Showing posts with label England. Show all posts
Showing posts with label England. Show all posts

Friday, August 31, 2018

DIVERS who have dedicated the last three decades to scouring a stretch of the River Tees have had their thousands-strong hoard declared as treasure.
Rolfe Mitchinson and Bob Middlemass started searching the area at Piercebridge, near Darlington, in 1987 and hung up their scuba suits at the site in September last year.

Their finds over the years combined have made up an collection of more than 5,000 items dating from the late Iron Age to the post-medieval period.

The majority of objects, more than 3,000, are Roman in origin and include coins, brooches, military equipment, tools and figurines.

At an inquest yesterday in Crook, senior coroner Jeremy Chipperfield concluded the Roman artefacts and coins were treasure.

A delighted Mr Mitchinson, 78, of Bournmoor, near Chester-le-Street, said: “We’ve been diving in the River Tees for 30 years and today was an accumulation of all that hard work.”

Mr Mitchinson and Mr Middlemass, 70, of Belmont, turned their attention from deep-sea diving to river diving in 1987 at the request of Northern Archaeology Group founder member Raymond Selkirk.

The pair, equipped with their gear, headed down to the northern banks of the river on the Raby Estates-owned land.

“In 1987 a lot of the main finds came out and then the more river bed we uncovered the more finds we made,” said retired printer Mr Mitchinson. “It was like an Aladdin’s Cave.”

As well as diving in rivers on archaeological missions across the country, the duo have continued to return to the place where it all began.

In September last year they were asked to stop diving at the site to allow for a major study to be carried out by Reading University.

A report from the British Museum to the coroner stated their finds were a "votive deposit or series of deposits", meaning they were deposited for religious purposes without the intention of recovery.

The expert identified the hoard as appearing to be associated with the piles and cross beams of a Roman-period bridge.

Among the items two or more precious metal coins and numerous gold and silver objects containing at least ten per cent of precious metal.

The court heard Durham University Museums has expressed an interest in acquiring the hoard.

The divers hope their finds will go on to be displayed to the public.

Hoard of Roman artefacts found by veteran divers 'is treasure'

Monday, August 27, 2018

“The villa would be the real center of rural industry and agriculture and although the persons living there would have been very wealthy and powerful there would have been all sorts of things going on from the cooks to slaves – but grain was vitally important to them,” Westcott told the Banbury Guardian.
The scans also showed indications of a bath-house, a domed-roof, mosaics, a grand dining room, kitchen, and living room. Earlier excavations have turned up coins, trophies, boar tusks, pendants, and tiles indicative of early Roman home heating systems. Photos of the excavation show the nearly 180 items found cleaned and cataloged during the dig. 

But who is the woman? Researchers aren’t sure. Ancient Romans inhabited Britain for nearly 400 years until the empire began collapsing during the third century. Given the amount of wealth surrounding her lead-lined tomb, it’s likely she was nobility. An analysis suggests she was just over 5 feet tall and in her 30s at the time of her death.
Westcott is approaching universities to secure funding for future excavations, which he suspects will cost around £2 million.

Ancient Roman Villa Nearly The Size Of Buckingham Palace Discovered On British Farm

Friday, July 27, 2018

Archaeological work near Woodbridge in Suffolk has revealed the rare remains of a Neolithic wooden trackway and platform.

The waterlogged timbers were found towards the end of an 18-month project carried out in advance of the installation of underground cables to connect ScottishPower Renewables’ East Anglia ONE offshore wind farm to the National Grid. During the initiative – overseen by Wardell Armstrong, with help from Suffolk County Council, Archaeology Solutions (Bury St Edmunds), Archaeology Wales, and Cotswold Archaeology – more than 50 sites along the 37km route were unearthed, but the trackway is one of the rarest and best-preserved finds.

Since February a team of over 70 archaeologists has been working to unearth the 30m-long wooden trackway and platform, which date to 2,300 BC. As the site lies next to natural springs, the perfect anaerobic conditions were created to allow for the preservation of the organic material.

To continue to maintain such delicate finds requires careful conservation. As Kate Batt at Suffolk County Council Archaeological Service explained, ‘Because organic finds of this age are so rare and vulnerable when exposed, they needed to be kept wet during excavation. The features containing the organic material have been flooded every night, and the archaeologists continually sprayed the wood to keep the trackway preserved as they worked.’
Other finds alongside the remains speak of the wooden surface’s importance to the prehistoric people who built it. These include an aurochs skull, found next to the platform, which appears to have been cut in such a way as to suggest it was affixed to a pole or possibly used as a form of headdress. As it was radiocarbon dated to c.4,300 BC, the aurochs had died 2,000 years before its repurposed skull was placed next to the track, possibly indicating that it had some cultural significance.

Richard Newman, Associate Director at Wardell Armstrong, said, ‘Undoubtedly this is a site of international archaeological significance. It is exceptionally rare to find preserved organic materials from the Neolithic period, and we will learn a great deal from this discovery. Some of the wood is so well preserved we can clearly see markings made by an apprentice, before a more experienced tradesman has taken over to complete the job. Initially some of the wooden posts looked like they were maybe 100 years old, and it is incredible to think that they are over 4,000 years old.’

Now that the project is nearing an end, the new discoveries will be recorded and stored for further analysis.

As Kate added, ‘Together with some of the other finds over the last two years, we hope that important artefacts can be displayed by local museums following completion of the analysis. The entire archaeological archive will be deposited with Suffolk County Council Archaeological Service, to ensure that the material remains available for future study.’

