Salt Hill A Lost Canterbury Tumulus

SALT HILL: A LOST CANTERBURY TUMULUS By WILLIAM URRY L? there were no building at aU on the site of Canterbury, the place might yet be remarkable for a group of tumuli. The most conspicuous of this group is of course, the Dane John Mound. There are, or have been, several others. No effort is undertaken in these notes to assess the archaeological significance of such of the group as are known burial mounds, but an attempt is made to compile a hst of mounds of which the existence at some time or other is established, and a case is stated for the addition of a further mound, " Salt HiU," to the hst. I. Dane John Mound, or Greater Dungeon.1 II. A crescent-shaped mound outside the City waU on the site of Canterbury East Station. It was destroyed in 1860 during the construction of the rafiway. Upon this mound, U the map of Canterbury in the 1825 edition of Gostling's Walk is to be trusted, there stood a smaUer mound. III. The Mound upon which stands St. Mary Bredin's School. It was lowered in 1783 and flattened to accommodate a building. A Roman cremation burial was found in it. IV. Little Dungeon (Dungfil). This is mentioned by William Somner in 1640,2 and it remained until the nineteenth century. It stood just within the City waU (St. George's Terrace) between Ridingate and Newingate, and from what Brent says3 it was at the parish boundary St. George—St. Mary Bredin. This boundary cuts the Terrace at a point 55 feet north of its junction with Gravel Walk, and thus indicates the site. Quite a considerable part of the mound still appears to exist. The destruction of the houses on the Terrace by enemy action has disclosed a mass of earth (much cut about by excavations for ceUars) projecting here, and only here, from the inner side of the rampart. If this does in fact represent the remains of Little Dungeon, it shows that this mound must have stood in the same relation to the City waU as its greater counterpart, the Dane John Mound, abutting directly on to it. V. Oaten HiU. This was in existence as late as 1825. Executions were conducted here until 1799.4 The hiU was of no small size. It was lozenge-shaped, with a longer axis of as much as 150 feet, lying at i For a discussion of I-TV, see V.G.H. Kent, III (1932), pp. 77-8 and Arch. Journ., 2nd series, xxxvi (1930), 236, 272-6. 2 Antiquities of Canterbury, ed. 1, p. 21. 3 J. Brent, Canterbury in the Olden Time, ed. 2, pp. 12, 143. 4 Gostling : Walk (ed. of 1825), p. 28, n. 2. 141 SALT HILL: A LOST CANTERBURY TUMULUS about 15° from north. The northernmost part occupied the triangular space in front of Messrs. Seam's Garage at the end of Oaten Hill Place ; the hop-oast covers the site of the southern section. The mound in its later stages is shown in the various printed plans of Canterbury as somewhat eroded away on the east; this was probably due to the Northciate Cathedral MOUMD AT I XLI -.« ST.AUfiUSTJNK MOUND IN ^ buraaU A&&6-Y PRJE-CINCTS N&wiViaate Worihaoxa. i s SS. N R-idmaate. DUN6E-50 ^ \ \ \ U « = OATE-N PAM& JOHN ST. MAR-Y HILL MOUMD BILE-DIN'S MOUND OH w SCHOOL SITE Of ya ffoo tooo W.o ^TATIOM 1.11 I 1 1 SCAL6 lit MOUNDS AT CANTEFLbUrLY passing London and Dover traffic. lake Little Dungeon, Oaten Hill also served as a parochial boundary-mark; it defined the extreme southern corner of St. George's Parish, and theh use in this way would point to the fact that the mounds are of ancient date, for both parishes had been delimited by the tweUth century. VI. The mound in the grounds of St. Augustine's Abbey. Little is reaUy known of this mound. It is depicted in the plan of Canterbury by Andrews and Wren (1768), which shows that it cannot have been formed, as has been stated, from earth dug out during excavations 142 SALT HILL : A LOST CANTERBURY TUMULUS for the foundations of the Hospital. In its present state it is of considerable size and it was untfi some years ago much larger. The waU which retained it along Longport coUapsed after heavy rain, and during subsequent alterations when the road was widened, a good deal of the earth on the street side of the mound was scarped away. Roman deposits seem to occur in the mound. VII. Mound in the Precincts. This was in existence by c. A.D. 1160. A representation of it, perhaps the earhest diagram of a tumulus in England, is shown in the Canterbury Psalter.1 Upon