EARTHWORK SURVEY AND EXCAVATION AT BO YS
HALL MOAT, SEVINGTON, ASHFORD*
PAUL BOOTH and PAUL EVERSON
INTRODUCTION
Boys Hall Moat, more correctly historically known simply as 'The
Moat', lies in Sevington parish near Ashford, close to its western
boundary with Willesborough. It is a Scheduled Ancient Monument
(Kent SAM 146) centred at N.G.R. TR 0 3004075. The site was
surveyed and described by staff of the Royal Commission on the
Historical Monuments of England in February 1990, fulfilling a
request from Dr J.H. Williams, County Archaeological Officer.1
Subsequently in March-April 1993 the Oxford Archaeological Unit
conducted a two-week excavation on a strip of land approximately
200 m. long (from north-west to south-east) and 4 m. wide, adjacent
to the main Folkestone to London railway line but lying within the
confines of the Scheduled Ancient Monument on its north-east side.
The excavation, which was required as a condition of Scheduled
Monument Consent before development, was commissioned by
British Rail (Network South-East) in advance of construction work
on the railway line. The excavation was directed for the Oxford
Archaeological Unit by Miles Russell. The post-excavation work was
carried out by Paul Booth, who is responsible for parts of the text not
credited to other writers. The site archive and finds are currently
held at the Oxford Archaeological Unit pending a decision on their
ultimate place of deposition.
• Published with the aid of a grant from the Oxford Archaeological Unit.
1 The fieldwork for a survey at 1:1000 scale was carried out by Paul Everson and
Robert Wilson-North from the R.C.H.M.E. Keele office; a full report is deposited in the
National Monuments Record under the reference TR 04 SW 2. The summary below is
derived from the archive report by Paul Everson; Philip Sinton redrew the archive plan
for publication. This account is published by courtesy of the Commissioners.
411
PAUL BOOTH AND PAUL EVERSON
LOCATION AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL BACKGROUND (Fig. 1)
The site lies some 3 km. south-east of the centre of Ashford on gently
rising ground (between c. 40 and 45 m. above O.D.) on the north-east
side of the river East Stour, in an area surrounded by pasture and setaside
land at the time of the excavation. The underlying geology is
principally Atherfield Clay, at the base of the Lower Greensand
sequence, which outcrops locally in a narrow east-south-east to westnorth-
west band parallel to the line of the river, between the underlying
Wealden Clay cut by the river itself and the later Hythe Beds to the
north-east.
Until recently, knowledge of the archaeological background of the
immediate area was confined to a number of finds of individual flint
and stone implements. Sites now known include an extensive area of
crop-marks, including possible ring ditches, a rectilinear enclosure and
other linear elements of uncertain date, centred only 900 m. due east of
Boys Hall. This complex is associated with field-walking finds of
Neolithic and Bronze Age flint, Iron Age, Roman and medieval
and post-medieval pottery.2 The certain presence of a number of Iron
Age and Roman sites even closer to Boys Hall has also been
demonstrated, in evaluations carried out by the Kent Archaeological
Rescue Unit3 and the Canterbury Archaeological Trust.4 Two
Late Bronze Age-Early Iron Age sites have been found at Waterbrook
Farm, to the south of Boys Hall,5 and a further site assigned to the Late
Iron Age lies immediately north-west of Boys Hall. 6 South-east of Boys
Hall two Late Iron Age-Belgic sites were located in the area of
the Ashford freight terminal.7 The more northerly of these sites may
have extended north-westwards towards Boys Hall. s Belgic to Early
Roman activity occurred to the south-west of Boys Hall and to the
south at Waterbrook Farm.9 In addition, the Roman road which runs in
a west-north-westerly direction from Lympne passes some 1.5 km.
south of the site on the south side of the East Stour. Recent work in this
vicinity has produced more Roman features as well as evidence for
2 Oxford Arch. Unit, P rovisional specialist report on historic and cultural impacts for
Union Railways Limited (1994).
3 KAR., 104 (1991), 74-77; also 'An archaeological evaluation at the Boys Hall
Industrial Area development', unpublished report by J. Willson.
4 Arch. Cant., cvi (1988), 2; Arch. Cant., ex (1992), 375-6.
s Arch. Cant., ex (1992), 375-6.
6 Willson, (op. cit., n. 2), 3.
Arch. Cant., cvi (1988), 2.
Willson, op. cit., n. 2, 3.
9 Ibid., 3-4; Arch. Cant., ex (1992), 376.
412
EARTHWORK SURVEY AND EXCAVATION AT BOYS HALL MOAT
LIA/Belgic
Belgic/early Roman
Fig. 1. The site in its local setting.
413
PAUL BOOTH AND PAUL EVERSON
Mesolithic and Neolithic flint working.10 There are no early medieval
finds from the vicinity.
R.C.H.M.E. SURVEY OF 'THE MOAT' Paul Everson (Fig. 2)
The moated site is one of a number of such sites in the area, but,
according to the assessment of the Monuments Protection Programme
in advance of the fieldwork, was reckoned one of the best examples in
the county at large. The results of the survey, by confirming and
documenting more clearly its late medieval status and adding an early
post-medieval phase including the elaboration of associated garden
earthworks, can only have enhanced its archaeological importance. The
garden earthworks may be the first to be formally documented by
archaeological survey and published in Kent of this monument class,
which has been the subject of increasing study elsewhere in the
country.11 They well illustrate the changing expectations of the setting
of a gentry residence in the sixteenth century and the aspirations of
families that formed the backbone of county society of that period.
