^rrfoflkp* dfantira.
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, CHRISTMAS 1945 AND
EASTER, 1946
THE BUTCHERY LANE BUILDINGS
By AUDREY WHXIAMS, F.S A., and SHEPRARD FRERE, F.S.A.
THE probability, at the end of 1945, that the open cellars on the south
side of Butchery Lane would shortly be filled in preliminary to building
dictated immediate examination of the area. The Canterbury Excavation
Committee, therefore, began work in the three cellars south-west
of F. W. Finnis and Sons' premises (Fig. 1, A, B and C).
The discovery of substantial remains of a Roman building in cellar C
made it desirable to continue and extend excavations in the same area
at Easter, 1946. In April, therefore, two deep cuttings from the surface
were made behind cellar C to trace the southward extent of the pavement
and trenches were cut in cellars D and E. During the excavation
it became necessary, owing to the likelihood of rebuilding, to extend
operations to cellars F and G also, below The Parade (Fig. 2).
This work led to the recovery of parts of two Roman buildings, one of
them, building 2, evidently an extensive quadrangle house, long
inhabited. The main quarters of the house lie below Butchery Lane and
the Parade, whither they could not be traced; the extant remains
include room 2 in the east wing, 40 feet by 10 feet 6 inches, doubtless a
lobby ; a corridor (room 3) 10 feet wide and traced for 40 feet 6 inches,
skirting the north wing ; a small hypocaust (room 4) ; and walls of
the west wing.
CELLARS A AND B
In cellars A and B a cutting was made parallel to Butchery Lane and
at a right angle to the cellar party walls (Figs 1 and 3, AB). In cellar A
the cutting was taken out only to a depth of just over 4 feet; but in
cellar B excavation to 13 feet below the cellar floor (24 feet O.D.)
revealed natural soil, a bright yellow loam capped by a thin streak of
sandy soil. This surface, lower than any found on previously excavated
sites in the city, quickly became water-logged. This condition had been
remedied in antiquity by raising the surface 6 feet or more with a deposit
of clean yellow loam. In this loam had been cut three pits (Rl, 2 and 3).
Pit Rl contained Claudian Samian ; R2 had no datable material but
was earlier than R3, from which came Samian dating up to A.D. 70. As,
however, the loam to the west (in cellar C) overlay Vespasianic debris
1 4A
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
it cannot date earlier than A.D. 79 and the material from the pits
must be disregarded.
Over the yellow loam, and sealing the pits, lay greyish soil interlarded
with streaks of gravel and charcoal, the latter brought from
elsewhere and not here indicative of fires. Here again the material,
including Vespasianic Samian, suggests a rather earlier date than can be
sustained in the face of the evidence from cellar C where a date c.
IS 20
K a — H — • • oi
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BUILDING I
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BUTCHERY LANE
ElG. 1.
A.D. 90 is likely for the build-up to 7-8 feet above the undisturbed
surface.
BUILDING 1. Into the late first century grey soil had been sunk the
foundations and lower courses of a roughly coursed flint wall. The
2
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
3avhiVd 3HJ_
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3
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
K&&Z iv>%iSzSopi
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FIG. 3. SECTIONS IN CELLARS A, B and C.
4
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
foundations of gravel with mortar were 2 feet wide and 2 feet deep ;
the wall was reduced to under a foot in height. Over it rested the
narrow party-wall of cellars A and B. Of the Roman wall only a length
of 13 feet could be exposed before it disappeared beneath Butchery
Lane. It was taken to be the south-west external wall of a building
lying partly under the modern street. A patch of mortar, on the grey
soil and against the wall-face, presumably a mason's patch contemporary
with the building, produced part of a mortarium of late first century
type (Fig. 9, 2). East of the wall a continuous layer of black soil with
household debris, on top of the grey clay, suggested a floor. This could
be dated to the early second century.
Over the wall and on both sides of it ran a layer of yellowish loam
with, above, a number of deposits of various materials—black soil,
more yellow loam, mortar and red soil with charcoal—evidently
materials dumped indiscriminately to level over a disused building.
The pottery (Fig. 9, 3-5) points to the operation having been carried out
in Antonine times or soon after. A pit (R4), of which only the lower
part had survived the digging of the cellar, disturbed the Antonine
layer in the interior of the building. Coins dated the pit to the late
third century.
Building 1 appears to have been in use early in the second century
and abandoned in the second half of that century. This short history
contrasts very markedly with the long occupation of building 2, but it
could not be accounted for in the two cellars examined. However, a
possible explanation can now be suggested as a result of excavations
by Messrs. F. Jenkins and J. Boyle in 1946-7, in the premises of No. 47
Burgate Street (Fig. 4). A report of this work will be published later,
but the plan has been prepared from information supplied by them.
In the cellar at the north end of the site were found levels suggesting
the demolition of a building at the end of the second, or in the early
third century ; while in trenches at the south end of the area a large
gravel foundation of late Roman date, mutilated by medieval pits, was
found. Its full extent was not revealed, but it clearly supported some
massive structure, to make room for which the earlier building had been
cleared.
CELLAR C.
In cellar C in a cutting alongside the north-east party wall natural
soil occurred at 12 feet below the cellar floor. The stratification is best
illustrated by two sections across this cutting (Figs. 1 and 3, CD, EF).
At the south-east end of the treneh black soil with oyster-shells covered
the old surface. This layer, 12 inches deep, contained a coin of
Vespasian and cannot therefore be earlier than A.D. 69-79.
Above came the build-up of clean yellow loam already noted in
5
GRAVEL. FOUNDS
BUILDING DEBRIS
HERE f "
<=Z=
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EXISTING SHOPS
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BUTCHERY LANE
BUILDING I
FEET
f/S'W
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BUILPING II
PIG. 4.
Rlan to illustrate relation of Building I to excavations at 47 Burgate Street.
CHAS: I FARTHING BELLABMINE o
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CHARLES II FARTHING
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BLACK STONY SOIL
WITH SHELL . OYSTERS
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BLACK MEDIAEVAL". .CHALK'
RUBBISH
TESSELLATED PAVEMENl
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UNEXCAVATED
BUTCHERY LANE
SECT/ON N-0
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FEET 10
51
FIG. 5.
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
cutting AB. This was so firm and clean as almost to justify its acceptance
as natural soil. It was, however, removed—with the reward of
the Vespasianic level below. Over the sterile loam lay more black soil
with oyster shells, a deposit 3 feet thick and dated by a practically
complete Samian bowl of form 30 (Fig. 11) to c. A.D. 90. With this late
first century date the coarse ware accords (Fig. 9, 9-12).
Into the black soil had been sunk the foundations of two walls
roughly aligned and running approximately parallel with the wall of
the cellar. Various patches of mortar, presumably contemporary with
the building, were found on top of the black soil just above the base
course of the wall. Mortarium rims from these patches were of the late
first-early second century type (Fig. 9, 13-14).
Finds from the post-wall deposits set an upper limit to the probable
period of building. Throughout the cutting 18 inches of brownishyellow
loam overlay the black soil. A Trajanic semis in good condition
indicates a date soon after A.D. 100 for this first post-wall layer. Above,
at the south-east end of the cuttmg, a considerable fire had baked,
cracked and discoloured the yellow soil and left a quantity of charcoal
(cornus species (dogwood), pyrus sp. (apple, pear, rowan etc.) and quercus
sp. (common oak)). From the top of the burned material came a coin
of Hadrian, a rare type of sestertius, dated A.D. 134-8. Several patches
of mortar against the wall-face at this height suggest that repairs were
carried out soon after that date.
BUILDING 2. The two walls already mentioned represent work of
two periods. The first wall, in the north-west corner of the cutting
(PI. I, 1, centre background) was of coursed flints with brick lacing
courses over a gravel foundation. By undercutting the Butchery Lane
revetting wall it was possible to uncover just the south-east angle of a
room (Fig. 2, room 1) lying beneath the modern road. It was clear
that the south wall of that room, in a reduced state, had been incorporated
in the building represented by the second wall found in the cutting-
At their junction there was a straight joint between the two walls to a
height of 18 inches above the foundations. From that point the flints
of the second wall rested on the reduced earlier masonry. They were
much robbed at the angle but definite enough on the return wall to the
west. It can be inferred that the brick laced wall was erected soon
after A.D. 90 and had a short life.
The second wall was of flints, random or roughly coursed, with
mortar. Its foundations (3 feet deep) were of gravel, loose below but
more compact, with some mortar admixed, towards the top. A base
course of larger flints projected slightly over the foundations. This
proved to be the north-east wall of a room (Fig. 2, room 2), of which the
north wall, overlying the south wall of the earlier buildings, ran obliquely
under Butchery Lane.
8
PLATE 1(1). BUILDING II.
Room 2 north corner, with angle of Room I centre background.
PLATE I (2). BUILDING II.
Room 2, from the north.
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
Within the limits of cellar C two rooms could be identified. In the
north-west corner of the cellar appeared the east end of room 3, a
corridor 10 feet wide with a tessellated floor. Its south wall, of flints
with brick lacing and, as far as could be seen in so small a space, of two
periods, was found, but the presence in room 2 of a pavement which had
to be preserved precluded search being made for the east wall of room 3.
