EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992*
ALISON J HICKS
With contributions by
R. Anderson, M. Bates, B. Dickinson, P. Garrard, L. Harrison,
E. Healey, N. Macpherson-Grant, D. F. Mackreth, A. Savage,
V. Tatton-Brown
THE EXCAVATION
INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY
The site at Each End, Ash (TR 304585) was located by the Canterbury
Archaeological Trust during trial trenching along the line of the Ash
by-pass, now constructed and directing traffic along the A257 to the
north of the village. No archaeological remains had previously been
identified within the impact area. Upon the discovery of a single
cremation burial and metalled surface within one of the trenches, a
broad area of topsoil was stripped. The total area uncovered, in which
archaeological features were visible within the impact zone, was
3,500 square metres (Fig.l). Excavation of the site was undertaken
between April and July 1992.
The occupation uncovered upon the site was principally of Roman
date. However, the activity within the area since prehistoric times
was suggested by the retrieval of a Mesolithic flint tranchet axe, a
Neolithic leaf-shaped flint, a barbed and tanged arrowhead of Early
Bronze Age date and sherds of prehistoric pottery. Iron Age activity
was indicated by the presence of a ditch, gullies and a small quantity
of pottery.
The project was entirely funded by Kent County Council Department of Highways
and Transportation. The Canterbury Archaeological Trust has contributed to the cost
of publication.
91
ALISON J. HICKS
Roman occupation was extensive across the entire excavation area.
The most prominent feature was a metalled road, with associated
drainage ditches. Thought to have been laid in the second half of the
first century A.D., the road appears to have replaced an earlier
trackway.
A Roman settlement lay adjacent to the road. This was represented
by a small wooden structure with associated yard surfaces, together
with a hearth, three wells and several pits which perhaps indicated
small scale industrial activity on the site. The predominant feature
associated with Roman settlement, however, was a sequence of open
gullies and ditches, cut in various directions across the site. Their
complexity suggests that drainage of ground water was a persistent
problem throughout the lifetime of the site. The major period of
settlement appears to have been the mid to late second to third
centuries A.D., although occasional fragments of early Roman and
late first- and early second-century pottery perhaps point to earlier
activity. Coin evidence suggests that the site may have contracted, or
even been temporarily abandoned, in the later part of the third century.
Three cremation burial groups were discovered, one to the north of
the road line, the others to the south, yielding pottery which was
largely mid to late second century in date. A number of the burials
were rich in grave goods, some containing as many as ten ceramic
vessels, whilst a lamp, copper alloy objects and remnants of footwear
were also retrieved. A single amphora burial was discovered, as well
as a box burial. In addition, an inhumation burial was excavated, set
within a large rectangular grave, from which late second- to thirdcentury
pottery was recovered.
Evidence of later Roman activity was tenuous, although fragments
of iate third- to fourth-century pottery were recovered. A deposit of
dark silt covering the road and its ditches, yielded a large quantity of
mid to late fourth-century coins. Thus by this period the road and its
ditches were no longer maintained, although the line probably
remained in use as a trackway.
The close proximity of the major Roman site at Richborough (only
2.2 km. (1 Vi miles) to the north-east) means that any discussion on the
nature of the settlement and the archaeological discoveries at Each
End must include some consideration of contemporary events at
Richborough.
In Roman times Richborough was located on an island divided from
mainland Britain by the Wantsum Channel (see below, The Topography).
The site became a major port during the Roman period. As
the bridgehead for the Claudian invasion, a ditched enclosure was
built in the first half of the first century A.D.; this was rapidly replaced
92
nC.rrce mation burials G21
y Site boundary
Road metalling G7 .•
Location Plan
Richborough Castle
Remains
n Sandwich
SP Y trS^
. - • ^
G14 . /
Well G9A
" TT
G19B
Cremation burials
O G22 O
O
\ \
\327\
> \G28
V »
\ G32 \
\G26 V'A > \ P
Drainage gullies
G33 ,/'
'».-*--'
.^Structure G15
V s?^. Well
vG19A,'- VTV
Cremation burial .G23
G32
• ^
Roman road
Yard surface
10 20 30
Fig. 1. Main site plan, showing the location of all principal features
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
by a wooden fort which remained in use until the late first century. The
port flourished during the late first and early second centuries, with a
civilian settlement encouraged by trade generated by the military
supply base. The settlement declined during the later part of the second
and the early third centuries, perhaps when Dover became the more
dominant commercial centre. In the late third century Richborough
was redeveloped as a site for the military and a new fort was
constructed (Johnson 1970).
The alignment of the road discovered at Each End runs towards the
former Wantsum Channel at Little East Street Farm, from where it is
postulated a ferry crossing could have connected with Richborough
(see below, p. 102).
Though the insubstantial nature of the road suggests it was unlikely
to have been a major route it was undoubtedly the presence of the
road and the proximity of Richborough which provided the impetus
for occupation.
THE TOPOGRAPHY
The site lies just below the 10 m. land contour, upon Tertiary deposits
of Thanet Beds, comprising sands, clays and silts, overlain by Head
Brickearth. The underlying solid geology is predominantly Cretaceous
Chalk. Between the Isle of Thanet and the Kent mainland exists
the Richborough Syncline, a shallow basin formed by a warp in the
underlying chalk. Following the general rise in sea level which
occurred after the last glaciation, c. 15,000 B.P., the syncline was
flooded by the sea and the Wantsum Channel was formed, creating a
sea passage linking the River Thames and the English Channel.
The Wantsum Channel is today represented by a broad belt of
low-lying marshland, varying from c. 1.2-4.8 km. in width, dissected
by man-made dykes and rivers flowing out to sea. This marshland
formed over thousands of years, as the Great Stour and a number of
smaller rivers flowed eastwards into the Channel. As they drained
much of eastern Kent, they deposited silts, a process probably
enhanced by the formation of the Stonar gravel bank to the east,
further restricting the free flow of water through the Wantsum
Channel. Silts would also have been produced by erosion of the cliffs
at Deal and Reculver (Hawkes 1968).
In the Roman period, despite the advanced state of the marsh
formation, a sea passage appears to have still existed in the Wantsum
Channel (Ogilivie 1968). This channel would have allowed ships to
navigate from the south through to the mouth of the Great Stour
93
ALISON J. HICKS
River, and so on to the Roman town at Canterbury. Further north,
they would have met the River Thames. The forts of Reculver and
Richborough were strategically sited at each end of the Wantsum
Channel.
The Roman port at Richborough lay upon an island (now known as
the Isle of Thanet) to the east of the Wantsum Channel. The site
excavated at Each End was situated on the fringes of the channel to
the west. As has already been mentioned, the link between the two
sites afforded by the newly discovered road, would have necessitated
a ferry crossing somewhere in the vicinity of the existing Little East
Street Farm (see also p. 102, below).
Today, the land east of Each End drops away to form a broad,
low-lying area of predominantly pasture, in places poorly drained. At
Each End itself, lying upon a stretch of gently sloping ground at a
height of c. 9-10 m. O.D., and upon the slightly higher, well drained
ground to the north-west, west and south-west, the land is largely
under arable cultivation, in part used for fruit growing.
DESCRIPTION AND DISCUSSION OF THE ARCHAEOLOGY
PREHISTORIC OCCUPATION
Evidence of prehistoric occupation was slight. The excavations
yielded a flint tranchet axe and obliquely truncated blade of Mesolithic
date, a leaf-shaped flint of Neolithic date, a barbed and tanged arrowhead
of Early Bronze Age date and two sherds of pottery tentatively
identified as of Late Bronze Age/Early Iron Age transition type. These
finds were all residual, but suggest activity within the locality.
IRON AGE OCCUPATION (FIG.2)
Iron Age activity was indicated by the presence of a large ditch and a
number of smaller gullies, as well as by a small quantity of pottery,
some residual. The large ditch (G.3)1 was located towards the
1 The stratigraphic context units (prefixed C.) were clustered into Sets (prefixed S.)
and Groups (prefixed G.), indicating particular activities or groups of activities occurring
upon the site during a particular time frame, using a hierarchical grouping
system (Clark 1988,1992; Pearson and Williams 1992). Details of the Sets and Groups
are provided in the site archive, available for study at the offices of the Canterbury
Archaeological Trust, 92a Broad Street, Canterbury, CT1 2LU.
94
r"
Site plan
1 J
\
m. A1 :f^
A Section
Will III IT
A1
m
325 Ui
G24
T
Drainage channels
Ditch G3
m
X
o
00
is
>
GO
a;
to
0 1 20m.
Fig. 2. The Iron Age ditch (G.3) and drainage channels (G.24, G.25).
ALISON J. HICKS
southern side of the site. Up to 1.70 m. in depth and with a maximum
excavated width of 4.80 m., this massive, linear cut ran east-west
across the excavation area. The substantial nature of the cut (C.2033),
with steep, undulating sides and a broad flat base, at first suggested
that the feature was defensive in nature. However, its meandering
plan and the nature of the infilling deposits did not support this
interpretation. Instead, the cut appears to have been excavated for
drainage. It would have contained water during much of its lifetime,
so that as it lay open, it gradually infilled with erosion deposits,
waterlain silts forming horizontally along its length.
Smaller ditches and gullies probably funnelled water from the
surrounding land into the ditch and then down towards the Wantsum
Channel to the east. A sequence of these drainage channels (G.24)
was identified during the excavation. Varying in depth from 0.15-
0.55 m., they yielded only struck flints and a single pottery sherd.
Clearly well maintained, having undergone a number of re-cuttings,
they were later replaced by a single, broad but shallow gully (G.25),
also draining away towards the large ditch.
The original date of the ditch is difficult to ascertain. Partial
excavation of the feature provided no evidence of cleaning or
re-cutting, suggesting that the deposits represented the entire original
infilling. The single sherd of pottery of Iron Age date recovered from
a deposit located just above the base may therefore indicate that the
feature itself was cut during the Iron Age. Although no features
specifically indicative of nucleated settlement were identified,
residual pottery sherds, recovered both from the ditch and other
features on the site, suggest that an Iron Age period settlement was
present within the immediate vicinity of Each End, with its main
period of activity occurring c. 650-450 B.C. The large ditch was
probably related to this settlement activity. It may have been cut for
land drainage within an area of crop cultivation.
Sherds retrieved from the infilling deposits of the ditch suggest, both
by their date and abrasion patterns, that the feature was open for a
considerable period of time, perhaps extending into the early first
century A.D. In addition, sherds of residual pottery recovered from other
features and tentatively dated c. A.D. 25-75 may suggest multi-period
pre-Roman occupation was present within the area of Each End.
PRE-ROAD ACTIVITY (not illustrated)
Features (G.4) were uncovered which lay directly below the line of
the trackway. These consisted of two gullies, a post-hole and two
96
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
features of unknown function. In addition, a short length of gully
(G.39) was excavated, aligned approximately north-south, lying
below the line of the southern road ditches and heading beneath the
line of the later track. What form the pre-trackway occupation took
is not clear; most of the features provided little insight into the nature
of settlement, although the two gullies suggest a process of land
management, possibly related to the Iron Age settlement discussed
above. No artefacts were recovered from the features and their date is
therefore uncertain.
Of importance, however, was the location of these features, which
demonstrated that occupation occurred before the existence of the
trackway. The trackway itself was therefore not the sole impetus for
occupation within the area, although it may have been important
during the Roman period.
ROMAN OCCUPATION
The trackway (not illustrated)
Before the laying of the metalled road surface, a trackway existed
which followed the same alignment. Remnants of this survived in the
form of wheel ruts and puddle holes (G.5). In addition, shallow
drainage gullies had been cut running parallel with the outer edges of
the track.
It was originally postulated that the trackway formed during the
road construction process. This would have involved considerable
activity; carts bringing gravel, tools and equipment, men laying the
metalling and cutting ditches, and a substantial amount of earthmoving.
Upon the clayey ground surface, this would have formed
wheel ruts and a variety of irregular features. However, it seems
unlikely that this process would have required the cutting of drainage
gullies or whether it would have formed wheel ruts aligned solely in
the direction of the trackway.
It seems more probable that the trackway was an early route, later
deemed inadequate to support the amount of traffic using it and
consequently metalled. It may have connected small settlement sites
or provided access to Little East Street Farm and a ferry crossing to
Richborough. The date of the original trackway is not certain since
the features yielded no finds. It was aligned towards Richborough,
where Iron Age occupation has been uncovered so it may have existed
prior to the Roman period. There was no direct evidence to suggest
that it was associated with the large Iron Age ditch to the south. The
97
ALISON J. HICKS
two features lay upon separate alignments, but this did not
necessarily preclude an association. The trackway probably remained
in use until the early Roman period and the laying of the metalled road.
The road: metalling (Fig.l)
The trackway was subsequently metalled to provide a more
substantial surface. Initially, its construction involved the deliberate
deposition of earth above the line of the earlier trackway (G.6).
Within one area, a moderately compact clay loam had been used to
level off a small hollow, whilst along the centre line of the road earth
had been laid to form an agger, enhancing drainage from the surface
of the road. The silty clay forming this central ridge probably came,
at least in part, from earth upcast by the digging of the road ditches.
The effect so created was of two 'lanes', to north-west and south-east,
separated by a low central embankment. A further, mottled earth
deposit was noted along the north side of the road (G.2) which
seemed to have been formed by surface activity when the road was
under construction, a process which would have involved much
trampling across the ground by men and animals transporting
materials and equipment.
The road metalling (G.7), aligned north-east to south-west, merely
consisted of a single deposit of compacted flint pebbles set within a
sparse sandy silt matrix, lying to a maximum depth of 0.14 m. but
surprisingly 15.00 m. in width, extending up to 18.00 m. in isolated
areas. The contour of the central agger was retained within the
metalled surface, a deliberate feature of its construction, whilst at its
edges the metalling was cambered, to enhance drainage from its
surface into the flanking side ditches. Once laid, small depressions
and hollows within the metalled surface rapidly filled with erosion
silts (G.12), thus levelling out any irregularities.
A number of long, linear depressions within the surface of the
metalling were clearly identifiable as wheel ruts. There was evidence
that some of the wear to the metalled surface was repaired by
patching (G.13) but only within isolated, relatively small areas.
Curiously, an area of patching identified along the south-east edge of
the metalling consisting of small-medium flint pebbles (C.323) laid
upon earth bedding (C.324), had the effect of levelling off the camber
at the edge of the road and so would have restricted drainage into the
road ditch. It is not known whether this was deliberate or merely a
piece of poor workmanship. The patching along the north-west
fringes of the road (C.369) petered out c. 3 m. before the edge of the
earlier metalling, indicating that either the patching material itself
98
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
had later worn away or the full width of the road, as originally laid,
was no longer required.
The road: ditches (Fig. 1)
Ditches were located to either side of the metalling, flanking the road.
Cut primarily for drainage, they must also have served to prevent
livestock from straying onto the road surface and possibly as markers,
to denote the boundary of the property associated with the road.
Immediately adjacent to the north edge of the road metalling lay a
single ditch (G.8). It had been subjected to numerous re-cuttings
during its lifetime (seven were identified during the excavation), no
doubt necessary due to silt deposition from the road metalling and
from the surrounding ground surface. The cuts, where they survived
in any substantial form, varied in width from c. 1.70-2.50 m. and up
to 1.50 m. in depth. In profile, most were bowl-shaped, with undulating
sides due to successive episodes of erosion, slumping, cleaning
and re-cutting. The base of one of the cuts (C.l 106, S.152) had been
lined with a deposit of flint pebbles, probably in an attempt to
enhance its drainage qualities.
