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 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . * *
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[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 ')
'A
rammed clay
and rag
'A
t
jiiiiifliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
-=> a et <=> burnt claw r-i p
.- . . i f . . - Mflnd < "*•
;•'.charcoal)," V Lvhile ash-.•:
| f 11J r | T-rnprtary T ] , | . | r |
NORTH-WEST
i t i i i
illinium
1 0 1 2 3 4 5
1 1 I I
10 ft
£
FIG. 3 [face p. 132
A ROMAN BATH-HOUSE AT LITTLE CHART, KENT
lime mortar, faced with neatly dressed stones of the same material of
average dimensions of 4 in. by 6 in. by 5 in. The junction of waU with
foundation was marked by a course of bricks along the inner face of the
wall, some of which remained, though the majority left only theh
bedding mortar. The few waU stones surviving above this course
showed that there had been a 2 in. offset at this point.
The apodyterium (A) PL II
No trace remained to suggest the position of the main entrance to
the building, but reason demands that it shall have been in room A,
which must have served on an apodyterium. The larger part of its
floor of plain red brick tesserse, each 1 in. to 1£ in. cube, was undamaged
though it lay up to 6 in. higher than the surviving level of the foundation
waUs. It had, however, owing to the subsidence of the filling beneath,
assumed an evenly dished shape. The tesserse were bedded on a layer
of hard, yeUowish mortar some 3 in. thick, which in its turn overlay up
to twice that depth of a softer mortar. Below this was a thin spread of
mortar containing pulverized brick, perhaps the dUuted surplus of the
concrete underfloor in room B. The main body of the fill consisted of
brown clay containing fragments and chippings of rag, the lowest layer
of it, however, immediately above the rock floor, being of greenish clay
and rather large stones.
The frigidarium (B) Pis. I I and III
Stripped of his clothes, the bather passed by way of a doorway, of
which nothing remained to indicate its exact position, into room B, the
frigidarium. This was a small room, some 8 ft. square, with a mosaic
floor of patterned black and white tesserse, surrounded by a plain
border of rag tesserse, aU approximately | in. cube (Pig. 4). Only a
smaU fragment of the decoration of this pavement remained, together
with a corner of the border. It had rested on a 4-in. raft of concrete,
mixed with pulverized brick, which had disappeared over more than
half the room. This in its turn rested on a filling of layers of clay or
clayey soil, mixed with mortar or fragments of rag. In this room also
subsidence had caused a concavity of the floor, the concrete slab being
actuaUy cracked.
The water from this floor emptied itself through the south-eastern
wall at its southern corner by way of a drain, of which a fragment survived
on the upper surface of the waU in the form of a roof tile.
On the south-western side of the room was an apsidal plunge bath
(pi. I l l ) , to which access was gained by two steps, the upper level with
the floor of room 2 and paved with bricks, of which only fragments of
the bedding remained, and the lower covered, like the risers of both
steps and the walls of the plunge, with concrete about 1 in. thick, con-
133
L I T T L E C H A R T F R I G I D AR
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BECONSTRUCTION
0 I 2
PLATE IV
-Js**
Calidarium (D) : the hypocaust, looking south.
PLATE V
Calidarium (D) : the hypocaust, looking towards the stoke-hole (E).
[face p. 134
PLATE VI
The period 2 furnace. To the right of the pole can be seen traces of the demolished
rear wall of the period I stoke-hole.
A ROMAN BATH-HOUSE AT LITTLE CHART, KENT
taming much pulverized brick. The floor of the plunge was paved with
brick tesserse, with the exception of two whole bricks, set irregularly
in the centre of the curve. These were certainly original and do not
represent a repah of the floor. The outer of the two was sealed by a
chamfer of white cement which ran right round the bath at the juncture
between floor and side, being broken only by the drainage arrangements
of period 2. The original drain seems to be represented by the hole,
some 6 in. square, in the tesserse at the western corner.