Its probable line was covered by a wall inserted at a later date, the
north part of the north-west wall of room 2. This overlapped the edge
of the pavement of room 3. The south part of the north-west wall of
room 2 had a straight joint with the south wall of room 3 and ran
parallel with the external wall of the house giving room 2 a width of
10 feet 6 inches.
The pavement of room 2 had been laid rather more than 3 feet above
what might be expected to be the original floor level of the room and
was 6 inches higher than the pavement of room 3. Its preservation
prevented investigation of its antecedents and no definite date can
safely be suggested for this rehabilitation of the room. At this stage it
had pink-plastered walls, vestiges of which remained standing (PL I, 1,
right) and a quarter-round moulding of pink mortar. The tesserse were
bedded in similar mortar.
The pavement, in all 40 feet long,1 consisted of three mosaic
panels at intervals along the long axis of the room and a margin of
coarse grey tesserse. The panels, 5 feet by 4 feet, were executed in red,
yellow, white and black. The north and south panels had centrally a
conventionalized flower and leaf design, with a " wave " border above
and below. The whole was framed with a three-strand guilloohe. The
centre panel differed in that the flower motif was bolder, the leaves
absent; a diamond border replaced the " waves " and the guilloche
had two strands.
Microscopic examination showed that the tesserse used in room 3
and for the margin of room 2 were of a sandstone derived from the
Upper Greensand, probably from the Dorking—Godstone area. The
red and yellow tesserse were cut from bricks or tiles. The fine-grained
dolomitic limestone of the black tesserse belongs to the Carboniferous
Limestone series; it may have been brought from the Mendips or
possibly from Leicestershire.
The pavement was in use long enough to warrant patching. A worn
place on the north-west margin had been made good with part of a brick
and a slab which may have been a re-used sillstone (PI. I, 2). Superficially
the slab appeared to be of marble ; microscopically it proved to
be a shelly limestone of which the source could not be determined.
Two major disturbances of the pavement had occurred. A pit
(PI. I, 2, foreground) had destroyed a corner of the north mosaic. Later
1 This measurement includes the area exposed later, south-east of cellar C.
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
than the debris covering the floor, the pit cannot date earlier than the
fifth century. The second blemish was a cavity against the face of the
south-west wall. This hole was stone-Hned except on the east side
which was probably left as a soak-away. It contained sticky black soil
with streaks of lime and was obviously the lowest part of an earthcloset
dated by an eighteenth century token.
The evidence for the end of this part of the house was clear. Over
the pavements and the internal wall lay a mass of flints, pink plaster and
mortar, evidently the ruins of the walls. Only the first foot of this
debris remained, immediately under the cellar floor. It contained coins
up to the late fourth century, including one of Valens (A.D. 364-78)
in good condition and late pottery (Fig. 9, 16-17). Rather later the
external wall was robbed to, or just below, pavement level. The
relationship between the mortar debris and the fine black soil covering
the denuded wall was obvious in the section cutting. None of the soil
had drifted into the room ; the edge of the debris remained clean and
regular. Worn late fourth century coins point to a fifth century (or
later) date for the depredations.
ABEA SOUTH-EAST OF CBLLAB 0.
The evidence obtained in cellar C was confirmed and amplified in the
trenches cut from modern surface levels south-east of it (see Fig. 5,
section N-O).
Above a 4-6 inch accumulation of dirt on the tessellated floor came
the collapsed masonry of the walls, a thick layer of flints and mortar,
containing pieces of window arched in tile. The first of these layers
produced 2 antoniniani of Radiate Crown type and 2 of Tetricus I
together with a barbarous radiate ; the rubble contained an antoninianus
of Tetricus I. All these coins were circulating in the fourth
century, but a clearer date for the collapse of the wall is given by the
coin of Valens mentioned earlier. The pottery found on the floor is
shown in Fig. 12, 20-3.
The south-east wall of room 2 was only found in November 1947
during excavations connected with the basement which to-day houses
the mosaics. It was of very doubtful and fragmentary character, and
all that can be certainly stated is that the north-east wall continued
beyond it towards the south-east. A second wall survived in better
state running from this to the north-east; but their point of junction
had been destroyed by a pit.
After the collapse of the walls, the site seems to have lain desolate
for almost a thousand years. The next deposit was a thick black layer
of medieval rubbish containing many bones, oyster shells, and sherds,
about 3 feet 6 inches thick. The date of this layer, which contained a
halfpenny of Henry II, is indicated by the pottery, which is of early
10
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
thirteenth century type (Fig. 17). The thick layer of domestic refuse
was doubtless put down to level off and bury the ruins ; the exterior
north wall was still standing well above the pavement at this time, as was
shown by its robbing trench, traceable certainly to within 16 inches
of the top, with indications that it had not in fact been dug until after
the whole layer had been deposited.
Almost at once rubbish pits were dug in this layer ; the section
shows pit M4 as earlier and pit M3 as later than an occupation layer on
top of the rubbish ; while the whole southern end including the pavement
had become distorted through collapse into a very deep excavation
below M3, which we were unable to excavate completely.
The pottery from all these layers and pits is closely similar (Figs.
17, 18) and shows that the whole sequence occupies but a short time in
the thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries. Indeed, the filling of
many pits is very difficult to distinguish from the surrounding soil;
sometimes its consistency differs ; sometimes as in M4 the decay of
vegetable matter has resulted in subsidence and a hollow.
The next period of activity is the second half of the seventeenth
century, to which belong two unrelated footings seen in the section, and
also the angle of a brick-built room west of the section, associated with a
chalk floor and a brick platform for a fireplace along its southern side.
There is a scatter of Charles I and Charles I I farthings—9 in number1
in these layers, but nothing later. A seventeenth century Bellarmine
jug was found almost intact beside a brick and stone wall running at
right angles from the brick-built room into the trench, and then turning
south. At the angle occurred a large number of ox-bones, perhaps
explaining the origin of the name Butchery Lane.2
There had been very little accumulation in modern times after the
removal of the seventeenth century buildings.
CELLARS D AND E.
(a) Roman.
Section GH (Figs. 6 and 7) gives an indication of the sequence of
1 Together with one of James I and 6 counters.
2 Mr. W. G. Urry tells us that the lane has had various names in times past.
In the thirteenth century it was Sunwineslane (Charta Anliqua, Ch. Ch. Cant. no.
C. 697, before 1207, and Rental 33, 1, c. 1232). About 1300 it was called Salcockeslane
or Clementeslane (Register J., 231 ff). About 1640 William Somner in the
Antiquities, p. 347 calls it Angell-lane. This name arose from the angel standing
on the apex of the gable of the SW transept of the Cathedral, dominating the lane.
Richard Culmer, the iconoclast, speaks in his Cathedral News from Canterbury
(1644), 23, of a " statue of Michael the Archangel looking straight to a lane right
over against it, in Canterburie, called Angell-lane." By 1768 the modern name had
come for it is marked Butchery Lane in the Plan of Canterbury of that date by
Andrews and Wren. The City Shambles lay in the road at the south end until
1740 (Gostling, Cant., ed 1, 1774, 31).
11
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
layers found in cellar D below the Roman building. The most remarkable
fact was that the natural soil was found at only 33 feet O.D.,
whereas below the outer wall in cellar C, only 18 feet farther east, it was
8 feet lower at 25 feet O.D. Somewhere below the pavement occurs
a very rapid rise. This was verified in pit M7, which gave a section ;
natural loam occurred at 34.17 ; at 30.26 occurred a change, greenish
to ir z« b FEET ROMAN WALL,PERIODS m' PERIOD 2 R 1 .M1 &c ROMAN AND
1 ». 2. OVERLAP. MEDIAEVAL PITS £
\
Rf3 7 Dl r
/
>l
VII /
flft.C* M» J ££*
** L_ Hi / \ y
"\
FIX l l \
\
\ -\
s- \HHl CLAUDIAN PMT-HOLES '//' '/, Cb c l . - l //
w? ^s ~w 14
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v g //
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|3 & M 0 W
t /
1 « r- J I BUTCHERY LANE
FIG. 6.
loam changing to orange with more iron-staining; but no turf-line
occurred here ; and the high level of natural loam in this direction
was confirmed in cellar F (34.51) and across St. George's Street (cellar
L), where a pre-Roman Belgic ditch was found at the same high level
(35.00).
Into the natural loam was sunk a shallow scoop beside and in which
were two postholes. The scoop was filled with a dark loam containing
12
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
oyster shells, fragments of charcoal, and some Claudian-Neronian
pottery, of which the latest was a form 29 in the style of Celadus of
La Graufesenque, dated by Dr. Oswald A.D. 60-70. This came from
above the interleaf of clean loam.
