1 E. Strong, La scultura romana, I (1923), p. 81, fig. 54, and S. Reinach, Rep.
de reliefs grecs et romains, I (1909), p. 94.
2 E. Strong, op. cit., II (1923), p. 253, fig. 159. S. Reinach, op. cit., p. 247.
For the references to Strong I am much indebted to Miss J. M. C. Toynbee.
3 E. Strong, op. cit., I I (1923), p. 263, fig. 160. S. Reinach, op. cit., p. 248.
4 S. Reinaoh, op. cit., p. 299, 20. It has sometimes been suggested that
such chairs are depicted with a single cross-joint merely for ease in representation,
but such a theory does not account for a representation common to monumental
sculpture, funerary reliefs and coins.
6 Convenient illustrations in H. Mattingly, Roman Coins (1927), Plate XVIII,
14 ; Plate XXI, 5, 6.
27
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
with the commander addressing his troops or engaging in ceremonial
purpose, was also a frequent item in coin design. The aurei and sestertii
of Caligula, Trajan and M. Aurelius here selected (Plate XIa) are
typical examples. It may be noted that a chair with six folding legs,
instead of the more normal four, is occasionally shown on coins.
There is no direct evidence that the Holborough chair belonged to a
military personage. It was apparently old and worn when it was placed
on the funeral pyre, and it may have been a family heirloom, though the
essentially personal nature of official chairs would seem to preclude this
view. At a frank guess, it may have been a possession of the official
in charge of the Roman town of Rochester, a retired army officer
possibly, who had his country house on the bank of the Medway at
Snodland and who was buried according to tradition under this
striking mound on the hillside above. The maintenance of a classical
way of life would come easily to such a man and, as will be seen later in
this Report, there is evidence that his family could afford to import its
own wines from the Mediterranean and to bury one of its children in a
lead sarcophagus unique in Britain in the eastern character of its
decoration.
Before the known examples of Roman folding chairs are listed, it is
perhaps well to say that there are in Belgium a number of moulded
bronze terminals, many still attached to pieces of iron framework,
which at first sight appear to be parts of these chairs. They are usually
of delicate design and fine craftsmanship, with the head and feet of an
animal, often a lion or panther, as end- and foot-pieces. In many
instances they have been excavated from known Roman burials.1
Close examination shows them to be parts of elaborate bronze, and
bronze-mounted iron, tripods, which were obviously too flimsy to carry
the weight of a human body, but of a structure which would support
movable bowls or table-tops for burning perfume, for lustration, for
food, or even for displaying a work of art to advantage. A bronze tripod
from Bavai in Douai Museum,2 with a deep bowl and terminal heads of
Bacchus, and the fine silver tripod with a shallow dish from the
1 See, e.g., the pieces from the Grimde, Tirlemont barrow in the Musee du
Cinquantenaire, Brussels. Ann. Soc. d'Arch. Bruxelles, IX (1895), p. 430 and
Plate XXII, fig. 1 (not fig. 2 as there stated) ; hence Mus. Roy. d' Art. Bruxelles,
Cat. I l l , PSriode Romaine (1937), p. 92, where this reference is wrongly given. A
folding framework of bronze with crossed and hinged legs, at first thought to be a
chair, was found in a wealthy Roman burial at Borsu, Liege. It is now in the Musee
Curtius at Liege: Bull. Inst. Arch. Liegeois, XXIX (1900), p. 191 ; XXXII (1902),
p. 339. Hence Franz Cumont, Comment la Belgique fut Romanisie (1914), p. 120,
footnote 1. Another tripod, complete, and probably from the same source, is
in the Musee du Cinquantenaire, Brussels. Two pieces of a small tripod with some
characteristics of a folding chair were found with other luxurious bronzes on the site
of a barrow at Herstal, Liege : Bull. Inst. Arch. Liegeois, XXIX (1900), p. 190 ;
and see Mus. Roy. d'Art. Bruxelles, Cat. LTI, Piriode Romaine (1937), pp. 146-148.
s J. B. Lambiez, Hist. Monumentaire du Nord des Qaules (1900), p. 236.
28
EXCAVATION OP A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH,. SNODLAND
Augustan Hildesheim Treasure in Berlin1 suggest two of such
usages.
Such pieces of dignified and luxurious furniture, and the obvious
remains of decorated bronze candelabra which are often found in
Belgium in archaeological circumstances similar to those of the chairs,
are excluded from the following list. It must be noted; however, that
all this remarkably fine furniture is concomitant with the aristocratic
culture of the Hesbaye.
LIST OF FOLDING CHATRS OIT THE HOLBOBOUGH TYPE
BBITAIN '
1. Bartlow Hills, Ashdon, Essex2
The largest of seven associated barrows in two straight lines.
Excavated 1835. Burial in chest of oak planks on earth and: chalk
platform 1 ft. 6 ins. above ground level. Contents : Glass. Square
wide-mouthed handled jug containing cremated bones of an adult;
two long-necked phials, one empty, the other with dregs of honey or
wine according to Michael Faraday who examined the material ; two
square handled jugs. Ritual Bronzes. Fine jug with a sphinx on its
handle, lying on a patera with reeded handle ending in a ram's head.
Handled globular bucket or casket enamelled in red, blue and green :
such enamelling is a well-known craft in the area of Gallia Belgica in
which Roman barrows are found. Two strigils. A very fine lamp with
acanthus leaf above the handle, traces of oil and wick remaining. Ewer
with lid. Iron. Folding chair. Pottery. Small beaker with prominent
foot. Outside the chest was a large two-handled globular amphora
with a flat disc-like mouth, filled with earth, ashes, and small fragments
of bone, evidently the sweepings of a cremation and possibly of the
funeral feast. The group of barrows as a whole is not likely to be later
in date than the coin of Hadrian found in one of them.
Much of the interest of the Bartlow Hills barrows, and of this one in
particular, lies in the evidence of " classical " ritual and ceremonial—
the sacrificial bronzes, covered with a cloth, the remarkable enamelled
casket, the wreathed lamp alight when the tomb was closed, the bones of
a cock, and the offerings of wine, honey and oil and of sprigs of boxwood.
The Chair. With the exception of the casket, which is preserved,
together with a replica, in the British Museum, all the objects from this
barrow were destroyed in a fire at Easton Lodge, where they were kept,
about 1859, and it is necessary to rely on the pubhshed account, supple-
1 Pernice and Winter, Her Hildesheimer Silberfund (1001). Several tripods
are conveniently illustrated in Bull. Inst. Arch. Liegeois, XXXII (1002), pp. 335-48
Plate B.
2 Arch., XXVT (1836), pp. 300-17.
29
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
mented by reference to the original finely finished drawings (Plate Xlla)
made for reproduction in Archaeologia by James Basire.1 The chair
was folded up on the bottom of the chest, the two strigils and the
pottery beaker, possibly an oil-cup, being placed within its frame.
Certain details emerge from Michael Faraday's careful examination
made at the Royal Institution. Much of the iron-work of the frame
remained in its original state under a coating of oxide. As at Holborough,
a white incrustation of carbonate of lime, derived from
calcareous matter with which the stool had been in close contact, lay
upon the upper bars of the frame. At the corners of the upper horizontal
bars, the pattern of hide straps forming the seat was preserved
in the oxide concretions, and pieces of the straps seem also to have been
preserved. These bars were decorated at each end with moulded
bronze knobs, the form and decoration of which may be seen in Basire's
drawing. The four feet also seem to have been in moulded bronze,
in the form of a simple animal foot with five closed toes.2 The simple
caps of the centrally placed hinge-pins seem likewise to have been
moulded in bronze. It will be noticed that one of the seat cross-bars
—on pictorial evidence from sculpture and coins it is the front of the
chair—is not continuous ; a space is left in the central portion, each
side being supported by a curved bracket attached to the leg of the
chair and ending in a plain ovoid bronze knob where it joins the seat
bar. The function of this discontinuous cross-bar, which is present
in the Holborough chair, in the complete chair from Fouron-le-Comte,
as well as in the " Seltman " chair (both are noticed below), does not
seem to be of more than structural significance,3 and an}' attempt
to see in it a ceremonial adjunct such as a sword- or standard-rest
seems, to say the least, to be highly problematical. The dimensions
of the chair are not recorded, but a height of 24 inches and an overall
width of 19 inches along the seat bars computed from the drawings
agrees well with the dimensions of the other two chairs already
mentioned.
John Gage, the well-informed Director of the Society of Antiquaries,
in publishing the Bartlow Hills chair remarked that he knew of no
other in Britain and could only offer as a parallel a chair from an
Egyptian tomb. His remarks are of particular interest in any consideration
of the provenance of the " Seltman" chair noted below.
1 op. cit., Plate XXXI, fig. 3, Plate XXXII, fig. 2. The originals are in
Society of Antiquaries Library : B. B. Portfolios, I, 29. See also Cyril Pox, Arch.
Camb. Region (1923), pp. 191-4.
8 Of. the animal foot terminals of shale and timber furniture. Joan Liversidge,
" Tables in Roman Britain," Antiquity, Maroh 1960, pp. 25-9.
a Miss J. M. 0. Toynbee suggests to me that the purpose of the gap may have
been to give a slightly greater pliancy to the seat at the front, under the thighs
of the sitter, and so ensure rather more comfort.
30
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW. AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
2. Hemel Hempstead, Herts.
In 1837, the following objects were found together in a burial ground
attached to Box Lane Chapel, (i) a globular urn of green glass containing
human bones and " small particles of gold fringe, etc." (ii) a small
pottery jug. (iii) a metal lamp-stand, (iv) various " ill-shaped
encrusted nails," which were lying around these articles, (v) subsequently
4 feet from the main group a large square glass vessel containing
human bones was uncovered.1 The accompanying illustration suggests
that the " nails " were possibly part of the framework of a folding chair,
but there can be no certainty as the objects do not appear to have been
preserved. The archaeological background is consistent with that of
other folding chairs.