A single post-hole (C.1088) cut the base of one of the ditch cuts
(C1063), whilst three stake-holes (C.1091, C.1097, C.1098) were
identified cutting the base of another (C.1089). Since the ditch
sequence was only excavated within a narrow slot, it is not known
whether these formed part of a pattern of associated features or were
merely isolated examples. Too many suggestions could be proposed
for their function to make speculation worthwhile.
Three lines of ditches were identified south of the road. The earliest
(G.9) was located furthest to the south. Bowl-shaped in profile, with
gently sloping and undulatory sides, the ditch cut (C.133/C.1029)
was up to 2.90 m. wide and 1.20 m. deep. It displayed evidence of a
single re-cutting (C.l 156), which reduced its depth to 0.75 m. A line
of post-holes (C.l 133, C.l 134, C.l 135), each square in plan, cut the
upper northern edge of the ditch, probably indicating the presence of
a fence line. This may have been erected to prevent animals straying
into the ditch when they were being herded along the road, no doubt
when they were being taken to and from local markets.
Subsequently, the ditch was deliberately backfilled by the dumping
of rubbish deposits, containing quantities of charcoal, daub and
pottery, within its upper levels, and a new ditch (G.10) was cut
slightly to the north. This re-alignment was probably undertaken in
order to insert a small structure (G. 15) and its attendant yard surfaces
(G.16) (discussed below), which overlay the line of the former ditch
99
ALISON J. HICKS
whilst respecting the line of the re-cut. Pottery of late second- to
third-century date recovered from the primary ditch provides a
terminus post quern for this re-location activity.
The new ditch (G.10) ran roughly parallel with, but cut away the
northern edge of, the former. With a roughly U-shaped base, the sides
were gradually sloping and undulating. The ditch had a maximum
width of 2.25 m. and a depth of 1.24 m. A single post-hole (C.l 18),
0.70 m. diameter, cut through the southern slope of the ditch. Since
no other post-holes were identified cutting the ditch, it can be
presumed that it did not represent a fence line. More likely, it was in
some way associated with the settlement activity to the south.
This secondary ditch was filled entirely with materials formed by
silting and erosion. These lay in bands, indicating a number of
erosion episodes and suggesting that the infilling occurred gradually.
No evidence of re-cutting was found; the cut as excavated perhaps
represented the final clearance of the feature.
The third, and latest, ditch located south of the road (G.14) lay
parallel with the others but was sited further north so that it cut
through the edge of the road metalling. Roughly U-shaped in profile,
with undulating sides, the maximum width of the cut was 1.85 m. and
it was 0.75 m. deep. This ditch was seen to terminate in blunt ends to
both the south-west and north-east. That this ditch cut the road
metalling may imply decreased use of the road or possibly a need for
greater space between the ditch and the settlement to the south,
already postulated for the re-location of the primary ditch. That the
ditch terminated within the excavation area may suggest that access
was required from the road into the settlement, suggesting that
occupation was beginning to expand into new areas to which direct
access had not previously been necessary. It should be noted,
however, that it could not be conclusively determined whether the
secondary ditch (G.9) to the south had gone out of use by the time this
more northerly ditch was cut, although it cannot be envisaged why a
double-ditch system would be required unless the ditches served
separate functions (for example, one a drain, the other a boundary);
there was no evidence, from the nature of the ditches, for such an
assumption.
The final ditch cuts to both the north and south of the road
contained erosion deposits in their lower levels, suggesting gradual
neglect. The upper levels, however, contained quantities of domestic
refuse, and pottery of late third- to fourth-century date, indicating
that some form of settlement remained within the vicinity even once
the ditches, and therefore probably the road, had ceased to be
maintained.
100
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
The road: Discussion
The date at which the road and its associated ditches were constructed
is far from certain. Few finds were retrieved either from the metalled
surface or from the ditches, and those from the latter merely provide
a terminus post quern for the infilling of the features whilst giving no
indication of their date of cutting. Similarly the finds recovered from
the metalled surface, consisting of a copper alloy horse harness
toggle and cheek piece of first-century date (SFN2 1262; C.l 15), a
single sherd of second- to third-century pottery and a coin of mid to
late fourth-century date, cannot assist with the primary dating of the
road for material could easily have become impressed into its fabric
by trampling upon the surface during its lifetime.
It seems feasible to suggest, however, that the road was laid during
the second half of the first century A.D., shortly after the Roman
conquest. This period saw the expansion of the site at Richborough,
which began life as the bridgehead for the Claudian invasion. The
ditched enclosure at Richborough was almost immediately replaced
by a wooden fort, which remained in use until the late first century
A.D., when the military base was superseded by a civilian settlement,
enticed by the thriving port (Cunliffe 1968). The growth of the port
would have been accompanied by the growth of trading links, along
roads and waterways, with surrounding settlements, including the towns
of Canterbury and beyond to London. Smaller sites, like that at Each
End, may have benefited from this increased trade, initially perhaps by
the replacement trackways with more substantial metalled roads.
The metalled surface appeared to remain in use until the late third
to early fourth century, although to what extent it continued to be
maintained during the later part of this period is uncertain. A deposit
of dark silt, allowed to form across the line of the metalling and
across the infilled road ditches, yielded a large number of coins of
mid to late fourth-century date. Thus it appears that by the late Roman
period the road and ditches had been neglected yet the line remained
in use as a trackway, the coins attesting to continued activity.
The road uncovered at Each End is in some ways rather curious since
it appears to provide conflicting evidence. The depth of the road metalling,
a maximum of 0.14 m., would have been insufficient to support
great volumes of traffic, yet the metalling width of c. 15 m. is comparable
with, if not considerably wider than, a number of other Roman
roads in Britain (cf widths of c. 7 m. at Fleet Farm (Ogilvie 1968); just
2 SFN = Small Find Number.
101
ALISON J. HICKS
under 7 m. at the west gate of Richborough (Cunliffe 1968); c. 8.5m.
for the widest road excavated at Springhead (Penn 1965); whilst the
portion of Watling Street uncovered at Springhead was only c 5.2 m. in
width (Penn 1958)). In addition, the cutting and re-cutting of the road
ditches to both north and south of the metalling suggests a considerable
amount of effort was expended both in the construction of the
road and in its maintenance.
The width of the metalling has led to suggestions that the feature
was not a road, but a courtyard. However, the ditches, flanking the
feature, and the presence of the central agger, do not support this
theory. Neither do the features uncovered beyond the ditches. If a
courtyard existed, it would be expected to be surrounded by buildings
of a substantial nature, especially as the 'courtyard' would have been
at least 35 m. long from south-west to north-east, and perhaps considerably
longer, since it was not bounded at either end of the
excavation. The Roman villa at Lullingstone, a substantial Roman
site, is only 38 m. in length (Meates 1979). No such buildings were
identified at Each End; the only building uncovered was the small
timber structure to the south, clearly not grand enough to have
warranted such a major courtyard. The cremation burials, bounding
to north and south, also suggest that the metalling represented a road,
graves often being sited flanking such routes during the Roman period.
The road was aligned in a north-east to south-west direction,
apparently heading towards the Roman fort at Richborough (Fig. 3).
It seems probable that the Wantsum Channel was crossed by ferry;
Margary (1948) proposed a crossing site at Little East Street Farm
which is on the protected alignment of the Each End road. A ferry
terminus may have been a simple affair. Ferries plying waterways in
parts of Asia today would leave no trace archaeologically; they
simply comprise a man with his boat pulled up onto the muddy
foreshore, ready to push off when traffic arrives to be taken across
(author's observation). It is quite probable that the Little East Street
Farm-Richborough ferry crossing was little more elaborate.
However, Margary postulates that the principal road leading to
Richborough was located further north-west and there seems no
reason to dispute this. The evidence of an earthen agger just north of
the village of Ash and traces of flint metalling near Cooper's Street
suggest that this principal road was heading towards a site near Fleet
Farm, located at the closest point to Richborough from the mainland.
This was confirmed by excavation in 1957 (Ogilvie 1968), the road
revealed being c. 7 m. wide, up to c. 0.6 m. deep, and comprising of
a double thickness of flint pebbles each up to 0.15 m. in diameter.
Remnants of the road were also found to the east leading towards the
102
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
RICHBOROUGH
Fleet Fm
^
/
ASH /
CANTERBURY
EACH END^
Wingham
Woodnesborough
o 1 10km
Projected alignment of Roman road uncovered at Each End
Roman roads as proposed by I D Margary (1948)
Fig. 3. The proposed alignment of the road uncovered at Each End, and its
relationship to other principal roads within the area
west gate of the Roman fort. Thus it would appear that this was the
main road connecting Richborough with the mainland, its method of
construction demonstrating that it would have been capable of
supporting a large volume of traffic.
The road metalling uncovered at Each End was of a far less
substantial nature, despite the impressive construction of the road
ditches, and could never have supported any quantity of traffic. It was
probably a minor roadway serving a local function, perhaps
connecting with the junction of the main Dover and Canterbury roads
located to the south-west.
At its south-west end, the road probably joined the eastward
extension of the Canterbury-Ash road, again postulated by Margary
(1948). From this Each End junction, a road or trackway may have
existed which led directly south of Woodnesborough, and from there
straight towards the port of Dover, rather than detouring to the west
via Ash before turning to Woodnesborough. Either way, the small
Each End road would have provided an additional link between
Richborough island and the mainland, and from there on to the towns
of Canterbury and Dover.
The settlement activity: Features and deposits (Fig. 4)
The most convincing evidence of nucleated settlement activity at
Each End was the discovery of a sequence of post-holes thought to be
the remnants of a small wooden structure (G.15) located south of the
road metalling. Seven post-holes (C.1072, C.1073, C.1074, C.1075,
103
o
Structure
G19A
G18D
G18G
Hearth
>
X
o
Fig. 4. The settlement features.
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
C.1076, C.1077, C.1087) were positioned in two parallel rows to
form a rectangular structure 4.60 m. long and 2.30 m. wide, its width
thus exactly half its length. Substantial deposits of tile recovered
from nearby abandonment or demolition material (G.71) suggested it
had a tiled roof.
Associated with the wooden structure were three patches of
compacted cobbling (G.16). Immediately adjacent to the structure, a
smooth cobbled threshold was formed by flint pebbles and occasional
chalk and tile fragments (C.385). North-east of this lay an area of more
uneven cobbling (C.386), comprised of both flint pebbles and angular
flints, combined with tile and slag fragments, probably a rough yard
surface. A narrow strip of this yard, adjacent to the structure and set at
a slightly lower level, may indicate the location of a small trampled
pathway running alongside the building.
The third patch of cobbling (C.387) was located on the south-west
side of the structure. Consisting of medium flint pebbles, large flint
nodules and occasional sandstone, tile, pottery and bone fragments,
this yard surface was smooth and compact in places but undulatory,
irregular and patchy elsewhere.
As discussed above, the wooden structure and its associated yards
were inserted into an area created by the re-location, slightly northwards,
of the southern road ditch. Whilst overlying the line of the
earliest road ditch, the structure and yards respected the line of the
re-located ditch, implying contemporaneity. Pottery recovered from
the fill of the earliest ditch indicates that the structure could date no
earlier than the late second century.
Three wells were discovered during the course of the excavation
(G.9A, G.19A, G.19B). Whilst none were fully excavated, two
(G.19A, G.19B) were taken to depths of between 2.20-2.40 m., where
the current water table was reached (8.11 m. O.D.).
One well (G.19A), perhaps the earliest of the three, was roughly
circular in plan, and broad at the surface where the sides had clearly
eroded to become shallow and undulatory. At a depth of 1.80 m.,
however, the shaft, whilst still circular, narrowed and the sides
dropped almost vertically. No evidence of an original lining was
visible. The well was infilled with lenses of erosion material, interspersed
with bands of humic material containing bone, charcoal,
daub and pottery dated to the late second to third century. Abandoned,
and gradually infilling naturally, the feature would have been
an ideal location in which to discard refuse generated by the nearby
settlement activity. The well was finally deliberately capped with a
0.90 m. deep deposit of sterile clay, and a hearth (discussed below)
sited above.
105
ALISON J. HICKS
This well was perhaps replaced by that to the west (G.9A), which
was only partially excavated due to time constraints. Apparently
circular or ovoid in plan, the sides were steeply sloping and slightly
undulating to a depth of 1.40 m., after which they broke almost
vertically down to an excavated depth of 1.70 m. (8.74 m. O.D.). The
well had become gradually infilled with a succession of erosion
deposits, intermingled with humic lenses containing bone, charcoal,
tile and pottery of late third- to fourth-century date, deliberately
discarded within the abandoned feature.
The third well lay to the north-east (G. 19B) and was excavated to the
depth of the current water table. Circular in plan at its upper levels, the
well had undulating sides probably caused by erosion. However, the
shaft became square at a depth of 1.60 m. where the sides were highly
compacted and vertical, suggesting an original plank lining. A linear
slot (C.1003) running up to the edge of the well may have indicated the
location of a wood or stone structure at the well head. Two adjacent
shallow, irregular features (C.l001, C.l002) were probably formed by
spilled water and trampling feet.
Infilling the well was a succession of erosion deposits from which
occasional fragments of later third- to fourth-century pottery were
recovered. The lack of refuse may suggest that the settlement had
largely been abandoned by the time this well became redundant.
Overlying the capped well (G.19A) was a hearth (G.17), constructed
from tiles set within a shallow depression. The tiles were
arranged with their flanges outwards to form an enclosed area. Lying
upon the tiles was a deposit of silty loam (C.327) heavily impreg- nated
with ash and charcoal, which would have formed during use of the
hearth. The surrounding ground surface was scorched to a deep
red-brown colour and flecked with concentrations of charcoal:
material was no doubt raked out still hot from the hearth, scorching the
earth and depositing waste material upon its surface which would
subsequently have become trampled into the ground. The hearth may
be suggestive of small-scale industrial activity, although analysis of
samples taken from the fill and surroundings gave no indication of its
use. Pottery of late third- to fourth-century date recovered from this
feature indicates that it was in use during the later period of the
settlement.
A number of pits (G.18) were identified, most backfilled with a
mixture of occupation debris, including pottery, bone, charcoal, daub
and humic material, and naturally formed silt deposits. Unlikely to
have been cut for storage, since the ground would have been too wet,
it seems likely that these features were rubbish pits, although why
these would have been necessary within a settlement surrounded by
106
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
fields is uncertain. An exception may have been the disposal of
industrial waste, possibly considered unsuitable to spread upon
agricultural land. However, soil samples analysed from the pits
provided no evidence of industrial activity.
The bulk of the ceramic material retrieved from the pits was of mid
to late second- to third-century date. Only one of the rubbish pits
(C.l 030) included pottery of a later date, its range extending up to the
fourth century.
Interwoven amongst the settlement features described above was a
complex of ditches and gullies, all concentrated to the south of the
road metalling (G.26, G.27, G.28, G.29, G.30, G.31, G.32, G.33,
G.35, G.36, G.37, G.38). Varying greatly in both width (0.18-3.90
m.) and depth (0.10-1.06 m.), some took the form of a single ditch or
gully cut which demonstrated no evidence of cleaning or re-cutting,
whilst others had clearly been well maintained, having undergone
numerous phases of re-cutting, some even to the extent of changing
the direction of water flow. In places, channels had also been
deliberately blocked by the insertion of tightly packed flints.