The distinct manor in Sevington of which 'The Moat' formed the
residential centre is traced by Hasted to Sir John of Sevington in the
time of Henry III.12 It passed by marriage in the thirteenth century to
the Barry family. The evidence for their splendid series of fourteenthand
fifteenth-century brasses formerly in St. Mary's Church at
Sevington certainly supports the belief that they were resident at The
Moat throughout the later Middle Ages. 13 Successive members of the
family held important public office in the county in the fourteenth,
fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, including knights of the shire, sheriff,
commissioner of the peace and lieutenant of Dover Castle, and they
intermarried with other leading county families.14 The male line failed
on the death in 1588 of Richard Barry, M.P. for Winchelsea and Dover
10 Canterbury's Archaeology 1992-1993, 41-2.
11 cf. (Ed.) A.E. Brown, Garden Archaeology, C.B.A. Research Report no. 78 (1991),
especially the papers by C.C. Taylor and P. Everson.
12 E. Hasted, The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent, Canterbury
1790, vol. III, 280.
13 H.L. Smith, 'Some account of brasses formerly in the Church of Sevington', Arch.
Cant., iv (1861), 117-22, incl. pedigree p. 122. Also C.R. Councer, 'The medieval
painted glass of Mersham', Arch. Cant., xlviii (1936), 81-90.
14 Hasted, lac. cit. ; W.B. Ellis, Early Kentish Armory, Arch. Cant., xv (1883), 15; J.C:
Browne, Knights of the Shire for Kent from A.D. 1275 to A.D. 1831, Arch. Cant., xx1
(1895), 212; T. Philipott, Villare Cantianum or Kent Surveyed and Illustrated, 2nd ed.
King's Lynn 1776, 317.
414
EARTHWORK SURVEY AND EXCAVATION AT BOYS HALL MOAT
RCHM
lNGLANO
limit of
1993
o• -=::1....01 -= =::--==s,,o.... -= ==--==--.;;100
metres
Fig. 2. Plan of the earthworks with the location of the 1993 trench (R.C.H.M.E. copyright).
415
PAUL BOOTH AND PAUL EVERSON
and Lieutenant of Dover Castle during preparations against a Spanish
invasion, and 'The Moat' passed by marriage to Vincent Boys of
Bekesboume.15 Nevertheless, the estate remained in occupation, until it
returned in the late 1620s by marriage to Thomas Boys of
Willesborough, who belonged to a different branch of the Boys
family. 16 Thomas 'pulled down this ancient seat and removed the
materials of it to rebuild his house at Willesborough', either in 1616
(according to Hasted), or by 1632, 17 thereby creating the house known
as Boys Hall that survives altered but with a seventeenth-century core
at N.G.R. TR 0281 4120.18 The earthworks of The Moat evidently
remained intact until the early 1840s and were labelled as 'site of the
ancient Mote House' .19 The north-eastern periphery of the site was
sliced through by the construction of the Ashford to Folkestone line of
the South Eastern Railway in 1842-43. The site was first referred to in
the archaeological literature in 1880.20
At the time of survey the earthworks were situated in a single field of
old pasture. The moat itself, 'a' on plan, lies at the south-east end of the
pasture field on almost level ground, with natural slopes rising away to
the north and north-west. It is broadly rectangular with overall
dimensions of 55-60 m. by 70 m. and is currently water-filled without
any break or causeway. Early large-scale map depictions also show it
water-filled but in two unequal sections that were separated by sharply
defined breaks, perhaps in origin causeways. These occurred
symmetrically in the north-west and south-east arms, not centrally but
off-set towards the north-east end. The continuous sheet of open water
that the moat now presents in contrast to its earlier depiction raises a
suspicion that it has been dredged. The moat is cut slightly into the
natural slope at its north-east end, and is tapered somewhat so that its
upslope side is some 5 m. longer than the south-west side. The water
sheet of the south-west arm is also markedly broader. The north-west
and south-east arms appear to taper north-east from 13 m. to 9 m. in
width, but this may rather originate in a single constriction in each arm
at the point of the possible causeways.
The moat encloses a rectangular island measuring some 40 m. x
15 P.W. Hasler, The History of Parliament. The House of Commons 1558-1603,
H.M.S.O. 1981; (Ed.) R. Hovenden, The Visitation of Kent 1619-1621, Harleian Society
42 (I 898), 39.
16 Hasted, Kent, vol. Ill, 280.
17 E.P. Boys Richardson, 'A seventeenth-century Kentish proverb', Arch. Cant., xxx
(1914), 81.
1s D.o.E. Listed Building List: Ashford District, TR 04SW 3/137.
19 P.R.O., IR 30/17/323.
20 W.M. Flinders P etrie, 'Notes on Kentish earthworks', Arch. Cant., xiii (1880), 8-16,
esp. 10.
416
EARTHWORK SURVEY AND EXCAVATION AT BOYS HALL MOAT
28 m. lip to lip. No masonry or significant change of levels is visible on
the island to give evidence of the house that stood there, but quantities
of floor- and roof-tile and mortar were observed during the survey and
a few sherds of late medieval pottery were collected. Hasted's
description of the moat as 'filled with water . . . inclosing strictly the
scite only of it ' might imply that the hall completely
filled the island, its outer walls rising from the moat itself (as, for
example, at Ightham Mote). The Barrys would have had a dwelling to
match their pretensions, and this is likely to have been of fourteenthand
fifteenth-century date, even if modernised or added to in the
sixteenth century.