it stood the Cathedral campanile which fell down in the earthquake of 1382. The mound is shown quite clearly at the bottom of the tower. Excavation is required to determine the exact nature of both this mound and the preceding. VIII. " Salt HiU." At Oaten HiU, WiUiam Somner teUs us, " was that commodity of oats sometime vented : as in the same place before Salt was sold, whence the place was caUed SalthiU."2 He gives as reference Rentale vet. Ecclesie Christi Cant. The archives of Canterbury Cathedral are pecuharly rich in ancient rentals, and several references to Salt Hill can be discovered. The hiU meets two requirements for an identification with Oaten HiU ; both are in the same parish (St. George's) and the same ward (Newingate). However, upon further investigation difficulties in this identification appear. The first occurrence of the name Salt Hill so far noticed is in a rental which can be dated from internal evidence to within a couple of years of 1165. The ceUarer of Christchurch receives a rent of 2s. per annum from John, son of Roger Cook for a plot of ground lying in Salthelle.& This ground, so it is stated, had belonged to Winede Oxe, and lay "without Newingate towards the east, next to the land of St. Augustine's held by Hamo son of Roger." In the next holding to the south dwelt Alderman Alan.4 If Salt HiU were to be identified with Oaten HiU, this property would lie near the junction of Chantry Lane, Oaten HiU (the street of that name), and Dover Street, that is, two streets and 800 feet away from Newingate. It is quite clear from the context, however, that it must be opposite the Gate, and that there is Uttle in between. l i we assume that the line of houses in Upper and Lower Bridge Streets between Ivy Lane and Dover Street lay on the same frontage in the tweUth century as at present, we ought to look in this neighbourhood for the holdings under discussion. This is an ancient built-up area. Many houses dating at least to the fifteenth century stood on 1 MS. Trinity College, Cambridge, fol. 284b. The volume was published in facsimile in 1934. 2 Antiquities of Canterbury, ed. 1, pp. 148-9. 3 Chapter MSS., Canterbury, Rental 31, col. i, para. 91. * Ibid. para. 92. The wording as to the position of Hamo's holding is ambiguous. See note 3, p. 144. 143 SALT HILL : A LOST CANTERBURY TUMULUS this hne until within recent times, and we are probably quite safe in the assumption that they lay on the same frontage as theh tweUth century predecessors. St. George's Place is, of course, a comparative newcomer and dates only from the end of the eighteenth century. Another rental relating to Canterbury in the Cathedral archives is incorporated in Register H, and was drawn up at the very end of the tweUth century.1 We will refer to it for convenience as H2. It deals inter alia with the same row of plots as does Rental 31.2 These have naturaUy undergone changes in tenants since the compilation of the survey of c. 1165. Alderman Alan's hehs now occupy his holding " in front of Newingate " ; an extra tenement in the possession of one Lambert has intruded itseU between those of Alan, and Hamo son of Roger ; this must be due to subdivision of the one or the other. The holding of John is now in the possession of Simon Chig, and has become Cathedral property,3 while beyond John, and south of " Lodderelane " hves Elviva widow of Pardich, paying 25d. at Midlent, and 7d. at the feast of St. Peter ad Vincula. There is no mention of Salt Hill. The rental " H2 " is a very remarkable document in that it comprises an extensive, detailed, and where it can be checked, extremely accurate survey of Cathedral property in Canterbury held by Gavelkind tenure, thus providing a remarkable picture of an English borough at the beginning of the reign of King John. Another rental, at the beginning of the same register,* here caUed HI for brevity, was drawn up a little later than the last mentioned, perhaps just before or just after the great exile of the monks, 1207-1213. I t does not provide as much detail as H2, but we find that the hehs of Pardich (altered in another, later, hand to Richard clerk of Milstead) pay 25d. at Midlent for land at Loddereslane " towards the south, at Salt Hfil."5 The holding of Alderman Alan, discussed above, can be fixed approximately as it is described as opposite Newingate. It must