Archaeologists stumble on Neolithic ritual site in Suffolk

Saturday, September 30, 2017


One man’s dreams came true this week when he found a hoard of 2,000-year-old Roman silver coins in Dorset. Fisherman and amateur historian Mike Smale was hunting for treasure with friends from the Southern Detectorists club when he found the coins worth £200,000.

The 600 rare Denarii were in a field in Bridport, so Mike and the farmer will legally split the money. Mike, from Plymouth, Devon, said: ‘It’s a great find, my biggest one, but I shan’t be giving metal detecting up, it’s great fun and I’m sticking with it.’ Some of the coins are extremely rare as they were minted in Roman general Mark Anthony’s short-lived reign when he was allied with Cleopatra, and can be worth up to £900 each.

Sean MacDonaldm, aged 47, organised the metal detecting hunt. He said: ‘Bridport is a cracking area anyway, it’s very rich in history, but a find like this is unprecedented. I was elated and shaking because this is a once in a lifetime find. ‘I’ve never seen a hoard of this size before.
We found one in Somerset last year but there were just 180, and they weren’t of the same calibre.’ He added:  ‘The archaeologists excavating it couldn’t believe what they were seeing because these coins are so rare.
I personally think a find of this size and variety will never be found again.’ Coin expert Dominic Chorney said: ‘Coin finds such as this are fascinating, and are incredibly important in shedding light on the history of Roman Britain. ‘Republican coins and those of Antony were issued before the Roman Invasion of Britain in AD 43, and would have drifted over in the pockets of Roman soldiers and citizens alike.’ Metal detecting has become more popular after the BBC sitcom Detectorists first aired in 2014, which featured Mackenzie Crook and Toby Jones quest for treasure in Essex.

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Man discovers £200,000 worth of ancient coins in farmer’s field

Thursday, September 21, 2017

Dig season was coming to a close when amateur archaeologists in southeast England made one of their most important discoveries to date: a Roman mosaic, dating back more than 1,000 years.


Since 2015, the dig led by the Boxford History Project and the Berkshire Archaeology Research Group has brought together local archaeology enthusiasts and professional archaeologists. The team's work has focused on three Roman sites near the small village of Boxford.

But when the first, vibrant colors of the mosaic poked through the broken dirt of the excavation site, "I was stunned into silence," said the leader of the Boxford History Project, Joy Appleton, in an interview with the New York Times.
Anthony Beeson, a member of the Association for Roman Archaeology, initially thought it might be a hoax.

"It was so unlike anything that has ever turned up in this country," he said in an interview with science news outlet Live Science.

Luckily for Appleton and Beeson, the mosaic was not a hoax but instead a glimpse into life in Britain under ancient Roman rule.

The mosaic itself is large, measuring just over 19 feet long. So far, only one side of the panel has been revealed by excavators, but characters and beasts from Roman myths can be clearly seen. Initial studies of the scene depicted on the mosaic reveal it shows the mythological character Bellerophon at the court of characters believed to be either Lobates or Proteus.

At the bottom of the mosaic is a creature known as the chimera, which had a lion's head, a goat's torso, a serpent's tail, and breathed fire. In Greek legends, Bellerophon was sent to kill the chimera, and the scene depicts the creature ready to attack.

The mosaic may also depict the Greek hero Hercules fighting with a centaur.

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In a statement, Roman expert Neil Holbrook explained that the find was one of the most important mosaics ever found in Britain.

"Not only is it a fantastic new piece of Roman art from Britain, but it also tells us about the lifestyle and social pretensions of the owner of the villa at Boxford," he stated. The villa's owner, Holbrook claimed, was likely of British origin and trying to forge a close relationship with the Romans. By commissioning a mosaic with Roman iconography, it may have signaled a willingness to embrace the Roman government that occupied Britain.

The Roman Empire invaded ancient Britain in 43 A.D. and occupied the region until 410 A.D. During this time, Britain became one of the western fronts of the expansive empire, and a number of representatives built villas throughout the country. Mosaics have been found in England of varying quality and preservation, but the archaeologists in Boxford claim this find is significant for its intact quality and what it can reveal about the inhabitants who commissioned it.
In a press release detailing the find, Cotsworld Archaeology, one of the organizations that contributed to the excavation, explained that the site likely contained a moderately sized villa with a series of adjoining rooms. They believe the mosaic and a bath suite where residents could plunge into a cold-water pool were added over time.

While the mosaic has been the most exciting find from this summer's dig, it wasn't the only artifact found at the site. During the beginning of the year, the team found a child's bracelet and coins. Volunteers also uncovered what they theorize was a barn and a courtyard gateway.
Excavations have finished for this season, but the team of archaeologists and enthusiasts plans to return to the site next year in the hopes of unearthing more remnants of an ancient society.
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Amateur Archaeologists in England Unearthed Rare Massive Roman Mosaic

Sunday, September 10, 2017


It always puzzled me that there are no ancient mulberries to be found in my neighbourhood of Spitalfields, the centre of London’s silk industry from the 16th century. 
So I was delighted when I was taken to visit the Bethnal Green mulberry, a gnarly old specimen which, in local lore, is understood to be more than 400 years old and is believed to be the oldest tree in the East End of London. 
I found it a poignant spectacle to view this venerable black mulberry. Damaged by a bomb in the Second World War, it has charring still visible upon its trunk which has split to resemble a Barbara Hepworth sculpture. Yet, in spite of its scars and the props that are required to support its tottering structure, the elderly tree produces a luxuriant covering of green leaves each spring and bears a reliably generous crop of succulent fruit every summer. 