The distinctive broadening of the water at the moat's south-west end
may well be an adaptation of the medieval moat contemporary with the
creation of a number of other water features to the south-west and west
of it. These represent an elaboration of the site in the form of gardens
and courts presumably in the early post-medieval period. The
ornamental features are laid out on relatively level or slightly rising
ground to the north-west of the moat, and rise up to the railway line at
the north corner of the field. They comprise an elaborate arrangement
of ponds and a number of square compartments, the details of whose
internal arrangements are not everywhere clear, but which may have
incorporated more water features. Precise definition and interpretation
of these features are made more difficult by their differential
preservation. Substantial ponds in a 40-45 m. strip along the west edge
of the earthworks and slight details associated with them are well
preserved. To the north-east of these the earthworks have been
smoothed or obscured.
The most prominent earthwork features are a deep angled pond,
'b - c', with its associated terraces, and the raised terrace and adjacent
earthworks at 'd' that continue the alignment of 'c'. Together they
extend for some 180 m. in length, divided into three equal sections, the
unit for which is the length of the south-west arm of the moat. The
straight section of pond, 'b', lies on the alignment of the south-west
arm of the moat; the similar length, 'c', is continuous with it and,
despite being on a different alignment, articulated with it by the
presence of broad terraces on either side which run the length of the
whole feature. This angular change effects a transition from the
established orientation of the medieval moat to the orientation of the
added gardens; 'd' continues the alignment of 'c' and is defined by the
same broad terrace on the south-west side. It is separated from 'c' by
an outlet channel, itself large enough also to have functioned as a pond.
Within the terrace that defines the south-west side of 'd' and parallel to
it lie two low banks, both exhibiting a drop south-eastwards halfway
along their length. They may represent either planting banks or the
417
PAUL BOOTH AND PAUL EVERSON
dividing banks between channels of an elaborate water system. A
raised area at the south-west end of the broad terrace which defines the
north-west edge of the site, is perhaps the site of a garden building or
viewpoint that looks down the alignment of 'd' and 'c'.
Closely related with 'd' is the block of earthworks to its immediate
east, which also exhibit good form and regularity. This is clearest in the
square platform, 'e', measuring some 7 m. by 6 m. and surrounded by a
broad, shallow ditch and an outer bank. As a water feature, 'e' would
have the appearance of a miniature moat and it links from its south
comer with the channels of area 'd'. A curving outlet channel from the
east comer of 'e' leads down over three slight earthen steps that might
represent a form of cascade. The square compartment to the south-east
has disturbed traces of what may have been a circular pond or basin for
this to empty into.
A series of water arrangements to the east of 'c' similarly take up the
alignment of this middle section of the gardens. They comprise
principally two less clearly marked ponds and the three parallel water
features are separated by approximately equal broad terraces. Details of
form in this area, however, are less clear-cut or reliable.
Scarps to the east and north have the smoothed appearance already
described. They are individually unintelligible but appear in places to
represent platforming and also have a marked rectangularity.
The north-west side of the site is defined by a disturbed and slumped
but still imposing earthen terrace, standing up to 1.20 m. high
internally. It exhibits marked changes in form. To the south-west, it is a
broad but well-defined terrace, that initially steps down southwestwards
but then holds a reasonable level for some 25 m. The final
20 m. again steps up slightly, and this, combined with the natural fall in
the ground surface south and south-westwards renders the south-west
end of the terrace a prominent feature. To the north-east, however, the
terrace becomes broader and even more disturbed, with a marked
increase in height at the point where a low terrace abuts it at right
angles. The curve east of the terrace scarp before it is lost under the
railway appears to be a genuine comer, probably marking the beginning
of the north-east side of the earthworks, which otherwise lies beneath
the railway.
Access to the site appears to have been from the north-east. It is
marked in the earthworks by a wide linear hollow, 'f' on plan, possibly
a double-ditched road, whose scarps are quite clearly truncated by the
railway. No convincing trace of it now exists in the disturbed land on
the other side of the track. This direction of access lends weight to the
interpretation of 'g' as a bridging-point or stub of a causeway to the
island, which the presence of tumbled masonry in the moat bank here
also supports. It might also suggest a function for some of the
418
EARTHWORK SURV EY AND EXCAVATION AT BOYS HALL MOAT
unintelligible features and platforms to the north of 'g' as the sites of
service buildings.
The rectangular area to the north-west of 'f' might appear to lie
outside the area of formal gardens as defined and to form a close, court
or paddock flanking the entrance way. Yet, it contains faint traces of
changes of level only a few centimetres high, whose rectangular layout
and orientation are in close sympathy with the garden features to the
south-west and with the north-west terrace. It may, therefore, be a
further garden compartment.
In summary, the site exhibits in its earthworks evidence for a
medieval moated residence - 'The Moat' - which has been adapted
with an elaborate layout of gardens that include raised terraced walks
and water features. Particularly impressive in conception are the
carefully contrived transition from the established orientation of the
moat to that of the gardens and the way in which the gardens are
organised in relation to the equal three-fold division of its south-west
side. A viewing point on the high south-west end of the north-west
terrace gives a view both along the alignment of 'd', 'c' and 'b', and
across towards the moated house with in the foreground at 'e' what
may have appeared as a miniature version of that moat.