therefore have been at or near the beginning of the present St. George's i Chapter MSS., Register H, fi. 218a-229b. 2 Ibid. fol. 222a. 3 Due to ambiguity in Rental 31 above, it is possible that the holding of Hamo Was north of that of John, son of Roger, in which case two tenements have intruded themselves. Subdivision and amalgamation of tenements went on constantly. Strictly speaking the tenant of the soil at the lowest level was the owner. The vendor sold for an initial lump sum (gersuma), retaining a small annual rent. Property was sold and resold, so many individuals and institutions might claim an interest in one holding. Perhaps in this case both Churches, St. Augustine's and Christ Church, drew rent simultaneously. * Register H, ff. la-16a. 6 ibid. fol. 4b. A point of topographical interest provided here is the fact that a cross stood in the roadway, in what would be now the centre of the crossroads. Alan's holding, before which it stood, is said to be in the hands of one Adam at Cross. 144 SALT HILL : A LOST CANTERBURY TUMULUS Place. To the north of that holding was a tenement of 14 feet frontage, according to the renthst H2, in the hands of Lambert, whfie next door dwelt Simon Chig enjoying a frontage of 22 feet; giving a combined frontage for these last two of 36 feet. Beyond Simon, and south of Lodderelane, dwelt Elviva widow of Pardic, occupying a piece of ground 27 feet in frontage. The Lane was therefore sited 63 feet north of the Alderman's holding. One of the outstanding facts brought out by a study of these early rentals is that in a great many instances the ancient property boundaries can still be traced upon the ground plan of modern Canterbury. The frontage of Elviva was, as has been shown, 27 feet, and the combined frontage of her two neighbours to the south 36 feet. These are the dimensions of two adjacent premises at the required point in Bridge Street to-day.1 If the identifications are accepted Alan's dwelling is then placed almost exactly where we should expect; it covered most of the breadth of St. George's Place and the premises on the northern corner. A difficulty is raised by a relevant group of deeds in the Cathedral archives. The deeds fall in date just after the first compilation of HI, and before the revisionary notes were added ; one of them records the sale by Walter son of Robert Sheepshank (Szepeszange) of Dover to Walter son of Roger of Iffeld of land at Salt HiU " without Niewingate " which belonged to Elveva of SaltheUe widow of RanduU.2 The frontage is given as 35 feet instead of 27, though it is clear from rents and names specified that it is the same piece of property as that held by Elveva in H2. Another3 deed concerns the further sale of this property at Salthfil outside " Neuhingate " from Richard son of Roger of Hiffeld to Richard the clerk, son of Martin of Milstede. The same measurement, 35 feet, is given as the frontage. In both cases the boundary to the north is given, not as Lodderelane, but as the holding of Robert Pret. The explanation might be that the frontage of 35 feet includes the width (8 feet) of the lane, which was some sort of private alley. It now remains to determine the nature and precise site of Salt hiU. It was not a natural feature. There are no hills worthy of the name for haU a mile or more. It was fairly smaU, it is clear, as it acts as a land-mark in a quite closely defined position, and as far as can be judged from available evidence (as given below) it lay between the town waU and a row of houses not more than 120 feet away, in which distance considerable space must be aUowed for the town ditch. Its name 1 The more northerly (Elveva ?) is a bombed and derelict 17th century building (divided into three shops) with a mansard roof. The other (Messrs. Twyman's newer department) seems to represent the holdings of Lambert and Simon. 1 Chapter MSS., Charta Antiqua, No. C. 1190. Elveva's complete title, assembled from all the sources must have been : Elveva of Salt Hill, widow of Randulf Pardic. 3 Charta Antiqua No. C. 1191. 