Complex formations of parallel and intersecting gullies were
uncovered, in places up to six gullies abreast and closely set,
although to what extent they were in use contemporaneously was not
always easy to determine.
The gullies varied greatly in profile, from shallow, U-shaped cuts
with undulating sides to steep-sided, V-shaped cuts, no doubt
depending upon the degree of weathering and re-cutting to which
each had been subjected. There was no suggestion that any of the
gullies were originally covered. Instead, the evidence indicates that
they were open drainage channels, cut with sloping bases along which
water would have flowed, rather than sumps or soakaways into which
water would have drained and remained static.
The principal aim of the channels appears to have been to drain
water from settlement areas and direct it away, either into the road
ditch to the north or along a series of ditches and gullies to the south.
An alternative suggestion, that they were land boundaries which also
serviced to drain areas of cultivation, seems implausible. There was
no evidence for arable activity in the ground between the drainage
features. A suggestion that the features were beam or timber slots can
be discounted due to the nature of the cuts.
That a system of water drainage was required suggests severe
problems with ground water. Why such a complex system came into
being over a period of time is open to debate. It is possible that the use
of areas between the gullies was changing, and their lines were
therefore moved to create space required for other activities or, in the
107
ALISON J. HICKS
case of the first southern road ditch, because the channel into which
they drained had been re-located. Alternatively, and perhaps a more
likely explanation for the series of closely-spaced central gullies, the
nature of the subsoil may have caused the gullies to rapidly fill with
erosion deposits during periods of bad weather. Anecdotal evidence
from local farmers indicates that, today, drainage ditches need to be
cleaned out every year to remain effective as water channels. Thus it
may be suggested that, in Roman times, if a gully was neglected for a
few winters in succession, its original line may have largely disappeared.
Under such circumstances, it may have been easier to re-cut a
gully line rather than locate and clean the original channel. A
combination of both factors is perhaps the most likely explanation for
the series of gullies uncovered at Each End.
Most of the drainage channels were filled with erosion material;
some contained sequences of material indicating a succession of
erosion episodes. A large proportion of the pottery recovered was of
later second- to third-century date, although fourth-century pottery
was also retrieved, particularly from the uppermost deposits. One of
the gullies (C.54) contained a complete, articulated dog skeleton,
which lay above the primary silty clay deposit covering the gully
base. The dog lay upon its side with head, tail and legs fully extended.
Above it, deposits containing quantities of charcoal, pot and bone,
probably conveniently dumped within a redundant feature, capped
the channel. Another of the gullies (C.57) contained an almost
complete pottery vessel (C.l55), dated to the mid second to third
century, lying above the primary deposit. The vessel fill was intact
(C.l56), but analysis provided no trace of any contents suggesting
that the pot was simply discarded into the gully because it was broken.
The settlement activity: Discussion
A sufficient quantity and variety of features was uncovered at Each
End to determine that settlement activity was present upon the site.
The concentration of many of these, including the structure and
yards, wells, hearth and pits, towards the south of the excavation area
may indicate that the settlement was concentrated here. However, the
location of burials within this part of the site may indicate that this
was an area of peripheral settlement. In addition, the complicated
sequences of gullies and ditches interspersed with the settlement
features indicate that extensive drainage was required for the area to
remain suitable for habitation. It therefore seems plausible to suppose
that the site excavated at Each End would not have been the primary
area chosen for habitation.
108
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
Instead it is probable that the settlement nucleus was located upon
the higher, drier ground to the south-west, west or north-west, beyond
the bounds of the excavation area, whilst the occupation activity
discovered at Each End may have represented later expansion of the
settlement into peripheral and less suitable ground. Anecdotal
evidence from members of the Mid Kent Search and Recovery Club
supports this. They report that a much larger concentration of metal
objects of Roman date has been recovered from the fields on higher
ground on the opposite side of the A257 than from the field
containing the excavated area. What form this nucleated settlement
took, its full size, extent and nature cannot be determined until a
much larger proportion of the settlement has been examined.
Events at Richborough would undoubtedly have affected the
settlement at Each End. Since the sites were connected by road and
ferry, trade would clearly have been conducted between the two both
in goods and services. The location of the Each End site, on the
fringes of the Wantsum Channel and maybe on the closest raised
ground feasible for habitation, ensured that its inhabitants reaped the
benefits of the nearby coastal zone. The benefits would have included
plentiful supplies offish, water fowl and reeds, and trade could easily
have taken place not just with Richborough but also with other ports
along the coast. No doubt small boats would have been pulled up
against the shoreline near Each End, ready to sail long the coastline
collecting and transporting cargoes as they went.
Settlement at Each End may have begun as early as the late first
century B.C. to the mid first century A.D. Two contexts were identified
which contained pottery of this date, although this may suggest occupation
within the locality rather than at Each End. Activity was certainly
present by the late first to early second centuries A.D.; a number of
pottery sherds of this date were recovered. It is possible that the construction
of the metalled road, thought to have occurred in the second half
of the first century A.D., may have provided the major impetus for
occupation, whilst trade with the growing port at Richborough would
have been an additional spur. The principal date of the Each End
settlement, however, was during the late second to third century, the site
perhaps being allowed to develop in its own right due to decreased
activity at Richborough. Pottery evidence indicates that settlement
expansion, or at least development, occurred in the late second century,
when activity moved into areas previously used for burial (the burials
were broadly mid to late second century in date). The settlement may
have seen its major period of expansion during this period.
Coin evidence suggests that the later part of the third century saw a
period of declining activity at the site. It has been suggested that this
109
ALISON J. HICKS
Group 21
.-. G21
Site plan
® a
Group 22
Fig. 5. Cremation burial groups G.21 and G.22.
110
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
may have been due to the threat of invasion; the occupants may have
responded by abandoning their settlement, whereas at Richborough a
stone fort was constructed.
Pottery dated to the late third to fourth century recovered from a
small number of the features suggests that some form of settlement was
present during the later Roman period. However, it may have largely
represented a time of gradual neglect and abandonment, or perhaps
continued contraction of the principal site of nucleated settlement.
The burials: The cremations (Figs. 5 and 6)
Three groups of cremation burials were uncovered during the course
of the excavation. A total of 15 burials contained 49 pottery vessels,
many of which were complete (see Pl.l). Appendix A provides a
summary of the contents of each grave. Two groups lay to the south
of the road metalling and one to the north, the latter separated by the
road line from the settlement area. The cremation site to the
south-east was the most extensive, consisting of nine burials, that to
the south-west the smallest, consisting only of two, whilst that to the
PLATE I
!;•
A selection of the intact pottery vessels recovered from the cremation
burials.
Ill
ALISON J. HICKS
north contained four burials. All were truncated to varying degrees,
in some cases so severely that only the lower portions of the ceramic
grave vessels survived.
North of the road metalling, four cremation burials (G.21: S.21,
S.22, S.23, S.24; Fig. 5) were discovered within an area of approximately
10 square metres, although the cemetery probably extended
further north and west beyond the bounds of the excavation area. One
burial (S.21) was unfortunately destroyed by unauthorised metal
detector users prior to the start of the excavation so that only a single,
fragmented pottery vessel (C.147) remained. No cremated remains or
associated grave goods survived. One of the other burials (S.22) also,
curiously, contained no cremated human remains, although the
cinerary urn and its fill were retrieved.
Each of the three un-robbed burials contained, in addition to the
cinerary urn, from two to four ceramic grave goods. Other grave
goods of note included a copper alloy tumbler lock bolt (SFN.601)
and two hobnails corroded to a fragment of mineralised leather (SFN.
1679), part of the sole from a hobnailed shoe or boot.
A total of nine cremation burials (G.22: S.4, S.13, S.14, S.15, S.16,
S.17, S.18, S.19, S.26; Fig. 5) was recovered from the area lying to the
east of the site, south of the road metalling. The area was bounded
upon all four sides by ditches and gullies, leaving a rectangular area of
c. 11 m. by 13 m. in which this burial group was located. As recov ered,
it appears that the ditches and gullies, yielding late second- to thirdcentury
pottery, respected the edges of the cremations, which were
dated to the mid to late second century. This may imply that the
cremations were marked above ground in some way. Alternatively, it is
possible that the ditches and gullies had cut away further cremation
burials, the remains of which, therefore, no longer existed. However,
since no burials were identified on the opposite sides of these
bounding ditches, this is thought to be unlikely.
Interestingly, each of the burial cuts within this group had a deposit
of earth lying upon the base, evidently deliberately laid. It was
invariably flecked with tiny fragments of charcoal, daub, chalk and
tiny flint inclusions, and thus could not have formed by erosion from
the natural subsoil into which the burials cut. Even the amphora burial
(described below) had earth lying within the ceramic base which could
not possibly have formed by anything other than deliberate deposition.
Within the burials, the grave goods sat directly above this earth
deposit, often pushed a short way into it. It therefore appears to have
been laid as bedding, to ensure that the ceramic vessels stood upright,
and remained so whilst the burials were backfilled. Neither of the other
cremation burial groups had similar deposits.
112
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
The apparent wealth of the burials within this group varied
enormously. One (S.13) comprised solely of the ceramic cinerary urn;
at the opposite extreme, a burial (S.4) was excavated which contained
the cinerary urn plus nine ceramic grave goods. The remains of a pair
of hobnailed boots (SFN.634) were also recovered from this grave.
Two other burials (S.18, S.19) were found to contain remnants of
shoes or boots; one (S.18) contained three burnt hobnails within the
cinerary urn, suggesting that the corpse was shod when placed on the
funeral pyre. The other burials each contained between one and three
ceramic vessels, one of which was an oil lamp (from S.19).
Of particular interest was the amphora burial (S.18). The cut had
been lined using the lower half of a large amphora (South Spanish
Dressel 20), into which an earth bedding (discussed above) had been
laid. The grave goods rested upon this deposit. They comprised the
cinerary urn, two ceramic vessels, a glass goblet containing fragments
of iron sheeting, and a number of iron hobnails from shoes or
boots. A second deposit of earth (C.24) had then been laid, sealing the
goods, and the upper portion of the amphora (C.67) positioned above.
Complete with two handles and the rim, this portion had fortunately
slumped down into the body of the amphora, protecting the grave and
its contents from the effects of later truncation.
One burial (S.26) (not illustrated), containing four vessels, was
uncovered by mechanical digger during levelling work prior to road
construction. A bucket scoop lifted a complete cremation burial;
ceramic vessels were seen by the archaeologist conducting the
watching brief literally hanging out of the side of the bucket. Thanks
to the immediate co-operation of the machine driver, the bucket was
carefully lowered to the ground and the excavation of its contents
undertaken. This ensured that the complete burial was recovered,
although it could not be illustrated due to its understandably
disturbed nature.
The third cremation group (G.23; Fig.6), containing two burials
(S.5, S.10), lay to the south. Further burials may, however, have been
located beyond the bounds of the excavation area. The earliest grave
(S.10) contained no ceramic vessels. Instead the cremated remains
had been enclosed within a wooden box. The base of the cut was lined
with iron nails, indicating the original outline of the box, now
decayed. The nails surrounded a patch of light grey-brown, moderately
compacted silt (C.231) containing frequent human bone
fragments. The cremated remains may originally have been placed
within a leather or cloth bag, of which no evidence survived. No
grave goods were included within the cut. However, a number of pig
and bird bone fragments, interspersed with the human bone, suggests
113
ALISON J. HICKS
that offerings were made upon the funerary pyre and that the soul of
the deceased was not neglected. Capping the burial was an earth
deposit (C.232); occasional iron nails were recovered from this
deposit, probably originating from the wooden box and indicating
that post-depositional mixing had occurred.
It has been suggested that the presence of a wooden box, in
preference to a ceramic cinerary urn, may indicate the burial of a
person from a low status or poor family. However, there is no reason to
suppose that a wooden box would be cheaper or easier to obtain than a
pottery vessel. With one exception, all the cinerary urns exhibited
characteristics of a type known as Canterbury or 'transitional Native
Coarse Ware', common throughout East Kent in the mid second to
third centuries. Thus the box burial may, in fact, have reflected a burial
of higher status.
The other burial within this area (S.5) cut through the edge of the
box burial. It contained only the ceramic cinerary urn. The fill of the
vessel (C. 130) was intact but curiously contained no cremated human
bone fragments although unburnt shrew and mole bones were
recovered. No other grave goods were recovered from the burial.
The cremations: Discussion
The cremation burials date between the mid to late second century.
Thus they were contemporary with similar burial rites fashionable in
Roman Britain at this time. All of the burials contained a cinerary urn
except one which contained a wooden box.
In four of the burial urns, fragments of cremated mammal bone
were recovered (see Appendix A). Pig was the only identifiable
species, whilst bird bones were recovered from the box burial. Pieces
of meat are likely to have been burnt with the body on the funerary
pyre as offerings to feed the soul on its journey to the afterlife
(Alcock 1980). It is probable that in this way some would have
become intermingled with the human remains. In addition, unburnt
bones, of mole and shrew, were recovered from two of the cremation
vessels. It would appear that the rodents either fell into the vessels
before soil had slumped down into them and so were unable to
escape, or they used the vessels as nesting sites.
Curiously, two of the cinerary urns were found to contain no
cremated human remains, although one of these contained unburnt
rodent bones. If nesting within the vessel, rodents may well have
disturbed the deposits, yet it seems likely that post-depositional
mixing, by rodents and also earthworms, would cause all the bone to
disappear. Is it perhaps more likely that, for some reason, the cinerary
114
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
urns were buried with no bone inside them? Other examples of
cremation burials containing no bone are known in Britain. At the
Anglo-Saxon cemetery at Spong Hill, at least one complete urn (no.
1881) was found to be devoid of bone (McKinley 1994).3 It is perhaps
possible that the cremations represented symbolic burials for bodies
which were missing, for example having been lost at sea.
Most of the burials contained grave goods in addition to the
cinerary urn. Many would have contained food and drink to provide
nourishment for the soul's journey to the underworld (Alcock 1980).
Examination of the earth fills of the grave goods provided no
evidence of their contents, but this was only to be expected, as they
were probably perishable. One burial also contained an oil lamp.
Interestingly, a cremation recovered from Warwick Square, London,
containing the remains of an adult and a child, had been buried with
two oil lamps; clearly it was thought that each individual would
require a lamp to light their way into the next world (Merrifield
1987). Hobnails were also recovered from four of the burials,
indicating that shoes or boots were buried with the grave. The
practice derives from the Celtic custom of providing the deceased
with footwear to ensure safe passage into the next world (Van Gennep
1977). One cremation vessel contained burnt hobnails suggesting the
deceased may have been burnt wearing boots or shoes.
Evidence that any of the burials once had markers was tenuous,
being provided solely by the location of the most easterly burial
group within an area surrounded by gullies and ditches which appear
to respect their positions. Widespread truncation which had occurred
on site could have removed all traces of markers. It is known that at
least some cremation burials were marked above ground during the
Roman period. At Caerleon a cremation dating to the first century
had a lead pipe leading to the surface so that libations could be poured
into the grave (Merrifield 1987,197, PI. 22), evidence that individual
graves were visited and as such must have been visible.
The siting of cremation burials surrounded by settlement features is
somewhat unusual, since it was more common during the Roman period
to position burial grounds beyond the occupation zones. It is possible,
however, that gradual settlement expansion down onto the lower ground
forced the abandonment of the cemetery areas. The cremations date
between the mid to late second century, whilst is was the late second to
third century which saw the major period of settlement, which perhaps,
moved at that time into areas formerly used for burial.