On the evidence of comparable sites elsewhere, such elaboration
would be expected to date from the later sixteenth or seventeenth
century. Here, it clearly took place before the site's abandonment as a
residence in the second or third decades of the seventeenth century.
THE EXCAVATION (Figs. 3 and 4)
The excavation was intended to examine and date features associated
with the scheduled monument with the aim of clarifying the nature and
sequence of the recorded earthworks, which were indistinct in this part
of the site. Any sub-surface features were also to be examined. In the
event, all surface features within the proposed development area were
flattened before the excavation commenced. Clarification of the date
and nature of the earthworks, therefore, proved impossible and effort
was concentrated on the sub-surface features. The area was stripped
down to relatively undisturbed archaeological horizons (the levelling
already mentioned left a legacy of machine marks, particularly at the
south-east end of the site) by a 360° excavator with a ditching bucket.
All subsequent excavation was by hand. The excavation took place in
generally poor weather conditions. A combination of this circumstance
with difficulties of access and earlier machine damage meant that
excavation of the north-west end of the site was not possible.
The natural subsoil, variously numbered, usually consisted of
419
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N
0
see tren ch
j- ---detail below ---1 10
1-·-·---·-·;;·r,·-·o:--;;-·-·-·-·ti-·----j·-\t·-·-·-·-·=c·f-·-4 ·-·-· -·-·-·-\_._._._______ --·-·- ------t1---·-·-·-·-/Lt . ..,r-\-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·--
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scale 1:1000
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scale 1:250
Fig. 3. Trench plans.
p to
0
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p
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EARTHWORK SURVEY AND EXCAVATION AT BOYS HALL MOAT
section 1 section 2
E s N
75
75 !
section 3
SE NW
49'S,.....---=<......:.::c----,
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52 69 71 70
section 4 section 5 section 6
w E NW SE SE NW
455.Y"
64 S&
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scale 1:50
section 7
SE NW
26
24
chalk
brick
0 3 m.
scale 1:100
Fig. 4, Selected feature sections.
421
PAUL BOOTH AND PAUL EVERSON
superficial deposits of yellow or yellowish-brown silty sand or silty
clay over grey clay (one localised thin gravel deposit was also noted).
Three possible tree holes (40, 56 and 77) were the only 'natural'
features observed.
The most significant archaeological features were concentrated in a
group in the central part of the excavated trench. The largest feature, a
north-south linear complex c. 4 m. wide, probably consisted of
successive boundaries. The earliest of these was a wide, shallow
possible cut (84), probably at least 3 m. across, the yellow-brown sand
fills of which (52 and 71) survived to a maximum depth of 0.15 m. The
existence of 84 is not certain, since it is possible that its fills
represented subsoil disturbed by overlying features. It would, however,
have served to establish the alignment which was then followed by a
number of other features. On its west side the possible fill 71 was cut
by a ditch (70/82), at least 1.20 m. wide and 0.45 m. deep, with an
irregular profile. The fills of this feature and of a further north-south
gully (69/80), some 0.65 m. wide and 0.30 m. deep, also with an
irregular rounded profile, were barely distinguishable from the
overlying deposit (50, etc.), of dark bluish-grey silty clay. This
appeared to be the fill of a very wide, shallow cut (49), some 4 m.
across but with a maximum surviving depth of only 0.22 m., which
truncated all the other features. 50 and its analogous deposits produced
a substantial group of Late Iron Age pottery, mainly in grog-tempered
fabrics. Smaller quantities of comparable sherds came from the fills of
the earlier features 84 and 69/80.
The south terminal of a parallel feature (75) lay some 5.50 m. west
of the north-south ditch complex. 75 was c. 1.15 m. wide and generally
not more than c. 0.18 m. deep, but towards the terminal it deepened to
0.36 m. Its relationship to the larger boundary is unknown, but its fill of
grey brown clay produced a single Late Iron Age sherd. East of the
large ditch was a group of gullies typically c. 0.30-0.50 m. wide and
with round bottomed V-shaped profiles up to c. 0.25 m. deep. One of
these gullies, 45/47, ran parallel to the principal north-south boundary
at a distance of some 8 m., with a second gully (47) roughly at right
angles to it running east-west between the two. The fills of both these
features produced Late Iron Age sherds. Slightly further to the east two
gully terminals (64 and 65) projected from the north-east and southwest
baulks of the trench, respectively, leaving an intervening gap of
c. 2.20 m. Both gullies were quite substantial so there can be little
doubt that the gap between them was intentional rather than being
caused by differential preservation conditions. The alignments of these
short lengths of gully suggested that they belonged to a curvilinear
enclosure. Such an arrangement could have been contemporary with
the north-south and east-west aligned features, but is perhaps more
422
EARTHWORK SURVEY AND EXCAVATION AT BOYS HALL MOAT
likely to have been of a different phase. Neither gully produced any
finds from its fill.
North-west of the group of Late Iron Age features was a further
linear feature (79), some 2.20 m. wide and 0.30 m. deep and aligned
roughly north-north-east to south-south-west. It was filled with grey
brown silty loam (78). The fill contained no finds apart from fragments
of ceramic pipe. It is not clear whether the feature was dug to contain
this pipe or if, as is perhaps more likely, the pipe was a later insertion.
If the latter, the original date of the feature is unknown.