Into this deposit were sunk the gravel footings of the first corridor
H
NORTH
TESSELLATED PAVEMENT
SOUTH
^CELLAR WALL FOOTINGS
ROBBED
aurreii
CONCRETE PEBBLY CLAY'
CLEA
CLAY^
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GRAVEL FOOTINGS NAT
ID F E ET
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-MODERN BUILD-UP- ; ^ = C
TESSEIXATED^PAVEMENT.
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WEST EAST
Fio. 7.
Sections in Cellars D and E.
wall. When this had been erected a 3-4 inch layer of gravel was laid
outside. This contained some fragments of form 67, dating from the
reign of Nero or Vespasian.
At a subsequent period a fresh wall for the corridor was erected on
the remains of the first, and a tile gutter was constructed round the
courtyard. This gutter was still preserved under the party-wall
13
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
between cellars C and D and round the hypocaust; but here it had been
robbed. It was later than a layer of pebbly clay capping the gravel, but
this clay contained no useful Samian dating material; the coarse
pottery is figured (Fig. 14, 52-4).
Other pottery earlier than the first period wall was contained in a
small gully running north and south below the foundations and in the
clean loam at its edges ; this contained the pottery in Fig. 14, 38-44,
and is all of early character (except the doubtful mortarium No. 43).
The evidence for the period 1 corridor is thus consistent as far as it
goes with that obtained for the exterior wall in cellar C. The corridor
pavement on the other hand is clearly an addition during period 2.
This floor overlay a Roman pit which contained a late mortarium
rim (Fig. 14, 55) ; only segments of the pit could be examined, for it
had been mutilated in medieval times. The corridor floor as it exists at
present is of late date, and cannot long have antedated the pavement
of room 2.
The corridor ran on towards the corner of cellar B, and one of its
walls must be the oblique wall mentioned by Pillbrow (Arch., XLIII,
163 and PL 22). He makes it 4 feet 6 inches thick, but this may be the
oblique measurement.
Room 4.
Jutting out into the courtyard was a small hypocaust room, approximately
11 feet 6 inches square, of flint and mortar build, entered from
the corridor by a door of which one jamb remained. Around it ran the
tile gutter, which here was only an inch or two below the modern floor
and had suffered in consequence. The room had been much damaged
by medieval pits ; but its north-west corner could be seen not to be
bonded into the corridor wall, though doubtless not substantially
different in date. Its north-east corner had sunk into a medieval
excavation, but along the east wall there still survived fragments of the
opus signinum floor of the bath capping the pillars. Each wall was
lined with a long pilaster to support the floor. In the room was a
substantial chalk foundation, clearly unrelated to the Roman structure
and of medieval date. East of this was found a very young baby's
skeleton lying in the hypocaust debris ; there was no sign of disturbance,
and it is clearly of Roman date.1
The latest coin in the hypocaust debris was one of Constantius I I or
Constans (A.D. 345-61).2 Also in this debris lay a roughly fluted pillardrum,
about 14 inches in diameter.
1 Mr. I. W. Cornwall has kindly supplied a full report on the remains, and part
is printed below (Appendix II, p. 43).
2 A graffito found unstratified hereabouts . . .]NITVS[ . . . has alreadybeen
published, J.R.S., XXXVII (1947), 182, No. 19.
14
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
The trench excavated for the south wall of the room occupied the
whole area between the wall and pit M7. In the trench were found
several pieces of polished stone, both Kentish Rag and Purbeck marble,1
they would seem to be material for an opus sectile floor.
The courtyard enclosed by the house was tiled or paved, for several
trenches showed traces of a thin mortar surface or spread usually pink
in colour. This sealed the pottery shown in Fig. 14, 45-8.
In trenches VIII and Va, below this mortar, occurred a rough pile
of large undressed flints in the loam. Their purpose was not determined.
Another unexplained feature was a small fragment of detached masonry
cut away by pit M2, but intact on its other faces, and apparently of
period 2 construction.
(6) Pits, Roman and Medieval.
Apart from the chalk foundation in the hypocaust, and a second
chalk foundation, which ran under Butchery Lane, in pit M5, the
medieval remains consisted of pits. Ml and 3-5 had badly damaged the
corridor and had been sunk to a great depth which was not fully
excavated.2 Their filling was black and sticky, and the finds were few.
Pit Ml produced a fragment of polished red Egyptian marble (p. 41)
which doubtless came from the Roman building and hints at wealth and
lavish outlay in decoration.8
Pit M7 was 8 feet 10 inches deep and was fully excavated, as it
provided a useful test section of the natural soil. Its filling was light
brown, soft and sticky, and full of woody vegetable matter ; a little
pottery and a few bones were found ; pick marks were visible at the
bottom of the pit.
The north-east corner of cellar D was very much disturbed by
medieval excavations, and at one point the floor had collapsed into a
hollow caused by subsidence of the pit-filling below. This area adjoins
the deep disturbance noted in Section NO. R3, a gully with vertical
sides, was earlier than this disturbance, and it only produced Roman
material, but this was inconclusive. R2 contained a large piece of
Roman drain on end ; this consisted of smoothed opus signinum sides
9 inches deep and a tegula for floor ; it may have been from the courtyard
gutter, but this seems unlikely as the levels suggest that the
gutter was never more than a few inches below the courtyard ; more
probably it is from the bath outlet, and may be compared with the
drain found in 1947 outside the St. George's Street bath-house.
1 Dr. K. 0. Dunham's report is printed below (Appendix I, p. 41).
s_The sequence of pits is indicated numerically where intersection made it
possible to learn it.
' Eor a similar find at Silchester, see Arch., LX, 155.
15
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
CELLARS F and G (Figs 2 and 8).
These cellars are separated from the Butchery Lane site by Burton's
shop on the corner of the Parade. Attention was directed to them
rather hurriedly in April, 1946, as building threatened, and further work
was done in August.
(a) Pre-building.
Cellar G had been considerably disturbed in medieval and modern
times, but F contained some undisturbed early layers in places. In the
west corner was a cluster of shallow post-holes in the natural loam
(Fig. 8), but the structure to which they belonged ran under the street
and neighbouring building. The post-holes appeared only when the
natural soil was reached, and were 6-8 inches deep, with an occasional
packing stone in the larger ones. East of the post-holes and cut by a
modern trench was a black charcoal patch, and south of it was a small
round pit in the edge of which was a stake-hole.
The first layer above the natural loam, which filled these post-holes
and dipped down into a larger pit (R8) which cut them, was a dirty
grey loam (Fig. 7, section LM), the upper part of which was very pebbly
as if some attempt had been made to provide a dry surface. This
layer contained pre-Roman Belgic pottery (Fig. 16, 61), while the stony
upper part contained, in addition to the two unidentifiable fragments
of Samian and a small fragment of form 29 which might be Vespasianic,
an Arretine potter's stamp (o. SBNTI). The pit R8 contained a piece of
Claudian (?) form 30.
(6) Roman Building.
Into this pit were sunk the gravel footings of the inner wall of the
west wing of the house, the foundations being deeper here in the
unconsolidated ground than they were further south.
Very little dating evidence was obtained in these cellars. Immediately
below the modern floor appeared part of a tessellated paving of
brick cubes on which lay a coin of mid to late third century type,
probably a radiate crown ; this floor was clearly a later addition, for
the wall itself had been rebuilt from a level just below it, disturbing
an earlier mortar floor.
Bordering the courtyard ran a small gutter, similar in position to the
tile gutter in D and E, but not here lined with tile. It was filled with
damp black soil, and in the short length (6 feet) available, produced
16 coins ; of these ten could be identified ; one was probably of
Salonina (A.D. 260-8) and all the rest were radiates of c. A.D. 270, the
latest being a barbarous radiate, c. A.D. 270-90.
These coins provide the only dating evidence available for the third
structural phase, when the southern part of the earlier wall was razed,
16
• CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
and a room (Fig. 2, room 5) built out across it into the courtyard.
Doubtless this caused the abandonment and silting of the gutter.
The period 3 walls were shallow and had been much disturbed except
along the south-west side, where for some reason the wall had been built
double for some distance. The south-east wall of this room was not
found, owing to extensive medieval and modern disturbance in cellar G,
but it must have lain within cellar G; for a piece of tessellated floor
extending from below the road in the south corner of that cellar
beyond the line of the south-west wall, showed that the turn had
come before that point was reached. At the crucial spot, a modern
drain had gone out under the road, removing all evidence.
The period 3 room was not the final structural phase here. The
south-west wall of this room had later itself been razed—and the room
thrown into the next room which now lies below the street. Adjoining
the piece of tessellated floor just mentioned, north-west of the drain was
found a second fragment of tessellated floor which here actually lay on
the top of the razed wall; and this floor itself was but the lower of
two tessellated pavements lying directly on one another and extending
below the Parade. On the upper floor lay a coin of Constantine I.
(Constantinopolis A.D. 330-7, in fairly good condition.) Both these
floors were of red brick cubes about 1 inch square, but the lower one had
a patch of sandstone cubes on the wall.