3. Newstead, Roxburghshire
The stock-in-trade of a smith recovered from a pit in this well-known
Roman fort included five wrought iron bars with hammered discoidal
mouldings, and three bronze terminals. The bars were scrap metal,
but they were well forged and in their day had formed a considerable
part of a carefully finished object. It is clear from the form of the bars
and the disposition of the mouldings that they were intended for use in
a horizontal position, and the excavator's suggestion that they were
remains of a sella castrensis, the camp equipment of an officer of high
rank, seems very probable.2 The bronze knobs were perhaps terminals
of three of the four legs, but there is a definite similarity between them
and the disc-like ornaments of the Nijmegen chair3 (p. 23). The
estimated width of the chair at 18 inches agrees with the others in the
series.
4. The " Seltman " chair
In 1920 two objects described as a standard of the Ninth Legion and
the camp-chair of a Roman general came up for sale at Sotheby's
Auction Rooms. Together they did not fetch more than £200.4 Both
items had been included without indication of provenance in the
W. H. Forman sale in the same Rooms twenty years earlier. They were
published in 1901 by E. J. Seltman5 as being found in England about
1 Arch., XXVII (1838), pp. 434-5.
2 J. Curie, A Roman Frontier Post. .. (1911), pp. 286-7, and Plate LXIV,
1, 2, 4 and 5 for the bars ; p. 287 and Plate LTV, 2, 3 for the terminals.
3 I am much indebted to Miss Joan Liversidge for a photograph of the reconstruction
of this notable chair.
1 Ant. Journ., I (1921), p. 141.
6 Bull, de la Soc Nat. des Antiquaires de France (1901), pp. 168-9 and plate
facing p. 168.
31
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
50 years earher, the previous owner, Mr. Forman, it was said, not having
recognized their significance. In 1912 0. Seltman1 recorded that the
objects came from the collection of the late Mr. Forman who in 1827
made private excavations in Essex; he further claimed, by relating
them to the Boudiccan episode, that they could be placed in a definite
historical context. Prolonged search has failed to reveal any references
to such excavation work, and it may be thought that John Gage would
have heard at least a rumour of such an important discovery made but
eight years before his own in the same county, a county, moreover,
where the Society's interests were strongly represented. In the next
pubhcation, the standard is said to be in the Mus6e du Cinquantenaire,
Brussels.2 The chair is illustrated by Miss Richter3 with little comment.
Dr. Charles Seltman, lately of Queens' College, Cambridge, who owned
the chair until some two years ago, states that he has no reason to
believe that it is necessarily from Essex, and that he has never held
that the claims made for it in the French and Italian pubhcations were
capable of substantiation.
The dimensions given by 0. Seltman, namely a height when folded
of 24 inches and a depth and width each of 17 inches, agree quite closely
with those of the Bartlow, Holborough and Fouron-le-Comte chairs.
It is described as of wrought iron overlaid with silver and a gold-bronze
alloy. The feet are in the form of animal (possibly goats') hooves. The
legs, of unique form which permit of double folding somewhat on the
principle of the folding tripods, are decorated with running pelta and
diamond lattice patterns4 which appear to be inlaid. The upper
terminals of the back legs are in the form of small heads, probably
representations of Silenus ; they continue the line of the legs as in the
Fouron chair, but there are no decorated terminals to the top cross-bars
as there are in the other chairs. The front cross-bar, as in the other
chairs more particularly noted here, is also discontinuous, the two
pieces, with terminals at the free ends, being supported from the legs
by straight struts and not curved brackets. It would, therefore, be
used deck-chair wise.
This chair cannot be safely accepted as an Enghsh find. It has
some features in common with the chairs under discussion, but a modern
laboratory examination with a view to determining the age and the
structure of its various parts would be desirable.
1 Revista Italiana di Numismatica, I (1912), p. 35. 1 Daremberg—Saglio, Diet, des Ants. Greques et Romaines, IV (1919), s.v.
Signa Militaria, p. 1313. 3 G. M. A. Richter, op. cit., (1027), fig. 301. 1 Of. the Pavia chair, whioh is thought to date from the eighth, or more
probably from the ninth, century j and a twelfth-century Byzantine folding ohair
of iron inlaid with copper and silver (696-1904) in the Viotoria & Albert Museum.
See Arte del Primo Millenio (1950), pp. 66-76 and plates 12-22.
32
EXCAVATION OP A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
BELGIUM1
1. Avennes, Liege
From a cist in a Roman barrow were recovered parts of a folding
chair of iron, namely, two feet of moulded bronze of the same
form as those at Heron (below), one with a piece of the iron framework
intact, and two straight legs hinged at the central point.
Musee Curtius, Liege. See Bull. Inst. arch. Lidgeois, XII (1874),
pp. 196-228.
2. Bassenge, Li&ge
Musee Curtius, Liege. An iron foot, plain, diameter on underside
1 • 06 inches, height 1 • 26 inches.
3. Avernas-le-Baudin, Hhge (la tombe de " Hdron ")
In this burial were found six engraved and moulded bronze feet, shod
with sandals, a cross-piece of iron, perhaps part of a hinge, and two
bronze hinge-pins, all of which were purchased by the Musee Curtius,
Liege, in 1862. Cf. Guide sommaire du Musde arch. (Maison Curtius),
sections belgo-romaine etfranque (Liege, 1909), 12. (A six-footed folding
curule chair is represented at Avignon, see page 23.)
4. Fouron-le-Comte, Lilge
An almost complete folding chair of iron found on the site of a
Roman villa here is now in Musee Curtius, Liege. Height 21 -6 inches ;
overall width 15-7 inches. In general design it is similar to the
Holborough and Bartlow chairs, with curved supports to the two
sections of the front horizontal bar. The large terminal knobs and the
hinge are, however, not decorated or mounted in bronze, and the feet,
fashioned to represent animal hooves, are likewise of plain wrought iron.
The back legs are elongated to form terminals (as in the Seltman
chair) which again are simple wrought knobs without decoration.
The chair, as restored for exhibition, is illustrated in Plate Xllb.
See Guide sommaire du Musde arch. (Maison Curtius), sections belgoromaine
et franque (Liege, 1909), 20; Bull. Inst. arch. Lidgeois,
XXXI (1901).
It does not seem possible to date any of the Belgian chairs from
internal evidence.
1 It gives me much pleasure to acknowledge the very ready help I have
received from M. Marien of the Dept. de la Belgique Ancienne of the Cinquantenaire
Museum, Brussels, and from M. Joseph Philippe, of the Maison Curtius, Liege,
in my study of the Belgian material.
33
a
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
THE LEAD SARCOPHAGUS
By J. M. C. TOYNBEE, M.A., D.Phil., F.B.A., F.S.A.
(Laurence Professor of Classical Archaeology in the University of
Cambridge)
1. GENERAL OBSERVATIONS
THE lead sarcophagus in the secondary burial (see p. 19) was found
intact, with bottom, four sides, and lid complete.1 Of the lid, torn
and tortured as it was, probably by blast from a war-time projectile,2
nothing was lost ; and the remarkable skill of a local plumber has
restored it virtually to its pristine state, with only a crack at one corner
to betray the damage which it had once sustained. The coffin
(Plate XIII) is of the tapering variety and measures, lid included,
3 feet 5 | inches in length, 1 foot 6£ inches in width, and 1 foot in depth
at the head, and 11 inches in width and 10 inches in depth at the foot.
The pottery-finds indicate that the barrow was not raised before the
early years of the third century (see below, p. 52) ; and since the style
of the decoration on the lead sarcophagus and the practice of inhumation
in Roman Britain are consistent with a date in the first half of
the third century, the child in the secondary burial could have been
the child or grandchild of the occupant of the primary grave.
2. THE DECORATION
The body of the sarcophagus is decorated in a simple manner with
large scallop-shells (pectines), three on each long side and one on each
short side, that at the foot being almost defaced. All the shells are set
with the hinge-lines next to the coffin-base. They are neatly and carefully
rendered ; but despite their naturalistic look they are not strictly
true to nature, since the lateral, triangular ears, which should connect
the two ends of the hinge with the sides of the fan-shaped valve, do not
appear. This lack of ears is to be noted in scallop-shells on other Roman
lead sarcophagi in Britain, for instance, on two fragments in the British
Museum, one from East Ham,3 the other from Shadwell Dock,4 and on
1 The sarcophagus is now in the Maidstone Museum, where the writer studied
it in July 1053. She wishes to record her gratitude to Mr. Alan Warhurst,
Archaeological Assistant in the Museum, for his kindness and helpfulness on that
occasion, and for supplying the photographs of the decorated lid here reproduced.
Mr. Jessup and Mr. Warhurst gave valuable assistance with the compilation of
the table of Roman lead sarcophagi found in Kent, which is printed on pp, 42-5.
2 See the photographs in The Times for 16th May, and Illustrated London
News for 23rd May, 1063.
3 Inv. No. 64, 3-18.4. ROHM Roman London, 1028, pi. 58, No. 3 ; C. Roach
Smith, Collectanea Antiqua, VII (1880), Plate XIX, Nos. 3, 4. All but a fragment
was stolen from the British Museum in November, 1050.
* Inv. No. 58.11-2.1. Short side. The lid, also decorated with scallop-shells,
was stolen from the British Museum in November, 1960.
34
PLATE XIII
*
#%&*
(a) General view
(Scale of inches)
(h) The lid from above
THE LEAD SARCOPHAGUS
t face p . 34
PLATE XIV
*
SA:.
St
4
HSj
5.0L.
iff-.
^
/
# •
2^
-q•
-
H
r* r yJtttm
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
a complete coffin, decorated all over with shells and rings, in the
Colchester and Essex Museum.1
The surface of the lid (Plate XIHa) is edged with four bead-and-reel
rods, two short rods at head and foot and two long ones on each side.