South-east of the Late Iron Age features a large, irregular linear feature
c. 7-9 m. across (36/19) ran in an east-north-east to west-south-west
direction. This was partly sectioned at two points. It had a maximum
depth of c. 0.95 m., with gently sloping sides and a flattish bottom. The
sequence of fills within the feature was quite different on each side of the
excavated area, but both sequences were consistent in producing small
quantities of pottery and tile, probably of post-medieval date, from their
lower fills. On the south-west side the primary fill (27), of grey clay, also
contained irregular fragments of chalk rubble. Later fills (30 and 25) were
similar in composition and character but with less chalk. These deposits,
up to c. 0.30 m. in combined thickness, were overlaid by a substantial
dump of bricks in a dark brown sandy loam (18), up to a maximum of c.
0.78 m. deep, the whole being overlaid by another greenish-grey clay
layer (24). To the north-east the principal deposits (11 and 10) were
yellowish-brown clay silt and sandy clay respectively. Fill 10 may have
been in a localised, shallow recut (13), but this is unclear, its stratigraphic
position and contour are similar to those of the brick filled deposit 18. 11,
which was probably the primary fill in this part of 36/19, contained a
small number of post-medieval tile fragments.
At the south-east end of the site an ill-defined layer of yellowishbrown
sandy loam some 0.10-0.20 m. thick (3 1/34) was the only
deposit to produce artefacts not of post-medieval date. This layer may
have been a medieval ploughsoil. The layer was cut by a gully (5, see
below) and probably also by an apparently circular pit, perhaps
originally c. 3 m. across (39) and up to c. 0.60 m. deep with a dished
profile. Its single fill (12) was of brown silt loam and contained postmedieval
pottery, tile, clay pipe and other material. This feature was cut
by a south-east to north-west aligned gully (5) which extended just over
10 m. into the excavated area. After a gap of c. 8.60 m. this line was
resumed by a further gully (16), c. 16.75 m. in length, which extended
up to and over the upper fills of 36/19, which it cut. These features can
be plausibly related to hedges along the railway line. A terminus post
quem of at least the early nineteenth century is indicated by the
contents of the features which they cut. More recent features were
impressions derived from recent machine movements. These had cut
423
PAUL BOOTH AND PAUL EVERSON
through the modern topsoil (2), which with other related layers (59 and
60), all of which contained post-medieval finds, overlaid the subsoil
level exposed by the machine stripping of the site.
THE FINDS
The only finds recovered in any quantity were pottery, ceramic building
material and animal bone. Other significant material consisted of a few flint
flakes and two possible quern fragments. Small quantities of glass, three clay
pipe fragments, five fragments of iron (four probably nails) and coal fragments,
all probably or certainly of nineteenth-century or later date, were also found
but are not reported on further.
The overall quantity of animal bone was not sufficient to merit further study
at this stage. Soil samples were recovered from some of the Late Iron Age
features and sieved for carbonised plant remains, but were unproductive.
The flint Philippa Bradley
Eight pieces of struck flint were recovered from the excavations. All of the
material is redeposited. The assemblage is summarised in Table 1.
TABLE 1. ASSEMBLAGE COMPOSITION
Context Flakes End and side Miscellaneous Total
scraper retouched
2 - - 1 1
12 2 1 - 3
50 I - - 1
62 2 - 1 3
Total 5 1 2 8
The flint is of good quality. Two pieces are orange brown with cherty mottles
and a fairly thick chalky cortex and the remaining material is mid-dark brown
in colour. Hard hammers were used and none of the retouched pieces, scrapers
and a retouched flake, are particularly diagnostic. Nevertheless, the material
would not be out of place in a Neolithic or Bronze Age context.
Neolithic flintwork has been found in the vicinity and field-walking by the
O.A.U. recovered a scatter of Neolithic and Bronze Age flint from
Willesborough approximately 800 m. to the north-east,21
21 P. Bradley, 'The struck flint', in Oxford Arch. Unit op. cit. in note 1, Cl5-C25.
424
EARTHWORK SURVEY AND EXCAVATION AT BOYS HALL MOAT
The quern fragments
Two small stone fragments, possibly from querns, were found in ditch contexts
associated with 'Belgic' pottery. They were of a whitish (c. Munsell lOYR 8/1)
sandstone, the quartz grains having a calcareous cement. This would be
consistent with an origin in the Greensand, perhaps from a relatively local
source.
The Late Iron Age and Roman pottery (Figs. 5 and 6)
Some 563 sherds of Iron Age and Roman pottery, weighing 4667 gm., were
recovered. The material was generally in poor condition. The great majority
was in grog-tempered fabrics of 'Belgic' type, which occurred in a relatively
narrow range of forms.
Fabrics
The material was divided into fabrics and recorded for each context by sherd
count, weight, rim count and EVEs (see further below). Ten fabrics were
defined. Summary descriptions are given below. More complete descriptions
are contained in the site archive.
Fabric 1. Grog-tempered
Grog is the major tempering agent, but burnt organic inclusions are also
common. There are also sparse-rare inclusions of rounded quartz sand,
sandstone, iron ore/clay pellets and (very occasionally) flint. Most of these
appear to be incidental components of the basic clay.
Fabric 2. Grog and sand-tempered
As Fabric 1 but with moderate quantities of rounded quartz sand, sometimes
augmented with rounded flint. The dividing line between this fabric and
Fabric 1 was not always easily defined.
Fabric 3. Sand-tempered
Small rounded glassy quartz sand grains are the only significant inclusion type.
Fabric 4. Grog and flint-tempered
Similar to Fabric 2 but with moderate angular flint.
Fabric 5. Flint-tempered
Abundant coarse angular flint and moderate very fine sand.