The south-eastern foundation waU of room B had been built against
the natural; the stub wall at the western corner of the plunge, together
with the first 3 ft. of the curve of the apse, which here overrode the rock
surface, were on the other hand free-standing. The exact juncture of
these two modes of construction had been obscured, in part by the
drainage arrangements of period 2 and for the rest by the complete
removal of the natural down to the lower stratum of rag, coupled with
damage to the outer face of the apse wall by quarry workings at this
point. The complete absence of facing stones over the full height of
most of the chcumference of the apse suggests, however, that this is the
raw, though damaged, back surface of a wall once built into the natural
and that the point of juncture with free-standing wall was in approximately
the position that the present state of the waU suggests.
The tepidarium (C) PL II
The doorway into room 0, the tepidarium, lay near its eastern
corner and was marked by the bedding mortar of tesserae on a brick
threshold. These were continuous with the floor of room B and the
same paving of rag tesserse once ran without interruption through
rooms, B, C and D. Whether C and D also had decorative patterns in
the centre cannot now be determined. In this room also the tesserae
were bedded on 3 to 4 in. of concrete, topping a buUders' make-up
simUar in general character to that of room B.
There was no evidence of arrangements for heating the room and this
was presumably achieved by proximity to the calidarium, possibly
supplemented by a brazier.
The calidarium (D) Pis. IV and V.
As the floor of the tepidarium extended through the doorway into the
calidarium and remained projecting a few inches beyond, the margins at
least of the floor in this room may be assumed to have been of white rag
tesserse. It was otherwise totaUy missing, only a few tesserse being
found in the disturbed fining of the hypocaust. The structure of the
hypocaust had not, however, been seriously damaged.
The floor had been carried on a series of brick piers arranged in pahs
down the length of the room. The distance between the two piers was
135
A ROMAN BATH-HOUSE AT LITTLE CHART, KENT
about 2 ft. 2 in. and suggests that the interval may have been arched
though no dhect proof of this was forthcoming.
The piers themselves rested on two stepped ramps, 2 ft. 6 in. wide
and running the fuU length of the room. The steps had been smoothed
into a glacis with a covering of cement, which extended down to the top
of the lowest riser. Between the two, ramps and their piers the floor of
the central channel of the hypocaust was of concrete, resting on a pitching
of stones directly on the natural clayey sand.
The purpose of these sloping ramps was, of course, to block a functionaUy
useless part of the hypocaust which would otherwise serve only
for the accumulation of relatively cold air. It is surprising that the
economy effected by the construction was not more widely recognized.
The only other examples known to me are the clay ramps of the late
Antonine bath-house in the Lullingstone vUla1 and the very feeble
versions in chalk at Darenth.2
The virtuaUy complete destruction of the floor and of the walls above
its level made it impossible to determine whether the calidarium had
been further heated by waU flues, but the absence on the site of any
fragments of box tUes suggests that any flues there may have been were
not extensive.
The Stokehole (E) Pis, VI and VII.
The stokehole was an extension of the calidarium hypocaust, and
was separated from it by brick-faced stub walls, carried forward as far
as the full width of the benches and leaving a furnace arch of the same
width as the central channel of the hypocaust. They served also to
carry the main north-eastern waU of the buUding against which the
pent-roof of the stokehole would have in aU probability abutted.
The furnace itself was extended to nearly 5 ft. by buUding into the
adjacent corners of the stokehole rectangular piers of mortared brick
rubble, regularly faced with brick. The floor of the furnace was paved
to the fuU extent of these piers with rectangles of broken brick, set on
edge herring-bonewise in concrete, in four paraUel rows. The junction
of the furnace floor with that of the hypocaust had been destroyed by
the robber hole.
No trace remained of means of access to the low-level floor of the
stokehole, being, no doubt, obliterated by the alterations to the stokehole
in period 2.
Dating
Removal of the buhders' make-up below the floors of the southwestern
half of the frigidarium, the whole of the tepidarium and 32 sq. ft.