Little did I know that this encounter with such a remarkable mulberry would lead me all over London to visit its fellows in a quest to understand the significance of these ancient trees. Or that it would bring me back again to the East End to confront the controversy that has arisen over the Bethnal Green mulberry which could result in it being uprooted from the earth. 
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The ancient London mulberry tree threatened by a block of luxury flats - and the fight to save it

Friday, September 8, 2017

A hoard of silver coins has been found buried in school grounds near a medieval castle in Northumberland.

The 128 coins were discovered by the caretaker, who was using a metal detector in the grounds of Warkworth Church of England Primary School.


The school is near Warkworth Castle, once the seat of the powerful Percy family.

The coins date from the 15th and early 16th centuries, covering the reigns of Edward IV, who became king after victory in the Wars of the Roses and Henry VII, the first monarch of the House of Tudor who won the throne when his forces defeated King Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth Field.

The coins were declared as treasure and have been valued at more than £11,000 by the British Museum, which did not take up the option to buy them.


They have been divided between the finder and the landowner, the Diocese of Newcastle.

On Wednesday, September 13 the 66 diocesan coins will be sold by Newcastle auctioneers Anderson and Garland.

They comprise groat and half-groat coins from the reigns of the two monarchs, plus nine Charles the Bold coins from the 1460s.

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http://thrgo.pro/?rid=-6AAAAAAAE6RUBAAAAAAAAAAQaFiaiAAAACharles the Bold was ruler of Burgundy in France and on good terms with Edward IV. The rulers agreed that the Burgundian coins could be legal tender in England.

The chairman of the school governors, John Hobrough, said: “The coins were found by the school caretaker who was given permission to use the metal detector. We have kept it under our hat to a certain extent.”

Andrew Agate is Newcastle-based finds liaison officer for the North East for the Portable Antiquities Scheme, to which such discoveries are reported
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Aancient coins found in the grounds of a Northumberland school are worth more than £11,000

Saturday, September 2, 2017

Mosaic depicting Greek hero Bellerophon riding the winged horse Pegasus has been described as best find of its kind in 50 years.

A spectacular Roman mosaic described as the best find of its kind in half a century has been partly uncovered in Berkshire, during a community archaeology project that only had two weeks left to run.
Anthony Beeson, an expert on classical art and a member of the Association for the Study and Preservation of Roman Mosaics, described it as “without question the most exciting mosaic discovery made in Britain in the last fifty years”
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Rare Roman mosaic found during Berkshire community project

Thursday, August 31, 2017

A joint campaign has been launched in the UK by Stena Line and Tourism Ireland which will be seen by over 3 million people.

The new campaign invites people to stir their soul and travel Fishguard-Rosslare to enjoy a short break in Ireland.

Highlighting the country’s Ancient East including counties such as Wexford, Waterford and Kilkenny, the campaign targets the ‘culturally curious’ audience across Britain. The campaign includes radio ads, which will reach over 1.73 million listeners in London, South West England and Wales and online ads.

Diane Poole OBE, Stena Line’s Travel Commercial Manager Irish Sea South said: “Through the launch of this new campaign in association with Tourism Ireland, we hope to inspire people to stir their soul and visit Ireland whilst highlighting the ease of access when travelling by ferry. Through the advertising channels we have invested in, it is expected that over 3 million people will be able to see the promotion of Ireland’s Ancient East.”

Julie Wakley, Tourism Ireland’s Head of Britain added: “We are delighted to partner with Stena Line and Rosslare Europort once again, to maximise the promotion of the Stena Line service from Fishguard to Rosslare. Our aim is to boost car touring visitor numbers to the South East and Ireland over the coming months; visitors who bring their car on holidays tend to stay longer, spend more and are more likely to visit more than one region.”

Joint Campaign Launched in UK to Invite Visitors to Ireland's Ancient East

New research has shed light on 16th and 17th century Catholic monks in England and Wales who rebelled in more ways than just their faith.

A study conducted at the University of Durham found some got into trouble for drinking too much, one died in a duel and another joined a monastery after accidentally killing his brother.

Speaking about those who broke monastery rules concerning alcohol, Dr James Kelly told Premier: "They weren't actually banned from drinking but, at particular times, they would follow a fasting routine.

"This meant cutting back on certain food, particularly meat but also alcohol. We do have a couple of cases where monks rebelled against this."

One was William Davies, or Brother Marcus, who was imprisoned in a monastery granary for refusing to obey rules on abstaining from alcohol.

The Monks in Motion project also concluded that there were around 900 Benedictine monks in England and Wales during the two hundred year period. The figure is higher than previous estimates of around 600.

The men travelled to continental Europe where they became monks and founded monasteries, before returning to Britain to carry out their ministry.

Dr Kelly added: "It is a significant increase and it means that they're a pretty well-represented minority opinion within English catholic circles certainly, but also a voice within the English religious elements."

Catholicism was effectively illegal from the reign of Elizabeth I to 1791 - during the so-called Penal period. Catholic monks risked being hung, drawn and quartered.

Another monk noted in the research was John Mannock (Brother Anselm) who turned to religion after accidentally dropping a cannon ball which killed his brother.

Monks in Motion brought together records from locations including Ampleforth Abbey, Downside Abbey and Douai Abbey (pictured above).

Study reveals ancient monks had wild side

Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Holderness residents are being invited to meet a team of archaeologists to hear about ancient villages lost at sea.

