
Warbank, Keston: A Romano-British Site
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Bee Boles and Beehouses
The Berkeleys of Canterbury
WARBANK, KESTON: A ROMANO-BRITISH SITE
By NANCY PIEROY EOX, B.A.
INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY
(I) THE WARBANK SITE
WARBANK is the name given to the lower south-westerly slopes of
Holwood Hill in the Parish of Keston (National Grid 541250/163250),
where an ancient river has cut a terraced valley (now dry) into the chalk
which forms the foot of the hill. The sunniest and most sheltered of
these terrace slopes was the site chosen for the Roman buhdings in the
Upper and Lower Warbank Fields—the Roman site is over 400 ft.
above sea level and is prominently situated right on the " nose " of the
hill so that any buhdings here would dominate the scene. (Fig. 1.)
I t is a very beautiful site with commanding views; in Roman times
buhdings here would have looked across the vaUey to the highway from
London to Lewes and northwards in the distance to Londinium—
where to-day can be seen St. Paul's Cathedral and Tower Bridge. A
bridleway still in use, recorded in a deed of A.D. 1326 as " the common
lane leading to Chelsham and elsewhere," follows the natural line of
movement between the Roman site at Warbank and the Roman Road
from London to Lewes, meeting the highway near Layhams Farm at a
distance of 1 £ miles. There is a spring above the site and the essential
building materials—sand, clay, gravel, chalk and flints are all found on
the site. (Fig. 1.)
It is interesting to record that the Roman site at Warbank (O.D.
425 ft.) is closely related geographically to the site of Caesar's Camp
(O.D. 450-500 ft.) the Iron Age Camp on Holwood Hill, and that first
century pottery, including buff/grey Belgic wares, was found on the
site during the excavations. The Roman site later became the site of
the Saxon Manor of Kestane or North Court (now represented by
Keston Court Farm), which included in its holdings the whole of Holwood
Hill, and in particular an interesting group of tenements just
outside the southern entrance to Caesar's Camp—an unusual feature
emphasized by the rest of Holwood Hill being heathland.
The southern entrance to Caesar's Camp and the associated ramparts
have been destroyed and Holwood House and its garden occupies
the site of the gateway and the medieval tenements, so that there is
an interesting suggestion of continuity on both archaeological sites.
96
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