In 1947 when temporary shops had been erected on the site, and a
fresh drain was being tunnelled from this corner to enter the main
drain below the Parade, a Roman wall was followed for seventeen feet,
and was found to join another one in the centre of the road. Measurements
were kindly taken at the time by the City Architect1, and this
wall is shown on Fig. 2. Unfortunately, its junction with the walls
already described, could not be determined, as the cellar wall had
disturbed that area. As far as it is possible to be sure, this wall agrees
with the original period 2 wall in cellars F and G rather than with the
period 3 one which has a slightly different alignment; there was, of
course, no stratification in the trench owing to the earlier drain on the
same line. The north-south wall under the road has perhaps been
tilted out of its true position by being undermined by the main drain.
In this connection, attention may be drawn to the series of 8 or 9 walls
18-25 feet apart, crossing the street at right angles, found previously
under this part of the Parade.2
Cellar G seems to have been a cellar in medieval times, for traces of
earth floors containing fourteenth century green-glazed ware was found
below the top of the period 3 south-west wall and also in the area marked
as Medieval Disturbance in trench XI (Fig. 8) ; here also were many
1 Mr. L. H. Wilson.
2 Conveniently summarized in the Victoria County History, i n , 69.
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
loose red brick tesserse, probably representing the period 2 floor, and
among them a coin of Tetricus I (A.D. 270-3).
SUMMARY.
Timber buildings dating from mid-first century times and the
occupation levels associated with them occupied all the area excavated.
At the north-eastern end, frequent builds-up had occurred to raise
the low level of the ground. The earliest occupation was perhaps by
RRSSKftRR**
^ PERIOD 2 i! k H I I
PER OD 3
XIV
R4.M11 A ROMAN AND
n MEDIAEVAL P T S
G
TO BELOW
"OMAN LEVEL
\\"l N . i ' L' ' i I i I' JiLlil!!!!;!/ Wli XI
11 I CONJECTURAL i,l RMTORATION I.: I n_ LllLi. tlBIMMt l|;._. a s ^ i ravriHe.
y 5*SS
BEB If BROKEN
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POST 1°-88£D
y
ITAKE-HOtC*
L
LT X
THE PARADE F E E T s 10 20
FIG. 8
NOTE : The patch of tesselated floor above Pit R8 is not marked.
the Parade, where it lies close to the pre-Roman Belgic ditch excavated
in 1946 on the other side of the street. In other words, the earliest
settlement seems to have crowned the natural hillock of loam which
rises towards the south-west. In cellar F the evidence was inconclusive,
but suggestive of pre-Roman occupation overlapping the first arrival
of Roman power. Little could be learnt of the size or character of these
timber hutments. They were replaced by masonry about fifty years
later.
Both masonry buildings were erected at approximately the same
time at the beginning of the second century. Building 1, after a life of
18
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
less than a century was demoMshed to make way for some massive
structure such as a temple or arch. But building 2 continued in
occupation throughout the Roman period. The main part of the earliest
house lies below Butchery Lane and the shops to its north west. This
house was of simple corridor plan. It was, however, soon extended by
the addition of east and west wings. The survival of Burton's shop,
it is true, prevented the walls in cellars F and G from being definitely
linked to the main building ; but as their axis is almost at right angles
to it, yet set slightly south, they can hardly be other than another wing
of the same house ; while if room 4 as seems likely, is but one of a
series of heated bathrooms, the main building will have extended
certainly as far as the point of intersection.
The first extension—period 2—seems to have taken place early in the
second century ; further alterations took place in the west wing at the
end of the third century, and it may have been now that the existing
mosaics were laid in room 2. Later still, room 5 in the west wing was
joined to its neighbour to the south-west. The end came in the third
quarter of the fourth century. The majority of the coins sealed by the
collapse are Constantinian ; a single coin of Valens in the rubble of
fallen masonry gives a terminus ante quern of about A.D. 370 or 380.
No Saxon remains were found, though Pillbrow records1 a Saxon (?)
comb 7 feet 6 inches (i.e. c. 36.4 O.D.) below the road opposite Rose
Lane.
After a period of build-up in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries,
when a cellar was dug in G, houses were re-built along Butchery Lane
in the late seventeenth century. Many of these were still standing in
1942.
THE FINDS.
(For abbreviations see p. 44.)
BUILDING 1 (Section AB).
A. FROM PRE-BurLDrNG DEPOSITS. LATE FIRST To EARLY SECOND
CENTURY.
(a) The yellow loam proved barren. As has been mentioned the
Claudius-Neronian material from the two pits cut therein (Rl and R2)
has no dating value.
Two Samian potters' stamps may be recorded.
1. Drag. 18. OF MOD (retro) in ansate frame. By MODESTVS
of La Graufesenque. A.D. 45-50.
2. Drag. 27. OF SAH, probably OF SAR. A.D. 60-70.
1 Arch., XLIH, 155.
19
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
T
1
PIG. 9. COARSE POTTERY (£).
20
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
(b) The grey clay.
Samian.
Drag. 37. Vespasianic, A.D. 70-80.
Coarse Ware (Fig. 9).
1. Upper part of jug with two double-ribbed handles ; hard greycoated
buff ware. Cf. Richborough I, 40 ; mid-first-early second
century, but here the neck is less cylindrical.
B. FROM DEPOSITS CONTEMPORARY WITH THE BUILDING. EARLY
SECOND CENTURY.
(a) Mortar patch outside wall.
Coarse Ware (Fig. 9).
2. Mortarium with bead and wide flat-topped flange ; cream ware.
Cf. Richborough I I I , 356 and Wroxeter, Fig. 19, type 18, late first-early
second century.
(b) Occupation layer inside wall.
Samian.
1. Drag. 36. Cf. 36, Silchester (O. and P., PI. LILT, 11), but the rim
here is flatter. Trajanic, c. A.D. 100-110.
2. Drag. 37. With basal ram's horn (partly destroyed by deep
grooves) characteristic of RANTO of Vichy. Trajanic, c. A.D. 100-110.
C. FROM POST-BUILDING DEPOSITS.
(a) Mixed layers over wall. Antonine.
Samian.
1. Drag. 27, a late form. Cf. 0 and P. XLIX, 19. Trajan-Hadrian.
2. Drag. 15/31. Hadrian-Antonine, A.D. 130-40.
3. Drag. 18/31. Cf. O and P. XLVI, 10. Hadrian-Antonine,
A.D. 130-40.
4. Curie 15. Antonine, A.D. 140-50.
Coarse Ware (Fig. 9).
3. Flanged bowl with girth grooves on body; sandy grey ware.
Cf. Wroxeter, Fig. 17,10, A.D. 80-100.
4. Dish; black burnished ware decorated trellis-pattern. Cf.
Richborough I, 46, late first-early second century.
5. Mortarium, with bead and down-turned flange. Cf. generally
Wroxeter, Fig. 19, 102/106.
5a. Mortarium stamp from vessel similar to 5.
21
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
FIG. 10. SMALL OBJECTS (J),
(pp. 23, 25, 26.)
• • A A « B / n
aw w
WW
rOfe^KvCfftfTAl
g?W»
PIG. 11 (*).
Samian bowl, form 30 (p. 24).
22
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
Other objects (Fig. 10).
1. Bronze brooch, bilateral spring protected by semi-cylindrical
cover, the chord held in a loop. Cf. Richborough III, 10 ; there A.D.
80-120.
(b) Pit R6. Late third century or later.
Coins.
1. Radiate crown. ?Claudius II. c. A.D. 270. Antoninianus.
2. Radiate crown, c. A.D. 270. Antoninianus.
BUILDING 2.
I. ROOM 2, CELLAR C AND EXTENSION (Sections CD, EF, NO).
A. FROM PRE-BUILDING DEPOSITS.
(a) The black soil over natural soil. Flavian.
Coin.
Vespasian (A.D. 69-79). As : poor condition—probably due to
location.
Samian.
Drag. 27. Stamped OF NGRI. By NIGER of La Graufesenque.
Pre-Flavian groove on footstand. Neronian, A.D. 60-70. The remaining
Samian includes Claudian and Neronian sherds.
Coarse Ware (Fig. 9).
6. Jar of Belgic type with everted rim, cordoned neck with offset
at base ; buff ware, combed. Cf. Richborough IH, 252/3 ; with
Flavian pottery.
7. Flanged bowl; fine black ware. For general type cf. Richborough
I, 22, late first century.
8. Fragment from carinated beaker with cordon on shoulder ;
buff ware. Cf. Richborough III, 290, A.D. 80-120.
Glass.
1. Fragment of rim and neck of bottle or large unguentarium ;
rim folded outward, downward and upward. Diameter 1 • 75 inches.
Bluish-green. Late first-second century.
2. Fragment of jug-handle, bluish-green, flat with single central
rib ending in spur on body. Cf. Behrens, Mainz Zeitschrift XX/XXI,
p. 67, Fig. 6, a similar jug but with nicked spur, associated with two
coins of Vespasian. Late first-early second century.
Other Objects (Fig. 10).
2. Bone pin with faceted knob.
23
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
(b) The yellow loam, here as in cutting AB, was barren.
(c) The upper black soil. Late first century.
Samian (Fig. 11).