Archaeologists will be at Welwick Village Hall on Monday to reveal early findings unearthed in a dig near Skeffling last autumn.


A geophysical study found evidence of storm surge deposits, ancient river channels and areas of peat from as far back as the Middle and New Stone Age, some 3,000 to 8,000 years ago.

The study suggests landscapes occupied and exploited by prehistoric people survive beneath the current farmland.

Across the higher parts of the site evidence was also found of Roman settlement activity, which evolved into the medieval period as communities settled closer to the shore as the land was drained.

Stephen Kemp, senior archaeologist at the Environment Agency, said: “Our initial assessment begins to tell the stories of communities by the Humber that learnt to adapt to environmental changes, like rising sea levels.

“When many of these ancient communities lived here the coast was much further away and the surrounding land was significantly less populated, enabling people and the ecology to thrive.
“The stories of the now lost villages provide interesting insight into environmental changes in today’s contexts and why, when providing managed realignment schemes like this, it is vital to ensure we are working with nature to make good long-term choices that will maintain our modern communities.”

The initial dig has been part of the design for the Outstays to Skeffling Managed Realignment Scheme.

The scheme is a habitat creation project on the Humber Estuary to offset habitat losses from future coastal development and “coastal squeeze”.

Coastal squeeze occurs when fixed hard flood defence structures, built to protect people and properties along the coast, reduce the inter-tidal land between low and high tide as a result of rising sea levels.

It is a legal obligation for the Environment Agency to rebalance this coastal squeeze by creating a compensatory habitat.

As part of the proposed scheme, a 900-acre natural habitat site will be created for estuarine and terrestrial wildlife.

An improved landscaped flood defence will surround this area to help reduce the risk of flooding to the local community.

Once complete, managed realignment sites like this are typically colonised with invertebrates and wading birds.

Environment Agency project manager Tim Cobb said: “With higher tides and changes in weather, we cannot avoid changes to our environment as we know it.

“But the results from our archaeological survey show these changes have been happening for millennia and they stress the importance of addressing coastal squeeze in key locations on Britain’s coastline.

“While the Outstrays to Skeffling Managed Realignment Scheme is still in public consultation stage we are keen to present our initial findings to the community.

"Perhaps more importantly though, we’d like to learn more about the local community’s understanding of the site to ensure they help us shape and maintain the important parts of the area’s history.”

A planning application for the Skeffling Managed Realignment Scheme is expected to be submitted at the end of 2017.

Subject to planning approval, the Environment Agency anticipates starting work for the western site in 2018.

Hear about the ancient villages lost at sea in fascinating archaeological dig

Friday, August 18, 2017

A large steel door guards the entrance to Joint Mitnor, a rocky cave in Devon, England, littered with the fossilized bones of ancient mammals. But in September of 2015, thieves managed to smash through the door and make off with several bones—including the fossilized tooth of a 100,000 year old elephant—and trampled over many others. The cave was shuttered and the remains have yet to be found.

Last Saturday, Joint Mitnor formally reopened its doors after two years. Visitors to the site will find the cave just as it was before the devastating theft, thanks to a collaborative effort to create 3-D replicas of the missing relics, Maev Kennedy reports for the Guardian.

The initiative was fronted by experts at the University of Birmingham, the Natural History Museum, and the Pengelly Trust, which manages Joint Mitnor. The team created scans based on similar bones that were excavated from the cave, and fed those scans into a 3-D printer. It took multiple attempts—and two broken printers—to get the recreations right.

“Our printers were set up for small industrial tasks, not for leaving them working away hour after hour on objects as complex as the elephant tooth,” Robert Stone, professor of interactive multimedia systems at the University of Birmingham, tells Kennedy. “It broke two of them.”

The replicas have now been placed back in the cave, which was first excavated in 1939, according to the website of the Pengelly Trust. Some 4,000 bones—belonging to hippopotamus, bison, hyenas, straight-tusked elephants and other mammals—were found embedded in a talus of ancient debris.

The remains range in age from 80,000 to 120,000 years old, dating to a relatively warm period between two ice ages. It is believed that the unfortunate animals found in Joint Mitnor had fallen through a shaft on the roof of the cave.

Steve Peacock of the Totnes Times, a local UK paper, reports that in preparation for the cave’s new chapter, Trust officials reportedly bolstered security at the entrance to the site, just in case.

source

Once Plundered by Thieves, Ancient Cave Reopens with 3-D Replicas of Stolen Fossils

Tuesday, July 11, 2017

AN EXCITING NEW HOARD OF ANCIENT ROMAN WRITING TABLETS UNEARTHED AT VINDOLANDA.

On the afternoon of Thursday the 22nd of June, at the Roman fort of Vindolanda in Northumberland, archaeologists made one of their most important discoveries since 1992. A new hoard of around 25 Roman ink documents, known as the Vindolanda writing tablets (letters, lists and personal correspondence), were discovered lying in the damp and anaerobic earth where they had been discarded towards the end of the 1st century AD.

These incredibly rare and fragile wafer-thin pieces of wood are often less than 2mm in thickness and about the size of modern day postcards. The documents were uncovered during the research excavation of a small area of the site (three metres in length) and are likely to represent a part of an archive from a specific period.

As the archaeological team, carefully and painstakingly extracted the delicate pieces of wood from the earth they were delighted to see some of the letters were complete and others had partial or whole confronting pages. The confronting tablets, where the pages are protected by the back of the adjoining pages, are the most exceptional discoveries as they provide the greatest chance of the ink writing being preserved.
Dr Andrew Birley, CEO of the Vindolanda Trust and Director of Excavations spoke about the day the tablets were recovered “What an incredible day, truly exceptional. You can never take these things for granted as the anaerobic conditions needed for their survival are very precise.