Fabric 6. Sand-tempered
Abundant very fine quartz sand with sparse larger sand grains and ?sandstone
lumps.
Fabric 7. Fine sandy oxidised (Romanised)
Fine orange-buff with sparse-moderate fine sand. A possible Canterbury
product.
425
PAUL BOOTH AND PAUL EVERSON
Fabric 8. Fine buff-white (Romanised)
Fine buff-white with moderate fine sand.
Fabric 9. Fine buff (Romanised)
Fine buff with sparse-moderate burnt organic fragments/voids.
Fabric 10. 'Chaff tempered' ware22
TABLE 2: QUANTIFICATION OF IRON AGE AND ROMAN POTTERY FABRICS
Fabric No. sh. %sh. Wt. (gm) %wt. No. rims %rims EVEs %EVEs
1 506 89.9 4406 94.4 52 96.3 3.75 94.5
2 25 4.4 185 4.0 2 3.7 0.22 5.5
3 5 0.9 13 0.3
4 2 0.4 11 0.2
5 1 0.2 2 -
6 1 0.2 8 0.2
7 3 0.5 10 0.2
8 1 0.2 1 -
9 1 0.2 3 0.1
10 18 3.2 28 0.6
Total 563 4667 54 3.97
The assemblage was dominated by the grog-tempered Fabric 1. Subdivision
of this fabric might have been possible but was not considered to be
worthwhile at present. The distinction between Fabric 1 and Fabric 2 ( on the
basis that the latter contained more sand) appears to be valid but of little
significance since the repertoire of decorative techniques and vessel forms
appears to have been the same in both. Sherds in these fabrics exhibited a wide
range of colour. While most were dark brownish-grey to black, light and
medium grey and orange-brown sherds also occurred. Most, if not all, vessels
in these fabrics appeared to be hand-made. The condition of the sherds made
assessment of surface treatment difficult. A relatively small number of sherds
was recorded as having been burnished, particularly on rims and shoulders, but
this proportion was probably originally much higher. The only significant
decorative techniques were the use of grooves and cordons and of irregular
22 KAR, 61 (1980), 2-3.
426
EARTHWORK SURVEY AND EXCAVATION AT B OYS HALL MOAT
combing or 'furrowing'. Some 98 sherds in Fabrics 1 and 2 (18.5 per cent of all
sherds in these fabrics) had furrowed decoration.
The remaining fabrics were of minimal importance. The single heavily flinttempered
sherd (Fabric 5) might have been residual in a late Iron Age context.
The sherds in Romanised fabrics were very small and the only apparently
significantly stratified fragments, in 50/62, the upper fill of the late Iron Age
north-south ditch complex, could have been intrusive.
The occurrence of fragments of 'chaff tempered ware' is noteworthy. This
fabric, probably to be associated with the manufacture and distribution of
salt,23 is often found in fragmentary condition and the Boys Hall sherds are no
exception.
Forms
Vessel types were quantified by rim count and EVEs (rim percentages). Many
of the rim sherds were small and it cannot be certain that each one represented
a different vessel, particularly since most of the vessels, being hand-made,
were, therefore, potentially irregular in rim form. The figure for EVEs, though
small, may provide a more reliable indication of the breakdown of vessel types,
though it seems that there are no significant differences in the data produced by
the two methods. The range of vessel types, confined to Fabrics 1 and 2, was
relatively limited. Probable jar types amounted to 96.7 per cent of the total
EVEs from the site. Just over half of the jars were of a simple barrel-shaped to
globular bead-rim form continuum, with no clearly-defined cut-off point
between the two. Medium mouthed jars with curving everted rims were almost
exactly half as common as the barrel-bead rim types, and most of the remaining
jars were of unspecified (but not bead-rim) types, usually with the rim as the
only surviving part. There was a single rim of a larger jar, probably a storage
vessel.
Other types were very poorly represented. There was only a single rim
certainly of carinated bowl or cup form, though other carinated sherds did
occur (without rims), and a possible bowl or dish rim fragment was also seen.
A strainer was represented by a perforated base. The upper part of this vessel
could have been of a standard jar form.
There was little significant evidence for use or re-use of the vessels.
Carbonised deposits were noted on the interior of a few sherds, but their
variable condition meant that it was not possible to record such evidence
systematically. Glossy black ?carbonised deposits were noted on the exterior of
a number of vessels, usually just below the neck. The consistency of
application of this feature suggests that it may possibly have been decorative in
function. One sherd was partly covered with a dense black substance of
bituminous appearance. This extended along one edge of the sherd and may
have been intended as an adhesive for repairing a broken vessel, as has
occasionally been noted elsewhere.24
23 Ibid., 2-4.
24 Cf. P.M. Booth, 'The Iron Age, Roman and Anglo-Saxon pottery,' in N.J. Palmer,
Excavations at Tiddington, near Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, (forthcoming).
427
PAUL BOOTH AND PAUL EVERSON
Discussion
The pottery forms a small but quite consistent group of material of late Iron
Age to early Roman date. The great majority of all the sherds (95.7 per cent)
came from the group of ditches and gullies in the central area of the site and
may be presumed to provide a terminus post quern for the filling of these
features. The upper fill of the main north-south ditch contained a small amount
of post-medieval tile, but this was probably intrusive. The three small Roman
sherds in the same feature may have been introduced with the tile, but this need
not have been the case.
Most, if not all, of the material may be assumed to have a fairly local origin.