1 I am obliged to Lt.-Col. G. W. Meates, F.S.A., for details of these.
2 A.O., 22 (1897) pi. G : A., 59, pfc. 2 (1905), pi. lix, fig. 2.
136
PLATE VII
The furnace : period 2 structure removed on the right, revealing the remains of
the period 1 furnace. Robber hole in the background.
PLATE VIII
Apsidal tank, added in period 2 to the calidarium.
[face )>. 13(i
PLATE IX
, 4*
The well, with steyning partly removed.
PLATE X
I M
Belgic pottery from the pit.
A ROMAN BATH-HOUSE AT LITTLE CHART, KENT
at the south-eastern end of the apodyterium failed to produce a single
piece of evidence to date the structure. Nor was the stokehole ash
sealed by the furnace of period 2 any more productive.
The soU back-filled along the faces of the western walls of the buUding
was also, where excavated, enthely without objects, which suggests
that the immediate site had hitherto been unoccupied and that this
back-filling process had occurred, as might be expected, in the course of
construction, before occupation debris had been aUowed to accumulate
on the surrounding surface, and not in anticipation of the thickening of
these waUs in period 2 (see below, p. 138).
The earhest material from the vicinity is the pottery from a pit (see
below, p. 142), 40 ft. from the west corner of the bath-house. This was
the only one excavated of a series of pits and hollows sectioned in the
face left by a mechanical excavator in the process of removing the overburden.
The type of occupation represented by this pit cannot be
determined on present evidence, but if it may fahly be supposed that
260 ft. is not too far for occupation material to wander (and if the
unexcavated pits and hoUows be assumed contemporary with this one,
the distance would be half that amount) and so appear in, for example,
the back filling against the western waUs, then the bath-house can hardly
be later than the pit which its pottery places at latest in the latter part
of the first century (p. 144). This evidence is extremely tenuous, but
would accord very well with what may be inferred from the quahty of
the construction.
PERIOD la
The corrosion of the brickwork of the furnace arch eventually became
sufficient to necessitate its replacement. The old brick facing and part
of the rubble and mortar core were dressed back, further at the spring
of the arch than at floor level where the lowest course remained
untouched, and the whole archway was renewed in dressed rag.
The masonry was not greatly inferior to the work of period 1, and
was structuraUy and qualitatively distinct from the furnace extension
of period 2. It is, therefore, certainly earher than the major alterations
of the latter period, and probably to be dated closer to period 1 than
period 2.
PERIOD 2
The alterations here hsted may be assumed to be contemporary,
though theh association is generaUy to be inferred rather than proved.
They share a hke crudity of workmanship, being much inferior to the
work of period 1.
137
A ROMAN BATH-HOUSE AT LITTLE CHART, KENT
The drain of the frigidarium plunge
Blockage or fracture of this drain made it necessary to open another,
which was inserted into the eastern corner of the plunge. This was
some 3 ft. below the level of the rock surface outside, and, to provide an
outfaU for the new drain, the natural rock and greensand were cut
away from a point 14 ft. 3 in. from the east corner of the building,
leaving the raw exterior face of the foundation waU exposed. This cut
sloped down for 4 ft. 5 in. and then dropped into a gulley which ran
away in a south-eastern dhection.
The new drain was inserted into the wall by quarrying through a
rough hole into the corner of the plunge. Two pieces of imbrex used to
floor the drain remained cemented in position.
The thickening of the western walls
The southern slope of the gulley had been destroyed by the quarry
workings and the outer face of the apse had also received rough treatment
from the same cause. It is, therefore, impossible to say at what
point the thickening of the free-standing western waUs by the addition
of some 2 ft. 4 in. of inferior masonry began. This addition survived
only from a point 3 ft. 2 in. from the western corner of the plunge.
Had it once run round the apse as far as the southern hp of the gulley
and been stripped in the removal of quarry overburden (as well it might
be, being of poor masonry and crumbly mortar) from the raw outer face
of the apse, exposed in period 2 by the dressing down of the natural in
this quadrant of the buUding, the rather battered appearance of the
outer face might be explained.