The ends of the short rods extend into the four corners, while the long
rods terminate just short of them. Three more similar rods, which do
not make contac.t either with one another or with the rods aligned along
the edges, are laid on the field in the form of a Y, of which the two
diagonal strokes or arms start near the corners of the head-end and
converge just before reaching the centre of the lid ; while the stem of
the Y, running towards the foot, roughly bisects the rest of the space.
A similar Y-shaped scheme, with cable rods and a scallop-shell at the
junction of the arms and at the foot of the stem, occurs on the lid of
a lead coffin found at Battersea Fields in 1794.2 There four scallopshells
are arranged in pairs on either side of the stem of the Y, while
five more shells occupy the triangle between its arms. On the lid of
the Holborough piece six scallop-shells, of the same type as those on
the body, are set in pairs to right and left of the central bead-and-reel
rod, each with the hinge-line next to it. The two shells of the pahnearest
to the foot are exactly opposite to one another; but in the case
of the central pair, and of that set at the point of convergence of the
arms and stem of the Y, the shells are asymmetrically placed, those
on the right (as one looks towards the head) being nearer to the head
than those on the left. The two shells nearest to the head show a
curious feature—two thin, diagonal lines running out, like antennae,
at an obtuse angle from the ends of the hinge-line on either side of the
valve.3 It is noteworthy that of the fourteen scallop-shells adorning
the sides and lid of this coffin, no two are precisely identical.
What gives the Holborough piece its unique interest among Roman
lead sarcophagi from Britain so far known, is the group of three fulllength
human figures arranged in two tiers between the arms of the Y.
Of the thirty-one other decorated coffins from this country known to the
present writer as surviving, or lost but recorded, only three bear or bore
full-length figures. These are the fragment of a lid from Cefn On,
Glamorgan, recently published, with its horseman and charioteer,4 a
lost lid from the Old Kent Road, bearing two diminutive figures of
Minerva,5 and a lost lid from Colchester, with a group, twice shown,
1 Roach Smith, op. cit., I l l (n.d.), Plate XIV, No. 3. Thanks are due to
Mr. M. R. Hull, F.S.A., Curator of the Colchester and Essex Museum, for a largescale,
detailed drawing of one of these shells.
2 RCHM Roman London, 1928, Plate 58, No. 1 ; Roach Smith, op. cit., I ll
(n.d.), Plate XIV, No. 2. The present location of the piece is unknown.
3 It is just possible that these lines represent the edges of the block or plaque
on which the stamp was carved or modelled (see below, p. 40).
4 Ant. Journ., XXXIII (1953), pp. 72-4, fig. 1 on p. 73 and Plate XVII.
6 Archaeologia, XVII (1814), pp. 333-4, Plate 26, No. 2.
35
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
described as that of two figures offering a sacrifice.1 But the Holborough
figures are, so far as we can judge, on a different artistic level from those
just quoted ; and they belong to a world of funerary imagery hitherto
unrepresented on sarcophagi from Roman Britain—the world of the
Dionysiac mysteries.
The three figures (Plate XIV) were cast as a single unit from an
oblong stamp some ten inches high. The impressions made, unintentionally,
in the matrix by the lateral and lower edges of the stampplaque
(see below, p. 40) appear on the lid as shght ridges clearly visible
at the sides of and beneath the group. Small as they are, these figures
are rendered in relatively high rehef and in a lively, naturalistic style,
with softly rounded contours and plastically modelled heads, bodies,
and limbs. Above, nearest to the coffin-head, is a half-draped Maenad
standing to front, naked save for a cloak caught over her left arm and
wrapped across her legs. With her right hand she grasps the top of a
long thyrsus, held vertically. Her features have vanished, but in her
hair are traces of what may have been a vine-garland.2 Beneath the
Maenad's feet is a slightly convex horizontal border containing five
circles with deeply incised outlines ; and below this are the other two
members of the trio. A naked man dances towards the right, with his
right leg and foot swung forward in advance of his left leg and foot, on
which the weight of his body rests. His left arm and hand are not
shown ; but with his right hand he seems to be leading by the left hand
a naked child, who trots along beside him. That the naked man is a
Satyr accompanied by a baby-Satyr may be reasonably inferred both
from his gait and from the presence of the certainly Bacchic figure of the
Maenad just above.
The funerary role of Dionysus as saviour and conqueror of death,
and of the Maenads, Satyrs, Pans, Silenoi, etc., in his train as symbols of
the rescued souls of Bacchic initiates in the bliss of paradise, is well
known to all students of Roman eschatological art and thought. Marble
sarcophagi carved in Rome, Italy, Greece, and other Mediterranean
areas with the story of Dionysus and Ariadne, ecstatic Bacchic processions,
or bands of riotous Cupids, are familiar items in most European
and American collections of ancient sculpture. Some such reliefs show
child-Satyrs among the revellers—that, for instance, on the front of a
fine piece found in Rome and now in Baltimore.3 There can be little
doubt that the Holborough figures are extracts from a Bacchic scene of
this kind. As to whether the child-Satyr's appearance here bears any
relation to the fact that the coffin was a child's, we can only speculate.
1 Roach Smith, op. cit., I I (n.d.), p. 53, Plate XIV, No. 4.
a The forms of the breasts, abdomen and hip are certainly female and preclude
the interpretation of the figure as an effeminate featuring of Dionysus himself.
3 K. Lehmann-Hartleben and E. 0. Olsen, Dionysiac Sarcophagi at Baltimore
(1942), p. 15, fig. 19.
36
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
The Baltimore sarcophagus just mentioned was that of an adult. But
we can surmise that the kinsmen of the Holborough child were, if not
members of a Dionysiac sect, at least conversant with the common stock
of doctrines and picture-symbols of Dionysiac other-world " theology."
The scallop-shells, like the dolphins which figure so persistently and
prominently on Roman lead sarcophagi of eastern provenance (see note
2 below), most probably allude to the journey of the soul across the
Ocean to the Islands of the Blessed.
3. THE SOURCE OE THE MOTIES
These Dionysiac figures are, as we have seen, new to Roman sarcophagi,
whether of lead, stone, or marble, found in this country so
far. The writer cannot claim acquaintance with all existing or
recorded decorated lead coffins cast in the western provinces. She has,
for example, had no opportunity of studying the Spanish or North-
African material. But her researches, so far as they go, in the museumcollections
and archaeological literature of Roman Germany and Gaul
have revealed no lead sarcophagus with Bacchic motifs from those
provinces, with the possible exception of a stamp showing two figures
standing beneath a vine-tree on a now vanished piece from Nimes.1
For Bacchic figures in this context we must turn to the east, to Syria
and Palestine, where decorated lead coffins were produced in large
quantities during the second, third, and fourth centuries of our era.2
The motifs on these eastern pieces include such Bacchic subjects as
Satyr-masks,3 masks of Dionysus,4 a Maenad riding on a panther,5 fulllength
figures of the youthful Dionysus,6 a Silenus playing on a double
pipe,7 a Pan,8 a naked Satyr standing in profile with a pedum,9 and a
frontal Satyr with nebris, thyrsus, and cantharus.10 Thus, in his rendering
1 Memoires de la SociiU des Antiquaires de France, XIV (1830), p. 98 ff.,
Plate IV.
2 See especially Quarterly Depart. Ant. Pal., 1 (1932), p. 136 ; II (1933), p. 185 ;
IV (1935), p. 87 ff., 138 ff. ; Journ. Hellen. Stud., L (1930), pp. 300 ff. ; LII (1932),
p. 262 f.; Syria, X (1929), p. 230 ff. ; XV (1934), p. 337 ff.; XVI. (1935),
p. 51 ff. ; Arch. Anzeiger (Jahrb. Deutsch. Arch. Inst.), XLVII (1032), col. 387 ff. ;
LI (1036), col. 262 ff; Berytus, III (1936), p. 51 ff. ; V (1038), p. 27 ff. ; VI
(1030-40), p. 27 ff. ; Melanges de I'VniversiU Saint Joseph, Beyrouth, XXXI
(1037), p. 203 ff.
3 Syria, XV (1034), pi. XLIV.
1 Syria, XV (1934), p. 349, fig. 22.
6 Syria, XV (1934), pis. XLVI, XLVII.
0 Berytus, I I I (1936), pis. XII, No. 2, XVI; VI (1939-40), pi. XIV. ; Arch.
Anz., XLVII (1932), col. 388, figs. 1, 2 ; col. 391, fig. 6 ; Mdanges de I'Vniv. St.
Joseph, XXI (1937), pi. LIII.
' Syria, XVI (1935), p. 58, fig. 38.
8 Berytus, V (1938), pi. V ; Journ. Hellen. Stud., L (1930), pi. XII.
0 Berytus, III (1936), pi. XI, XIV ; V (1938), pi. IX ; VI (1936), pi. XIII;
Arch. Anz., XLVII (1032), col. 388, figs. 1, 2 ; Quarterly Depart. Ant. Pal., IV
(1035), pi. LV ; Journ. Hellen. Stud., L (1030), pi. XII.
10 Clermont Ganneau, Album d'antiquitis orientates (1897), pi. I, No. 5 ; Berytus,
V (1938), pi. X.
37
EXCAVATION OP A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
of Bacchic figures, the designer of the Holborough coffin would seem to
betray east-Mediterranean affinities ; and the newly-discovered piece
raises in an acute form the problem of where, by whom, and under what
influences the decorated lead sarcophagi found in Britain were made.