I. Drag. 30. In the later style of SABINVS of La Graufesenque,
c. A.D. 90. It has the following motifs frequently used by this potter—
Diana cf. 30, Bregenz (Stanfield, J.R.S., 1937, p. 171, Fig. 8) ; group
of three pomegranates at top and bottom of a St. Andrew's cross
cf. 30, London (op. cit., Fig. 9, 32) ; lanceolate leaves on a St. Andrew's
cross, cf. 30 London (op. cit., Fig. 9, 34 and Fig. 10,41). The execution is
rather coarse and the figures somewhat blurred as often on Domitianic
bowls. The further Samian sherds are Claudian, Neronian and
Vespasianic.
Coarse Ware (Fig. 9).
9. Belgic jar, outbent rim and cordons at base of neck ; buff ware,
combed.
10. Jar with everted rim and offset at base of neck ; buff ware
burnished black on neck ; decorated with nail-prints with combing
below.
II. Jar with sharply everted rim and bulbous body ; hard sandy
black ware. Cf. Richborough I I I , 245, A.D. 80-120.
12. Flanged bowl; hard black ware. Cf. Richborough I, 22, late
first century.
B. FROM DEPOSITS CONTEMPORARY WITH THE BUILDING.
(a) Mortar patch. Late first century.
Coarse Ware (Fig. 9).
13. Mortarium, bead and flange almost level; cream ware. Cf.
Wroxeter, Fig. 19, type 26, A.D. 80-120.
14. Mortarium, with flat-topped rim beveUed internally; cream
ware. Cf. Richborough III, 351, A.D. 50-75 ; Wroxeter, Fig. 19, type
14, late first century.
C. FROM POST-BUILDING DEPOSITS.
(a) Yellow-brown loam. Early second century.
Coins.
1. Claudius I (A.D. 41-54). Native copy of As ; condition fair.
2. Trajan, c. A.D. 100. Semis ; condition good. M. and S. 443.
Samian,
A poor group in which the only identifiable sherds are Vespasianic
(3), Domitianic (1) and probably Trajanic (1).
24
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
Coarse Ware (Fig. 9).
15. Mortarium, bead and flange of rim level. Cf. Wroxeter, Fig. 19,
type 22, A.D. 80-120.
Other Objects (Fig. 10).
3. Bronze spoon ; part of handle wanting.
4. Lunar brooch with traces of red enamel.
(b) Burned deposit (section CD only). Second quarter of second
century.
Coin.
Hadrian A.D. 134-8. Sesterius: condition good. Rare type.
M. and S. 763.
(c) The upper mortar layer (possibly indicative of repairs) produced
no datable finds.
(d) Earth on pavement below wall debris. (Section NO). Late
fourth century.
Coins.
1. Tetricus I (A.D. 270-3). Antoninianus: good condition. M. and
S. 126.
2. Tetricus I (A.D. 270-3). Antoninianus: good condition. M. and
S. 133.
3. Radiate Crown c. A.D. 270 or later. Small Antoninianus.
4. Radiate Crown. Antoninianus.
5. Barbarous Radiate c. A.D. 270 or later. Antoninianus but
4 M size.
Pottery (Fig. 12).
20. Jar, dark grey ware burnished inside lip with reddish tinge.
21. Flanged bowl, dark buff-grey ware, probably hand-made, roughly
burnished, and with polished trellis on lower part of external wall.
22. Beaker in hard red paste, with polished dark red-brown slip.
23. Jar-rim in coarse grey-brown ware. Also 2 other rims of late
fourth century hand-made " porridgy " ware.
Other Objects (Fig. 15).
4. Small bronze finger-ring: only one end of ring is attached to
socket; the other is apparently adjustable, but this may be making
the best of a break in antiquity : stone missing.
5. Bone pin with large spherical head.
25
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
D. FROM POST-DEMOLITION DEPOSITS.
(a) Mortar debris inside wall (overlying mosaic floor). Late fourth
century.
Coins.
1. Tetricus I (A.D. 270-3). Antoninianus: condition fair. M. and
S. 121.
2. ? Tetricus I (A.D. 270-3). Antoninianus : very worn.
3. Tetricus I I (A.D. 270-3). Antoninianus. M. and S. 274.
4. ClaudiusII(A.D.268-70). Antoninianus: worn. M.andS. 110.
5. Claudius II (posthumous) A.D. 270. Antoninianus: worn.
M. and S. 266.
6. Radiate crown, c. A.D. 270. Antoninianus : very worn.
7. Constans c. A.D. 350. 4 M size.
8. Constantius II (or Constans), c. A.D. 360. 3 M : worn.
9. Valens (A.D. 364-78). 3 M : good condition.
Coarse Ware (Fig. 9).
16. Funnel-necked jug with neck-ring ; buff ware. Cf. Richborough
II, 164. Late third-fourth century.
17. Bowl with oblique straight sides, rim higher than flange;
burnished black ware. Cf. Richborough I, 121-2, fourth century.
Two further examples of this type of bowl came from this layer.
Other Objects (Fig. 10).
5. Bone pin, knobbed head.
(b) Black soil over robbed wall. Late fourth-fifth century.
Coins.
1. Victorinus (A.D. 268-70). Antoninianus. M. and S. 118.
2-3. Tetricus I (A.D. 270-3). Antoninianus (semi-barbarous).
4-5. Tetricus I (A.D. 270-3). Antoninianus: worn. M. and S.
100/102.
6. Claudius II (posthumous), c. A.D. 270. Antoninianus. M. and
S. 261/2.
7. Carausius (A.D. 287-93). Antoninianus. M. and S. 118 ff.
8. Constantino I A.D. 320-4. 3 M.
9. Constans A.D. 341-5. 3^1.
10. Constantius II (or Constans) overstruck c. A.D. 360. 3 M
(small).
11. House of Theodosius I (A.D. 388-95). 4 M : worn.
Coarse Ware (Fig. 9).
18. Mortarium, bead high above flange ; reddish-buff smooth hard
26
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
mmwF 21 ?/ 22 23
/
2 4
/ *
25
^r |
VWH
FIG. 12. COARSE AND OTHER POTTERY (i)
'SSS3i. OOOOOOOOO
S
FIG. 13. TERRA SIGILLATA (J).
Nos. 1, 5, p. 29 ; 2, 3, p. 33 ; 4, p. 36 ; 6, p. 35 ; 7, p. 28.
27
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
ware. Cf. Richborough HI, 360, fourth century; Wroxeter, Fig. 20,
type 130, with late third century coins.
19. Bowl with rim high above flange. Cf. similar bowls above from
the mortar debris over the mosaic.
II. ROOMS 2 and 3, CELLARS D and E (Section GH).
A. PRE-BUTLDING DEPOSITS.
(a) Dark grey loam with charcoal, on natural. Mid first century.
Samian ; none.
Coarse Ware (Fig. 12).
27. Large jar of Belgic coarse ware (" porridgy " paste, brown
leathery surface), corrugated shoulder.
28. Coarse bead-rim jar, similar paste, black rough surface similar to
25.
29. Coarse flat-topped rim, harder sandier paste.
30. Hard light flagon with cream surface cf. Gamulodunum form
140 B : Claudius-Nero.
31. Butt-beaker imitation, dull black surface, slightly "soapy"
(but fine sandy paste) ; decorated with fork scorings.
32 Terra nigra platter; dull grey black surface : variety of
Gamulodunum form 15.
33 Terra nigra platter; hard silvery surface, cf. Gamulodunum,
form 14.
34. Imitation terra rubra platter, in sandy bright red ware, with
polished surface.
35. Thick lid in coarse grey porridgy ware.
36. Gallo-Belgic white butt-beaker, cf. Oamulodunum form 113,
probably made in this country.
37. Rim of hard pink sandy paste, with bright red washed surface
outside, and inside as far as bottom of bevel.
(b) Glean loam. Mid first century.
Samian.
1. Form 29 by SCOTTIVS of La Graufesenque (Fig. 13, 7). The
same design is found on a Tiberian form 29 (with rouletted central
moulding) at Vechten (Knorr, T.S. 1919, 72 G.) ; but on this specimen
the central moulding is plain. No doubt Claudian, A.D. 40-50.
Coarse Ware.
This was similar to that of (a) and also had a sherd or two of grey
sandy Romanized ware.
28
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
(c) Upper part of dark loam, above (b).
Samian.
1. Form 29 by SCOTTIUS: a second sherd of the above.
2. Form 29 (2 sherds) ; style of CELADVS of La Graufesenque.
His rosette in a frame of vertical obHque beads, with dot-circles in the
four corners, exactly as on a form 29 at Mainz stamped CELADI MAUI
Knorr, T.S., 1919,21B). Period Nero, A.D. 60-70. (Fig. 13,1.)
3. Form 29, lower frieze. The little cruciform ornament is used by
CRESTIO (form 29, OF CRESTIO, British Museum), and it is probably
his work. Claudian (Fig. 13, 5).
4. Form 15 similar to Claudian examples from Aislingen (0 and P,
XLHI28 and 29) or to the form 15 from Silchester stamped OF FELICIS
(Claudius to Vespasian). Period Claudius-Nero (A.D. 50-60).