The thickening wall ran along the south-western face of the building,
but at the western corner it had disappeared. Up to a point 9 ft. along
the north-western wall nothing of it remained except the thick spread
of crumbly mortar on which it had been buUt over soU filled back against
the outer face of the waU of period 1.
No clue was forthcoming to explain the function of this addition to
the waUs. Had it run right round the frigidarium apse it might be
supposed to have afforded it a decent face, but, the condition of the
period 1 waUs as surviving do not suggest it was necessary along the
remainder of its length, unless these had been extensively destroyed at
a higher level, the old masonry and addition being topped by walling
contemporary with the latter and of such similar inferiority as to
requhe greater width for stabUity.
The apsidal tank (PI. VIII)
The mortar foundation spread of the waU thickening impinged on
the topmost surviving stones of the hypocaust beneath a small apsidal
138
A ROMAN BATH-HOUSE AT LITTLE CHART, KENT
addition near the centre of the north-western waU of the calidarium.
No trace of the tank, which must have stood at the floor level of the
calidarium, remained. The hypocaust was heated with ah borrowed
from that of the calidarium by way of a channel roughly broken through
the intervening waU. The roughness of the passage was partly
smoothed by a patching of the sides of the channel.
The hypocaust had been buUt by excavating a roughly semicircular
hole in the soU filling the gap of about 4£ ft. between the outer face of the
calidarium and that of the natural. The rough rag masonry rose as a
lining against the sides of this hole in a series of narrow steps, impinging
at the rear of the hypocaust against the face of the natural itself. The
apse waU above rested on the surface soU, sandwiching between itself
and the rock surface, where it overlay the latter, a thin layer of period 1
surface soU.
Apart from the projecting piers of the lowest step, which may at a
higher level have been carried out to match corbeUing from the waU of
the cahdarium, there were no indications to show how the floor of the
tank above was carried. There was no trace that there were ever piers
on the hypocaust floor.
The Stokehole (PI. VI)
In order to increase the size of the furnace to cope with the extra
demands made upon it by the addition of the apsidal tank, it was
vhtuaUy doubled in length. The square furnace piers of period 1 were
largely demohshed and were replaced by two rectangular piers of rough
rag masonry set in clay, with a core of rubble and earth. Where the
new piers extended beyond those of period 1, they overlay 3 in. of ash
which covered the earher stokehole floor of rammed clay and fragments
of rag topping a mortary fill over bed-rock. The concrete furnace floor
was also extended with a paving of broken brick roughly set in mortar.
A single whole brick was incorporated in the floor at the mouth of the
furnace. The inner faces of the piers leaned irregularly towards one
another and presumably enclosed the furnace in a roughly corbeUed
tunnel.
The resultant furnace structure would have almost fiUed the stokehole,
which was, therefore, enlarged by demohshing its rear wall and
most of that on the south-eastern side down to the floor level. Both
these waUs had in period 1 been buUt against cuttings in the natural,
which was now quarried back beyond the hmits of excavation, but,
behind the stokehole, to a point which could be estabhshed by surface
indications and a small trial hole to be 7 ft. 3 in. further back.
The calidarium hypocaust
To be associated with these various constructions are a number of
139
A ROMAN BATH-HOUSE AT LITTLE CHART, KENT
patches making good corrosion of the sloping sides of the hypocaust of
the calidarium. Access below the floor could readUy have been obtained
whUe either the hypocaust of the apsidal tank or the renewed furnace
were under construction.
Dating
The sole dating evidence for the structural alterations of period 2 is
afforded by heavily burnt coins found in the ash of the stokehole (p.
145). These proved indecipherable, but provide a fourth-century date.
The duration of period 2 cannot have been long. The sides of the
furnace, for example, which, being of rough masonry set in clay, would
be eminently corrodable in the fire, and the reused furnace arch of
period la, were not badly damaged. Some part of the fourth century
would, therefore, appear to cover both the beginning and end of the
period.