Of the 2,384 cremations recovered at Spong Hill, 29 contained no bone. However,
most of these were not complete vessels.
115
ALISON J. HICKS
A number of theories can be proposed for the three separate burial
groups, though without wider knowledge of the surrounding
unexcavated areas, these must remain speculative. The groups may
have represented different periods of time, although the pottery
dating is, unfortunately, insufficiently precise to determine whether
any group largely pre-dates another. If this suggestion is correct the
north-western group (G.21) would appear to be the latest, the other
groups having been overtaken by occupation activity and therefore
been abandoned at this time. Another suggestion is that the burial
areas represent different spatial, social or family groups, although
each group contained a diversity of apparent wealth, and the burial
group to the south-west (containing an inhumation (discussed
below), a box burial and a cremation containing a ceramic urn)
clearly showed significant variations in burial practice.
The burials: The inhumation (Fig. 6)
A single inhumation burial (G.20A) was uncovered within the
excavation area, adjacent to a number of rubbish pits and post-holes.
The grave was of a particularly curious construction. The outer burial
cut (C.l032) was rectangular in plan, aligned north-east to south- west
and 3 m. long, 1.5 m. broad and 2 m. deep. The sides were largely
vertical but stepped inwards towards the base. At the base, an erosion
deposit (C.422) of silty clay almost identical to the surrounding
subsoil, suggested that a period of time had elapsed between the
cutting of the feature and its use as a grave. However, this did not
appear to be slumping from the existing cut sides which, over much of
their height, were absolutely vertical. It is possible that the material
was banked up around the sides of the feature after its cutting and it
could perhaps be envisaged that heavy storms may have washed the
material into the cut. Alternatively, the upper portions of the cut, once
demonstrating the effects of slumping and erosion may have been
removed by truncation.
After the deposition of this erosion material, no attempt appears to
have been made to clean out the original cut. Instead, a narrow shaft
(C.l 128) was cut into its centre, 2.05 m. long but only 0.50 m. wide,
into which was inserted a wooden coffin; dark brown lines of staining
(C.406), indicating the original coffin position, were visible within
the narrow shaft. Lying at the base of the coffin were the human
remains (C.408), in a poor state of preservation but identifiable as
those of a woman, estimated to be of 35 to 45 years of age. The body
lay supine, with the head aligned towards the south-west.
The grave shaft was backfilled with a deposit of green-grey silty
116
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
C405
Site plan
G23 & G20A
Section
+10.00m.OD
Group 20A
cut C1032
C420/
423 fSp* cut C1128
Coffin C406
Group 23
Fig. 6. Inhumation burial G.20A and cremation burial group G.23
117
ALISON J. HICKS
sand (C.420/423) and the entire outer cut infilled with a sequence of
silty clay deposits (C.214, C.419, C.421), probably representing
material upcast from the digging of the original hole. As the coffin
began to decay and collapse under the weight of material above, the
upper infilling material slumped down to partially fill the void, so
becoming less compacted within a shaft-like area directly above the
coffin (C.405).
This burial was much deeper and broader than was common for
Roman inhumations, but it is not known why such effort was
expended upon this single burial. What seems probable, however, is
that it was the grave of a person of high status. However, it is curious
that the inhumation was located within an area of peripheral settlement
activity, containing rubbish pits, post-holes and, to the northwest,
a hearth, when Roman burials were usually sited outside the
area of the settlement. It was originally thought that the burial may
have pre-dated this occupation, the settlement having spread to
incorporate an area used for burials. However, pottery evidence
suggests that the occupation activity and the inhumation burial were
roughly contemporary, being of late second- to third-century date,
and its location therefore remains as enigmatic as its construction.
Stratigraphically, the inhumation burial can be seen to post-date
one of the cremations, whilst the pottery recovered from the
inhumation (late second to third century) is broadly later than that
from the cremations (mid to late second century). It can perhaps,
therefore, be tentatively suggested that this burial represents the
beginning of the change in Roman burial practice from cremation to
inhumation.
Late/post-Roman activity (not illustrated)
Only sparse evidence of late and post-Roman occupation was uncovered
upon the site. A deposit identified as demolition debris (G.71)
was recovered from the area adjacent to the wooden structure. This
consisted of an irregular spread of flint, chalk, tile and sandstone
fragments which lay above the western yard surface. The deposit may
have formed when the structure was demolished or fell into decay.
Unfortunately, no dating material was recovered from the layer.
Above the road metalling, deposits of silty clay (G.70) formed,
probably due to a combination of natural silting and erosion
processes, and continuous trampling across the road surface. This
build-up may have occurred both during the lifetime of the surface
and in its primary stages of abandonment. Subsequently, a dark soil
(S.3), up to 0.30 m. deep in places, formed above the line of the road
118
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
and ditches, indicating that the road had ceased to be maintained by
this time. However, although the metalling was now covered and the
road ditches abandoned, it should not be supposed that the route was
no longer used. A large quantity of fourth-century coins recovered
from the dark soil horizon suggest activity in the later Roman period.
It seems probable, therefore, that, having become well established as
a roadway during the previous centuries, it would continue to be used
as a trackway when the administration involved in its maintenance
was no longer present.
No features specifically indicative of late Roman occupation were
identified at Each End, although fourth-century pottery recovered from
a number of features suggests some activity was present. However,
extensive truncation had taken place across the site, no doubt due to
later agricultural practices which may have removed evidence of late
Roman activity. Although the road and ditches were neglected, local
settlement may have continued. Alternatively, the late Roman period
may have seen continued contraction of the nucleated settlement site,
which perhaps never recovered from its decline in the late third
century. Materials of late-Roman date retrieved during the excavation
may have derived solely from use of the surviving trackway.
Fragments of Anglo-Saxon pottery recovered from the layers of
colluvium (G.72) and topsoil (G.73) are probably stray finds,
possibly from field-manuring, and are not necessarily indicative of
post-Roman occupation.
THE HUMAN REMAINS
Trevor Anderson
THE CREMATED MATERIAL
Introduction
Seventeen pottery vessels, with their contents intact, were forwarded to the
osteologist for excavation. In three cases (vessels C.37 (S.15), C.260 (S.4),
C.471 (S.26)), the urns were sufficiently complete to permit examination by
computerised tomography (Anderson and Fell 1994)4 before excavation.
An advanced form of radiography where sections or slices can be obtained without
damaging the object. The tomographs were kindly provided by Jon Billings and Colin
Fell of Kent and Canterbury Hospital.
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ALISON J. HICKS
Eleven vessels were found to contain cremated remains (Appendix A). An
additional cremation was discovered in a poorly preserved wooden container.
This is discussed separately below.
The condition and preservation of the material
Bone condition
The fact that all the bones were hard and solid, did not leave a mark when
scratched and were not calcined, suggests that the firing temperature was
between 400-750° (Hoick 1987, 131-2). Experimental work, however,
suggests that calcination may occur at a lower temperature in an oxygen-rich
environment (Parker 1985). In vessel C.43 (S.13, 11.6 per cent of the bones
were only lightly burnt which argues for either a low firing temperature or a
very short period of cremation. In two vessels (C.78 (S.14) and C.471 (S.26))
the recovery of intact teeth suggests that the maximum temperature was
probably less than 500°C.5
Colour
The majority of the fragments (89.7 per cent, with a range from 75.0 - 97.8
per cent) were pale cream or off-white in colour, which suggests that most of
the bones were burnt in a well-oxygenated environment. All the vessels,
however, contained sooty, dull-grey blue/black bone fragments. This would
argue that approximately 10 per cent of the material was burnt in a reducing
environment. In all vessels, it was noticed that the trabeculae were
frequently blue whilst the external surface was white. This supports the view
that a lack of oxygen will result in a blue coloration. Other factors, however,
such as liquefaction of the marrow, will cause localised temperature
reduction, which will influence bone colour (Reverte 1987).
In vessel C.78 (S.14) the majority of the fragments were off-white but a
few ribs and various vertebrae were blue externally. These bones are
well-protected by soft tissue and would tend to be the last skeletal elements
directly exposed to the flames of the pyre. This suggests that the cremation
was probably of rather short duration, with the centre of the body not fully
burnt. Also it is a possibility that the body in question was rather thin, since
a lack of fatty tissue would tend to slow down the cremation process.
In vessel C.70 (S.17) the majority of the fragments were off-white but
larger portions of the lower leg and ankle were blue. There is very little soft
tissue over the lower leg, which means that normally these bones are quickly
burnt. The fact that the rest of the body has been consumed points to the
interpretation that the heat of the pyre was confined to the upper body, with
the lower legs being burnt in a less intense heat, possibly a smouldering fire.
It is possible that a sudden heavy downpour reduced the efficiency of the
5 Work by the Japanese forensic odontologists, Furhata and Yamamoto, suggest that
tooth eGoldstein 1973,23).namel will be completely exfoliated at c. 500°C (quoted in
Buikstra and Goldstein 1973, 23).
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EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
cremation process.6 The upper and central region of the body, fuelled by the
ignited body fats, would continue to be consumed, quite probably being
stoked vigorously, and thus fed with oxygen, by the attendants. The lower
legs, however, peripheral to the centre of the cremation, would tend to burn
fitfully in such circumstances.
Size
In the sample as a whole, almost half the bones (by weight) were between 20-50
mm.; just over a quarter between 10-20 mm.; 15.8 per cent less than 10 mm. and
bones over 50 mm. accounted for only 11.9 per cent of the total. In two vessels
(C.142 (S.24) and C.148 (S.23)) no bones over 50 mm. were found: these two
urns contained a higher than average frequency of fragments under 20 mm. The
fact that these two vessels were incomplete when excavated, with only the base of
C.142 recovered, appears to have artificially biased the results for these vessels.
In the more complete urns, there was little variation in mean bone size.
This suggests that a similar method of cremation and collection was practised
throughout the sample. Bones that fractured during the cremation would have
their broken ends exposed to the heat of the pyre and they would display a
uniform white colour. The fact that many of the fragments are blue internally
and white externally argues that the fractures occurred towards the end of the
cremation process, perhaps as a consequence of the pyre collapsing, or else
they were broken during collection.
The latter view is supported by the fact that even in present day cremations,
bone shafts up to 25 cm. in length are recovered, prior to crushing in the
cremulator (McKinley 1989). Also archaeological evidence has demonstrated
that the bones of cremated bodies are relatively intact as long as the burnt
remains are left in situ, and are not collected (Buikstra and Goldstein 1973, Fig. 16).
Weight
The weight of human bone recovered from the incomplete cremation vessels is
of limited value for assessing the percentage of the skeleton which was
deposited in the vessel. In the eleven cremation vessels a total of 10,417 gms. of
human bone was recovered. From the four complete urns, however, the mean
bone weight is 1,317 gms., which range from 859 to 1,959 gms.. In modern
crematoria somewhere between 1,600-3,600 gms. of bone is recovered from an
adult body (McKinley 1989). This suggests that, in our sample, approximately
half the bones were recovered and deposited in the cremation vessel.7
In larger towns, most cremations probably took place in permanent structures such as
the one found at Carnuntum, Germany, as illustrated by Wenham (1968, Fig. 8). In
rural areas, an unenclosed pyre, open to the elements would probably be the normal
method of cremation.
7In three complete vessels, C.30(S.18),C.37(S. 15) andC.471 (S.26) (mean height 19
cm.), it was possible to establish a soil:bone ratio; the mean was 1:19.8. Obviously, the
weight of the soil will vary due to both its composition and the shape of the urn. As a
rough guide, however, this suggests that the ratio should be in the region of 1:40, if all
the bones from a single individual had been deposited in the vessel.
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ALISON J. HICKS
This raises the question of what happened to the rest of the cremated bones.
There is a sufficient number of bones to rule out the possibility of a token
deposit. Clearly, the smaller fragments may have been lost or overlooked
during collection, but these would not account for half the body weight. Even
more enigmatic, is the fact that two apparent cremation vessels (C. 131 (S.5),
C.l65 (S.22)) did not contain any cremated bone.8
Location
In three complete vessels (C.30 (S.18), C.37 (S.15), C.471 (S.26)) it was
possible to sub-divide the soil matrix into five layers of equal depth.
Examination of the bone weight from each layer showed that the majority of
the bone fragments were located in the lower portion of the vessel, with the
upper layers being largely devoid of bone fragments. The mean bone:soil
ratio for the lower two layers was 1:28.8 and 1:30.3, respectively; the same
ratio for the upper two layers was 1:4.5 and l:12.7.Tomographicexamination
of two of these vessels demonstrated the exact 3-D location of individual
cremated fragments (Pis. II and III). The evidence clearly indicates that the
vessels, when deposited, were less than half full of cremated bone. The
vessels presumably filled with soil during the years after deposition; there is
no evidence to suggest that cremation vessels were deliberately filled with
soil prior to burial.
No distinct pattern of bone deposition was recognised in the three complete
vessels which could be divided into layers. The various skeletal elements,
such as skull, vertebrae and upper or lower limbs, were not confined to
individual layers. In vessel C.87 (S.19) evidence of earthworm activity was
noted. In this and in vessel C.1319 (S.5) unburnt shrew and mole bones were
recovered10 (PL IV). Clearly their activity disturbed the cremated fragments.
In three vessels, cross-layer joins of the bone fragments was possible. In
vessel C.30 (S.18) distorted skull fragments, which must have shattered
during the cremation, recovered from the three lower layers of soil, were
re-united. In vessel C.37 (S.15) two fragments of left fifth metatarsal could
be joined. In vessel C.43 (S.13) two fragments of patella from different layers
were found to join.
Our findings suggest that post-depositional infill of soil, coupled with
earthworm activity and the presence of burrowing animals, will have
destroyed any information regarding the original location of the cremated
human bone fragments.
8 At Spong Hill the smallest deposit of cremated bone was 117.2 gms.; at St. Stephen's,
St. Albans, the figure was 71.8 gms. (McKinley 1993). In both cases the
cremations were undisturbed and were identified as the remains of a single adult.
9 This vessel did not contain human bone.
10 It is possible that these animals had fallen into the cremation vessels prior to their
infill with soil: if the containers had been full of soil the animals would have been able
to burrow their way out. Alternatively, the animals may have been using the vessels for
nesting.
122
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
PLATE II
Vessel C.37: CT scan, demonstrating the exact location of cremated
bone fragments.
Skeletal elements present
In all the cremations many of the fragments could not be firmly identified. On
average just over half (50.7 per cent) of the bones were classed as
unidentified fragments. At best almost three-quarters of the bones were
identified (vessel C.260 (S.4)). In incomplete cremations, containing minute
fragments, the percentage of firmly identified skeletal elements fell as low as
9.1 per cent (vessel C.148 (S.23)).
Examination of the identified fragments showed that all skeletal elements,
skull; axial; upper; and lower limbs, were represented. It has been established
that, in a complete body, these four elements account for 18.2 per cent; 23.1
per cent; 20.6 per cent; 38.1 per cent of the skeleton, respectively (McKinley
1989). In the Each End cremations the mean of the four elements, being 22.0
per cent; 21.6 per cent; 21.8 per cent; 34.6 per cent, equate closely with these
figures. In the sample as a whole, the skull and the arm bones are slightly
123
ALISON J. HICKS
PLATE III
A
\
*\W
Vessel C.471: CT scan, demonstrating the exact location of cremated
bone fragments.
over-represented, whilst the lower limbs and the remaining axial elements
are slightly under-represented. Bearing in mind that the majority of vessels
are incomplete and that over half the fragments were not firmly identified
means that no definite conclusion can be drawn from this finding. There is no
evidence, however, that certain elements were noticeably over- or underrepresented.