I was fortunate enough to be involved when my father, Dr Robin Birley, excavated a bonfire site of Vindolanda tablets in 1992 and I had hoped, but never truly expected, that the day might come when we would find another hoard of such well preserved documents again during a day on our excavations.

Dr Robin Birley who also made tablet discoveries at Vindolanda in 1970’s and 1980’s commented “some of these new tablets are so well preserved that they can be read without the usual infrared photography and before going through the long conservation process. There is nothing more exciting than reading these personal messages from the distant past”.

A few names in these texts have already be deciphered, including that of a man called Masclus who is best known via a previous letter to his Commanding Officer asking for more beer to be supplied to his outpost. In one of the newly discovered letters he seems to have been applying for leave (commeatus). Other characters and authors of the letters may already be known thanks to previous Vindolanda tablets from the site, and new names will emerge to take their places in the history of Roman Britain, propelled as they now are from total obscurity to sending a direct written message to us about who they were and what they were doing and thinking almost 2000 years ago. This latest discovery is the highlight of an extraordinary excavation season at Vindolanda.

The tablets are now undergoing painstaking conservation and infrared photography so that the full extent of their text can be revealed. It is quite possible that some of the new information will transform our understanding of Vindolanda and Roman Britain and we along with other archaeologists, Latin scholars, Roman experts and interested public alike will have to wait with baited breath for the full expert translation of the tablets to begin in earnest as they complete their conservation process.

The Vindolanda Trust

The Vindolanda Trust is an independent archaeological charitable trust, founded in 1970. The Vindolanda Trust does not receive any annual funding and relies on the visitors to both Roman Vindolanda and the Roman Army Museum to fund its archaeological, conservation and education work.

The Vindolanda Tablets

The first Vindolanda tablets were discovered in 1973 by Robin Birley who was a co-founder of the Vindolanda Trust and its former Director and Director of Excavations.  These documents are the very personal accounts, lists and letters of the people of Vindolanda, most of them written before the construction of Hadrian’s Wall started in the AD 120’s.  They form the most important archive of Roman writing from north-western Europe and have revolutionised knowledge of life on the Roman frontier.  They give wonderful details which cannot come to use from any other archaeological source.  In 2003 experts from the British Museum named the Vindolanda Tablets as the Top Archaeological Treasure to come from Britain.

The Vindolanda Tablet collection is held at the British Museum in London. Nine of the tablets are currently on loan to Vindolanda and are on display in a specifically designed vaulted gallery in the museum.

I am sure that the archaeological staff, students and volunteers who took part on this excavation will always remember the incredible excitement as the first document was recognised in the trench and carefully lifted out. It was half a confronting tablet, two pages stuck together with the tell-tale tie holes and V notches at the top of the pages. The crowd of visitors who gathered at the edge of the excavation fences were also fascinated to see tablet after tablet being liberated from a deep trench several metres down”.

Source
http://www.heritagedaily.com

Roman tablets unearthed at Vindolanda

HARTLEBURY Castle's County Museum is to host a family friendly archaeology themed day as part of the national Festival of Archaeology.

'Dig It!' will run between 11am and 4pm on Sunday (July 16) and promises to be great family fun with lots of hands on activities.

Families can have a go at metal detecting and learn how to use a trowel to dig for archaeological finds.

Youngsters can also enjoy making fossil imprints in clay to take home and all visitors can try looking through microscopes with an archaeologist to identify different seeds and find out more about the lives of people in the past.

Pippa Ashmore, museum events officer, said: "If you have always wondered what it is like to be a real archaeologist come and get hands on with history and help the museum celebrate the national Festival of Archaeology."

For more information, call the County Museum on 01299 250416 or visit museumsworcestershire.org.uk.

Source

Learn about archaeology at Hartlebury Castle's County Museum

Friday, July 7, 2017

A Stone Age cult site in Bidford and Iron Age settlement in Rugby are just two of the topics to unearth at the Festival of Archaeology in Warwick.

Market Hall Museum will host a number of talks throughout July about archaeological adventures and discoveries – some of which will be shared for the very first time.

The festival kicks off on July 19 with a free lunchtime talk on the ancient craft of metalworking, exploring the creative skills of the bronze-smith in prehistoric Warwickshire.

The following day Archaeology Warwickshire will present findings from the team’s excavations in Bidford, where they uncovered a 4,000 year old henge complex.

Around the web
http://thrgo.pro/?rid=-6AAAAAAAE6RUBAAAAAAAAAAQaFiaiAAAAExplorations go further afield on July 24, when senior archaeologist Dr Cathy Coutts will be talking about discoveries made at St John’s Hospital in Lichfield. It is here that evidence of at least two black people of African descent was uncovered in the medieval cemetery.

The final event on July 27 will see Nigel Page talk about Ridgeway Farm in Rugby, where excavations have revealed a complex landscape of Bronze Age pit-alignment boundaries, Iron Age settlement and Roman enclosures.

Visit warwickshire.gov.uk/heritageboxoffice for tickets and full details.

Source

Around the web
http://thrgo.pro/?rid=-6AAAAAAAE6RUBAAAAAAAAAAQaFiaiAAAA

Unearth some surprising history at the Festival of Archaeology

Thursday, July 6, 2017

BOURNEMOUTH UNIVERSITY (BU) MARINE ARCHAEOLOGISTS ARE SET TO BEGIN EXCAVATING THE HISTORIC WARSHIP INVINCIBLE 1744.