The long interval between the two periods of occupation makes the
very good condition of the floors the more surprising. The surviving
pieces show no sign of patching or renewal and must have been protected
by an accumulation of material upon them. The occupiers of period 2
wUl, therefore, have been obliged in part to excavate the buUding before
re-roofing it and adapting it to theh needs.
THE WELL (PL IX)
WhUe excavation on the bath-house was in progress, blasting operations
at the quarry face, at a point 82 yd. from the corner of the
cahdarium, exposed the outer face of the steyning of a cylindrical well.
The upper part of the weU, to an estimated depth of 6 ft. 2 in, from
the modern surface, had been swept away unobserved in the mechanical
removal of the quarry overburden. The excavated portion, 10 ft. 6 in.
deep and about 3 ft. 4 in. in diameter, had been quarried through the
rock and lined with roughly squared, unmortared stones. Excavation
was discontinued 2 ft. below the level of the quarry floor. These last
2 ft. were subsequently fiUed in ; the upper part, discovered in the
working face, has now been quarried away. A considerable depth
remains untouched, for layers of reddish ash in the filling were depressed
towards the centre of the well as much as 3 ft. below theh outer edges.
The fiU was of a consistent grey-black mould, at intervals layered
with ash, and contained only fragments of pottery (p. 143) and window
glass. Pieces of the same bowl (Eig. 5, 3) were found at both top and
bottom of the excavated portion.
The date of the filling of the well is given by the pottery as not later
than the mid-second century. Its original construction may perhaps
be associated with that of the bath-house, though its distance from the
140
7
1
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. <
I 0 - 1 2 Skttn
Eio. 5
A ROMAN BATH-HOUSE AT LITTLE CHART, KENT
latter shows that its primary function was not to supply water for
bathing.
BUILDING 2
During the winter of 1947-48 quarrying operations 16 yd. northwest
of the bath-house demohshed the corner of a buUding, of which it
was possible to trace short lengths of the two adjacent walls (see site
plan, Eig. 1). They were built of random rag, faced with dressed stones,
about 2 ft. thick and plastered internaUy. They were very similar in
construction to those of period 1 in the bath-house.
I t was not possible to investigate further and the structure has since
been consumed by the quarry.
THE PIT
The removal of quarry overburden had left an exposed face westnorth-
west of the bath-house. In it were visible a number of shallow
pits and irregular hoUows extending for 130 ft. Only the largest pit
was excavated. It was the furthest from the bath-house and lay at a
distance of 260 ft. from its western corner.
It was 6 | ft. in diameter and 3 ft. deep, and proved to have lost to
the mechanical excavator about a quarter of its volume. It was bowlshaped
in section and uniformly full of fine grey soU containing fragments
of Belgic oUse (below, p. 144). No specific function could be
detected for it.
CONCLUSION
In the reports of the 1942 excavations1 mention was made of
"evidence during periods of dry weather, of masonry near to the surface
both adjoining to and nearby". Apart from buUding % of which there
was no trace on the surface, but which was subsequently exposed in the
course of quarrying, no remains could be discovered to substantiate this
conjecture despite extensive digging of trial holes and probing to the
north and north-east of the bath-house, in that part of the field unaffected
by quarrying operations. In aU cases the rock surface was
met at a depth varying eastwards from 2 ft. 6 in. to 9 in., the surface
declining relative to the level of the rock with the faU of the ground in
that direction.
I t is not possible, therefore, to be precise concerning the activity with
which the bath-house was associated, though the identification of building
2 might have greatly assisted in this. An earher find, however,
suggests that it may have been farming. In 1936s a pit containing
1 A.O., 55 (1942) 76 f. and J.R.S., 33 (1943), 77.
2 A.C., 48 (1936) 234 f. For other finds at Little Chart see V.C.H., I l l , 158
(?Roman cremations near Warren House) and A.C., 48 (1936) 236 (Anglo-Saxon
burials in the Stambers Field quarry).
142
A ROMAN BATH-HOUSE AT LITTLE CHART, KENT
charred wheat was reported to have been discovered " just outside the
walls of Surrenden Park, Little Chart ", but, inconsistently, its exact
position is given as lat. 51° 11' 20" N. and long. 0° 46' 39" E. The
description, however, aUows Stambers field as a possible site.