There is evidence for an inverse relationship between skull and axial
elements and also between upper and lower limb bones. Cremations with
many skull fragments have very few other axial elements and vessels with
arm bones over-represented have relatively few leg bone fragments. Since
many diaphyseal fragments can not be readily identified, an apparent
discrepancy between upper and lower limbs may be illusory.
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EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
PLATE IV
Unburnt shrew (mandible) and mole (humerus) bones from vessel C.l31;
evidence of post-depositional contamination. Scale: c. 3:1.
The inverse relationship, noted in four vessels, between the weight of
cranial and axial fragments is very interesting. There is some evidence that
cranial fragments are over represented in vessels with a high proportion of
small fragments or an absence of larger bones (C.37 (S.15), C.142 (S.24)). In
vessels with larger and lightly-burnt bones, vertebrae are over-represented
and cranial fragments are less frequent (C.30 (S.18), C.43 (S.13), C.70
(S.17)). The reason for this is that in badly fragmented remains, small pieces
of cranium will still be recognised due to their distinctive sutural lines and
vascular impressions; in lightly burnt remains, even a few large portions of
vertebrae will outweigh minute cranial fragments.
The occasional wrist or ankle bone or phalanx was noticed but, in general,
the smaller bones of the hands and feet were rarely recovered. This may be
the result of inefficient collection. It should be borne in mind, however, that
hands crossed over the body are normally protected by 'the heat shadow' and
are well-represented (Hoick 1987, 160). Thus, the absence of hand bones
supports the view that the bodies were cremated with arms by their side."
Ageing and sexing
Ageing and sexing of cremated remains is notoriously difficult. The standard
11 In modern forensic work, hand bones are rarely recovered, if the arms are outstretched,
since the adequate supply of oxygen will quickly consume them.
125
ALISON J. HICKS
ageing and sexing criteria are not normally available, being either absent,
fragmented or distorted by the cremation processes. However, juvenile
individuals can be separated from full-grown adults when it can be
demonstrated that epiphyseal fusion is incomplete. From the minimum
number of twelve individuals (including the casket/box burial) all were
full-grown adults. The presence of an unfused clavicle and a fused femoral
head suggests that the female in vessel C.30 (S.18) was a young adult aged c.
18-23 years. The degree of suture closure in the unsexed remains from vessel
C.260 (S.4) suggest an age of over 30 years. The other remains could not be
accurately aged, except to say they were full-grown.
In six cases (vessel C.30 (S.18), C.37 (S.15), C.43 (S.13), C.78 (S.14),
C.471 (S.26) and in the wooden box S.10) the remains were assessed as
female. These diagnoses were based on the width of the greater sciatic notch;
the pre-auricular sulcus; the frontal bone; the size of the glenoid cavity,
estimated femoral head diameter and mid shaft femoral circumference,
respectively. The other six adults could not be sexed. Given the small
sample, there may be no significance in the fact that only females were
identified.
Non-metric variants
The individual in vessel C.70 (S.17) exhibited a minor variation in the path
of the occipital artery (exsutural mastoid foramen). The sample, however,
was too badly fragmented to permit meaningful study of non-metric variants.
Pathology
There was very little evidence of pathological lesions on the cremated
fragments. The fragmentary nature of cremated remains, as well as the degree
of distortion, means that pathological lesions, except vertebral joint
degeneration, are rarely encountered. As such it is almost certain that the true
prevalence of disease will be under-represented.
The adult female in vessel C.43 (S.13) presented with well-defined
osteophytes on her lower spine. The individual in vessel C.471 (S.26), an
adult female, displayed osteophytic outgrowth on her odontoid peg (second
cervical vertebra).
The only other possible lesion was noted on an adult female (?) in vessel
C.37 (S.15). The medial facet of her right calcaneus (heel bone) exhibited a
smooth-edged shallow cavitation (PL V). The oval defect measured 4 x 3
mm. with the greater dimension being mediolateral. The left calcaneus was
normal. The defect probably represents an example of osteochondritis
dissecans, a term coined in 1887 by Konig (Barrie 1987). The cause was
uncertain, although minor trauma was postulated; more recently it has been
suggested that localised delay in ossification is the underlying cause (ibid.).
One clear finding is that the site of predilection is the medial femoral
condyle (knee joint) (c. 90 per cent of cases) and that adolescent males are
most frequently affected (Ortner and Putschar 1981, 242). Other sites,
including the elbow (Pick 1955), patella (Desai et al. 1987) and the ankle
(Bauer et al. 1987; Dashner and Golder 1990; Gerard et al. 1989; Madhok
1987; Nafei et al. 1990), have occasionally been reported in the modern
126
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
PLATE V
Right calcaneus from (individual in) vessel C.37, displaying
osteochondritis lesion (arrowed) of the medial facet. Scale: 2:1.
medical literature. There is some suggestion that multiple lesions, associated
with short stature, are familial (Mubarak and Carroll 1981; Philips and Grubb
1985).
In living patients, there is evidence that osteochondritis of the ankle may
result in pain and swelling (Madhok 1987); however, it often heals naturally,
without further symptoms (Bauer et al. 1987). This finding, coupled with the
location and size of the lesion, suggests that osteochondritis of the ankle may
be under-represented in clinical practice. In dry bone material, the true
incidence of the defect will be recognisable (Wells 1974).
Dental pathology
Fragmentary teeth were recovered from all the vessels except C.142 (S.24).
which was only represented by a fragmentary base. A total of 20 teeth was
available for examination.12 The majority were loose root fragments. In two
vessels, C.78 (S.14) and C.471 (S.26), a complete tooth was preserved. The
12 The dental remains were examined by Jon Andrews, B.D.S., B.Sc, F.R.S.M.
127
ALISON J. HICKS
only evidence of dental pathology was found in an adult female (vessel C.471
(S.26)). Her lower left first premolar displayed evidence of infection and
abscess or cyst formation. The small sample means that it was not possible to
assess the oral health status of the sample under study.
Other finds: Animal bones
Small samples of burnt animal bones were intermingled with cremated
human remains in four vessels (C.30 (S.18), C.47 (S.16), C.78 (S.14), C.87
(S.19)). The only identified animal was pig ruling out the possibility that
domestic pets were being burnt with their dead master or mistress. The mean
weight of animal bone was 33 gm.; the maximum weight, 84 gm., was
recovered from vessel C.47 (S.16). In the latter, the presence of an unfused
femur suggests that the pig was under VA years; unfused metatarsals in vessel
C.30 (S.18) argue for slaughter prior to 2 years (Cornwall 1974, 229). Pig
teeth and bird bones were recovered from the wooden box S.10.
It appears that in Celtic tradition the deceased, for a limited period at least,
still required bodily nourishment. This equates with Van Gennep's period of
transition, in which the corpse is regarded as an object of fear since it is not
yet fully incorporated into the abode of the dead (Van Gennep 1977). Items
of food and footwear would be placed with the body so that it would safely
reach the next world and would not return to haunt the living. The burning of
animal bones on the pyre with the corpse suggests that the Romans were
feeding the spirit or soul of the deceased, the ascending smoke symbolising
the release of the bodies from their mortal existence and completion of their
safe passage into the next world.
When present, the small sample of burnt animal bones suggests that only a
few bones were placed on the pyre. The age of the slaughtered pigs would be
compatible with prime eating quality. It is reasonable to assume, therefore,
that the majority of the carcass was used as a meal for the living, whilst
inedible portions were burnt with the corpse as a token gesture.
In the early Roman period, following the Celtic tradition, a formal meal
was occasionally laid out beside the cremation vessel, in which plates, dishes
and even cutlery were provided for the deceased (Biddle 1967; Philpott 1991,
197-8 and 237). As time progressed, this practice became infrequent and
burnt animal bone fragments are found within the cremation vessel. At Each
End, no animal bones, burnt or unburnt, were placed with the associated
vessels; unburnt animal bones, shrew and mole, in vessels C.87 (S.19) and
C.131 (S.5), and the single unburnt fish bone (vertebral centrum) in vessel
C.471 (S.26), represent post-depositional contamination.
The box/casket cremation
In addition to the eleven cremations deposited in pottery vessels, a single
cremation was discovered in a box or casket (S.10). The wood had rotted
away but the outline of the container could be identified by the presence of
iron nails. The container exhibited characteristics typical of both box and
casket burials. The size (length 70 cm.; width 34 cm.; depth 24 cm.), as well
128
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
as the absence of ornate metal decoration, suggested that it represented a box
rather than a casket (Philpott 1991, 12-21). The bone fragments, however,
appeared to have been deposited directly in the box and not, as is the usual
practice with box burials, inside a pottery or glass container (ibid. 16). It is
possible, of course, that they were originally placed in a leather bag or pouch,
which would leave no visible trace.
Unlike most box and casket burials the example from Each End did not
contain any grave goods except for cremated bird and pig bones.13 Over 50
box burials and approximately 40 casket burials are known from Roman
Britain (ibid. 12-21). The majority occur in Hertfordshire and Cambridgeshire
and both forms are known from the early Roman period but appear to be
unknown before the arrival of the Romans. Most casket burials are first or
second century; box burials are most frequent in the mid to late second
century (ibid.).
All the bones were hard and solid and did not leave a mark when
scratched. Practically all were white/off-white (98.9 per cent), the
remainder being blue/black. By weight, almost a quarter of the fragments
were under 10 mm.; just over 8 per cent were larger than 50 mm., the
majority of the bones being between 10-50 mm. The total weight of
recovered human bone from the box was 1,234 gm. The bone:soil weight
ratio was calculated as 1:18.3.
Just over 40 per cent of the fragments could be identified. It appears that
most elements of the skeleton were represented, but the skull (33.7 per cent)
was over-represented, whilst the remainder of the axial skeleton was
under-represented (12.9 per cent). Even allowing for differences in weight,
the upper limbs were not so well-preserved (12.2 per cent) as the lower. Two
teeth were recovered: the root of a lower right canine and the roots and an
incomplete crown from an upper right second molar.
Examination of the fragments suggests that the box contained only one
individual. The remains were those of a fully-grown adult since the end
plates of the cervical vertebrae were fused. There was insufficient evidence,
however, for a more precise age. The gracile nature of the long bone
diaphyses (the femoral circumference is only 69 mm.) supports the view that
the remains were female. There was no evidence of either non-metric
variants, bone or dental pathology on the available fragments.
Pig teeth and lower jaw (4 gm.) and bird bones (10 gm.) were intermingled
with the burnt human remains. The presence of two parallel cut-marks on the
latter suggest that the flesh may have been removed prior to cremation. As
with the other cremations, it appears that the small sample of non-human
cremated bone represents a symbolic gesture of feeding the spirit of the
deceased, whilst the majority of the animal was eaten by the mourners.
The fragments deposited in the box were broadly similar in appearance to
However, box burials outside the main distribution have been found without
grave-goods; examples are known from Gloucester, York and Cumbria (Philpott 1991,
19, Fig. 2).
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ALISON J. HICKS
those found in the pottery vessels. All the bones were burnt in an oxygen-rich
environment: this is most noticeable in those from the box. The maximum
temperature, however, by the condition of the bones and the incomplete
destruction of the teeth, was probably less than 500°C (Furuhata and
Yamamoto, quoted in Buikstra and Goldstein 1973,23). It is possible that the
bones were burnt in a fairly fierce fire of short duration.
In modern crematoria a cremated adult body yields 1,600-3,600 gm. of
bone (McKinley 1989), even allowing for the fact that the remains are
extremely gracile, it would appear that less than three-quarters of the
bones were collected and deposited in the box. It is possible that the
smaller fragments and those that had turned to ash were not recovered.
Most of the skeletal elements (skull; axial; upper and lower limbs) were
present. The small size of the fragments is probably the reason why the
skull was over-represented whilst the rest of the axial skeleton was
under-represented.
THE INHUMATION
One inhumation (G.20A) was discovered. The skeleton was represented by
a crushed skull and fragmentary long-bone shafts. The ribs, spine and
pelvis, as well as the ends of the long-bones, had not survived. The
available bones were very fragile. Fragments of cervical vertebrae in the
surrounding grave fill (layers C.406 (S.8), C.415 (S.8)) belonged to the
articulated inhumation.
Based on the cranial morphology,14 the skeleton appeared to be female.
Only two teeth, upper molars, were present. They were not heavily worn
which at first glance suggests a young adult. However, the lower teeth had
been lost during life; consequently, the degree of attrition on the available
teeth may have underestimated the true age of the individual. The fact that the
sutures of the vault were not sharply defined argues for an older age. From
this evidence, an age estimation of 35-45 is obtained. There was no evidence
of disease on the available bones. The fact, however, that the spine and the
articular surfaces of the long bones were not recovered means that the
severity of in vivo joint degeneration cannot be ascertained.
The bones were too fragmentary for detailed metric analysis. Four indices
could be calculated and they all fell within the normal range.15 Sixteen
cranial and three post-cranial non-metric variants were available for
examination. Only one trait was present: the mastoid foramina both present
in the temporal. A similar finding was noted on the right side in the cremated
remains from vessel C.70 (S.17). The trait is not an uncommon finding and
appears to contain a low heritability. As such, it would be incorrect to assume
that the two individuals are genetically related.
14 Lack of brow ridges; shape of forehead; size of mastoid process and the appearance
of the lower jaw.
15 Frontage curve index: 83.3; Brachial index: 85.7 (r); Meric index 74.2 (r); cnemic
index 86.0 (r).
130
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
THE PREHISTORIC POTTERY
Nigel Macpherson-Grant
The excavation produced 68 sherds of prehistoric pottery (overall weight:
550 gm.). Much of it was residual in Roman contexts, but twenty sherds came
from features thought to be of pre-Roman date, nineteen of these from the
large pre-Roman ditch (G.3). All sherds are of small to medium size with
wear patterns ranging from fresh to fairly heavily abraded.
The full range of prehistoric activity represented is difficult to assess; the
sherds are generally too small and nondescript to ensure firm attribution in
each instance. One body sherd (C.l 20 (G.27)) has gritting suggestive of Late
Iron Age ware types; one rim fragment (C.40 (G.22)) could belong anywhere
between the Late Bronze Age/Early Iron Age transition to Late Iron Age; two
body sherds (C.l67 (G.21), C.282 (G3)) have tempering attributes similar to
recognised earlier first millennium B.C. types.
A fresh body sherd (C.l (G.73)) and a fairly worn base sherd (C.195
(G.32)) probably represent flint-and-grog-tempered wares of broadly c. A.D.
25-75 date, but they could be earlier (see below).
What is indisputable is that is that Early Iron Age to Mid Iron Age activity
is represented by four sherds of rusticated pottery (C.2 (G.72), C.42 (G.22),
C.195 (G.32), C.333 (G.33)). Though all are fairly worn, the sherd size and
degree of wear on those from C.42, C.195 and C.333 suggest derivation, if
not directly from earlier (pre-Roman) levels, then from Iron Age occupation
in the immediate vicinity. The sherd from C.42 is probably from a heavily
rusticated straight-walled bowl similar to a vessel from Highstead Period 3 A
(Macpherson-Grant forthcoming). The other three rusticated sherds may be
of similar date or more specifically Early to Mid Iron Age (equivalent to
Highstead Period 3B). Two sherds from the pedestalled base of a fine ware
jar, recovered during the initial programme of trial trenching along the Ash
by-pass (side code AB.92, context C.30), tend to confirm a Period 3B-type
emphasis for the Each End rusticated sherds.