5. Form Ritterling 9 (?). Probably Claudian (A.D. 45-50). Also
small pieces of forms 18 and 27.
Coarse Ware (Fig. 12).
24. Dirty light brown combed ware.
25. Black bead-rim pot; soft " porridgy " paste ; arched brush
striations.
26. Imitation Gallo-Belgic platter in coarse soapy grey-brown ware.
Other Finds.
1. Part of a melon bead.
(d) Clean loam below corridor floor, cut by gravel footings.
Samian.
1 small fragment of form 27.
Coarse Ware (Fig. 14).
38. Jar of " soapy," hardly yet Roman, ware (gritty brown-black
paste with reddish core ; smoothed on rim and neck ; shoulder
decorated with shallow incisions; lower part of body matt with
polished lines); cf. Gamulodunum form 109 (A.D. 43/44-65); Richborough
III, 244 (A.D. 50-75).
39. Hard grey-ware beaker with polished surface and sharp carination,
cf. Gamulodunum 120 (A.D. 49-65). Richborough I, 75-7.
40. Lid, coarse grey ware.
41. Carinated jar, slightly soapy smooth hard grey ware. This is
of early Roman type, probably mid first century cf. Ospringe, 355 ;
for Belgic prototype cf. Verulamium, Fig. 15, 39.
42. Jar, similar to 41.
29
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
39
ayy*:vx»v\y«fr
J
1
T
45 ~f 4*7 « * ^ 48 T
49
/
50
:?£#*••£"' 7
53
54
• ^
55 T 56 ~3 sr
FIG. 14. COARSE POTTERY (J).
(e) Gully running north-south, cut from the level of the clean loam
(d) above.
Samian.
1. Form 18, early type, similar to but somewhat larger than
Ritterling 2 Ab (0 and P, XLV, 2) with fragment of stamp ]STIO, no
doubt for OF CRESTIO. Claudian.
30
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
Coarse Ware (Fig. 14).
43. Hard brick-red mortarium, white grit. No exact parallel to
this has been traced. Mr. Phihp Corder, Lady Fox, and Mr. Eric
Birley all of whom have seen it, agree that it is later than first century,
c. A.D. 120 or more probably c. A.D. 150 being considered the earliest
date for its manufacture. Yet its stratigraphical position and its
associations both point to a date in the third quarter of the first century.
The difficulty can here only be noted until some parallel form is found.
44. Base of large flagon in dense dirty white ware; perhaps
Neronian or early Flavian.
d
©
i
i
£ i»sm 3
i1
i 4
a? « j - . . u . r i . ^ mi.
t
8 t ! . 5 i 7
11
> , 1 1 t i
\
FIG. 15. SMALL OBJECTS (f).
Nos. 1, 2, p. 35 ; 3, p. 31; 4, 5, p. 26 ; 6, p. 32 ; 7, Roman Bronze Pin from
Trench V; 8, p. 40; 9, p. 41.
Other Finds.
1. Bronze Brooch (Fig. 15,3). Collingwood, group P. Gamulodunum
type XVIII B. Incomplete specimen: the bow is fluted, the central
ridges being knurled, the outer plain; the foot flat and diamondshaped,
and decorated with punch marks. Period : Claudius-Nero.
2. Glass handle, ribbed: deep amber ; from a jug with angular
handle. M.J. type 58. Later first century A.D.
31
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
(f) Layers sealed by the mortar spread of the courtyard.
Samian.
1. Form 27, small fragment, trench 5b.
2. Form 29, small fragment with godroons ; possibly Claudian,
trench 5a.
3. Form 37, ovolo, indeterminate, trench 8.
Coarse Ware (Fig. 14).
45. Bowl with reeded rim ; granulated light grey ware. Also
fragment of a second. These bowls are common at Canterbury ; they
appear first in Claudian times at Camulodunum (form 246) and are
common in Flavian times, Richborough I, 79, Collingwood 18-20.
46. Rim of brown ware with grey surface, of poppy-head beaker
type. Early second century.
47. Rim, groved for lid, grey ware cf. Richborough IH, 245, dated
A.D. 80-120.
48. Reeded rim in grey ware, cf. Camulodunum 250.
Other Finds (Fig. 15).
6. Bone needle.
(g) Wall trench of hypocaust room 3.
Samian.
1. Form 30 or 37, small rim fragment.
2. Form 18, indeterminate.
3. Form 18/31, indeterminate.
4. Form 27, indeterminate. This piece was in the clay bedding
for the gutter, the other three below, in the wall-trench.
Coarse Ware (Fig. 14).
50. Rough-cast beaker, brown paste. This, with its small rim and
low belly is not earher than early second century. Verulamium Fig. 27,9.
51. Dish-, light grey " porridgy " ware.
Also body sherds of grey ware beaker with barbotine dots.
Other Finds.
Pieces of polished stone. See Appendix I, Nos. 2-7.
B. DEPOSITS CONTEMPORARY WITH BUILDING.
(a) Mortar spread (Courtyard floor).
49. Bowl, probably carinated, in granulated grey ware, of.
Richborough I, 22, III, 215 : second half of first century.
32
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
(b) Gravel layer (section GH) above grey loam.
Samian (Fig. 13).
2-3. Form 67, two pieces; period, probably Nero, c. A.D. 60-70.
(c) Pebbly clay above (b).
Samian.
1. Ritterling type 1 ; probably Claudian (A.D. 50-60).
2. Form 18, indeterminate.
Coarse Ware (Fig. 14).
52. Bowl with reeded rim in grey ware ; three different vessels.
53. Base of olla with lattice pattern.
54. Lid in grey ware.
Glass.
1. Fragment of rim of large flask, diameter of rim 2\ inches, greenish,
rim folded upwards and inwards. Form not in M.J.; second-third
centuries.
(d) Pit R\. Fourth century.
Coarse Ware (Fig. 14).
55. Dense smooth whitish mortar. Late third or early fourth
century. Cf. Richborough I, 97-102 for form only (early to mid fourth
century) ; Oswald Margidunum in Ant. Journ., XXIV, Fig. 7, 61
(late third century).
56. Soapy black rim ; perhaps a late wide-necked flagon like
Richborough I, 118 (fourth century), but perhaps a native version of a
Claudian butt beaker.
57. Neck and rim of Castor beaker ; pink paste, red interior, dark
slate-coloured glaze outside.
The rim form is of late third century type cf. Verulamium Theatre,
Arch., LXXXIV, 255, Fig. 10, 14.
C. POST-DEMOLITION DEPOSIT.
(a) Rubble filling of hypocaust, room 3. The layers were as follows
(a) 3 inches of dark silt on the concrete floor, probably contemporary
with its use ; (6) fallen building debris above (a) ; (c) thin deposit
of earthy silt above (b), perhaps washed into the hollow by weathering.
Coins.
1. Claudius H (posthumous) A.D. 270. Antoninianus: condition
fair. M. and S. 261/2 (b).
2. ? Tetricus I A.D. 270-3. Antoninianus (a).
33 «
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
3. Tetricus H (A.D. 270-3). Antoninianus: condition good.
M. and S., 270 (b).
4. Radiate Crown c. A.D. 270. Antoninianus.
5. Radiate Crown c. A.D. 270 or later. Antoninianus (small) (c).
6. 1 Barbarous Radiate. Late third century (b).
7. Barbarous Radiate. Late third century (b).
8. Carausius (A.D. 287-93). Antoninianus: condition good.
M. and S. 101 (b).
9. Constantine I (A.D. 307-37). SM : mint condition. Cohen 487
A.D. 320-4 (b).
10. Constantine I, 3 M A.D. 330-5 : mint condition (c).
J 5 9 \
58 59 y
60
62
(
6\
I
6 5
64
;
67 68
7\
< . v? i
70
69
72 )
FIG. 16. COARSE AND OTHER POTTERY (i).
34
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
11. Constans (A.D. 337-50). 3M A.D. 345-50 : condition good (b).
12. Constantius I I or Constans. 4 M size, A.D. 345-61 (b).
(b) Also the following.
1. Postumus (A.D. 259-68). Antoninianus c. A.D. 260 : on tile
gutter.
2. Tetricus I (A.D. 270-3). Antoninianus, condition fair. M. and
S., 79/80. On pavement of corridor.
3. Tetricus I. Antoninianus, condition fair. M. and S. 100. On
pavement of corridor.
HI. WEST WING, CELLARS F and G (Section LM).
A. PRE-BUILDING DEPOSITS.
(a) Dirty loam on natural soil.
Coin.
1. British tin coin (Fig. 15, 1). Derek Allen's class 2 1 : diameters
0 • 56 and 0 • 48 inches.
Coarse Ware (Fig. 16).
61. Bead-rim bowl with burnished neck and brush-striated sides, in
fight grey " porridgy" ware, black surface. Pre-Roman type,
paralleled in the Belgic ditch (cellar L) on the south side of St. George's
Street (to be published) cf. Gamulodunum 258, which began before the
conquest, but reached its greatest popularity in period IV (A.D. 50-61).