P. Thomsen, reviewing in Philologische Wochenschrift for 23rd
September, 1939, col. 1025, articles on eastern lead sarcophagi contributed
by E. von Mercklin to Archdologischer Anzeiger and Berytus (see
above, page 37, note 2), remarked on the importance of answering by
detailed study the question as to whether the lead coffins found in the
western provinces were imported wholesale from the east or represent
western versions of fashionable eastern products ; and he suggested
that these objects would, in the latter case, furnish evidence, additional
to that already furnished by glass,1 of the migration westwards of
Syrian craftsmen. The discovery of the Holborough coffin may be said
to have gone some way towards establishing the truth of the second
alternative.2 It is unlikely that this piece was made in an eastern
workshop and traded into the province. The bead-and-reel motif used
for its borders and Y-design, a motif which it shares with many another
British, Gaulish, and German lead sarcophagus, is ubiquitous for outlining
borders, lozenges, squares, rectangles, triangles and other
geometric patterns on Syrian and Palestinian pieces. Butthe Y-shaped
arrangement has, to the writer's knowledge, no counterpart on eastern
sarcophagi. More significant still, the Bacchic figures, while eastern
in character and content and Mediterranean in style, have no exact
parallels among the Dionysiac subjects listed above. Again, the large
scallop-shells would appear to be a specifically British motif in this
context, perhaps reflecting the taste of local workmen or of local patrons.
They occur on none of the German or Gaulish lead sarcophagi which
have come to the writer's notice ; and when shells appear, as they
do occasionally, on eastern pieces, they are of the smaller, cockleshell
(cardium) variety, real shells, it seems, being used to produce the
impressions in the matrix.3 Finally, the tapering form of the coffin, with
the main axis of the lid-design set lengthwise, as though to be viewed
by a spectator standing at the foot, a form commonly found in Britain,4
1 D. B. Harden, Greece and Rome, I I I (9th May, 1934), p. 143 ; Journ. Rom.
Stud., XXIV (1934), p. 54 f.
a But a thorough, systematic study of all decorated lead sarcophagi" found in
the western provinces, comparable to the studies already devoted to the eastern
pieces, is urgently needed.
3 Clermont Ganneau, op. cit., pi. I, No. 6 (Brussels) ; Berytus, V (1938), pi.
XII (Mete); pi. XIII (Copenhagen); pi. XI (Rome, Museum of Papal Biblical
Institute); Quarterly Depart. Ant. Pal., II (1033), p. 186. Cf. Berytus, V (1938),
p. 44.
4 e.g., ROHM Roman London (1928), pis. 57, No. 4 ; 68, Nos. 1, 2, 3 ; Arahaeologia,
XVII (1814), pi. 26, No. 2 ; XXXI (1846), fig. on p. 308 ; Ant. Journ.,
XXXI (1053), pi. XVII; Roach Smith, op. cit., I l l (n.d.), pi. XIV, No. 4 ; VII
(1880), pi. XIX A, figs. 1, 6, 7. All these are decorated sarcophagi.
38
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
we may take to be a local feature, rarely, if ever, met with in Gaul
and Germany and almost non-existent in the eastern areas,1 where
decorated lead sarcophagi are normally rectangular, with centripetal
lid-designs viewable from all sides. Indeed, the evidence strongly
suggests that the Holborough coffin was made in Britain and that its
ornament was designed either by a Syrian craftsman settled in or
visiting this island and fusing local taste and custom with eastern
tradition, or by a Gaulish, or even British, pupil of a Syrian craftsman,
or through the medium of a stamp executed in a Syrian artist's western
workshop. Another Kentish lead sarcophagus tells much the same
story. Found at Milton-next-Sittingbourne and now in the Maidstone
Museum, it is decorated on its long and short sides with a series of
" St. Andrew's Crosses " formed by bead-and-reel rods, with a Medusamask
medallion in each quarter of each cross.2 A very similar, if
slightly more elaborate, version of this scheme appears on the lid of a
lead sarcophagus in the Mus^e National Libanais, Beirut.3 It seems
not unlikely that this design was brought to Britain by an eastern
craftsman or in an eastern pattern-book.
4. THE PURPOSE OE THE DECORATION ON ROMAN LEAD SARCOPHAGI
What was the purpose of all the elaborate and often minutely
symbolic ornamentation lavished on lead sarcophagi, eastern and
western ? Sculptured marble sarcophagi were set in chamber-tombs or
ranged along road-sides, where they could be seen, admired, and
pondered over by the eyes and minds of relatives or passers-by. Lead
coffins, on the other hand, were hidden away from human sight—
encased in outer receptacles of wood4 or stone or, as was the Holborough
piece, enveloped directly in the earth. Once the interment had taken
place the decoration could have no effect on any living persons. It
could neither please them aesthetically, instruct or comfort them
spiritually, or even gratify a taste for display. This fact throws not a
little light on Roman after-life ideas. The motifs and patterns on these
coffins must have been mainly designed for the benefit of the dead,
whose souls, while located in paradise, were believed, according to the
vague and often confused and inconsistent " theology " of the age, to
1 Of all the coffin-lids illustrated in the articles quoted in note 2 on p. 37, only
one appears to taper slightly '(Syria, XV (1934), pi. XLIII, No. 9). Another
tapering eastern lid, on a late piece with Christian symbols, is in the Musee Lycklama,
Cannes. In this case the motifs, the Sacred Monogram in an aedicula thrice
repeated, face towards the head of the deceased, that is, towards the wider end
(Gazette des Beaux Arts (1931), II, p. 334, fig. 25).
2 Arch. Cant., IX (1874), p. 165 ff., with plate and seven figures ; Roach-
Smith, op. cit., VII (1880), p. 182 f., with figure.
3 Syria, XV (1934), pi. XLVIII, No. 23.
4 Of. Quarterly Depart. Ant. Pal., IV (1935), p. 70 ff.
39
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
inhabit, in some sense, or at least to visit from time to time, the place
in which their bones reposed.
5. NOTES ON THE TECHNIQUE AND DISTRIBUTION OE ROMAN LEAD
. SARCOPHAGI
The method used in manufacturing Roman lead sarcophagi was that
of open sand-casting. Matrices of wet sand of the sizes required for the
lead sheets were first prepared. A coffin could be made in two sheets, a
smaller one for the lid, a larger one for the bottom and sides. In such
cases the second sheet was cast in a matrix shaped like a rectangle from
which four small squares of identical size had been cut out, one at each
of the four corners, in such a way that the inner corner of each square,
coincided with one of the four corners of the central oblong area reserved
for the base ; the four sides were then bent up into the perpendicular ;
and the four angles of the " trough " so formed were soldered together.
Alternatively the base and two short sides could be cast in one sheet,
the short sides being beaten up, while the two long sides were cast
separately and soldered on to the rest. Or the base and two long
sides could be cast in one sheet, the long sides being beaten up, while the
two short sides were cast separately and soldered on. Or, again, the
bottom and four sides could be cast in five separate sheets and all united
by soldering. The body of the Holborough sarcophagus was cast in one
sheet. The sheet for the lid was always slightly larger than the area of
the base, so that its four edges could be beaten down to overlap the sides.
The ornament was almost certainly produced by a series of positive
stamps, either modelled in clay or, much more probably, carved in wood
in relief on square, oblong, circular, or elliptical plaques or blocks, or on
long strips, as in the case of borders of running scrolls or garlands. Each
figure, mask, shell, vase, column, rosette, etc., or each small group of
such motifs, in a given design, was modelled or carved on a separate
plaque or block; while modelled terracotta or carved wooden rods
served as the stamps for cable or bead-and-reel edgings and outlines of
geometric patterns. These stamps were pressed face downwards into
the matrix of wet sand so as to imprint it in sharp negative impressions
arranged according to a pre-conceived scheme selected by the craftsman
from his pattern-book. The stamps, having made their impressions,
were then removed ; and when the molten lead was poured on to the
matrix, the negatives left in the sand produced positive figures and
patterns standing out in relief on the surface of the sheet. If the plaque
or block of a stamp were so pressed into the sand that the background
of the figure, etc., was not just flush with, but a little below, the surface
of the matrix, shght ridges would appear in the finished product on one
or more sides of the design, as in the case of the Holborough figure-group.
It seems unlikely that negative terracotta moulds or wooden blocks
40
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
carved in " intaglio " were prepared and left in the matrix when the
lead was poured on to it. No terracotta moulds, corresponding to wellknown
coffin-motifs, have, so far as the writer is aware, come to light ;
and in the case of " palimpsest" designs, that is, of criss-crossing
rods or scroll borders or of figures superimposed on bead-and-reel and
cable lines, moulds, whether of clay or wood, left in the sand-bed were
clearly out of the question. In such " palimpsests " the upper motif
was obtained by pressing the stamp firmly into the bed : that stamp was
then removed and the stamp for the lower motif laid circumspectly
across the first impression, so as not to blur its outlines, and pressed
more lightly into the matrix. It is noteworthy that no positive terracotta
stamps for lead sarcophagus ornamentation are mentioned in the
standard accounts of Syrian and Palestinian coffins (see p. 37, note 2)
as found in excavations or surviving in museums. Nor are any known
from Roman Britain. This negative evidence strongly suggests that
such stamps were of perishable wood ; and wooden stamps are, in fact,
used for casting decorated lead in this country in modern times.
A further argument for holding that the decorative motifs were not
mass-produced in terracotta moulds lies in the fact that when the same
motifs are repeated on the same side of a sarcophagus they are seldom
completely mechanical replicas of one another. Cases in which such
replicas seem to occur could be explained by supposing that a stamp
having made its impression in one part of the matrix was quickly taken
out and pressed in again in another part of it. Indeed, stamps could
obviously have been re-used in different portions of the same coffin or
in a number of different coffins ; and while it is likely that each workshop
had its special repertory of motifs and designs, both stamps and
pattern-books could clearly have circulated from factory to factory, or
even from country to country. The irregularities and lack of symmetry
displayed by the schemes of some of even the most handsome and
elaborate eastern products indicate that the stamps were laid in the
matrix mainly by eye. A central motif is, in fact, seldom quite mathematically
centred: masks, busts, and figures are often out of the
perpendicular ; and balancing motifs, such as the shells on the Holborough
lid, are frequently out of line. Such blemishes must have been
chiefly caused by careless setting, sometimes, perhaps, by unavoidable
shifting of the sand-bed.