BU is working with lead partner, Maritime Archaeology Sea Trust (MAST) and the National Museum of the Royal Navy (NMRN) on the excavation and conservation and eventual exhibition of important artefacts from the shipwreck, revealing important clues to what life and maritime warfare was like in the late 1700s.

The ship, built by the French in 1744 and captured by the British in 1747, was used by the Royal Navy until it sank in the Solent, hitting a sandbank in 1758. The ship has been sat on the bed of the Solent ever since.

The wreck was rediscovered by Arthur Mack, a fisherman, in 1979 after which a small-scale excavation took place, led by Commander John Bingeman during the 1980s. Since then the site has become increasingly exposed due to shifting sands in the Solent, requiring an emergency rescue excavation before all records of the ship are lost.

BU, MAST and the NMRN have been awarded £2 million from the LIBOR fund for the excavation of the wreck site, which has now begun.

Dave Parham, Associate Professor in Maritime Archaeology at Bournemouth University, said, “What Invincible has is a revolutionary hull and significant contents of an 18th century warship from armaments to personal possessions. We are excited to start excavating and studying these rare artefacts and putting them on display for the public to engage in a period of maritime history that we currently don’t know too much about.”
Dan Pascoe, the site licensee said: “It gives me great pleasure to be able to follow in the footsteps of John Bingeman and reunite once more, the Invincible with the present, through her excavation and recovery’”.

Jessica Berry, CEO of MAST, said, “Currently there is a prominent gap in our knowledge between the Mary Rose, built in 1511, and HMS Victory, built in 1765. In between, there is a missing link and Invincible will fill that. We are looking at raising a set of articulated timbers to look at how unique she was, along with some significant artefacts that will illuminate this part of maritime history and preserve it for generations to come.”

A video has been created to give more information about the project, which can be viewed on Bournemouth University’s YouTube channel.

Another important part of the project is the involvement of Service and ex-Service personnel, particularly in helping to record and conserve the artefacts, offering the chance for important voluntary contributions to the project.

Once conserved  , the artefacts will go on display at the National Museum of the Royal Navy in Portsmouth Historic Dockyard, alongside other important maritime displays and the Mary Rose and HMS Victory.

Bournemouth University set for historic Invincible project

Wednesday, June 21, 2017


But on the same axis, in the opposite direction, is the point on the horizon where the sun sets on the winter solstice. And some experts suspect that the midwinter alignment may have been the more important occasion for the Neolithic people who built Stonehenge.

John North, a historian of astronomy, wrote in his book Cosmos:

The usual interpretation of Stonehenge would make its center the place from which the midsummer sun was observed over the Heel Stone. This is almost certainly mistaken. The viewing position was at the Heel Stone itself, outside the sacred space, and the chief celebration was that of the setting midwinter Sun, seen through the narrow central corridor. Stonehenge is a skeleton through which light can pass from numerous directions, as in the timber monuments before it, but all of these were carefully planned so as to present a solid appearance against the sky when viewed from suitable positions — and the Heel stone is just such a position. Sight of the last glint of winter sunlight through the center of the black edifice must have been deeply moving.

Source
vox.com 

Decoding the ancient astronomy of Stonehenge

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

After the Resurrection, this tomb is crammed with the remains of former Archbishops of Canterbury.

Last year, during the refurbishment of the Garden Museum, which is housed in a deconsecrated medieval parish church next to Lambeth Palace, the Archbishop of Canterbury’s official London residence, builders made the discovery of a lifetime: a cache of 30 lead coffins that had lain undisturbed for centuries.



Closer inspection revealed metal plates bearing the names of five former Archbishops of Canterbury, going back to the early 1600s.

Building site managers Karl Patten and Craig Dick made the find by chance, as the former chancel at St Mary-at-Lambeth was being converted into an exhibition space. Stripping some stone to even out the precarious flooring and enable disabled access to the old altar, they accidentally cut a six-inch diameter hole in the floor and noticed a hidden chamber beneath.

Attaching a mobile phone to a stick, they dropped it into the void. What they filmed astonished them – a hidden stairway leading to a brick-lined vault. Inside, piled on top of each other, were the coffins. On top of one rested an archbishop’s red and gold mitre.

Two had nameplates – one for Richard Bancroft (in office from 1604 to 1610) and one for John Moore (in office, 1783-1805), whose wife, Catherine Moore, also had a coffin plate. Also identified from a coffin plate was Dean of Arches John Bettesworth (who lived from 1677 to 1751), the judge who sits at the ecclesiastical court of the Archbishop of Canterbury.

St Mary-at-Lambeth’s records have since revealed that a further three archbishops were probably buried in the vault: Frederick Cornwallis (in office from 1768 to 1783), Matthew Hutton (1757-1758) and Thomas Tenison (1695-1715). A sixth, Thomas Secker (1758-1768), had his viscera buried in a canister in the churchyard.

“It was amazing seeing the coffins,” says Patten. “We’ve come across lots of bones on this job. But we knew this was different when we saw the archbishop’s crown.”
Details of the find have been kept secret for months until Easter Day to make the vault safe ahead of the museum’s grand reopening next month. As the tomb had been undisturbed for centuries, there was a fear the roof may have been unstable.