Other Objects.
1. Brooch—some fragments which Mr. Hull thinks may have been
the shape of Collingwood's group A (Gollingwood, Fig. 60, 2). Possibly
pre-Claudian.
2. Bronze finger-ring, decorated with three grooves on face (Fig.
15, 2).
(b) Pebbly-ham above (a).
Terra sigillata.
1. Arretine platter (form 18?) with stamp C. SENTI as at Haltern
(Loeschcke, Haltern H, PI. XXIX, 203, 204, and p. 182). His stamps
even occur on the Augustan site of Mount Beuvray : this piece may be
only Tiberian (Fig. 13, 6).
' 2. Form 29 : too small for exact identification: probably
Vespasianic (A.D. 70-80).
Also 2 unidentifiable fragments.
Trans, of International Numismatic Congress, 1936, 351-7.
35
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
Coarse Ware (Fig. 16).
58. Large jar with corrugated neck and brush-striated shoulder.
Typologically early Belgic form, cf. Wheathampstead No. 2. (Verulamium
PI. XLIX, 2), Swarling No. 31 ; it does not occur at Prae Wood
or at Colchester.
59. Bead-rim bowl; fight brown " soapy " ware with dark grey
core.
60. Pedestal base, in " porridgy " grey ware.
62. Biconical bowl in buff-grey ware ; shoulder bears lightly tooled
grooves to give corrugated effect.
(c) Pit R8.
Samian.
1. Form 30, fragment of rim, high glaze ; probably Claudian,
A.D. 40-50.
Other Pottery (Fig. 16).
63. Gallo-Belgic terra nigra platter. Camulodunum form 7b.
64. Platter in fine pohshed grey-black ware imitating terra nigra.
Cf. Camulodunum 26-7.
65. Dish in coarse granulated buff-grey ware.
66. Lower part of girth beaker in pink ware with darker surface ;
vertical fine combing.
67. Jar of more Romanized appearance ; dark grey smoothed
surface ; paste light grey and " porridgy."
(d) Post-Hole L.
68. Lid (?) in reddish sandy paste, surfaces pohshed dark grey;
band of incised comb-rilling.
(e) Clean loam above pit 228 below builders' debris east of wall.
71. Incense-cup : two fragments in red granulated ware ; burnt
dark on inside. Not closely datable ; cf. late first century example
Richborough I, 30.
B. DEPOSITS CONTEMPORARY WITH BUILDING.
(a) Glean clay build-up below mortar floor.
Samian (Fig. 13).
4. Form 37 style of MEMOR of La Graufesenque. His ovolo as on
37 at Pompeii inscribed MIIMORIS (retro), with his Nile goose (Oswald
2244). Period : Vespasianic, A.D. 70-80. -
36
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
Coarse ware (Fig. 16).
69. Flagon neck in soapy grey paste with orange surface. This
seems to be not later than Claudian (cf. Gamulodunum Fig. 51, 3) and
was doubtless incorporated when the clay was brought from elsewhere,
together with a biconical bowl of Belgic make resembling Camulodunum
form 229 B.
;
) s
2-SSL n 4
y>
7 J COOT reenter ewro 8
Moroo»(»«o«i>r m 9
10
I mii
PIG. 17. COARSE MEDIEVAL POTTERY, EARLY 13TH CENT. (J)
(b) Builders' debris east of wall.
70. Dish in grey ware ; early second century cf. Richborough I, 46,
IH, 339 (both late first or early second centuries) and Newstead p. 258.
(c) Black filling of gutter east of wall (late third century).
Coins.
1. Salonina ? (A.D. 260-8). Antoninianus.
37
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
2. Victorinus (A.D. 268-70). Antoninianus: condition good.
M. and S. 118.
3. Claudius H (A.D. 268-70). Antoninianus: condition fair.
M. and S. 81.
4. Tetricus I (A.D. 270-3). Antoninianus : condition good. M. and
S. 100/2.
5. Tetricus I. Antoninianus : condition good. M. and S. 147.
6. Radiate crown A.D. 270. Antoninianus (small).
7. Radiate crown c. A.D. 270. Antoninianus (small): condition
fair.
8. ? Radiate Crown c. A.D. 270.
9. Radiate Crown c. A.D. 270. Antoninianus (small), semibarbarous.
10. Barbarous Radiate Crown c. A.D. 270-90. Antoninianus:
condition fair.
11. Illegible 4 M size. Third or fourth century. Probably diademed
head.
Coarse Ware (Fig. 16).
72. Jar rim, coarse grey ware.
(d) Occupation of rooms.
Coins.
1. Probably Radiate Crown (mid to late third century type) ; on
tessellated pavement in cellar F.
2. Constantine I (A.D. 307-37). ConstantinopoUs type (A.D. 330-7),
3 M ; on upper tessellated pavement in cellar G.
MEDIEVAL AND RECENT.
A. LEVELS STRATIFIED ABOVE ROOM 1 (Section NO).
(a) Black medieval rubbish above Roman debris. Early thirteenth
century.
Coin.
Henry II. Cut Halfpenny (Canterbury ?).
Mule : Tealby C/Short Cross la. c. A.D.1180.
Pottery (Fig. 17).
1. Bowl, reddish brown hard granulated paste.
2. Bowl, dark grey ware ; simple almost Roman shape.
3. Coarse red ware, very shelly; dimpled pie-crust rim with
pronounced Up.
4-6. Hard brick-red to brown granulated paste.
38
J )
FIG. 18. COARSE MEDIEVAL POTTERY FROM PITS (1).
39
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
7. Narrow-necked jar with collar-rim, grey ware, decorated with
bands of coarse rouletting.
8. Rim, grey ware, with applied band in hollow of neck.
9. Grey-black granulated ware.
10. Coarse light grey granulated cooking pot.
11. Reddish jug, with a little shell grit, unglazed.
Other Objects (Fig. 15).
8. Bronze key with circular notched bow in axis at right angles to
that of the bit, which is welded.
A terminus post quern for this group is provided by the coin of
Henry H, which shows appreciable wear, yet would have been pushed
out of circulation by succeeding issues fairly soon. The deposit will
not then be earher than c. 1200 ; on the other hand the pottery it
contains is on the whole earher in type than the late thirteenth century
wares represented in the pits (Fig. 18). In general these vessels are
more curved, less angular or flattened in the neck and rim than their
successors, a feature also seen in the Norman pottery from Caesar's
Camp, Folkestone (Arch., XLVH, PL XX) and in the twelfth and early
thirteenth century pottery from Rayleigh Castle, Essex (Trans. Essex
Arch. Soc, XII, 182). The slight shoulder and tall straight rim of 10,
again, is a type found stratigraphically earher than a late thirteenth
century pit below the Rose Hotel (to be published) ; and the internal
swelling of 8 and 9 is parallelled in twelfth century pottery from
Alstoe Mount, Rutland (Antiq. Journ., XVI, 403, Nos. 11, 13).
Rouletting, too, as on 7, with square or diamond-shaped notches, is a
feature inherited from late Saxon times (Oxoniensia, V, 46), and it is
found on Norman wares of the twelfth century (Old Sarum, Antiq.
Journ., XV, 185). For an example more nearly contemporary with ours
cf. White Castle, Monmouthshire (Ibid. XV, 330-4 and Fig. 3, 14).
(b) Medieval rubbish pits later than (a) (Fig. 18): late thirteenth
century.
Pit i¥4.
12. Spouted flagon, in hard grey ware with light golden brown
surface and glaze, traces of white slip in places below it. Surface
combed horizontally; below the spout (missing) an arcading of low
raised ribs.
13. Reddish hard granulated ware.
14. Coarse shell-gritted ware.
15. Cooking pot, ware similar to 2.
16. Similar.
17. Jug, hard grey ware with patches of olive-green glaze.
40
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
18. Reddish jug with brown glaze.
19. Similar.
Pit Ml.
20. Conical cresset-lamp for insertion in a bracket.
Pit M6.
21. Cooking pot, roughly shaped, hard brown sandy ware.
22. Cooking pot, grey ware.
Pit jura.
23. Hard grey granulated jar, hardly any shell grit; internal bevel.
Two examples.
24. Large dish, diameter 14 inches, grey ware with copious shell
grit, reddish brown surfaces.
25. Bowl, hard sandy ware, buff brown, with a little shell grit.
26. Very large dish, diameter 2 feet, ware similar to 13 but containing
much more shell grit. 13 and 14 both have a row of small pinincisions
round the flat top of the rim, c. -| inch apart.
27. Oblique sided dish, brown sandy ware.
28. Dish or lid (?) similar ware. Also present, a number of pieces of
flat heavily-fired floor tile, c. -| inch thick, sometimes thickly greenglazed.
In this group, while there are obvious similarities with the earliest
group e.g. Nos. 21 and 22, on the whole the rims are flatter and the
shoulders more pronounced or angular. Glaze, too, is more common.
This group bears comparison with the late thirteenth century pottery
from Watling Street (Arch. Cant., LX, 99).
