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ARCHAEOLOGICAL EVALUATIONS AT
EBBSFLEET IN THE ISLE OF THANET
D.R.J. PERKINS
With appendices by A. Gibson, N. Macpherson-Grant
and C. Wren.
SUMMARY
During the spring of 1990 the Trust for Thanet Archaeology carried
out separate but adjoining evaluation surveys on farmland at Ebbsfleet
in the Isle of Thanet. There was thus an opportunity to examine
a spot of special importance in our history, that 'Ypwinesfleot'
where according to tradition both the Saxons and St. Augustine first
trod British soil. Both field-walking and limited excavation provided
evidence in keeping with the site's antecedents, suggesting perhaps
continuous occupation over 2400 years. A beaker burial formed the
earliest material discovered, followed by a Late Bronze Age hoard,
and both Iron Age and Belgic settlement remains. The sequence
continued with a Roman presence peaking in the fourth century. A
role for Ebbsfleet as major entrepot to Thanet seems indicated.
Since the important horizons sampled were demonstrably vulnerable
to the plough, measures for their preservation would seem
imperative.
INTRODUCTION
Archaeological evaluations at Ebbsfleet Farm were commissioned by
the MI Group who intend to construct a sewage works and tannery,
and on adjoining land by a company planning a golf course. Thanks
are due to the MI Group for funding the evaluation, and for
negotiating a 'window of access' with the leasing farmer. The
evaluations were carried out as consecutive but individual projects.
The first dealing with Cottington Hill, and the second with Ebbsfleet
269
D.R.J. PERKINS
Farm, but excluding Weatherlees Hill which is now, we believe,
preserved from development. For the purposes of this report data
from both projects have been combined.
The geography and geology of Ebbsfieet
Ebbsfleet is bounded to the south and west by the River Stour and the
Minster Marshes (drained), to the east by the A256 which follows a
medieval shore-line, and to the north by the rise of chalk downland at
Cliffsend, Thorne, and Sevenscore. It consists of three low hills,
Weatherlees, Ebbsfleet, and Cottington, the first two rising from an
alluvial plain (Fig. 1). While previously a subject of debate,1 geological
survey supports a picture of Ebbsfleet in Roman days as a
sea-girt peninsula in the eastern mouth of the Wantsum, with
Weatherlees an island.2
The hills are upfolds of the chalk covered by the Thanet Beds, a
yellow-brown sand containing large sandstone boulders known as
'