None of the sherds retrieved from the pre-Roman ditch (G.3) are
rusticated. Tempering/finishing attributes would not be out of place in either
Late Bronze Age/Early Iron Age transition or Early to Mid Iron Age contexts,
but, with one exception, most of the sherds are significantly fresher than
most of the residual material and in situ occupation of later prehistoric date
can be safely assumed. This is reinforced by the twelve sherds (all fairly
fresh, some joining) representing one or two vessels from a layer (C.353
(G.3)) in the pre-Roman ditch. The exception is a sherd from a layer (C.279
(G.3)) in the same pre-Roman feature; this is from a thick walled, larger
diameter storage jar with overall abrasion significantly heavier than other
sherds from layers in the same feature. The ditch either remained open for a
considerable period, or incorporates material representing relatively
long-term activity in the area. The nature of the infilling deposits suggests
the former.
The presence of this prehistoric material suggests three possibilities. The
first is that all the flint-gritted sherds are derived from in situ occupation of
131
ALISON J. HICKS
single period date, equivalent to Highstead Periods 3A-3B. Since grog
tempering is a recognised (but minor) attribute of Early Iron Age pottery
production, the potential later Iron Age flint-and-grog-tempered sherds could
all belong to this scenario. Alternatively, rather longer-term occupation,
possibly continuous and equivalent to Highstead Periods 2, 3A and 3B, may
be represented at Each End. The third possibility is that multi-period,
non-continuous occupation, possibly continuous and equivalent to Highstead
Periods 2, 3A and 3B, may be represented at Each End. The third possibility
is that multi-period, non-continuous occupation was occurring upon the site,
with phases of activity occurring during either of the periods described above
but also having a later Late Iron Age element.
On balance, the third suggestion is that preferred, with a date of c. 650-450
B.C. proposed for the main phase of pre-Roman activity, whilst the evidence
of the Late Iron Age coin and the possibility that some flint-and-grogged
sherds are late emphasises the possibility that multi-period (pre-Roman)
activity was present.
The rusticated sherds confirm the presence of yet another settlement of
broadly Early Iron Age to Mid Iron Age date and underlines the growing
recognition that Iron Age settlement during the sixth to the fifth century B.C.
was regionally far denser than recently suspected. The presence of fabric/
formal attributes similar to Highstead Period 3 A is socially significant, since
it further confirms the implications of the Highstead evidence: namely that
the ceramic change from Late Bronze Age types to specifically Continentalstyle
rusticated Early Iron Age types was more likely to have taken place via
peaceful cultural adoption/influence than rapid 'invasion-type' replacement.
Although there is a considerable body of indirect evidence supporting this
scenario, sites actually exhibiting this potential are rare, so that the present
data are a useful contribution.
The evidence for immediate pre-Roman activity is slight. Few, if any, of
the purely grog-tempered wares appear to represent pre- or Conquest period
A.D. native occupation, but the Late Iron Age coin and, less certainly, the
possible Late Iron Age 'Belgic'-style sherds do indicate a degree of activity
in the area during this time and may act as a potential explanation for the
presence of the Roman settlement/activity itself.
THE ROMAN POTTERY
Andrew Savage
INTRODUCTION
Excavation yielded a total of 5,305 sherds, weighing c. 66.5 kg. and
representing a wide range of local and imported types. Most of the material
dated to the mid to late second to third century and much of it consisted of
small to medium-sized, often worn sherds. A high degree of chemical
weathering had taken place softening sherds and often removing evidence of
surface treatment.
132
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
It would appear, on the basis of sherd size and condition, that most if not
all of the pottery represents secondary deposition. Most of the pottery was
recovered from stratigraphically isolated features, largely drainage gullies
and ditches, but also from a number of pits, wells, etc.. Many of these
features are judged to represent peripheral activity relating to a small
settlement lying beyond the area of excavation.
Ceramically, the most interest feature of the site was the pottery from
fourteen cremation burials (G.21, 22, 23), all apparently dating to the mid to
late second century and containing a substantial quantity of stamped samian.
This material has been described in detail and fully illustrated, and is
discussed below. A fifteenth cremation (S.10) yielded no pottery.
Only a brief summary of the other pottery from the site is included in this
report. Pottery dating for individual features or groups is included in the
stratigraphic report, where appropriate.
The samian stamps report was written by Brenda Dickinson. The other
samian was identified and dated by Maggy Taylor.
POTTERY FROM THE CREMATION BURIALS
Summary
Fourteen cremation burials yielding pottery were excavated from three
distinct areas (G. 21, 22, 23). In total, forty-eight pots and one ceramic lamp
were recovered. The fabrics present are listed below. Most of the fabrics are
local or traded wares whose characteristics are well-known. The local wares
are discussed at length by Pollard, in Blockley et al. (1995). See also the
Discussion and Catalogue, below.
Chemical weathering has severely affected the surfaces of many vessels,
especially those in softer fabrics. In the case of some transitional Native
Coarse Ware and fine Upchurch-type vessels, decorative motifs have been
partially and in some instances possibly completely removed. Six vessels
displayed severely truncated profiles. These and two parts of a single Dressel
20 amophora (burial S.18) have not been drawn.
Eleven of the burials (S.4, S.14, S.15, S.16, S.17, S.18, S.19, S.22, S.23,
S.24, S.26) have been dated to the mid to late second century and three,
containing only single coarse ware urns, as broadly second century although
they are likely to be of similar date to the others (S.5, S.13, S.21).
The importance of these burials lies in the fact that, though small in
number, they appear to fall within a relative closely defined date bracket.
The dating of the coarse wares, particularly that of the cinerary urns, has
been refined by the presence of thirteen samian vessels (c. 26 per cent of the
total by vessel count), nine of which are stamped (see samian stamp report
(10.3)), and other fine wares. As a group they thus constitute an extremely
useful 'dating calibrator' for the mid to late second century in east Kent, a
period of ceramic transition (see discussion, below). The assemblage may
contribute to future typological studies of coarse grog-tempered ware of the
period.
133
ALISON J. HICKS
Discussion
Twelve of the burials contained between one and four vessels, typical
numbers in second-century cremations (Philpott 1991, 32). Of the remaining
two burials, one (S.24) contained five and the other, a richly furnished burial
(S.4) which yielded fine ware imports from Gaul, the Rhineland and possibly
Colchester, contained the unusually large number of ten, giving a mean
figure of 3.5 vessels per burial. It should be noted, however, that burial S.21
was robbed prior to excavation and may have originally contained a larger
number of pots. In a sample of 1477 cremations from fifteen cemeteries in
south-east England considered by Philpott, only fifteen burials yielded as
many as, or more than, ten vessels (ibid. 34). No burial excavated to date at
Canterbury has yielded as many.
Most of the multiple-vessel interments contained typical variations on the
standard jar/flagon/dish/beaker ceramic suites which usually furnished
cremations of the period. All but two of the jars are in Transitional Native
Coarse Ware, a local (east Kent) coarse grog-tempered fabric. Of the remainder,
one (S.15, Fig. 9.21), a double- handled jar/'honeypot', is in a fine
buff sandy ware, and the other, ajar/beaker, is in fine grey Upchurch-type
ware (S.22, Fig. 7.3).
All of the interments appear to date to the mid to late second century, with
a possible emphasis in the third quarter. A fifteenth cremation (G.23, S.10),
a box-burial, was also recovered. This is not discussed here as it yielded no
pottery. Most recorded box-burials date to the mid to late second century
(ibid. 17). Although evidence is slight, the interment of fifteen individuals
within what seems to have been a short period of time might imply that the
cemetery served a small settlement rather than an individual farmstead.
It is not possible to suggest, on the basis of the available evidence, that the
three groups into which the burials are divided represent a chronologicallybased
development. It is interesting, though, that very little of the other
pottery recovered from the site pre-dates the grave-groups, the main period of
activity being the late second to third century and later. It is possible that the
nearby settlement expanded or otherwise developed in the late second
century to include an area previously reserved for burial of the dead. It was
the Roman custom to bury the dead outside settlement boundaries.
None of the burials contain the Canterbury grey sandy ware bowls or jars
of late first- to mid second-century date that are widely distributed in east
Kent. This constitutes further evidence for the contraction in the Canterbury
pottery industry and the distribution of its products which seems to have
taken place in the mid second century and which has been observed
elsewhere. Canterbury grey wares are, for example, virtually absent from
Period II deposits of the Classis Britannica fort at Dover, dated to c. A.D.
155/160-180 (Pollard 1988, 95). Canterbury pink-buff flagon wares
however, which continued to be- manufactured to at least the late second
century, are present here. They are also present in the mid second- to
third-century cemeteries at Cranmer House, Canterbury (Pollard 1987,
284-298) and Ospringe (Whiting et al. 1931).
Equally striking is the absence of the BB2 jars and dishes whose incidence
134
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
in east Kent increased in the later second century as that of Canterbury sandy
wares declined (Pollard 1988, 97). Coastal sites such as Richborough and
Dover exhibit a higher incidence of BB2 than inland sites such as Canterbury
(ibid., 93). Although BB2 jars are generally uncommon at Canterbury in both
funerary and occupation deposits, dishes are not and are present in the
cemetery at Cranmer House; both jars and dishes are present at Ospringe. The
absence of BB2 at Each End is thus worthy of comment. The explanation may
involve questions of status and choice of vessel rather than chronology.
Although eight of the fourteen burials contain at least one dish as part of the
pottery suite, they are all in samian ware.
Given our substantial ignorance as to the nature and extent of the
settlement with which these cremations are presumably associated and the
assemblage-variation between different cemeteries associated with a single
occupation-site observed elsewhere (Philpott 1991, 33), questions of
settlement status are not addressed here.
All of the thirteen samian vessels present are undecorated. Of these, twelve
are Central Gaulish and all are dated to the mid to late second century. The
earliest is dated Hadrianic/early Antonine and none of the stamped vessels is
definitely later than the A.D. 170s (see samian stamp report, p. 136).
Although the problems of dating coarse wares on the basis of associated
samian which might enjoy a much longer life are well known, the abundant
and well-dated samian present here is considered to support the suggestion
that few, if any, of the coarse ware vessels are likely to post-date the second
century. Similarly, none of the other local imported finewares need be of
third-century date and are likely to be earlier.
The coarse ware urns are all grog-tempered, in a fabric which is
transitional between soft-fired, grog-tempered ware of the first and early
second centuries and the much harder-fired Native Coarse Ware of the late
second to third centuries. The ware is commonly found in east Kent. Several
examples here (e.g. Figs. 8.9, 9.19) display the decorative motifs often
associated with it: burnished chevrons on the body beneath a double groove
and oblique linear or lattice-burnish on the shoulder. The development of
these fabrics and their distribution have been discussed at some length by
Pollard (1987, 298; 1988, 98; 1995, 704-5). He considers that the transition
was complete 'by the last quarter of the second century, if not somewhat
earlier' (ibid., 298). The balance of the fine and coarse ware dating here
suggests an emphasis for the dating of the burials in the third quarter of the
second century. Ten transitional Native Coarse Ware vessels (nine jars and
one bowl) have been illustrated (Figs. 7.4; 8.9, 10; 9.19, 22; 10.24; 11.29;
12.32, 35; 13.39). They demonstrate the substantial degree of detailed
typological variation present in this fabric. Given the relatively tight
date-range suggested for the burials, it is to be hoped that their illustration
may contribute to future studies of the typological development of
grog-tempered ware in east Kent in the second and third centuries.
Burial S.19 (second half of second century) provides an example (C.92,
Fig. 12.38) of the occasional inclusion of lamps in Romano-British
cremations. Philpott has suggested, while acknowledging an insufficient
body of data, that the practice may have become more common in the mid to
135
ALISON J. HICKS
late second century. This example adds to that body of data. Lamps have so
far not been recorded in burials (cremation or inhumation) dating later than
the early third century (Philpott 1991, 191-92).
One amphora burial was recovered (S. 18). Most Romano-British amphora
burials are found in south-east England. Most belong to the mid to late
second century, although third-century examples are occasionally found
(ibid., 22-23). This example adds to the sixty-four noted by Philpott as being
recorded in Kent (ibid., 22). Thirty-eight were recorded at Ospringe (Whiting
et al. 1931; Pollard 1988, 105); other examples have been excavated by the
Canterbury Archaeological Trust at Cranmer House, Canterbury (Pollard
1987) and Crundale (publication forthcoming).
Here at Each End, the neck of aDressel 20 south Spanish olive-oil amphora
was carefully removed to just below the level of the handle/body junction.
This allowed the other vessels associated with the burial to be placed within
it. Sometimes, in such cases, the neck was discarded and replaced by another
cover; sometimes it was repositioned on the shoulder. In this case it would
appear that the latter procedure was followed. However, possibly because the
upper body was damaged during the removal of the neck, preventing a secure
fit, or as a result of pressure from above, the neck was either placed within or
subsequently fell into the body.
Another amphora, by its description probably also a Dressel 20, has been
previously recorded in a burial at Ash (VCH (1932), Kent, 144; Callender
1965, 27) and two others were recorded at nearby Richborough (Cunliffe
1968, 27).
The samian stamps
Barbara Dickinson
Each entry gives: burial (set) number, context number, potter (i, ii, etc.,
where homonyms are involved), die number, form, reading of the stamp,
published example, pottery or origin, date.
(a), (b) and (c) indicate:
(a) Stamp attested at the pottery in question;
(b) Potter, but not the particular stamp, attested at the pottery in question;
(c) Assigned to the pottery on the evidence of fabric, distribution and, or, form.
Ligatured letters are underlined.
Stamp No. 1.
Burial S.17 (C.72). A(e)nisatus la 88/31 IS TVSF (ORL B4, 30, 2) Trier (a).
This stamp almost certainly belongs to a potter who also used the name
Aenisatus, but on one die only. At some stage in his career he also worked at
the Argonne factory of Pont-des-Remes, and at Heiligenberg. There is no site
dating for him at all, but his use of this stamp on form 27, which ceased to be
made in Central Gaul about A.D. 160 and, as far as can be seen, in East Gaul
too, suggests Hadrianic or early-Antonine date. This would be consistent
with the form of the Each End vessel. Fig. 11.30.
136
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
Stamp No. 2.
Burial S.4 (C.267). Avitus iv lg 18/31-31 AVITI MA Lezoux (b). Some of
this potter's stamps, from other dies, have been noted on samian after c. A.D.
150; they are also common in Antonine Scotland. This evidence, combined
with his frequent use of forms 18/31 and 27, suggests that he was at work c.
A.D. 125-150. Fig. 8.12.
Stamp No. 3.
Burial S.4 (C.270). Cerialis ii 4a 33 CERI AL M Lezoux (b). In the early- to
mid-Antonine period Cerialis ii was associated with Paullus iv and Cinnamus
ii in the production of decorated ware; this occurs frequently in Antonine
Scotland and in a group of burnt samian of the 140s at Castleford. This
particular stamp, noted only on plain ware, reflects that range, with its use on
forms 18/3IR, 27 and Ludowici Tg. c. A.D. 135-170. Fig. 8.15.
Stamp No. 4.