A square manhole has now been let into the chancel floor, with a glazed panel that will offer a glimpse of the steps down to the vault. The coffins – which have been left exactly where they were discovered, undisturbed – will be out of bounds, for good reason. Most lead sarcophagi contain dry remains, but some bodies decompose into a viscous black liquid known as “coffin liquor”. Should the ancient casings crack, it will spray forth.

Today, I am the first outsider to be allowed a look into the hidden tomb. I lie on the newly flattened altar, stare deep into the gloom, and point my torch at that mitre, still gleaming away on the jumbled pile of archbishops’ coffins. It is a spine-tingling view – one that astounded Christopher Woodward, director of the Garden Museum when he first heard of the discovery.

“I didn’t know what to expect,” he says. “I knew there had been 20,000 bodies buried in the churchyard. But I thought the burial places had been cleared from the nave and aisles, and the vaults under the church had been filled with earth.”


Woodward was not alone in this. St Mary’s crucial role in the history of Lambeth Palace’s most prestigious residents had been lost over time. It was originally an Anglo-Saxon church, built in 1062. Lambeth Palace was built later, in the 13th century. As the palace grew in importance, St Mary’s was overshadowed, literally and metaphorically.

There were records of archbishops being buried in the church, from the 17th to the 19th centuries. But it was thought their coffins had been swept away in 1851, when the ancient church was almost entirely rebuilt, except for its tower. Historians, Woodward included, believed the vaults had been filled in. And so they had been, except for the one beneath the holy altar, the most important spot in the building.

Woodward employed archaeologists, who photographed the coffin plates and researched burial records. Finally, last month, they came up with their staggering conclusions.

Of the identified coffins, the most important belongs to Bancroft, the chief overseer of the publication of the King James Bible. Production began in 1604 and the Bible was finally published in 1611, the year after Bancroft’s death. To find his coffin after all these centuries is astonishing.

“Archbishop Bancroft was chosen by King James I to put together a new English translation of the Bible,” says Woodward. “He didn’t write it, of course, but he made it happen, and the words he forced into print still ring out across a thousand churchyards every Sunday morning. It feels very precious to have his coffin as cargo in our hold.”

Woodward has also consulted Dr. Julian Litten, Britain’s greatest expert on ancient funerals and author of The English Way of Death. The Lambeth mitre chimed with his research into senior church funerals. Archbishops were buried with painted, gilded mitres placed on their coffins as part of their funerary achievements.

Litten concluded that the Lambeth mitre was a fine, 17th-century example. He also worked out, from the stamped plate on the casket beneath, that the coffin was made between 1775 and 1825, probably by the crown undertakers, Banting of St James’s. In other words, the mitre belonged to an older coffin, lower down in the pile, and had been moved on top of the new arrival to prevent damage.

“There is no other vault in the UK so rich in its sacerdotal (priestly) contents,” says Litten. “In short, it is the only archiepiscopal vault in the UK and, therefore, unique in the true meaning of the word.”

You might think Archbishops of Canterbury would be buried in Canterbury Cathedral. And, indeed, more than 50 of them are. But there is no rule saying their remains must be interred there. Six are buried in Croydon; three in Oxford; one in St Lawrence Jewry, in the City of London; one in Westminster Abbey; two in Winchester; and several on the Continent, from Normandy to Viterbo in Italy.

It isn’t surprising, then, that six were buried in Lambeth, residence to Archbishops of Canterbury for nearly 800 years. What is surprising is that they should be in tiny St Mary’s, rather than mighty Lambeth Palace itself.

The archbishops lived in glitzy splendour in the palace, with their own grand apartments, hall and sprawling gardens. Today, the Archbishop of Canterbury still has his own magnificent, 13th-century chapel and crypt within the palace walls. But his predecessors were buried not inside the palace chapel, but in the humble church next door.

How the old archbishops adored the church. Every time a member of the royal family visited Lambeth Palace, the bells of St Mary’s were rung. When a new rector was recruited for the church, he was often one of the Archbishop’s own chaplains or household officers.

“St Mary’s was unique as a London parish church as it was also, in effect, an annex of Lambeth Palace,” says Woodward. “This discovery opens up that whole story.”

Deconsecrated in 1972, St Mary’s pews and bells were transplanted to churches and houses across the country. It was even due to be demolished before becoming the Museum of Garden History (later renamed the Garden Museum) in 1977.

How wonderful that while St Mary’s has risen from the dead, its ancient, holy spirits are still sleeping under the altar.

Hole accidentally cut in U.K. museum floor reveals stairs to hidden tomb of five archbishops

Friday, April 7, 2017

Scattered across the site and buried in a series of pits, the archaeologists have found large quantities of high-status Roman products
A remarkable archaeological investigation is shedding new light on the Roman conquest of Britain – and on the geopolitical background to one of the murkiest royal sex scandals of British history.

Excavations in Yorkshire have unearthed the first ever archaeological evidence of high-status Roman influence in northern Britain.


It appears to confirm ancient historical accounts of a political and military alliance between the Roman Empire and northern Britain’s largest native kingdom.

Archaeologists, working in conjunction with Historic England and funded by Highways England, have unearthed the remains of a previously unknown, yet high status, small town consisting of a mixture of Roman and native buildings, potentially associated in some way with Iron Age Britain’s most controversial ruler – Queen Cartimandua of The Iron Age Kingdom of Brigantia (modern Yorkshire and northern England).

In the settlement – located at Scotch Corner, 40 miles north of York – the archaeological excavations have unearthed what may well be the first archaeological evidence of Cartimandua’s deep collaboration with the Romans and her betrayal of native Britain.
Scattered across the site and buried in a series of pits, the archaeologists have found large quantities of high-status Roman products which had almost certainly been given or sold to the Brigantes.