NOTE.—There was also found, unstratified, a glazed stamped tile of
the pattern figured as No. 45 of the London Museum Medieval Catalogue
list (p. 245). This type is already recorded from Canterbury Cathedral.
(c) Seventeenth century layer.
Fig. 15, 9. Bronze face of small portable sun-dial. This was found
in the layer at the north end of section NO, 16-24 inches below the
surface. The gnomon, which is missing, was apparently held in a
small socket rivetted to the central arm.
APPENDIX I
PETROGRAPHIOAL REPORT
By K. C. Dunham, D.Sc, S.D., of the Geological Survey and Museum
1. Pohshed slab, 0 • 55 cm. thick, with one obtuse angle of the original
outting (102°) remaining. Cellar D, Pit Ml. A red hornblende
porphyrite composed of white phenocrysts of oligoclase-andesine up to
3 mm. long, highly sericitized, and phenocrysts of oxyhornblende up to
41
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
1-25 mm. long in a fine-grained groundmass containing quartz and
feldspar with abundant disseminated cryptocrystalline ?hsematite,
imparting a red colour to the rock. The oxyhornblende is pleochroic
pale yellowish-brown to deep brown, and many crystals show dark
margins ; it is optically negative with high optic axial angle and low
extinction angle. A little calcite is present in the groundmass. It is
possible that some of the phenocrysts may have been orthoclase rather
than plagioclase, but the extensive sericitization makes positive
determination impossible.
This may be identified with confidence as the rock known as
Porfido Rosso Antico, obtained from quarries at Jebel Dokhan in Egypt.
The specimen submitted is identical with our specimen from that
locality (F.3136) and the rock-type is an unusual one.
2. Floor-slab, one surface only ground, 2 • 2 cm. thick, other dimensions
at least 15 x 14 cm. Coarsely crystalline shelly limestone, containing
abundant remains of the gasteropod genus Viviparus (Pdludina).
The shells are recrystallized, and partly filled with calcite mud. They
are cemented by a matrix of coarsely crystalline clear calcite, with
crystals up to 0*5 mm.
3. Floor-slab, similar to 2, shelly limestone rich in remains of
Viviparus.
4. Slab ground both sides, 2 • 3 cm. thick, other dimensions at least
7x5*5 cm. A coarse shelly limestone rich in Viviparus remains and
containing patches of yellowish calcite mudstone, possibly with some
dolomite, enclosed in a matrix of very coarsely crystalline calcite.
Some of the sheUs are partly replaced by hmonite, possibly after pyrite.
Fragments of crystalline phosphate and rare quartz grains are present.
These shelly limestones rich in remains of Viviparus (Nos. 2, 3, 4)
are characteristic of certain beds in the Purbeck (upper Jurassic) and
Wealden (lower Cretaceous) series. The former have been extensively
worked for marble (" Purbeck Marble ") in the neighbourhood of
Swanage, Dorset, while the latter has been worked under the name
" Sussex Marble " at Gorlinger, Petworth, Bethersden and Coolham,
Sussex. The species of Viviparus present in the Wealden is somewhat
larger than in the Purbeck, and my coUeague Mr. Edmunds is of the
opinion that the specimens submitted are more likely to have come from
the Purbeck than the Wealden. In this case, they may have been
derived from thin beds which occur in the vicinity of Battle in association
with iron ores probably known to the Romans, and need not
necessarily have been brought from Swanage.
5. Small fragment, 3 • 3 cm. thick, ground on one side and partly on
the other. A glauconitic sandy limestone : composed of quartz grains
averaging 0-2 mm. but reaching a maximum length of 1-5 mm., and
abundant green glauconite pellets averaging 0-15 mm. diameter in a
42
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
calcite mosaic matrix. A little pyrite, partly altered to hmonite, is
present.
6. Paving slab, at least 14 x 12 • 5 cms. A fine-grained limey
glauconitic sandstone : containing highly angular quartz grains averaging
0-05 mm., with some brownish-green glauconite, cemented by
calcite. Minor constituents include brown staurolite, zircon, oligoclase,
ilmenite, magnetite, leucoxene.
The glauconitic hmestone and limey sandstone (Nos. 5, 6) may be
assigned with confidence to the " Kentish Rag " facies of the Lower
Greensand. This facies extends from the neighbourhood of Maidstone
to beyond Ashford, Kent, and is extensively quarried at Maidstone,
East Mailing, Otham, Larkfield and Chilmington.
NOTE.—Nos. 2-6 were found in the foundation trench of Room 4.
With them was (7) another piece of shelly hmestone in the shape of an
irregular rhomboidal quadrilateral, 8-8x5-6 cm., and 1-3 cm. thick.
Its edges were slightly bevelled to give a good joint; its face is pohshed,
the other sides roughly ground. This is clearly opus sectile, as also is
probably No. 1. Similar fragments of Wealden Marble, cut for an opus
sectile floor, were found at Angmering, and a discussion will be found in
Sussex Arch. Colls., LXXIX, 15-19.
APPENDIX II.
SKELETON OP INFANT FROM HYPOOAUST-FILLING OF ROOM 4.
By I. W. Cornwall, B.A.
The remains were extraordinarily complete, for the most part,
even paper-thin bones, such as the inter-alveolar septa of the jaws being
preserved.
A few parts were missing altogether : the nasal, palatine, ethmoid
and lachrymal bones of the skuU, the left tibia, both fibulae, all the
bones of hands and feet and several vertebrae.
The skull was, with some difficulty, approximately reconstructed.
Though the still-separate bones of the base, and some of the face,
showed good contacts, those of the vault were evidently still widely
separated during life and considerable fragments of them were missing.
As they were, moreover, mostly no more than 1 mm. thick, large errors
were inevitable in making edge-to-edge joins during reconstruction.
The final result, therefore, was not exactly symmetrical, though the
errors were distributed as widely as possible to enable the general
appearance of the skull to be reproduced fairly accurately.
Even the posterior and antero-lateral fontanelles of the braincase
43
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1946 AND 1946
were wide open. These are usuaUy filled in by growth of the surrounding
bones within 2-3 months after birth.
Only one tooth was found, the germ of a lower medial incisor,
the first tooth to cut the gum, generaUy between 6 and 9 months
after birth. The root was quite unformed and the tooth was evidently
in life, stiU buried in its alveolus in the mandible. This indicates an
age probably less than six weeks.
On one side the tympanic ring of the temporal bone was still
separate from the squamous part and very weU preserved. On the
other side the corresponding part was already fused with the rest
of the bone. This union generaUy takes place shortly before birth,
so that its incompleteness in this instance indicates at most a newlyborn
infant and possibly even a fuU-term foetus.
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
Arch. Archceologia (Society of Antiquaries).
Camulodunum Hawkes and HuU, Society of Antiquaries Research
Report XIV.
Cohen Cohen, Description historique des monaies frappdes sous
Vempire romain.
CoUingwood CoUingwood, The Archceohgy of Roman Britain, 1930.
J.R.S. The Journal of Roman Studies (Society for the Promotion
of Roman Studies).
Knorr, T.S. Knorr, Topfer und Frabiken verzierter Terra-Sigillata des
1919 ersten Jahrhunderts, 1919.
M. and S. Mattingly and Sydenham, Roman Imperial Coinage.
M.J. Morin-Jean, La Verrerie en Gaul sous Vempire romain,
1913.
Newstead Curie, A Roman Frontier Post and its People, 1911.
Ospringe Whiting, Hawley and May, Society of Antiquaries
Research Report VHI.
Oswald Oswald, Index . of Figure Types on Terra Sigillata,
(Supplement to Liverpool Annals of Archaeology and
Anthropology).
O. and P. Oswald and Pryce, An Introduction to the Study of
Terra Sigillata.
Richborough Bushe-Fox, Society of Antiquaries Research Reports
/ , II, III VI, VII, X.
Swarling Bushe-Fox, Society of Antiquaries Research Report V.
Verulamium Wheeler, Society of Antiquaries Research Report XI.
Wroxeter Bushe-Fox, Society of Antiquaries Research Report I.
44
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, 1945 AND 1946
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS.
The writers desire to thank their many friends who have assisted
the work. Mr. A. Martyr Smith made the prehminary surveys of the
sites, and Mr. J. Mann took the levels. The Samian ware has been
reported upon by Dr. Felix Oswald, the glass by Mr. D. B. Harden, and
the coins by Mr. B. H. St. J . O'Neil. Mr. Edmunds and Dr. Dunham
examined geological material, the Rev. Dr. S. G. Brade-Birks a soilsample.
Mr. W. F. Grimes drew Fig. 11, and Mr. Cornwall reported
upon the human remains.
The thanks of the Canterbury Excavation Committee are due to
the foUowing for permission to dig on their property : the Directors
of Court Brothers (Electrical Contractors) Ltd., Messrs. George, Beer &
Rigden and Taylor Brothers. Thanks are also due to F. W. Finnis and
Sons for the use of their bakery ceUar as storing-place for tools and
Roman pottery, and for many kindnesses.
F.W.T.
45