The grog-tempered tradition was firmly rooted in east Kent in the first
centuries B.C. and A.D.25 and may be presumed to have been maintained at a
number of local production centres within the region. Flint-tempering has also
been seen as characteristic of the region,26 but its almost total absence at Boys
Hall may indicate the location of this site at the periphery of the flint-tempering
zone.27
The date of the inception of grog-tempering in the region is still unclear, though
it presumably extended well back into the first century B.C. Its demise falls within
the later part of the first century A.D.,28 in part corresponding with the expansion
of sandy ware production at Canterbury.29 If the small Fabric 7 sherds from the
north-south ditch fill 50/62 are in situ they may represent the very beginning of
this transition. If intrusive, the otherwise unadulterated nature of the grogtempered
assemblage might suggest that it had terminated before this transition
began, perhaps, therefore, not much after the middle of the first century A.D. and
almost certainly by about A.D. 75. The current estimation of the date range of
chaff-tempered ware would be consistent with this.3o
There is no clear evidence for chronological distinction between the feature
fills in which the pottery concentrates. The assemblage is homogeneous
throughout and its condition does allow consideration of questions such as
abrasion. Indeed the average sherd weight, 8.3 gm., demonstrates that the
material was well fragmented. The relatively abraded character of some of the
sherds was probably, however, in part a function of the soil conditions on the
site rather than indicating extensive redeposition. The overall quantity of
material suggests that it derives from more or less immediately adjacent
activity, though this clearly did not include the deposition of primary rubbish.
Illustrated vessels (Figs. 5 and 6)
Because of the lack of major ty pological variation and of any clear
chronological distinction between individual feature groups the illustrated
25 R.J. Pollard, The Roman pottery of Kent (1988), 42.
26 I. Thompson, Grog-tempered 'Belgic' pottery of South-eastern England, BAR 108
(1982), 12-14.
27 Cf. ibid., 7.
2s Pollard, op. cit. n. 10, 67.
29 Ibid., 66.
30 Arch. Cant., ex (1992), 298.
428
EARTHWORK SURVEY AND EXCAVATION AT BOYS HALL MOAT
pieces are presented as a single group, arranged in a typological sequence
based mainly on rim forms. In each entry the context number follows that of
the fabric. All the vessels are handmade except for no. 20.
1. Fabric 1. 62. Barrel-shaped jar with incipient bead rim. Groove on shoulder
and furrowed decoration.
2. Fabric 1. 62. As last, but more globular in form. Burnished on shoulder.
3. Fabric 1. 52. Bead-rim jar with crude thickened rim. Groove on shoulder and
furrowed decoration.
4. Fabric 1. 50. As last, without groove on shoulder.
5. Fabric 1. 62. Small bead-rim jar with simple thickened rim. The shoulder is
burnished and has a (?deliberate) oval indentation. Furrowed decoration.
6. Fabric 1. 50. Bead-rim jar with groove on shoulder and furrowed decoration.
Traces of both exterior and interior sooting.
7. Fabric 2. 62. Bead-rim jar. Possible groove on shoulder.
8. Fabric 1. 62. Bead-rim jar with groove and burnishing on shoulder.
9. Fabric 1. 62. Small bead-rim jar.
10. Fabric 1. 53. Globular jar with well-defined bead-rim and groove on the
shoulder. Burnished on the shoulder, possibly overall.
11. Fabric 1. 50. Bead-rim jar with burnished shoulder and furrowed
decoration.
12. Fabric 1. 62. Bead-rim jar with large and well-defined rim. Groove on
shoulder.
13. Fabric 1. 50. Jar with short upstanding elongated bead-rim. Burnish and
groove on shoulder, furrowed decoration below.
14. Fabric 1. 52. Jar with short curving everted rim. Burnished on shoulder.
There is a shiny black deposit in a narrow band under the rim.
15. Fabric 1. 62. Jar with short curving thickened everted rim. A very slight
groove defines the base of the neck. Above this line is a fragmentary band of a
black deposit as on no. 14. In addition, lumps of a similar material occur along
one edge of the sherd, both on the surface and partly on the break. These may
represent an accidental post-breakage occurrence, but might suggest an attempt
at repair.
429
PAUL BOOTH AND PAUL EVERSON
Ii
I I 1 I I
/
---,-
7 --1 --------\
I I I I
11
1\
\1
\ \
0
10
I
I
I
I
4L
I \
/ I \
8 l======l,\
\ \ I /
II
-----,-I-
-
--::-::-_-::-:::-_-_) "'
Fig. 5. Late Iron Age pottery nos. 1-12.
430
EARTHWORK SURVEY AND EXCAVATION AT BOYS HALL MOAT
,t 13 I-=-
\
I ' (
14 16 '
\\ II I
I 15
II I
) t
17
II I
I} (
19
II
18
'
0 100 mm
) I : H
20 \
I I I
... I /
,) ( I/
21 <, 23
'
/
Fig. 6. Late Iron Age pottery nos. 13-23.
431
PAUL BOOTH AND PAUL EVERSON
16. Fabric 1. 50. Jar with short curving slightly everted rim. Grooves on
shoulder.
17. Fabric 1. 62. Jar with thickened curving everted rim. Grooves on shoulder.
Possibly burnished.
18. Fabric 2. 62. Jar with curving everted rim.
19. Fabric 1. 62. Jar with curving everted rim, a cordon at the base of the neck
and grooves at the girth. The neck has a fragmentary shiny black deposit as on
nos. 14 and 15.