145 13 SALT HILL : A LOST CANTERBURY TUMULUS indicates very clearly that it was a mound of some sort, and, since smaU natural mounds are not met with in this locahty, we may infer that it was artificial. The word " hiU " is appUed regularly to the Canterbury mounds. The first element in the name is correctly explained by Somner. The register of St. Augustine's Abbey places a Martin the Salter (Sceltere) here in the thirteenth century.1 We can perhaps decide the site of Salt HiU with more precision. It lay sufficiently near Elveva's holding to supply her with a surname. L «& ui o V >- — r \& ^ cO dl Ul Oi y. vt U w ^H / y o.S OPALDE-BJAAN HE-I + ALAM [ST. 6&OR.GE-5 ("opposite N«Wm9ate') STR.E-E-TJ N&WINOATE- PLACE] NE-WNGATF CRJOSS H6IRS OF AILR.'ICJ OI SE- 0CHERUl ^ VO V D P 55 cOdi vxu\hu >- 1 Uuivil 3 a soft l o o f h I... I I I I I I w.u Environs of Salt Hill, Canterbury, about A.D. 1200, reconstructed from Register H, Canterbury Cathedral. To the north of this, and perhaps incorporated in it, lay a narrow lane, while beyond this was another holding, that of Osbert Pret. It seems improbable that the hfil lay in this direction. It is very unlikely indeed that it lay behind, to the east of, the row of dweUings. It did not He to the south of say the Alderman's house as there was a continuous 1 Black Book of St. Augustine's, ed. Turner and Salter, p . 166, in a Canterbury Rental transcribed into the volume. The names of citizens occurring indicate the date. 146 SALT HILL: A LOST CANTERBURY TUMULUS frontage of tenements stretching to, or almost to Dover Street.1 The only hkely site is therefore in the street, before Elveva's house, that is in what to-day is Lower Bridge Street, at a point about 70 feet from the corner of St. George's Place. We may imagine it as standing at the edge of the town ditch in the same manner as the mounds without the waU at the Dane John (Nos. II and III above). "Salt HiU seems to have survived tiU as late as 14302 but had disappeared by the seventeenth century, and there could have been no hving memory of it at that date or the learned and industrious William Somner, who searched for antiquarian remains " as narrowly as for Ants-paths" would have heard of it, and not have identified it incorrectly as he did with Oaten Hill. As stated above we propose to leave the archseological implications to the speciahst, but it is weU to draw attention here to the fact that on the very site of Salt HiU as suggested on manuscript evidence, a remarkable Roman inhumation burial was discovered in the Canterbury drainage operations of 1867-1868. At the upper end of Lower Bridge Street, 6 feet from the existing surface, and but 3 feet from some earher surface, came to hght a leaden coffin 4 feet 8 inches in length ; it had a decorated lid, and contained the remains of a ghl of 12 or 13 years of age.3 Students of the history of the Dane John group of mounds wiU at once recaU the " corse closed yn leade " dug up by treasure seekers early in the sixteenth century in a tumulus near Baron Hales' house.* It seems possible that the Bridge Street burial was in fact connected with Salt HiU, and that Salthfil was one of the group of Roman tumuh, the significance of which has been discussed elsewhere. When perhaps late in the Middle Ages, the mound was destroyed (it must have been an awkward obstruction in the roadway) the removers excavated down to the road level of their day.but failed to dig low enough toreach the coffin. The engineer in charge of the drainage operations of 1867-1868, James Pilbrow, placed before the Society of Antiquaries in 1869 a very bare account of discoveries made in the excavations. The report was most unsatisfactory, and so were the precautions taken to prevent the loss or destruction of objects found. The leaden coffin which might have served as a principal exhibit in the Canterbury Museum had by March, 1868, been broken up and sold for scrap metal.5 1 Register H, fol. 222. 2 B.B. St. Aug., p. 180. 3 Archceologia, XLIII, 160-161. Arcliceologia Cantiana, XIV, 35, where an illustration is given. The lid was in the shape of a parallelogram, with diagonal rope-moulded lines crossing from corner to corner. At the point of intersection was a flower in the form of a rose with four petals ; half way between the centre and each corner on the lines was a plain circular ornament. * Leland : Itinerary, ed. Toulmin Smith, vol. IV. p. 70. 6 Gentleman's Magazine, 1868, i, p. 369. The centre ornament of the lid, and one of the others, survived and were exhibited by Pilbrow at his lecture (Archceologia, vol. XLIII, p. 161). 147

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