The main areas of the manufacture of Roman lead sarcophagi were,
apparently, first and foremost Syria and Palestine at one end of the
Empire, and secondly Britain and Gaul at the other. There are also
records of, or statements about, lead sarcophagi discovered in Italy,
Switzerland, Spain, and North Africa.1 In Britain, lead coffins, whether
1 Arch. Anz., XLVII (1932), col. 403 ; LI (1936), cols. 267, 277, 278 ; Syria,
XVT (1935), p. 66.
41
ROMAN LEAD SARCOPHAGI AND CISTS PROM KENT
I n the bibliography : Smith=C. Roach Smith, Collectanea Antiqua, 7 vols., 1848-80 ; Payne=G. Payne, Collectanea Cantiana.
1803 ; V.C.H.= Vict. County Hist. Kent, vol. I l l , 1932.
PROVENANCE, ETC. PRESENT LOCATION BIUEF PABTICTJLABS BlBIJCO&BAPHY
No longer in Public
Found 1878 in the New Library, Chatham.
Cemetery Presumed destroyed
2 CEAYTOKD
Pound 1878 on Watling
Street between Crayford
and Bexley
Reburied
Scallop-shell in cable triangle on one
end of lid. Two open scallop-shells
on one short side. Middle-aged
man, inlime, with glass vessel, glass
and pottery outside. N-S position
Five scallop-shells in cable triangles
on hd, two scallop-shells on one
short side. Young woman
P.S.A., ser. 2, vii, 1876-8, 415.
J.B.A.A., xxxiv, 1878, 259.
A.C., xii, 1878, 430 ; xiii, 1880,
168
Payne, 145.
Smith, vii, 1880, 186-7, pi. xix, A,
7-9.
V.G.H., 149.
A.C., xii, 1878, 429.
J.B.A.A., xxxiv, 1878, 259.
Smith, vii, 1880, 188-90, pi. xix, A
No. 6.
V.C.H., 151.
PEINDSBTJBY
Found near Quarry
House before 1838
Crossed-eable.
vessel
Contained pottery J. Phippen, Desc. Sketches of
Rochester and Chatham, 1862
235.
A.G., xvii, 1887, 189.
V.C.H., 154.
SNODLAND, HOLBOBOTJGH
Found in R.B. barrow,
1953
Maidstone Museum Maenad, Satyr, baby-Satyr, and
scallop-shells on lid. Scallopshells
on sides. Very young
child, with probable leather purse
The present publication.
The Times, 15 May, 1953, 7 July,
1953.
III. Bond. News, 25 May, 1053.
MrtTON-NEXTSlTTINGBOTJBNE
Found 1868 at
Bex Hill
MlLTON-NEXTSlTTrNGBOTXRNE
Found 1871 at
Bex Hill
Maidstone Museum
(i)
British Museum
(")
7 MlLTON-NEXT-
8 SlTTrfrGBOUBNE
Found 1868 a t (iii)
Bex Hill (iv)
0 MlLTON-NEXT-
10 SlTTINGBOUKNE
Found 1871-3 a t (v)
Bex Hill (vi)
Series of bead-and-reel " St. Andrew's Gents. Mag., 1868, i, 225-6.
Crosses " with Medusa-mask medal- P.S.A.L., ser. 2, vi, 1873-6, 46.
Hon in each quarter of each cross. A.C., ix, 1874, 165-8.
Unguent bottle. Outside, two- Payne, 24.
handled cylindrical green glass jar Smith, vii, 1880, 182-3, with fig.
stamped I BONT. Late 2nd cent. The Antiquary, xliii, 1907, 373.
with photo (upper fig.).
V.C.H., 96-7.
P.S.A.L., ser. 2, vi, 1873-6, 46.
A.C., ix, 1874, 168-71, with figs.
Payne, 24-8, with plate and figs,
1-4.
Smith, vii, 1880, 184-6 and fig. on
p. 185.
V.C.H., 97.
B.M. Guide to Ants. R.B., 1951,
65, fig. 32, No. 3 ; 66 with
wrong reference to glass vessels.
Bead-and-reel panels and " St.
Andrew's Crosses " ; Medusamasks,
lions, vases with torches.
Outside, green glass jug with
crimped handle. Late 2nd cent.
Both undecorated. Bodies in lime,
(iii) Male, with unguent bottle of
blue glass. Glass jug outside.
Probably late 2nd cent, (iv) Female,
with two pottery vessels
outside.
Both undecorated. I n (vi) two fingerrings
of gold wire and three jet
pins with faceted heads
Gents. Mag., 1867, i, 506-7.
P.S.A.L.. ser. 2, v, 1870-3, 381 ;
vi, 1873-6, 46.
Payne, 23-4.
A.C., ix, 1874, 164-5.
Smith, vi, 1868, 263-4 ; vii, 1880,
182.
V.C.H., 96.
P.S.A.L., ser. 2, v, 1870-3, 381 ;
vi, 1873-6, 153.
Arch. Journ., xxx, 1873, 296.
A.C., ix, 1874, 171.
Smith, vii, 1880, 186.
" Four, if not six, other lead coffins," undecorated, came from this site (Payne, 29). They may include the two here fisted.
From particulars given by Payne in P.S.A.L., ser. 2, vi, 1873-6, it seems that this site was a natural mound and not a barrow ;
in any case, it lacks the usual commanding geographical situation. The site has been entirely destroyed for brickearth.
PROVENANCE, ETC. PRESENT LOCATION BRIEF PARTICULARS BIBLIOGRAPHY
11 MTJRSTON,
NR. SlTTINGBOTrRNE
Found 1869 in
Eleven Acres Field
Melted down, metal used
to seal joints in gas
mains a t Sittingbourne.
Cable " St. Andrew's Crosses " on A.O., x, 1876, 183.
lid, sides and ends. Fragments of Payne, 43.
glass vessels Smith, vii, 1880, 190.
V.O.H., 97-8.
12 PETHAM
Found 1775 near
Garlinge Green
Cable " St. Andrew's Crosses " on
lid and four sides. Child, with
Castor-ware urn, an urn stamped
BIBE, and another urn
B. Faussett's Note, Soc. Ant. MS.
No. 723, folio 6.
Smith, iv, 1857, 173-5, pi. xl,
No. 1.
V.C.H., 162.
13
£
PLTTMSTEAD
Pound 1887
Maidstone Museum Cable round edges of hd and " St.
Andrew's Cross " incised on one
end of hd. N-S position. Young
girl. Traces of wood shell
P.S.A.L., ser. 2, xi, 1885-7, 308-9;
xii, 1887-0, 6 ; xiii, 1880-91,
245.
A.G., xvii, 1887, 10-11, with plate.
V.C.H., 163.
14 RAMSGATE
Pound 1846 on site
Saxon cemetery at
Ozingell
Rolfe Collection, hence
of Mayer Collection, but
not a t Liverpool. Location
now unknown
TJnornamented. In a grave. J.B.A.A., ii, 1847, 85.
T. Wright, Wanderings of an
Antiquary, 1854, 82.
A.C., xii, 1878, 334.
Smith, vii, 1880, 190.
V.C.H., 162.
15 ROCHESTER
Pound c. 1927 in Love
Lane (Boley Hill Roman
cemetery)
Sold to a dealer in old
metal. Published fragment
not in Rochester
Museum
Scallop-shells ; panels of cable, probably
triangular. Child. N-S
position.
A.C., xxxix, 1927, 159-64 and fig.
V.C.H., 87.
16-
19
20-
21
SITTINGBOURNE
Found 1879 a t
Chalkwell, on
Watling Street
(i)
Stolen from British
Museum in Nov., 1950
do.
(Circular cist)
Found 1934 a t
Highsted Quarry
do.
. (Canister lid)
SOUTHFLEET
Found at Springhead,
on Watling
Street 1807
22 WESTBERE (STURRY)
Found 1755 near
Whatmer Hall
(ii) —
(iii) Maidstone Museum
(iv) —
(i)
(ii)
Cable, lozenges and " St. Andrew's
Cross," with yokes (?) and circles.
Head to W. Child of 6 years, with
bracelets of jet and twisted gold
wire, and gold finger-ring of 3rd
cent. Pottery and glass vessels
outside
Cist contained calcined human bones,
bronze vase and bowl, a glass
vessel, and cup of Castor ware.
Probably enclosed in wood coffin.
Undecorated. Young woman
Flanged canister-lid, probably used
here as a pot-cover. Male skeleton,
with four pots of 4th cent, date
Two undecorated coffins, each with a
child's skeleton, within a stone
tomb. One contained a pendantchain,
a pair of bracelets and
finger-ring, all of gold. 3rd cent.
Inside stone coffin,
near
Pottery-flagon
(Compiled by J . M. C. Toynbee, R. P. Jessup, and Alan Warhurst)
P.S.A.L., ser. 2, viii, 1879-81.
210-211.
A.C., xvi, 1886, 9-10 with plate.
Payne, 54-5 and pi. xviii.
Smith, vii, 1880, 186-7.
V.C.H., 98.
Daily Telegraph, 15 Nov., 1950.
B.M. Guide to Ants. R.B., 1951,
62, 65, fig. 32, No. 2.
A.G., xvi, 1886, 10-11.
Payne, 57.
Ant. Journ., xv, 1935, 209, 210
fig. 2.
Ant. Journ., xv, 1935, 209-12, and
fig. 3, where scale should read
( x i ) .
Arch., xiv, 1808, 38-9, pi. vii,
3 and 4.
Smith, i, 1848, 110.
R. P. Jessup, Arch. Kent, 1930,
213, and jewellery, pi. ix.
V.C.H., 91.
B.M. Guide to Ants. R.B., 1951,
pi. 1, 7, for chain.
E. Hasted, Hist. Kent, ix, 1800,
76-7.
A.C., ix, 1874, 172.
Smith, vii, 1880, 190.
V.C.H., 174.