20. Fabric 2. 62. Jar similar to last, but larger.
21. Fabric 1. 62. Large jar with curving everted rim. Very slight traces of
possible furrowed or combed decoration.
22. Fabric 1. 62. Small carinated bowl or cup with slightly everted rim.
Burnished above carination.
23. Fabric 1. 62. Angle of sharply carinated bowl or cup with a cordon defined
by deep grooves above the carination.
The later pottery Lucy Bown
Thirty-four medieval and post-medieval sherds, weighing c. 200 gm., were
recovered. Twenty-two sherds were assigned to six medieval fabric types and
the remaining 12 to seven post-medieval wares . Six sherds belong to a
distinctive quartz and flint tempered fabric which could be late Saxon or early
medieval, dating from c. A.D. 1000-1200. All these sherds are heavily abraded
and fragmented and the only diagnostic example is the inturned rim of a bowl,
probably paralleled at Canterbury by forms dated A.D. 1050-1150.31 Seven
sherds are in a coarse quartz-tempered ware used for cooking vessels. This
fabric has been recognised as a common component of the Union Rail Link
field-walking collection32 from the vicinity of Ashford and is thought to date
from the eleventh to the mid thirteenth century. Of the remaining nine sherds
four are less than 10 mm. in size and, therefore, too small to identify closely
and the remaining five belong to four different fabric types thought to be of
twelfth- to fourteenth-century date. These are a single sherd in a fine
pinkish/cream fabric, three sherds in two hard fired reddish yellow quartztempered
fabrics (one moderately tempered with larger quartz and the other
abundantly tempered with fine quartz); and a single jug rim in a coarse quartz-
31 N. Macpherson-Grant, 'Local and imported wares at Canterbury: Late Saxon, SaxoNorman
and Medieval, a provisional Guide. Canterbury Arch. Trust (1981), figs. 20 and
25.
32 Cf. note I.
432
EARTHWORK SURVEY AND EXCAVATION AT BOYS HALL MOAT
tempered sherd of light red colour. These well thrown, light firing sherds are all
likely to be from jugs and are, therefore, placed stylistically in the twelfth to
fourteenth century.
The earliest post-medieval wares present are two sherds of late
medieval/early post-medieval red earthenwares of sixteenth-century date and
four fragments of imported Cologne/Frechen Bellarmine dating from the mid
sixteenth to seventeenth century. Later post-medieval wares include eighteenthto
twentieth-century Creamware, English Porcelain, English Stoneware,
Transfer printed wares and modem white earthenware.
The contexts containing medieval sherds also had either post-medieval
pottery or tile present. All the medieval material is likely to have been residual.
The building material
Just over 3.5 kg. of ceramic building material, probably all of post-medieval
date, was recovered from the site. This total excludes the post-medieval brick
deposit (18) in the ditch/hollow 36 (material from this context was not
retained). The assemblage contained a little brick in coarse sandy fabrics, but
consisted primarily of fragments of thin peg-tiles (c. 10-14 mm. thick) in finetextured
fabrics with at most sparse-moderate rounded quartz sand grains. This
material occurred principally in topsoil and other contexts where it was
associated with post-medieval pottery. A few fragments were, however, found
in the tops of the fills of two late Iron Age features (fills 46 and 50) but they
are assumed to have been intrusive in these contexts.
DISCUSSION
The excavated late Iron Age and early Roman features do not constitute
a coherent settlement entity, though the quantity of finds, particularly
of pottery, and the presence of items such as quern fragments indicate
that domestic settlement lay closely adjacent to the excavated area. In
view of the discrete character of the features in the central part of the
excavated area, it is not possible to determine their relationship (if any)
to the apparently contemporary 'site 2' identified in the Kent
Archaeological Rescue Unit work immediately to the south-east. This
site in turn may be seen as a continuation of that located in the northwest
corner of the Ashford Freight Terminal by the Canterbury
Archaeological Trust. The occurrence of so much activity of 'Belgic' to
early Roman date within the immediate area (see summary above)
raises the question of whether this should be seen as representing a
typical rural settlement density for this region and period, or whether
the concentration of 'sites' was unusual. It is perhaps possible that the
location of broadly contemporary features across a relatively wide area
indicates the presence of a number of dispersed component elements of
a larger settlement complex.
433
PAUL BOOTH AND PAUL EVERSON
Damage to the site prior to the commencement of fieldwork meant
that it was not possible to achieve the principal objective of the
excavation, to examine the earthworks in detail. However, two major
features encountered within the trench may have related to these
earthworks. Feature 79, towards the north-west end of the excavated
area, links closely with the north side of the probable entrance road (f)
into the moat complex, though its fill was unfortunately undated. A
ceramic pipe within the feature was presumably a later insertion in the
way that field drains tend to be laid along the furrows of ridge and
furrow fields. Towards the south-east end of the trench a further
substantial feature (36 and 19) up to 9 m. wide clearly related to an
irregular hollow which aligned with the south-eastern arm of the moat.
The interpretation of this feature in the context of the earthwork layout
is unclear. The excavated evidence suggests that it was substantially, if
not entirely, of post-medieval date. The upper part of the sequence of
fills, consisting largely of brick rubble, may have been deposited
immediately prior to the construction of the railway embankment. The
function of the feature is uncertain, unless it formed some kind of
feeder channel for the moat. Even if this was the case it need not have
formed part of the original configuration of the moat.
434