Among the valuable artefacts unearthed so far are fine imported Roman glassware, beautiful glazed Roman tableware, imported drinking flagons, glass gaming counters, part of a fine Roman copper mirror and part of a rare and beautiful Italian-made amber statue.

It’s known from historical sources that the Romans gave Cartimandua and her rival supporters large amounts of wealth to reward her for betraying Britain’s resistance to Rome.

The political reality of the situation was that Britain was a patchwork quilt of independent tribal states – some of which were pro-Roman while others were anti-Roman. 


To complicate things further, some of these native kingdoms and tribal confederations included within them both pro-and anti-Roman rival elements.

Indeed, that was the decidedly volatile situation in Brigantia itself. Queen Cartimandua (literally, in Celtic, ‘the Pony-Chaser’) was Queen of Brigantia in her own right – and seems to have been very pro-Roman. But her husband became decidedly anti-Roman and even eventually clashed militarily with them.
Cartimandua’s story is one of collaboration, marital strife and probable infidelity and ruthless treachery.

One of the leading anti-Roman British rebels, Caratacus (sometimes known today as Caractacus) sought sanctuary in Brigantia – but it’s ruler, Cartimandua, arrested him, put him in chains and handed him over to the Romans who gratefully rewarded her handsomely.

She then appears to have divorced her probably less pro-Roman husband (Venutius) almost certainly after having developed a relationship with his armour bearer, who she subsequently married. The royal love feud between the Queen and her ex-husband led to Venutius mounting two invasions of Brigantia. On both occasions, Roman occupation forces in southern Britain sent military help – but in the end, Venutius succeeded in defeating and removing his ex-wife from power.

The findings at the newly discovered small town at Scotch Corner were high-status goods probably supplied to Cartimandua and/or her pro-Roman Brigantian aristocratic supporters – precisely during this period of Roman collaboration and internal Brigantian civil conflict.
A key discovery at the site is a large collection of late Iron Age metal pellet moulds, thought to have been used for native coin manufacture. Research at the University of Liverpool has revealed that they were probably used to produce gold/silver/copper alloy native British coins – perhaps needed for massively increased levels of trade with newly arrived Roman merchants. The alloys detected in them are consistent with native British coin production. Their discovery may well be the first archaeological evidence of Brigantian coin production – because so far no coins of that particularly important British tribal kingdom have ever been found.

Significantly, fragments of up to 50 ceramic metal pellet mould trays have been discovered in the native British area of the Scotch Corner settlement. There were two types of tray – ones for producing 100 metal pellets each and others for producing just 50 slightly larger pellets – arguably to make larger coins.

In total, the trays, unearthed by the archaeologists, would have been capable of producing over 3000 metal pellets which would have been turned, with the help of a hammer and die, into coins. It is the most northerly archaeological evidence for Iron Age coin manufacturers in Europe.


The settlement itself appears to have been divided into two distinctly different areas – Roman and native. Facing onto the main London to Brigantia road were up to 40 Roman-style rectangular buildings – probably a mixture of domestic and industrial premises. Of those, around a dozen have been excavated by the archaeologists.

Some way behind them, and therefore set back from the road, were a probably similar number of Iron Age native British roundhouses. Some 14 of those have been excavated.

In a third and fourth area – to the north and south – archaeologists found a series of pits which had been used for the potentially ritual votive deposition of high value and sometimes probably deliberately broken high-status Roman artefacts. Iron Age religious tradition often involved the deliberate breaking of valuable objects to be buried as votive offerings to the gods.

The newly discovered Scotch Corner Roman artefacts represent the earliest known major archaeological evidence of Roman influence in northern Britain. For the first time, archaeology appears to confirm some crucial aspects of what Roman historians claimed was happening in Brigantia in the period immediately before the north of England was fully incorporated into the Empire.

It may also push back by up to a decade and a half, the probable date for the initial laying out of the northern section of the London-Brigantia Road (what is today the Yorkshire part of the A1 ). The road (probably originally, at least in part, a native trackway) was very slightly diverted to deliberately pass through the newly discovered Scotch Corner small town.

As the Roman buildings, potentially built in the mid-to late 50s AD, faced onto that road, the Roman highway may have been initially conceived in that decade, rather than the early 70s AD as had previously been thought.

As the route was without doubt used by the Roman military, it helps to illustrate archaeologically the substantial extent of a Roman military presence well before northern England was incorporated into the Empire. There is also an enigmatic as yet unexcavated rectangular feature at the Scotch Corner site which may turn out to have been a very early Roman fort.

“The discoveries illuminate a crucial period in the history of Britain – the very early presence of Roman wealth, power and influence in northern Britain,” said Neil Redfern, Historic England’s principal inspector of ancient monuments.

“The excavations at Scotch Corner are redefining our understanding of how the region was incorporated into the Roman Empire,” he said.

The newly discovered hybrid Roman and native small town is just eight miles from the probable Brigantian capital, now known as Stanwick, to which it was connected by an Iron Age road.

The finds were discovered through the £380m Highways England Leeming to Barton road scheme to upgrade the existing dual carriageway with a new three lane motorway. The extensive excavations have been carried out by Northern Archaeological Associates – and managed by Dr Jonathan Shipley and Helen MacLean from the archaeological section of the US engineering consultancy, AECOM, with support from Historic England.

New light shed on Royal sex scandal as ancient Roman remains unearthed

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