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
plain or decorated, have come to light predominantly in Kent (see
pp. 42-5), the London area, eastern England south of the Wash
(especially at Colchester), and in the cemeteries of Roman York, while
sporadic finds have been made north and south of the Wash (Horncastle
in Lincolnshire, Chesterton-on-the-Nene near Peterborough,
Ipswich, Great Wenham in Suffolk), in the Midlands (Leicester,
Irchester, Verulamium), and in the western districts (Cirencester,
Glamorgan). Britain, as everyone knows, was particularly rich in
lead1 and partly supplied with this commodity the markets of Gaul,
which also had her own lead-mines, mainly in the north.2 Spain, too,
was notably lead-producing.3 On the other hand, Syria and Palestine,
the cradle and centre par excellence, so it seems, of this branch of
decorative art, contained no lead-mines.4 The nearest mines were in
Asia Minor.5 Whence and by what routes did these countries import
their lead ? And how did it happen that the craft flourished most
brilliantly in lands of which the essential raw material was not a native
product ? These are questions still awaiting answers. No previous
student of the subject has, to the writer's knowledge, so much as posed
this problem, still less attempted to solve it.6
VII. OTHER FINDS
(1) POTTERY
By N. C. COOK, B.A., F.S.A.
(Keeper of The Guildhall Museum)
THE pottery came from the following sources :
A. A great pile of sherds on the northern side of the Main Burial.
B. The Central Area.
1 L. C. West, Roman Britain : the Objects of Trade (1931), pp. 31-4, 39-41 ;
ed. F. Tenny Prank, An Economic Survey of Ancient Rome, I I I (1937), p. 42 ff.
(R. G. Collingwood).
a L. C. West, Roman Gaul: the Objects of Trade (1935), pp. 60-70, 76, 77 ;
ed. F. Tenny Frank, op. cit., I l l (1037), pp. 461, 587, note 05, 501 (A. Grenier);
O. Brogan, Roman Gaul (1953), p. 137.
3 L. C. West, Imperial Roman Spain : the Objects of Trade (1929), pp. 45, 51,
52 ; ed. F. Tenny Frank, op. cit., I l l (1937), p. 139 f., p. 158 ff. (J. J. van Nostrand)
; Journ. Rom. Stud., XVIII (1928), p. 129 ff.
4 No mention is made of lead-mines in Syria or of the importation of lead into
the country in ed. F. Tenny Frank, op. cit., IV (1938), p. 156 f., p. 201 ff (P. M.
Heiohelheim).
5 Ed. F. Tenny Frank, op. cit., IV (1938), p. 622 f. (T. R. S. Broughton).
0 Lead was exported in considerable quantities from the West to India, where
it was used mainly for native coinages (E. H. Warmington, The Commerce between
the Roman Empire and India (1028), p. 267 f.). One of the lead-routes eastward
rn ay well have passed through Syria and have stimulated interest there in exploiting
that commodity for funerary purposes. For the lead-industry in the Roman
Empire in general see M. Besnier, Revue Arch., XI (1020), pp. 211 ff ; X I I I (1921),
p. 36 ff. ; XIV (1921), p . 98 ff.
46
EXCAVATION OP A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
C. Pits 2 and 3.
D. The core of the barrow.
E. The ditch silt.
It is immediately apparent that the sherds from the first three
sources, with the exception of the rouletted beaker, have been subjected
to great heat after manufacture. The plates are, in places, burnt almost
to cinders. The amphorae, though split, and discoloured by fire, have
not suffered such intense heat, but the two beakers show no signs at all
of having been burnt.
The suggestion is that the plates were in the funeral pyre, the
amphorae burnt in the purificatory or clearing up fire on the site of the
barrow after the funeral rites, but before the mound was raised, but that
the drinking cups were not placed in the pits until the fires were over.
All the pottery, except that from the ditch, was recovered in very
small fragments, and there can be little doubt that it was deliberately
smashed.
A. POTTERY FROM THE NORTHERN SIDE OE THE MAIN BURIAL
This consisted of about one hundredweight of small sherds which,
when sorted, proved to be the remains of five amphorae.
1. The largest amphora, Fig. 13, left, has a cylindrical body, sagging
slightly in places. The ware is hard, reddish brown in colour, and
covered with a creamy-buff shp. The collar is cylindrical, and the neck
conical. Just below the junction of collar and neck is an impressed
stamp with an incised square panel. The stamp is fractured, and parts
of the letters are missing. Dr. M. H. Callender kindly reports on this
stamp :—
" The stamp reads
TEP *
SVRl
and is exactly paralleled from the Monte Testaccio, Rome (C.I.L., xv,
2817 b), although the latter is in hollow letters. There is a further
example TEP
SVRI, also in hollow letters (idem, 2817 a).
Other possibilities are FT EP retrograde and in frame, and FT EP
retrograde and in double frame (idem, 2809, a, b). Incidentally, the
TEP || SVRI examples were stamped on the necks of small amphorse.
Expansions:
1. F(iglinae) or [ex] F(iglinis), T.EP ( ) or T. E ( ) P ( ).
2. [figlinae, etc.] T.E ( ) P ( )||
SVRI [vilici]
47
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
On the basis of numerous parallels, I am fairly confident in offering
these expansions. From the general style it may possibly be of South
Spanish origin, which would imply that this particular vessel was
imported sometime before c. A.D. 200, but at any time during the course
of the period c. A.D. 10-200. I have reached the tentative conclusion,
however, that wine, olive oil and fish sauces were no longer imported
into Britain from Spain and Italy after the victory of the Severi at
Lyons in A.D. 197. If any such commodities came into the country,
they were from Aquitaine and possibly Gallia Narbonensis, where the
cask rather than the amphora was the main vessel for the transportation
of such goods—although the amphora was used on occasion.
2. The four smaller amphorse were all of the same size and form,
and only one of them is here illustrated (Fig. 13, right). They have
shallow ribbed vertical collars, shghtly undercut at their lower edge,
short necks, and pear-shaped tapering bodies which swell out again
at the base to end in a spherical knob. The two handles spring from
almost the base of the neck, rise to about the bottom of the collar, and
join the body of the pot at the bulge. The paste, which is reddish in
colour and contains very finely powdered grit, has been dipped in a
cream coloured slip.
B. POTTERY EROM THE CENTRAL AREA
From this area came numerous sherds, including small splintered
fragments of the smashed amphorae, and two pieces which actually
join on to the plate No. 2 from Pit 3. There were also fragments of
tile, and of the rouletted beaker from Pit 2.
C. POTTERY EROM PIT 2
The remains of two straight-sided plates. In each case the coarse
ware of the fabric has been covered with a fine slip which now, doubtless
owing to changes due to fire, appears as a pink, merging to yellow, colour.
It is likely that these were originally fumed wares, and that the carbon
deposit has been consumed in the open fire in which the plates were
subsequently burnt.
1. Diam. 10 in., height 1-9 in. The outside of the walls of the
plate are ornamented with shallow tooling in the form of overlapping
arcading. The base is flat and decorated beneath with shallow tooling
in the form of a circle of running loops around its edge.
2. Diam. 7-8 in., height 1-6 in. Rounded base on the inside of
which is a small isolated shallow tooled ornament, identical with that
on the plate from Pit 3, Fig. 14.
3. A rouletted beaker, max. diameter 6-2 in., Fig. 14, of fine buff
clay with black " varnished " surface. Conical neck with no marked
48
EXCAVATION OP A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
SCALE '» INCHES
SCALE IN INCHES
P I G . 13. AMPHORAE FROM N. SIDE OP MAIN BURIAL
49
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
offset at the junction of neck and body. Base missing. No signs of
burning.
POTTERY FROM P IT 3
1. Many sherds of a rouletted beaker of similar type to No. 3 from
Pit 2, but the sherds were very small and only a small part of the whole
vessel was thrown into this Pit.
There are also the remains of at least six, and possibly seven, straightsided
plates. They are not' all complete, and as several of them are
almost identical in size and form, one cannot always be certain that
what appear to be parts of the same plate are not, in fact, parts of two
separate plates.
2. Diam. 10 in., height 2 in. There is ornament on the outside
of the walls and beneath the base identical with that of No. 1 from
Pit 2, of which this plate is practically a duplicate. Fig. 14.
3. Diam. 13 in., height 1-8 in. Unornamented. Flat base.
Much burnt.
4. Diam. 6-7 in., height 1-5 in. Rounded base on the interior
of which is an ornament identical with that on No. 2, Pit 2. This
ornament does not continue right round the plate ; the illustration,
Fig. 14, shows the whole of it.
5. Diam. 7-8 in., height of uneven rim varying from 1-5 to 1-8
in. Body cracked and distorted by fire. Rounded base.
6. Fragments of one, or perhaps two, plates, similar in size and
paste to No. 5, with the same ornament on the inside of the base as No. 4.
The sherds are so badly damaged by fire that it is not possible to be
quite certain that some of them do not, in fact, belong to No. 5 from
Pit 3, or even No. 2 from Pit 2.
7. Plate of grey paste with black surface, Fig. 14. Diam. 6 in.,
height 1-5 in. Rounded base with a rise towards the centre, perhaps
a distortion due to heat. On the inside of the base is the same ornament
as on No. 2 from Pit 2, or No. 4 from Pit 3. Though cracked and distorted
by heat, this plate still retains the black fumed surface which
was, perhaps, characteristic of all these plates before they were burned
in the funeral pyre. It may well have been completely covered by ashes,
and therefore in the absence of a reducing atmosphere, the carbon
deposit on the surface was not consumed.
D. POTTERY EROM THE CORE OE THE BARROW
There were a few very abraded sherds of indeterminate Roman date,
though there is one sherd which is certainly a small rim fragment from
one of the plates found in Pits 2 and 3. There are also two small much
worn sherds of gritted ware which are prehistoric in character, and
perhaps associated with the Bronze Age folk who built the round barrow
50
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
on the hill above this Roman barrow. There is one splinter of Samian
ware, a fragment of the rim of Drag. Form 27 or 18 and dating from
A.D. 60-80, and fragments of tiles.
f \
Pit 3
\ / \ <
>
»»M M »»»» mmnmmm m
Pit 2, 3.