No description of the pit is given which might in fact identify it With
a storage pit of the type best known from the Iron Age A site of Little
Woodbury1 and the Romano-British farms of Cranbourne Chase.2
The wheat proved to contain a few grains of oats and barlev, and seed
of the cornfield weed Bromus secalinus.3 A Roman date is most
probable in view of the presence over the pit of a flanged tile and inside
it of two stones of a species of Prunus, perhaps cherry, a tree of Roman
introduction.*
THE POTTERY (Eig. 5).
The well
This group of fragments was found in the excavated section of the
well between the stripped rock surface and the quarry floor. The filling
was consistent throughout and pieces of the same vessel (3) were found
at both top and bottom.
The terra nigra (3, 5 and 7) cannot be long post-Claudian, but some
pieces, including the inferior wares of pronounced native character (10,
12,14 and 18), may be as late as the early second century. The pottery
is consistent with the disuse of the well and its deliberate filling over a
comparatively short period of time not later than the mid-second
century.
Figured Samian
Eig. 5 : 1 . Eorm 30 Drag. Good pinkish-red glaze. Vine scroll with
pointed heart-shaped leaf; double outline. Perhaps Claudius-
Nero.
Plain Samian
Eig. 5 : 2. Form 27 Drag. Dull, reddish glaze ; overfired. EuU
bead-rim ; perhaps a grooved foot-ring. Mid first-century.
Gallo-Belgic : terra nigra
Eig. 5 : 3, 5 and 7. Bowls. Well levigated, pale grey ware ; black
wash mostly disappeared. Terra nigra rarely occurs after Claudius.
1 Gerhard Bersu, Excavations at Little Woodbury, Wiltshire. P.P.S. 6 (1940)
30 ff., esp. 48 ff.
2 General Pitt-Rivers, Excavations in Cranbourne Chase I, 1887, 7 ff. and II,
1888, 51 ff. C. F. C. Hawkes, Britons, Romans and Saxons round Salisbury and
in Cranbourne Chase, Arch. J., 104 (1948), 27 ff., esp. 36-48.
3 Prof. John Percival, A.C., 48 (1936), 235.
* M. P. Charlesworth, The Lost Province, Cardiff 1949, 71 f.
143
A ROMAN BATH-HOUSE AT LITTLE CHART, KENT
Coarse pottery
Eig. 5 : 4, 5 and 6. Everted rim beakers, 6 with shoulder cordon.
Hard brownish-grey ware, burnished. Richborough 1: 75-7 and
III: 290 ; A.D. 80-120.
Eig. 5 : 9. Reeded rim bowl. Ware as last.
Eig. 5 : 11. Reeded rim bowl. Dense granular grey ware. Richborough
I. 79 : first century.
Eig. 5 : 10 and 12. Bowls. Coarse grey-black ware, varying to brown,
soapy surface ; hand made. Cf. Richborough 1: 73 and III: 223
and 224 ; A.D. 70-120.
Eig. 5 : 13 and 15. Pie dishes. Grey ware ; black-brown slip, lattice
on outer face ; late first-early second century.
Fig. 5 : 14. Olla. Black ware with soapy surface, as 10 and 12, but
wheel-turned. Cf. Richborough 1: 52 and Leicester Eig. 42 : 30.
Fig. 5 : 16. Storage jar. Heavy rolled rim ; coarse, unevenly fired
ware, grey to brown.
Fig. 5 : 17. Mortarium. Pinkish-buff ware. Cf. Richborough IV :
495 ; late first century. Wroxeter 1912. Fig. 19 : 22, 26 and 30 ;
A.D. 80-120.
Fig. 5 : 18. Jar. Black ware ; soapy surface, as 10, 12 and 14 ;
perhaps hand-made. Cf. Richborough 1: 13 and II: 140 ; both
Claudian.