Burial S.19 (C.91). Osbimanus 7a 31 OSBIM VS Lezoux (b). This stamp has
been noted at the Pennine fort of Bainbridge, where it is on a form not current
before c. A.D. 160, and elsewhere on the contemporary cup, form 80. However,
the form of the Each End vessel suggests that it belongs to the earlier years of
the die's use, c. A.D. 150-160, along with dishes of form 18/31R which carry
the same stamp. Fig. 12.37.
Stamp No. 5.
Burial S.26 (C.475). Pugnus ii lc 18/31-31 PVGNIM Lezoux (b). Only two
other vessels with this stamp are known to the present writer, both on form
18/31 from a pottery shop at Castleford destroyed by fire in the 140s. Other
stamps of Pugnus from this burnt deposit occur on Hadrianic and early-
Antonine forms, such as 27 and 81, and one is also on a decorated bowl from
a very worn mould in a pit at Alcester, filled in the 150s (forthcoming), c.
A.D. 130-150. Fig. 13.41.
Stamp No. 6.
Burial S.16 (C.49). Sextus v 8b 31 SEXTVS F Lezoux (a). There is no site
dating for this particular stamp, but its presence on forms 31R and 79 or
Ludowici Tg makes mid to late Antonine use certain. Other stamps of the
same potter occur on Hadrian's Wall (Benwell and South Shields) and in a
group of late Antonine samian recovered off Pudding Pan Rock, Kent. c.
A.D. 160-200. Fig. 10.26.
Stamp No. 7.
Burial S.4 (C.269). Titurus 2a' 18/31-31 TITVRI M (Walke 1965, no. 370)
Lezoux (c). This stamp comes from a broken die, which originally had a frame
with ansate ends. Neither version of it has been easy to date so far, but the later
one, represented here, occurs on form Ludowici Tg; this suggests that the die
was still in use after A.D. 160. The Each End stamp provides the best evidence
yet for the early use of the die, in that the dish, on the evidence of its form, is
unlikely to be later than c. A.D. 145, and probably belongs to the early 140s.
Fig. 8.14.
137
ALISON J. HICKS
Stamp No. 8.
Burial S.15 (C.39). Verecundus v la 18/31 V RECVNDVSF (Ludowici 1927,
232, d) Blickweiler (a). East Gaulish potters of this name unfortunately still
lack convincing dating evidence. There are four examples of this stamp from
Rheinzabern, on burnt vessels; some, and probably all, are from the cemetery
rather than the kiln-site, so there is no reason to think that he worked there.
The other sites on which the stamp has been found are consistent with its
origin at Blickweiler. One stamp from another Blickweiler die is also noted
from the Trier potteries, but as it is not on a waster, the vessel could equally
well have originated at Blickweiler. One of the East Gaulish Verecundi
worked successively at several other potteries, but his career seems to have
been rather later, and he is unlikely to have been the same man as Verecundus
v, who was almost certainly at work in the Hadrianic to early Antonine
period, to judge by his use of forms 18/31 and 27. The form of the dish is
consistent with such a date. Fig. 9.23.
Stamp No. 9.
Burial S.18 (C.31). Uxopillus 6c 31 VXXOPILLI Lezoux (a). The unusually
deep wall and high kick of this vessel suggest that it is extremely late in the
Central Gaulish range of form 31 and this alone is enough to make a late
second-century date certain. Uxopillus's other stamps occur in a pit of c.
A.D. 150-160 at Alcester (forthcoming), in a group of burnt samian of c. A.D.
170 at Tac (Hungary) and at Benwell and Newstead. His range will be c. A.D.
150-180, but this particular dish almost certainly belongs to the 170s. Fig.
12.34.
The catalogue
Vessels are listed in Group no. order. Cinerary urns are indicated by an
asterisk: (*).
Burials north of road (G.21) (S.21, 22, 23, 24)
Burial S.21
This burial was robbed. It may therefore originally have contained a larger
number of pots.
(C.l47) (*) Transitional Native Coarse Ware. Probably necked everted-rim
jar. Truncated. Not drawn.
Date: Second century.
Burial S.22
(C. 161) Samian. Central Gaulish. Curie 15 dish. Antonine. Fig. 7.1.
(C.l62) Canterbury fine pink-buff sandy ware. Triangular-lip flagon cf.
Kirkman 1940, no. 49. Mid to late second century. Fig. 7.2.
(C.165) (*) Fine grey Upchurch-type ware. Everted-rim breaker, cf.
Monaghan class 214.3 (Monaghan 1987), which is dated A.D. 90-150. Traces
of almost vertical burnished linear decoration beneath shoulder groove. Fig.
7.3.
Date: Second half of second century.
138
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
1
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Ik**-* c•^j*--^r k
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6
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Fig. 7. The Roman Pottery: nos. 1-8. Scale 1:4, except stamp at 1:1.
Burial S.23
(C.148) (*) Transitional Native Coarse Ware. Necked everted-rim jar.
Wiping on lower body. Fig. 7.4.
(C. 149) Samian. Central Gaulish. Curie 46 cup. Hadrianic/Antonine. Fig. 7.5.
(C.l50) Fine grey Upchurch-type ware. Very small narrow-necked flask, cf.
Monaghan class IB. Fig. 7.6.
Date: Mid to late second century.
139
ALISON J. HICKS
Burial S.24
(C.142) (*) Transitional Native Coarse Ware. Probable necked everted-rim
jar. Truncated. Not drawn.
(C. 143) Fine grey 'Upchurch' ware. Rouletted, probable bag-beaker. Badly
worn and truncated. Cf. Pollard, in Blockley et al (1995), Fig. 308, no. 369
and Fig. 309, no. 376, from deposits dated late second to mid third century.
Not drawn.
(C.I44) Canterbury pink-buff sandy ware. Probable cupped or ring-neck
flagon. Truncated. Not drawn.
(C.469) Samian. Central Gaulish. Curie 46 cup. Antonine. Fig. 7.7.
(C.470) Samian. Central Gaulish. Curie 23 dish. Antonine. Roughly
scratched graffito on exterior. Fig. 7.8.
Date: Second half of second century.
Burials south of the road-east (G.22) (S.4, 13-19, 26)
Burial S.4
(C.260) (*) Transitional Native Coarse Ware. Narrow-necked everted-rim jar,
cf. Pollard 1987, fig. 107, no. 3A; cremation dated mid second to third century.
Burnished chevron decoration beneath double groove. The shoulder above the
groove may originally have also been decorated. Wiping on lower body. Fig. 8.9.
(C.262) Transitional Native Coarse Ware. Necked everted- rim jar. Wiping
on girth and lower body. Cf. Pollard 1987, fig. 107, no. IA and fig. 109, no.
10A; cremations dated mid second to third century. Fig. 8.10.
(C.265) Lower Rhineland fabric 1. Cornice-rimmed, roughcast-decorated
beaker, cf. Anderson, Fig. 7, no. 1, which is dated c. A.D. 70-120. Fig. 8.11.
(C.267) Samian. Central Caulish. Drag. 18/31-31 dish. c. A.D. 125-150..
Stamp of Avitus. See samian stamp report, No. 2 (10.3). Fig. 8.12.
(C.268) Oxidised Upchurch-type ware. Flange-rim segmented bowl, cf.
Monaghan class 5B2. ?c. A.D. 90-130. Fig. 8.13.
(C.269) Samian. Central Gaulish. Drag. 18/3-31 dish. Probably c. A.D.
140-145. Stamp of Titurus. See samian stamp report, No. 7(10.3). Fig. 8.14.
(C.270) Samian. Central Gaulish. Drag. 33 cup. c. A.D. 135-170. Stamp of
Cerialis. See samian stamp report, No. 3 (10.3). Fig. 8.15.
(C.27I) Canterbury coarse pink-buff sandy ware. Cupped ring-neck flagon,
cf. Pollard 1987, fig. 111, no. 19B, dated c. A.D. 130-200/250 in a cremation
dated mid second to mid third century. Fig. 8.16.
(C.273) Canterbury coarse pink-buff sandy ware. Description and date as for
(C.27I). Fig. 8.17.
(C.277) Colchester/north Gaulish colour-coated ware. Cornice-rimmed,
roughcast-decorated beaker, cf. Anderson 1980, Fig. 13, no. 1, dated c. A.D.
120-150. Fig. 8.18.
Date: Mid to late second century.
Burial S.13
(C.43) (*) Transitional Native Coarse Ware. Necked everted-rim jar.
Vestigial cordon on neck. Burnished chevron decoration beneath double
shoulder groove. The shoulder above the groove may originally have also
been decorated. Wiping on lower body. Fig. 9.19.
Date: Second century.
140
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
I ' I
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Fig. 8. The Roman Pottery: nos. 9-18. Scale 1:4, except stamps at 1:1.
141
ALISON J. HICKS
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142
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
Burial S.14
(C.78) (*) Transitional Native Coarse Ware. Probably necked everted-rim
jar. Truncated. Not drawn.
(C.80) Fine grey Upchurch-type ware. Poppyhead beaker, cf. Monaghan class
2A4. Undecorated. Mid to late second century. Fig. 9.20.
Date: Mid to late second century.
Burial S.15
(C.37) (*) Fine sand-tempered ware; cream-buff surfaces, grey core.
Possibly north French. The ware is similar to butt- and pentice-beaker fabrics
at Canterbury which have been identified as being of north-west Gaulish
origin (Rigby, in Blockley et al. 1995). Double-handled jar/'honeypot'.
Vessels of this form are not common in east Kent. Several broad parallels
were recovered from Richborough, dated to the late first century (Bushe-Fox
1932, nos. 296, 297, and 1949, no. 389). Fig. 9.21.
(C.38) Transitional Native Coarse Ware. Neck everted-rim jar. Wiping on
girth and lower body. Cf. Pollard 1987, fig. 109, no. 10A; cremation dated
mid second to third century. Fig. 9.22.
(C.39) Samian. Central Gaulish. Drag. 18/31 dish. Stamp of Verecundus.
See samian stamp report, No. 8 (10.3). Fig. 9.23.
Date: Mid to late second century.
Burial S.I6
(C.47) (*) Transitional Native Coarse Ware. Narrow-necked everted-rim jar.
Burnished chevron decoration beneath double groove. Vertical knifetrimming
on lower body. Fig. 10.24.
(C.48) Canterbury fine pink-buff sandy ware. Triangular-lip flagon, cf.
Kirkman 1940, no. 51. Mid to late second century. Fig. 10.25.
(C.49) Samian. Central Gaulish. Drag. 31 dish. Mid to late Antonine. Stamp
of Sextus. See samian stamp report, No. 6 (10.3). Fig. 10.26.
(C.83) Fine grey Upchurch-type ware. Poppyhead beaker, cf. Monaghan class
2A4. Undecorated. Mid to late second century. Fig. 10.27
Date: Second half of second century.
BurialS. 17
(C.68) Fine buff ware (?Upchurch-type); orange-red core. Fine silty
micaceous fabric with sparse to moderate, fine to very coarse sub-angular
clear and milky quartz, occasional fine to very coarse ferruginous inclusions
and sparse fine white mica. Large, tall-necked flagon; single, 3-rib handle.
Rim missing. Fig. 11.28.
(C.70) (*) Transitional Native Coarse Ware. Necked everted-rim jar.
Lattice- burnish on shoulder, it may originally have been decorated beneath
the double groove. Wiping on lower body. Cf. Pollard 1987, Fig. 107, no. 2A;
cremation dated mid second to third century. Fig. 11.29.
(C.72) Samian. East Gaulish. Drag. 18/31 dish. Hadrianic to early Antonine.
Stamp of A(e)nisatus. See samian stamp report, No. 1 (10.3). Fig. 11.30.
(C.73) Fine grey Upchurch-type ware. Poppyhead beaker; probably
undecorated. Probably mid to late second century. Cf. Pollard 1987, Fig. 113,
143
ALISON J. HICKS
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» »r
25
,*
i ' /
24
27
26
^gfHi K^ y y o i a
Fig. 10. The Roman Pottery: nos. 24-27. Scale 1:4, except stamp at 1:1.
no. 35B; cremation dated late second to third century. Fig. 11.31.
Date: Mid to late second century.
Burial S.18
(C.23) South Spanish Dressel 20 amphora (same vessel as (C.67)). Buff
fabric. Used as a container for the other vessels in this burial. Truncated; the
lower 2/5 of the vessel survives. Not drawn.
(C.30) (*) Transitional Native Coarse Ware. Wide-mouthed bowl, cf.
Ospringe no. 492 which was accompanied by samian dated A.D. 160-190.
Burnished decoration above girth-groove. Fig. 12.32.
(C.31) Fine oxidised Upchurch-type ware with cream slip. Cup-mouthed
flagon, cf. Monaghan class IE 1.4, dated A.D. 140-190 and Ospringe nos.
124, 164 and 177. Fig. 12.33.
(C.32) Samian. Central Gaulish. Drag. 31 dish. Probably c. A.D. 170-180.
Stamp of Uxopillus. See samian stamp report, No. 9 (10.3). Fig. 12.34.
144
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
Fig. 11. The Roman Pottery: nos. 28-31. Scale 1:4, except stamp at 1:1.
145
ALISON J. HICKS
KKS/uffl2£P
38
Fig. 12.The Roman Pottery: nos. 32-38. Scale 1:4, except stamps at 1:1.
146
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
(C.67) South Spanish Dressel 20 amphora (same vessel as (C.23)). Neck and
shoulder, used as a 'cover' for (C.30), (C.31) and (C.32). Rim missing. Not
drawn.
Date: Late second century.
Burial S.19
(C.87) (*) Transitional Native Coarse Ware. Narrow-necked everted-rim jar.
There may originally have been decoration above and/or below the double
shoulder groove. Strongly defined vertical knife-trimming on girth and
lower body. Fig. 12.35.
(C.89) Canterbury coarse pink-buff sandy ware. Ring-neck flagon. Mid to
late second century. Fig. 12.36.
(C.91) Samian. Central Gaulish. Drag. 31 dish. c. A.D. 150-160. Stamp of
Osbimanus. See samian stamp report, No. 4 (10.3). Fig. 12.37.
(C.92) Fine buff ware. Lamp, cf. Loeschke type IX; fine, dense, silty matrix,
sparse to moderate, fine- to medium-sized angular and sub-angular, clear and
milky quartz; sparse, fine white mica; sparse, fine, rounded and sub-angular
ferruginous inclusions. A very similar fabric to (C.68), burial S.17, but finer
and denser, containing more ferruginous inclusions, but less coarse quartz.
?Local or Upchurch-type. A lamp of this type was recovered from a
Canterbury cremation dated late second to early third century (Pollard 1987,
fig. 112, no. 23G). Fig. 12.38.
Date: Second half of second century.
Burial S.26
(C.471) (*) Transitional Native Coarse Ware. Necked everted-rim jar.
Heavily weathered oblique linear burnished decoration is visible on the
shoulder; there may also originally have been decoration beneath the double
shoulder groove. Fig. 13.39.
(C.473) Fine grey Upchurch-type ware. Short-necked flask, cf. Monaghan
class IB. Fine 'Upchurch' flasks are usually found in mid/late second- to
early fourth-century contexts in Canterbury. Fig. 13.40.
(C.475) Samian. Central Gaulish. Drag. 31 dish. c. A.D. 130-150. Stamp of
Pugnus. See samian stamp report, No.5 (10.3). Fig. 13.41.
(C.476) Fine grey Upchurch-type ware. Everted-rim beaker with latticeburnish
decoration on body. The formal and decorative characteristics of this
vessel are usually associated with BB2 jars of second-century date. Cf.