PIG. 14. POTTERY EROM PITS 2 and 3 ( xi)
(Platters 4, 7, 2 from Pit 3. Beaker from Pit 2)
E. POTTERY EROM THE SECT OE THE DITCH
1. The greater part of the body and one rim fragment of a fumed
ware pot with eavetto rim and two smooth bands of black at the bulge
and at the base. Lying on the bottom of the ditch. Early third
century.
51
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
2. Sherds from the middle section of the body of a large cooking
pot of reddish brown ware with black fumed surface. Not sufficient
to reconstruct the form of the pot. Coarse chalk filling.
3. Part of the shoulder of a large cooking pot of brown sandy ware
with two parallel grooves around the shoulder. Ditch Section III,
coarse chalk filling.
The dating evidence afforded by this pottery is as follows. While
the plates may be of any date from Antonine times onwards, the
rouletted beakers belong to the third century. This date is also that of
the cavetto rim pot found at the bottom of the ditch. The beaker whose
form it is possible to reconstruct is an early example of its type and, in
general, one might place the erection of the mound to the first quarter
of the third century A.D.
The built of the pottery is of native manufacture, but the five
amphorse are of Mediterranean origin. The large cylindrical type is
a form common to the western parts of this area—Spain, North Africa
and Italy—but the four smaller amphorse are from the eastern Mediterranean
and are a well-known Grecian type. These had all previously
been brought to this country, perhaps as deck cargo, but certainly full
of wine which was consumed at the funeral feast.
(2) GLASS
The ten fragments of glass vessels recovered were not sufficient for
restoration. At least four vessels seem to be represented. Dr. D. B.
Harden, who most kindly examined the pieces, suggests that they could
very well fit in with a third century date, but that there is not sufficient
information for even one complete shape.
There is no doubt that the glass vessels were melted almost completely
on the pyre.
GLASS-SLAG
The specimens were examined in the Department of Glass
Technology, University of Sheffield, by whom the following comments
were made :—
" The glassy material of the crushed sample was sorted by
hand, washed, and measurements of its refractive index were made.
The values obtained ranged from 1-503 to just over 1-520 for
different small fragments. It was noted that the fragments were
of quite good colour, being only faintly tinted, but were weathered
heavily on the surface. The weathering process tends to remove
alkali from the glass, leaving a low-refractive index layer richer in
52
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
silica. It was also noted that in the other samples of slag the
glassy material surrounded and included, without any zone of
partial fusion, pieces of charcoal, soil, etc. The only suggestion
that foreign material had been picked up occurred with one of the
samples of' run glass ' where the surface showed some discolouration.
" Regarding the fragments of more massive glass which were
found, refractive index measurements were again made on small
flakes removed for this purpose. The values obtained were
approximately 1-509 and 1-518. The glass was not very homogeneous,
showing heavy striae where the broken edges had
weathered. It would appear, particularly from the colour of the
glass, that the fragments are derived from at least three vessels,
if indeed not four or more. Some of the thinner pieces show
distortion which can only be the result of heating to a fairly high
temperature. The more massive pieces have not been distorted ;
this suggests that the temperature to which the pieces were
subjected was not very much higher than about 550°-600° C.
" The evidence indicates the strong probability that the socalled
slag is actually the fused remains of various vessels. In
favour of this view are (a) the comparatively good colour, (b) the
values of refractive index, and (c) the non-fusion of included
material. Had the glass been derived from wood potash and
materials from the soil where it was found it is unlikely that all
these features would have been shown. Such an ' accidental'
glass would have shown wide variations in refractive index,
probably a considerable amount of small bubbles, partial incorporation
of sand from the soil, and it would probably have had
very poor resistance to the attack of moisture. A probable
explanation for the presence of fragments of unmelted glassware
is that under the influence of sudden strong heat the vessels would
shatter, and some pieces would be thrown into the cooler outer
parts of the cremation pyre. The temperature towards the centre
of the fire would be considerably higher, probably more than
1,000° C, and would be sufficient to cause the fusion of this
glassware. The molten glass would then drip to the bottom
of the fire, and pick up bits of ash, etc., before cooling to a solid
mass.
" In summary, then, we feel that the samples may be accounted
for by the suggestion that several glass articles were included in
the funeral pyre, that under the influence of heat the articles were
shattered, and that the pieces remaining near the centre of the
fire fused to form the ' slag,' while a few fragments falling outside
the hottest zone remained substantially unaffected."
53
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
(3) IRON NAILS
Upwards of 350 iron nails were saved for examination ; a large
number from the central turf area were not saved, but it is likely that
the total number seen by us and by Thomas Wright approached 500.
Iron nails, chiefly the fastening of wood chests, are frequently found in
Roman barrows, but such a large number, matched only by the 200
found by Sir John Evans in the Standon, Herts., barrow,1 is rare.
Apart from the relatively few nails associated with the coffin of the Main
Burial, the bier of the Secondary Burial, the small coffer in Pit 2 and the
nails of unknown purpose in Pit 1, the bulk was doubtless derived from
the funeral pyre, a tiered structure of timber poles and battens, such as
that represented on the coin described below. A considerable but
smaller number is likely to have come from the timber-framed shelter
round the Main Burial. To none of the examples recovered could a
magic or ceremonial significance be attached. In length undamaged
nails ranged from 4-1 inches to 2 inches ; all were of the usual rectangular
cross-section, with tabular or cushion heads, and no decoration.
Many had been hammered over to serve as hold-fasts, but none were
roved.
A representative series of nails from the site was examined in the
Laboratories of the National Steel Company of Wales, Ltd. All were
of wrought iron of exceptionally high quality. The outer scale, as
expected, proved to be a corrosion product from the chalky soil. On
nails from the Main Burial and the surrounding turf area, the analysis
of the innermost scale is typical of burnt iron, while the intermediate
second layer is typical of both. In some examples, including nails
incorporated in the corrosion of the chair, the action of fire was to
change the surface to a smooth unbroken skin of oxide which gave
complete protection to the metal and a surface appearance of bronze ;
this technical information is kindly provided by Mr. F. W. Biek of the
Ministry of Works. Information obtained from an investigation of
rust-patterns is noted on page 11 above.
The analysis of a nail from the Main Burial is appended :—
C. -02
S. -023
P. -065
1 Youngsbury, Standon, near Ware, excavated 1888, Arch., LII (1890), pp.
287-296. Only one nail was found in the Bartlow Hills barrow which contained
the folding chair.
54
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
Spectrographic Analysis, by Mr. K. J. Butler, Messrs. Edgar Allen & Co.
Silicon
Manganese
Nickel
Chromium
Molybdenum
Tungsten
Vanadium
Cobalt
Titanium
•05
<-01
•05
<-01
•017
<-01
<-01
<-01
<-01
Niobium
Tantalum
Copper
Aluminium
Tin
Lead
Zr. Nb
Boron
•022
•03
<-01
<-05
Not detected
<-001
Magnesium •012
Non-magnetic Oxide : outside layer. Light brown colour.
Total Fe.
FeO
^ a 0 3
SiO.
44-0
tr.
62-92
2-36
A1A
CaO
MgO
MnO
Loss
2-78
13-1
tr.
Nil
19-0
Magnetic Oxide
Total Fe.
FeO
Fe203
SiO.
second layer. Blue-brown colour.
58-0 A1S03 1-86
5-14 CaO 22
78-1 MgO tr.
1-68 MnO Nil
Loss 12-0
Magnetic Oxide : third or inner layer detached from nail by hammer
blows. Grey-blue colour with few brown spots.
Total Fe. 63-0 AlaOs
FeO 18-9 CaO
69-1 MgO
SiO. •10 MnO
Loss
3-71
•92
tr.
tr.
6-6
(4) THE PURSE
The sample was an organic material heavily impregnated with lead
compounds. The usual tests for tannin with boiling water and with
dilute acid failed. The caustic soda test for tannins however gave a
positive reaction, and there was also evidence for the presence of fatty
acids. The usual tests for proteins failed. There was much nitrogenous
matter present. These tests, made by the A.P.C.M. Research
Organization, were sufficiently encouraging to suggest the presence of
55
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
leather or hide and a sample was sent to the British Leather Manufacturers'
Association, who very kindly report:—
" The sample consisted of large portions of rather flaky pieces
of a brittle substance with an earthy appearance though much
infiltrated by lead from the coffin. It contains 40 per cent, of
ash and when it is ignited there is a substantial formation of lead
droplets. Two determinations (by Kjeldahl method) on the whole
thickness of this material gave 1 • 2 per cent, and 1 per cent, of
nitrogen, which would correspond to about 6 per cent, of leather.
An inner layer separated from this material showed on examination
under the microscope what might be the remains of the
characteristic fibre structure of skin and leather. This inner layer
contained 1 -4 per cent, of nitrogen corresponding to about 15 per
cent, of leather.
" We do not think we can offer an absolutely certain conclusion
about this material, but in our opinion it is probable that
it does represent the remains of the leather part of a purse."
The inner lining was examined by the Linen Industry Research
Association, who kindly report:—
" The lining consists of seven layers of a fine fabric with a
patterned weave. The fibres are from the bast of a plant and
have the characters of flax. The outer portion is not a fabric,
and may be an animal skin."
(5) COIN
Memorial coin of Antoninus Pius struck under M. Aurelius (161-180).
M. & S., vol. I l l , p. 315, No. 1266.
Obv. DIVVS ANTONINVS
Rev. CONSECRATIO S. C.
Pyre of four tiers, decorated with hangings and garlands,
surmounted by a quadriga.
