
A Roman Bath-House at Little Chart, Kent
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Watermills on the River Len
Forged Anglo-Saxon Charters
A ROMAN BATH-HOUSE AT LITTLE CHART, KENT
By JOHN EAMES
INTEODTJOTION
Position
The site lies on the north-eastern slope of the Lower Greensand,
looking across the vUlage of Little Chart, 4 \ mUes north-west of Ashford,
towards the high chalk ridge on which runs the Pilgrims' Way (National
Grid Reference 51/939458) (pi. I, and Fig. 1).
Immediately west of the village is a large, open field, known as
Stambers Field, now bounded to north and west by woods and to the
south by the Little Chart-Pluckley road, which here forms the northern
boundary of Surrenden Park.
The south-western part of this field had been used over a period of
many years by Messrs. Robert Brett and Sons, Ltd. of Canterbury
(now the Kent Tarmacadam Co.) for the quarrying of Kentish rag.
Discovery
In 1942, in the course of stripping overburden in preparation for an
extension of quarrying activity, a fragment of mosaic pavement was
torn up by the bucket of a mechanical excavator. Work in this area
was immediately stopped and, except to the outer face of the apse waU
of the frigidarium plunge, no other damage was done.
In October of that year Major J. G. Brinson, R.E. (then Lieutenant),
with a smaU party of assistants, was able to uncover a part of the
building, comprising room B and its apsidal plunge, room C, part of the
hypocaust of room D and a small area of room A.1 This excavation was
subsequently filled in and, owing to the preoccupations of war, work
was not resumed until the September and October of 1947, when, under
the auspices of the Inspectorate of Ancient Monuments of the Ministry
of Works, the whole buUding was cleared with the assistance of members
of the Ashford Archseological Society and others.2
Thanks are in particular due to the late Mr. R. J. Geering, whose
energy and enthusiasm were responsible for initiating the excavation,
and to Mr. E. J. Kinnear of Robert Brett and Sons, Ltd., to whose
appreciation of the importance of the site and assistance during the
excavations are due the results embodied in this report.
1 A.C., 55 (1942) 76 i.: also reported in J.B.S., 33 (1943) 77.
2 A preliminary notice appeared in J.R.S., 38 (1948), 96.
130
PLATE I
m_ ^ • ^ • n H
The site looking north-east. The bath-house lies between the figures at the
confluence of t h e arrows.
PLATE II
Apodyterium (A), frigidarium (B) a n d tepidarium (C), from the west.
[face p. 130
PLATE III
«_WF
%J?$,
* /ML.
The apsidal bath of the frigidarium, showing (left, below) the period 2 drain of the
bath and (above, in the foreground) the original drain of the frigidarium floor.
L I T T LE CHART
IQm.O 10
JOkmO 10
100 0
building
$? bath-house
* « « * *
0 8 '• &^
1600-800 ft
1400-600ft
m 200-400 ft _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . * *
<5> *„
*«* & *§ ^
[Based! wpon ffe Ordnance Survey Map with the sanction of the Controller of S.M. Stationery Office. Crown Copyright reserved
FIG. 1
A ROMAN BATH-HOUSE AT LITTLE CHART, KENT
THE BATH-HOUSE (Figs. 2 and 3)
Stambers Field has in the past been extensively ploughed—in the
nineteenth century with steam ploughs—and for a period it served as
a hop garden. As a result the bath-house had been stripped to its
foundations and the debris of its destruction completely removed.
These operations had involved the disappearance of virtually every
stone of the walls above and at floor level. They had also destroyed
almost the whole floor of room B, together with more than half its
underlying concrete, most of the pavement of room C, a smaU part of
the tesserae of room A and the complete floor of room D. So thorough
had been the disturbance in this room that only a few loose tesserae of
the floor were found in the hypocaust filling, many of the bricks of the
piers carrying the floor had been removed and at its northern end a
hole had been broken through the hypocaust floor and its foundation of
pitched stones.
The natural surface on which the buUding was constructed consisted
of strata of rag, 2 to 3 in. thick, interleaved with bands of simUar thickness
of clayey grey-green glauconitic sand. Though there was rock
within inches of the surface, its stabUity was considered inadequate for
the construction of the buUding directly upon it and the foundation
waUs were carried down to a securer rock stratum some 4 ft. 6 in. lower.
On the north-eastern and south-eastern sides of the buUding these walls
are built up against the natural which inside the building is removed
down to the lower stratum of rag. Those of the two opposite sides,
however, are free-standing. The limits of excavation revealed the
relation of the latter to the natural rock in two places only. At the
western corner of the apsidal bath of room B, a spur wall runs up to the
face of the rock, here cut back 6 or more inches from the wall-face and
lying at a level about a foot lower than on the opposite side of the buUding,
and from this point springs the curve of the outer face of the apse.
On the north-western side the edge of the rock runs paraUel to the wall
face and 4 ft. 6 in. from it, but at a point 7 ft. from the western corner
of the building turns away at right angles. It is impossible to say with
certainty why all the foundation waUs were not built alike, lining, as it
were, the sides of a pit. No doubt, however, the buUding was founded
in its own quarry and the quantity of stone requhed for its construction
may weU have been greater than that afforded by the resources of its
superficial area.
PERIOD 1
Construction
The quahty of workmanship was everywhere of a high order. The
walls and theh foundations were constructed of random Kentish rag in
132
C H H 0 U
SECTION B
natural removed as
quarry overburden
mortar spread
rag
tesserae
concrete
SECTION A-
77777777777
rafl,
tesserae
concrete
SECTION A
robber
hole
hop pole hole
SECTION C - SECTION C
SECTION B
period I altered
in period 2
| | period I
period la
•'•.'•: period 2
natural rag rock
. '• i)r,iii-)iiii-r)7miitn/>-f)/ir'u/7/7)7j7rT?/7f?/r!7 777fK77?\
-1 to back of period 2
v stokehole 6ft
Fia. 2 I face p . 182
L I T T L E C H A R T S E C T I O N S
SECTION A
SOUTH-EAST NORTH-WEST
floor level