Eig. 5 : 19. Flagon. Pink ware. Cf. Wroxeter 1912 : 2 ; A.D. 80-
120. Silchester pi. Ixii, 118.
Eig. 5 : 20. Lid. Hard grey ware with granular surface. Leicester,
p. 119, type C ; conquest-mid-second century.
The pit
With the exception of an unidentifiable fragment of Roman ware,
the pottery from the pit was Belgic. There is, however, no reason to
beheve that any of it is pre-Roman, as the ware continued in vogue
well into the second half of the first century.
Ollae with combed decoration
Coarse, gritty grey fabric. The ware is discussed in Richborough II,
pp. 97-9 ; v. pis. xxix and xxx : 135 and 136. Cf. Canterbury 1945
and 1946 no. 61.
PI. X : 1. Body fragment of a large olla, maximum diameter perhaps
26 in. Oblique combing in bands of alternate dhection, 1 | in. wide.
PI. X : 2-5. Rim fragments of smaller bead-rim oUse with plain band,
1-1| in. wide, below rim, and horizontal combing below.
PI. X : 6. Body fragment of similar oUa with combing horizontal
above and, below, curving diagonally down.
144
A ROMAN BATH-HOUSE AT LITTLE CHART, KENT
PI. X : 7. Body fragment of a large oUa comparable in size to 1, with
applied strip of finger-pinched decoration. Cf. Verulamium, pi. h,
17, from Wheathampstead oppidum.
THE COINS
Tetricus I (270-3)
1. Ant. M. and S. 100. Obv. IMP C TETRI . . . bust rad. dr. r.
Rev. PAX vert. sc.
2. Ant. M. and S. 101/2 (barbarous).
Carausius (287-93)
3. Ant. M. and S. 101. Obv. Bust rad. dr. cuh. r. Rev. PAX vert,
sc. F/O
:ML
Fausta
4. AE3, reduced 12.5 Obv. ? FLAV MAX EAVSTA AVG diademed
bust, r. Rev. % Victory Cohen 7, p. 337 : 24. IConstantine II as
Cajsar (317-37).
5. AE3, reduced 13.5-15. Rev. GLORIA EXERCITUS two soldiers
and standard. ? —rnrJS—
None of the coins listed above was found in a stratified context.
Four illegible coins were recovered from the top layer of stokehole
ash—1 AE2, 1 AE3 and 2 AE4 (thick flan. 8-9 mm.).
SMALL FIND
Bone pin. Leicester type C.2, fig. 90 : 8. From the top layer of stokehole
ash (fourth century).
ABBREVIATIONS
A. Archaeologia.
A.C. Archaeologia Cantiana.
Arch. J. Archaeological Journal.
J.R.S. Journal of Roman Studies.
P.P.S. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society.
V.C.H. Victoria County History.
Canterbury 1945 and 1946 Audrey WUliams and Sheppard Frere,
Canterbury Excavations, Christmas 1945 and Easter 1946. A.C. 61
(1943) 1 ff.
Leicester K. M. Kenyon, Excavations at the Jewry Wall Site, Leicester.
Report of the Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries
No. XV, 1948.
145
A ROMAN BATH-HOUSE AT LITTLE CHART, KENT
Richborough I, II, III, IV, J. P. Bushe-Fox, First, Second, Third and
•Fourth Reports on the Excavation of the Roman Fort at Richborough,
Kent. Reports of the Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries
nos. VI, VH, X and XVI, 1926, 1928, 1932 and 1949.
Verulamium, R. E. M. and T. V. Wheeler, Verulamium. Report of the
. Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries of London, no.
XI, 1936.
Wroxeter 1912, J. P. Bushe-Fox, Excavations on the Site of the Roman
Town at Wroxeter, Shropshire, in 1912. Report of the Research
Committee of the Society of Antiquaries of London, no. 1, 1913.
Cohen, H. Cohen, Description historique des monnaies frappis sous
I'empire romain. Paris, 1885-8.
M. and S., H. Mattingly and E. A. Sydenham. The Roman Imperial
Coinage, London, 1923.
146