The coin is in worn condition, distorted by heat, and corroded by
contact with the iron nail to which it was firmly attached when it was
found. It was evidently one of the offerings on the funeral pyre which
was later collected up with other material from the same source and
placed in the " ritual " pit in which it was found. It was no doubt
of some age when it was so used. No other coin was found on the site,
and the particular interest of this one lies in its representation of a
cremation pyre, a feature which no doubt accounts for its presence.
56
EXCAVATION OP A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
(6) THE HUMAN REMAINS
By J. WHILLIS, F.R.C.S., and C. W. T. SHUTTLEWORTH, F.D.S.,
M.R.C.S.
(of Guy's Hospital)
CALCINED BONE EROM MAIN BURIAL
All the bones show features similar to those of modern cremated
remains. They are twisted and fissured and show the transverse and
parallel splitting characteristic of exposure to intense heat. Moreover
all the bones have been purposefully broken into fragments so that any
attempt at complete reconstruction is impossible.
Human bones
There is no evidence of there being more than one individual, no
duplicates having been found. The bones are adult. There are indications
which enable an approximate estimate of age to be made :
(a) Jaws. Fragments of the left side of the upper jaw and of the
right half of the lower jaw both show tooth sockets, some of which
contain roots of teeth. There are indications that all the teeth were
originally present in these fragments during life ; there is no evidence
of alveolar absorption which would follow loss of teeth.
(6) Skull fragments. One or two fragments of the outer table of the
skull show that some of the sutures were still open on the outside surface.
There is no evidence of sutures on the inner surfaces of any of the skull
fragments. If the features shown by these fragments were general
throughout the skull an estimate of age of the individual at about
40 years would be justified.
(c) One fragment of vertebral body shows some inflammatory change
probably indicative of localized disease (? tuberculosis) during life.
(d) Fragments of long bones (ulna, radius, humerus, femur and tibia)
are robust and show fairly well-marked muscular attachments. The
fragment of occipital bone shows a very pronounced superior nuchal
line. All these features indicate that the individual was probably male.
(e) Axis vertebra. This is almost complete. Its vertical height is
40 mm. and to this it is estimated about 3 mm. should be added because
of loss of the tip of the odontoid process and the anterior lip of the
lower edge of the body. 44 • 9 mm. is the mean measurement for males ;
29-8 mm. the mean for females. This makes it extremely likely the
individual was a male of average stature.
( / ) Fragments of hip-bone, especially that showing a portion of the
great sciatic notch, conform to the features of male bones.
It should be noted that fragments showing green (bronze) staining
are recognizable as belonging to the hip-bone, the femur, the fibula and
the metatarsus. No such staining is to be found on any other fragments.
57
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
These remains are therefore probably those of a man of average
stature aged about forty years.
Bone from Pit 3
There are two fragments of the central portion of the hard palate
and lowest part of the nasal septum. There is not enough of these
bones to state whether they are human, but there is nothing to indicate
that they are not. There is also a human tooth, an upper molar ; the
crown has disappeared and the apices of the roots are much charred
but sufficient remains to say that it was fully developed.
Bone from Pit 2
There is a fragment of the right zygomatic bone (almost certainly
human) and a portion of the neural arch of a vertebra (probably human).
BONES OE CHILD EROM LEAD COEEIN
This skeleton is almost complete. The bones are of a peculiar
brownish colour, due to the absorption of lead salts from the metal of
the coffin during the process of decomposition.
The age of the child was about one year, the following features being
salient in making this estimate.
(1) Lower jaw: The symphysis between the two halves is on the
point of closing (end of first year). The lower central incisor teeth have
erupted. The lower lateral incisors are on the point of eruption (10
months-1 year).
(2) Upper jaw : The central incisors appear to be just erupting.
The crypts of the unerupted teeth contain the calcified crowns and
partly formed roots of all the milk dentition together with the calcified
tips of the permanent central incisors and the occlusal surface and cusps
of the first permanent molars. From the amount of root formed on
the incisors of the milk dentition the age of the child would be 9-12
months.
(3) Vertebrae : The neural arches in the cervical region are still in
two halves. Those in the lower thoracic region (1st year) are united.
(4) Foot bones : Only the calcaneum, talus and cuboid are ossified.
The lateral cuneiform centre is not present (latter part of 1st year), but
this may have been lost.
(5) Humerus : The centre is present for the head of one humerus
(1st year). That for the other side may have been lost.
The state of the above bones justifies an estimate of age as between
eight months and one year. The size and state of the other bones
•supports this estimate.
58
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
(7) ANIMAL BONES
By E. W. BAXTER, B.SC, F.L.S.
(Department of Biology, Guy's Hospital)
From amongst the many fragments examined it has been possible
to identify the following :
A. From Lead Coffin (Secondary) Burial: the bony shaft together with
neck and tubercle of an anterior rib (3rd or 4th) from the R. side
of a young rabbit. This was the only animal remains in the coffin
burial. Further, unlike all the animal remains from the other pits
this bone showed no signs of having been burnt. [Recent]
B. From Main Burial: Two parts of one radius of a fowl.
C. From Pit 2 .-
(1) Remains of Sheep
(a) R. and L. condyles of skull.
(b) Portions of R. radius.
(c) Portion of R. ulna.
(d) Neural spine of a lumbar vertebra.
(e) Ischial portion of aitchbone.
(/) Part of spine of shoulder blade.
(2) Remains of Fowl
(a) Distal end of tibio-tarsus (drumstick).
(6) Portion of proximal end of shaft of same.
(3) Remains of Smaller Bird
Several portions of bones, of wings and leg.
Adult (epiphyses fused).
As noted above, all the remains from both the Main Burial and Pit 2
had been burnt. Furthermore, no entire bones were found, although in
several instances two or more fragments could be pieced together, thus
assisting hi the identification of the bone.
In no instance did the remains suggest the presence of more than one
animal of each kind, there being no duplication of any part or fragment,
and the several parts of each animal appeared to be of the same age.
59
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
(8) MOLLUSCA
By A. G. DAVIS, F.G.S.
The material studied consisted of two soil samples : A.—from the
turf layer of the central area, and B.—from the undisturbed core of
the mound. Sample A consisted of approximately 25 per cent, of chalk
lumps and pellets and 75 per cent, of humus and soil. In Sample B both
the chalk and humus were in approximately equal proportions. Some
fragments of fossil Inoceramus and ossicles of crinoids were present in
both samples and are derivatives from the chalk. Molluscan remains
are plentiful in both samples and suggest that the site both before and
during the construction of the mound was a favourable one for snails.
FAUNAL LIST
Pomatias elegans (Miiller) ..
Cochlicopa lubrica (Miiller) ..
Vertigo pygmaea (Draparnaud)
Pupilla muscorum (Linn6) ..
Vallonia costata (Miiller)
Valloma excentrica (Sterki) ..
Clausilia bidentata (Strom) ..
Cepaea sp. ? nemoralis (Linne)
Trichia striolata (C. Pfeeffer)
Trichia hispida (Linn6)
Helicella itala (Linne)
Arion sp.
Limax sp.
This snail fauna is typical of many Roman sites except that Helix
aspersa Miiller, which usually occurs, is absent. There is no great
difference between the faunas of either sample. Most of the species
lived on for a time after the construction of the mound but in reduced
numbers.
The fauna is one which suggests a dry calcareous grassy scrub. The
soil contained sufficient calcium to support such lime-loving species as
Pomatias elegans and Helicella itala. Both these species no longer live
on the site ; they shun man and his works. P. elegans requires a
crumbly soil and the mound may have become too consolidated for it
to five there. The remaining species may be expected to be still hving
in the vicinity—the writer has lately taken most of them in a post-
Roman deposit at Ham Hill, Snodland, not far from the barrow.
The climate at the time of the construction of the mound was
probably dryer than at present—the moUusca suggest such conditions.
A.
5
5
24
18
10
4
1
14
C
2
B.
20
1
5
13
13
11
2
C
1
6
40
C
3
60
EXCAVATION OF A ROMAN BARROW AT HOLBOROUGH, SNODLAND
(9) ANALYSIS OE LEAD EROM COEFIN
(By courtesy of the Britannia Lead Co., Ltd.)
Estimation of impurities
Antimony
Arsenic
Bismuth
Copper
Zinc
Cadmium
Silver
Tin ..
Trace
Not detected
Nil
0-015 per cent.
Trace
Not detected
0-003 per cent. (1 oz. troy/ton avoir.)
0 • 69 per cent.
(For analyses of Roman lead, see Arch. LVII (1901), pp. 402-3 et seq.
and O. Davies, Roman Mines in Europe (1935), p. 161, etc.)
NOTE : All the antiquities recovered from the barrow have been
presented by the Associated Portland Cement Manufacturers, Ltd., to
Maidstone Museum, with the exception of the human remains which
have been given to the Gordon Museum at Guy's Hospital.
NOTE.—Two lead sarcophagi found in Canterbury are not included
in the preceding table on p. 42.
1. A sarcophagus found by treasure-seekers in one of the Dungeon
Hills is recorded by Leland in a well-known passage (Itinerary, L.
Toulmin Smith's ed., IV, 69-70). On general grounds the Hill is likely
to have been one of the important group of Roman barrows at Canterbury
(Dunning and Jessup, Antiquity, X, 1936, 50).
2. A lead coffin with central ornament suspiciously like a Tudor
rose but accepted as Roman by Roach Smith (Arch., XLIII, 1871,
160-1. Arch. Cant., XIV, 1882, 35 and plate) was found in the main
drainage operations of 1868 at the upper part of Bridge Street. Mr.
Wilham Urry has pointed out that this is the site of Salt Hill, a mound
probably destroyed late in the Middle Ages, and he argues convincingly
for its inclusion in the Canterbury group of Roman barrows (Arch. Cant.,
LXI, 1948, 141).
If these were inhumations contained in barrows, there is no indication
whether they were secondary burials as at Holborough, but in
any case their occurrence in this context is of distinct interest.
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