
The Roman Villa in Cobham Park, near Rochester
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Denns, Droving and Danger
Algernon Sidney, 1623-1683
THE ROMAN VILLA IN COBHAM PARK, NEAR ROCHESTER
By P. J. TESTER, F.S.A.
THE Cobham villa was discovered in April 1959, during the course of
some digging undertaken by the Kent Archaeological Society for the
purpose of determining the age of the Cobham Park earthworks.1
During the following August, a fortnight was spent in investigating the
associated Roman features, and in 1960 three weeks were given to
uncovering the main building. All the excavation was done by
volunteer diggers working under the supervision of the present writer.
Interim notes on the progress of the work have appeared in Arch. Cant.,
LXXIII and LXXIV.
THE SITE
The National Grid Reference of the villa is TQ 68326932. The
building lay along a low ridge, running N.W.-S.E., composed of
Blackheath and Woolwich Beds overlying Thanet Sand. To the south
is a wide chalk valley and northward an extensive area of London Clay.
The ridge is defined generally by the 350 ft. contour and the ground
east of the villa rises to form a low hill reaching 390 O.D.
Watling Street ran 300 yards to the north, its course being slightly
south of the present main road (A.2).2 Along this highway 3£ miles to
the east was the Medway crossing and the town of Durobrivae (Rochester),
while 4 | miles in the opposite direction there existed a Roman
settlement at Springhead, identified by the Ordnance Survey as
Vagniacae.
Part of the villa was found to have been cut through by a wide ditch
which contains the boundary fence between the wooded hill to the east
and the adjoining field (Fig. 1). This partial destruction probably took
place as long ago as the seventeenth or eighteenth century and no record
of what was found appears to have been made.
CONSTRUCTION
Three phases of construction were evident in the villa, as indicated
on the accompanying plan (Fig. 2). The original building consisted of
five rooms flanked by a corridor on the N.E. side, these being shown on
the plan in sohd black. In constructing the footings, flint and chalk had
been laid in the foundation trenches with clay in lieu of mortar, and upon
1 Arch. Cant., LXXIII, 224-5.
2 Victoria County History (Kent), III, 137.
88
R O M A N V I L LA C O B H A M PARK
UNEXCAVATED
TRACES OF COBBLED FORECOURT
PIT
PIT IV
SITE OF DESTROYED
*>*3 HEARTH HYPOCAUST
PIT V
PIT III SXZZZZZZZZZZZZZL
FLINT & IRON SANDSTONE FOOTINGS
tWOOOO MORTARED FLINT WALLS
V/////A UNMORTARED FLINT FOOTINGS
SCALE OF FEET
| I M l I I I I I |
IO IO 20 30 40 50
H.A.JAMES 8, P.J.TESTER I960
FIG. 2.
[face p. SS
THE ROMAN VILLA IN COBHAM PARK
this, mortared flint, pebble conglomerate and iron sandstone were set,
the last-mentioned material forming the outer faces (PI. I A). Nothing
remained to show the original height of these walls for stone-robbing and
ploughing had reduced them to or below the Roman ground-level.
Possibly they merely formed the base for a timber-framed structure,
though the amount of flint rubble covering the interior of Room 3
suggested that the adjoining walls had been carried up some way in this
material.
1
-(NV
4" COIN HOARD
100 o
WELL
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OUTBUILDING
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