Wilson, in Blockley et al. (1995) fig. 307, no. F192, from a deposit dated c.
A.D. 140-170. Fig. 13.42.
Date: Mid to late second century.
Burials south of the road-west (G.23) (S.5)
Burial S.5
(C.131) (*) Transitional Native Coarse Ware. Probably necked everted-rim
jar. Truncated. Not drawn.
Date: Second century.
147
ALISON J. HICKS
V
//
y *= t
\
\
40
\
39
41 7, (\
ez2ZZZZEZZZZ222>
Fig. 14. The small finds: nos. 1-9. Scale 1:1
154
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
SFN.620; Fig. 14.4; C.279 (G.3) - ditch fill.
Copper alloy brooch. Incomplete. Early - late first century A.D.
The spring has four coils and an internal chord. The bow has an almost
circular section and two groups of three grooves on the front; one is just
under the sharp bend in the profile and the other a little way below. The
catch-plate is almost completely missing along with the end of the bow.
SFN.753; Fig. 14.5; C.213 (G.35) - gully fill.
Copper alloy brooch. Incomplete. Early- late first century A.D..
The spring has three coils and an internal chord. The bow is thin with a rectangular
section. There is a sharp bend in the profile at the top and two groups
of grooves on the front. One just below the top and the other just above the
catch-plate which is largely missing.
Although the sections of the bow are different, the groups of grooves on
the front could suggest that the two brooches had a common origin. The
significant feature may be the actual thickness of the bow of the brooch
SFN.620 (C.279). Here, there is a marked reduction in thickness at the
start of the spring, a feature which also applies to brooch SFN.381
(C.u/s). Dr Ian Stead (1976) discussed a group of brooches belonging to
the latest phase of the British Late La Tene and established that there was
a progression of sorts through his Welwyn and Lexden divisions of the
Aylesford Culture. The characteristics to which the writer draws
attention are the mouldings or knobs on, and the expanded head of, the
bow (e.g. Stead 1976, Fig. 1). The early brooches are marked by having
external chords and framed catch-plates. When the chord becomes
internal, the upper end of the bow frequently becomes thicker so that the
chord has a seating and this detail gives rise to the markedly trumpet-like
heads to be found on some members of the group. The open or framed
catch-plate can be taken as a sign that such brooches are concurrent with
the Nauheim and Drahtfibel, those with external chords being earlier
than those without. The stage belongs entirely to the first century B.C.
The introduction of two styles of fretting, those with a cross-bar
consisting of two Cs and those with delicate lattice (e.g., ibid. Fig. 3, 3,
4) comes, at the earliest, towards the end of the same century and the
lattice is a mark of the earliest Colchester which will run the style on into
the earliest first century A.D.. Thereafter, the tendency is to simplify,
which gives rise to the familiar punched rectangular holes in the
catch-plates of British Colchester, and may well have led to the use of
multiple circular holes in a few of the general type discussed by Stead
(1976, Fig. 2,4).
What is at issue here is whether or not the groups of grooves bear any
relationship to this development, and the contention here is that there is
evidence for this: narrow mouldings just above the catch-plate occur
with an open-framed catch-plate at Glastonbury (Bulleid and Gray 1911,
155
ALISON J. HICKS
202, PL 40, El86); the same site produced another brooch which has two
groups of narrow mouldings, with the same kind of catch-plate (ibid.
299, PL 40, El28) and this is repeated at Rotherley (Pitt Rivers 1888,
122, PL 99, 4). A single group of grooves can be seen on a brooch from
Marshfield, Glos.17 and grooving of a more general kind occur on two
brooches from Maiden Castle (Wheeler 1943, 258, Fig. 83, 8, 10); all
three have open-framed catch-plates. Closer to home is a brooch with
grooves across the upper part of the bow and with evidence for having
had a framed catch-plate (Rodwell 1988, 57, Fig. 43, 4, MFI, B13).
Other examples could be given, but they would only repeat the general
trend present here. As is the case with the Nauheim when the catch-plate
is no longer pierced, an imprecision in dating descends upon brooches
which display similar decorative characteristics, but lack the determining
feature of either a framed or fretted catch-plate. The thick head of
the brooch SFN.620 (C.279) gives something for the chord to seat
against, and there is always the possibility that the catch-plate had been
framed or fretted, although that is discounted here.
Brooch SFN.753 (C.213) obviously had a solid catch-plate. There are
brooches with grooves across the bow like the present examples whose
distribution is thinly but evenly spread across southern England
excluding the deep south-west. Dating is sparse: Braughing, A.D. 15-25
(Mackreth 1981, 132, Fig. 69, 28); Neatham, Hants, second century to
mid third century (Millett and Graham 1986, 111, Fig. 73, 140);
Marshfield, Avon, 250 and later (Mackreth 1985, 146, Fig. 45, 26). The
first item at least suggests that the implied succession is real, but the
other two must have been residual in their contexts. The date-range runs,
therefore, from near the beginning of the first century A.D., which is
what would be expected from the earliest derivatives, to near the end of
the same century.
Knee brooches
SFN.1270; Fig. 14.6; C.2 (G.72) - colluvium.
Copper alloy knee brooch. Incomplete. Second half first - early third century
A.D..
The head is missing. The bow is shaped like a cabriole leg. The catch-plate is
vertical. The rest of the brooch could have had either an open-backed springcase
or a fan-shaped head-plate behind which the sprung pin would have been
mounted between two pierced lugs. There is no reason for thinking that the two
styles have any chronological significance. A recent review of the dating of
knee brooches (Mackreth forthcoming) concluded that the type was in
common use through the second half of the second century into the early third.
17 I am grateful to Mrs. V. G. Swan who allowed me to record the brooch when it was
on loan in the Salisbury Office of the Royal Commission on Historical Monuments
(England).
156
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
Strap-ends
SFN.198; Fig. 14.7; C.l (G.73) - topsoil.
Copper alloy heart-shaped strap-end with slot for the strap. Ring and dot
surrounds rivet in the centre; cf. Simpson 1976, pp 201-2, for discussion of
heart-shaped strap-ends and further references.
SFN.105, Fig. 14.8; C.2 (G.72) - colluvium.
Copper alloy amphora-type strap-end, with hinge fitting. Broken and incomplete.
Two oval and one circular cut out, rocker-arm zig-zag decoration
around the edge. Simpson type (a) amphora shaped strap-ends, cf. Simpson
1976, 198, Fig. 4.
SFN. 141; Fig. 14.9; C.2 (G.72) - colluvium.
Copper alloy amphora-type strap-end. Incomplete. Central piercing for rivet
attachment, rocker-arm zig-zag decoration. Simpson type (b), cf. Simpson
1976; Ager 1987.
SFN.520; Fig. 15.10-unstratified.
Copper alloy heart shaped strap-end. Incomplete. Ring and dot decoration
around the edge; cf. Simpson 1976; 201-2.
Horse harness toggle or cheek piece
SFN. 1262; Fig. 15.11; C.l 15. (G.7)-the road metalling.
Copper alloy horse harness toggle or cheek piece, inlaid in geometric panels
with coloured enamels (fragments only survive). First century A. D.; cf. Hull
1968, 97, no. 144.
Socketed bill (or axe head)
SFN.622; Fig. 15.12; C.281 (G.32) - ditch fill.
Iron socketed bill (or axe head). Part of the blade is missing. Possibly early
Romano-British. A similar object, associated with a hoard of Roman coins,
is located in the Verulamium Museum, St. Alban's (Accession No. 1994-4).
Spiral ferrule or ox goad
SFN.686;Fig. 15.13; C.323 (G. 13)-road patching deposit.
Iron spiral ferrule or ox goad. Iron Age; cf. Manning 1985, 141-2, s. 95-102.
Glass objects
V. Tatton Brown
SFN.581; Fig.16.14; C.33 (G.22) - cremation burial grave good.
Blown glass goblet. First three-quarters of the second century A.D..
157
ALISON J. HICKS
TU&A^
- \
m\
Fig. 15. The small finds: nos. 10-13. Scale 1:1, except nos. 12 and 13 at 1:2
158
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
14
\
kJ^ U a
a fc.ci C5 FAS
[ 2989
&&•»>a < i
l|v| green to yellow 15
Fig. 16. Blown glass goblet (SFN. 581, C.33), scale 1:2.
Marbled glass bowl fragment (SFN. 609, C.120), scale 1:1
Blown glass goblet of colourless glass, considerably restored; evidence of
strain cracking and small bubbles in the glass; surface dulled by weathering.
Carinated body; rim bent outwards and cracked off; blown foot. A pair of
parallel wheel-cut lines below the rim; two pairs in the carination and a pair
around the bottom. Height: 9.4 cm.
This goblet belongs to a series of biconical drinking cups known from
several sites in Europe as well as Britain. The group was recently discussed
159
ALISON J. HICKS
by Price and our example is close to her nos. 8-10 from Felmongers, Essex
(Price 1987). The Felmongers goblets come from a pit whose contents
appear to have been deposited between A.D. 150 and 170, probably around
A.D. 160-70. Like those, our example must have been made some time in
the first three-quarters of the second century, but probably not thereafter,
which accords very well with its context. It was found in cremation burial
S.18 associated with pots dating to the late second century A.D..
SFN. 609; Fig. 16.15; PLVI; C.l20 (G.27) - gully fill
Marbled glass bowl rim fragment.
Part of the rim and side of a shallow bowl of mosaic glass. Formed from
sections of cane showing opaque yellow rods, arranged around an opaque
dark red core, in a translucent green ground. Probably made by the slumping
process (recently Gudenrath 1991). Original diameter 10.2 cm.; surviving
height 3.8 cm.; max. thickness 0.4 cm.
Mosaic glass bowls of this type are quite common in Britain with
examples known from sites including Caerleon and Colchester (Price
forthcoming). They were probably imported from Italy where they are
PLATE VI
: *
Marbled glass bowl fragment (SFN.609, C.l20). Scale: c. 2:1.
160
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
normally dated to the late first century B.C./early first century A.D. (cf.
Grose 1989, especially 242), but the discovery of coloured mosaic glass in
later contexts in north-west provinces of the Roman Empire, notably
Britain, (cf. Harden and Price 1971; Price 1985) suggests that production
continued until at least the end of the first century A.D.. There is no firm
dating evidence for our piece, which was found in a drainage pit connected
with the Roman road with Roman hobnails and the skeleton of a dog.
THE FLINT ARTEFACTS
Elizabeth Healey
A total of 148 flint artefacts was recovered from the excavations at Each End.
All were recovered as residual finds within features of later date. Only a brief
summary is presented here. More detailed consideration of the material will be
undertaken in a proposed synthetic study of the flint artefacts from east Kent.
It is unfortunately not possible to date the bulk of the assemblage. However,
the tranchet axe and the obliquely truncated blade, despite the absence of blade
production, both signal a Mesolithic presence. The Neolithic period was
represented by a single leaf-shaped artefact whilst the barbed and tanged
arrowhead indicates an Early Bronze Age date.
THE COINS
Ian Anderson
During excavations at Each End, 350 coins were recovered, the majority by
members of the Mid Kent Search and Recovery Club working in conjunction
with the Canterbury Archaeological Trust. The bulk of the material was
retrieved from the dark soil horizon (S.3) overlying the line of the road and
ditches. With the exception of one Iron Age and three medieval and postmedieval
hammered coins, all are Roman. At present they are temporarily
stored, for security reasons, with Canterbury Museums.
For much of the Roman period, it appears that few coins were being used
and lost on site, with numbers rising slightly in the late third century and then
a sudden upsurge in the fourth century. However, the presence of firstcentury
coins is not necessarily indicative of an early date for this site.
Nearly all the early coins have considerable degrees of wear, suggesting they
had circulated for many years before being lost. The longevity of early
Empire coins has been demonstrated by the composition of hoards deposited
in the second and third centuries, which have contained first-century
material, and provide a further indication that the early coins from Each End
were probably lost at a much later date. This view is supported by the pottery,
which provides little evidence of early Roman occupation, the principal
settlement activity not occurring until the mid to late second century.
In order to determine whether this pattern of coin loss is typical or unusual
161
ALISON J. HICKS
350 T
300
Each End
Other rural sitas
2 200 -•
5 10°
W="i
Date periods
Fig. 17. The number of coins recovered by period.
for a rural site, a chart has been constructed (Fig. 17). This shows the number
of coins recovered from Each End within each period, expressed as coins per
thousand. The values have then been compared with an average of corresponding
values for 36 rural sites taken from Reece (1991).
The chart shows that for much of the time, there is nothing to distinguish
Each End from any other rural site, except on two occasions. The first occurs
within periods A.D. 260-75 and 275-96 when, although there is a slight rise
in the number of coins lost, both values are still a long way below those for
other sites. The only other site with corresponding values lower than Each
End is Trevelgue, Cornwall (Reece 1991, 34) which appears to have been
occupied briefly in the fourth century. These low values indicate that activity
at Each End diminished in real terms during the latter half of the third
century, possibly to the extent of being temporarily abandoned. Whether this
phenomenon is peculiar only to rural sites in east Kent or only to Each End
cannot be determined, due to a lack of comparable material. The only other
local rural site with which a comparison can be made is Ickham (Clark in
preparation), three miles west of Each End. This has also produced proportionately
low quantities of coins for periods 260-75 and 275-96, 52 and 25 per
thousand, respectively.
It is interesting to note that at about this time the stone defences at the
nearby fort of Richborough were constructed as a protection against Saxon
162
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
pirates (Johnson 1970), and it is possible that for a time this inland area was
abandoned through fear of the same threat.
The other exception occurs within periods A.D. 348-64 and 364-78, where
both values greatly exceed the average. Compared to individual rural sites,
both periods are exceeded only by Kingseate, Gloucestershire, and Trevelgue,
Cornwall (Reece 1991, 33 and 34). As with Trevelgue, both Kingseate sites
were occupied in the late Roman period. The Ickham values for the same
periods are 94 and 206 per thousand respectively, the former corresponding
Closely to the average, the latter greatly exceeding it. It is possible that the high
values for period A.D. 364-78 at least, from both sites, may reflect a normal
pattern of coin loss for this locality. Again, without more comparable material
from this area, this cannot be certain.
Many of the late Constantinian coins from Each End are copies, whose
prototypes were official coins produced during A.D. 330-48. They are a very
common find, and are believed to have been produced during c. A.D. 341-47,
when production of official coins was temporarily suspended. It has been
suggested that as they occur in larger numbers on military sites than
elsewhere, they were produced for use by the army (Hammerson 1987). Out
of a total of 94 coins dated A.D. 336-48 recovered from Each End, 28 (29.8
per cent) were copies, compared with a corresponding figure of 66 per cent
from Richborough. It would appear that Each End was free from military
influence.
Other copies are those that use as their prototypes the various reverses of
silvered bronze coins bearing the legend Fel Temp Reparatio (hereafter
referred to as FTR). These copies were produced soon after the introduction
of the official coins in A.D. 348, and were manufactured in immense
quantities after the regular series was reduced in size in A.D. 353; by this
time the only reverse in use depicted the Emperor spearing a barbarian falling
from this horse, and it was this type that was predominantly copied.
A total of 47 FTR coins were recovered from Each End, of which 41 (87.2
per cent) were copies. Corresponding figures for nearby sites are 65 per cent
at Richborough (Brickstock 1987, 74), 75.3 per cent at Ickham, 49.7 per cent
at Canterbury bath house (ibid., 73) and 64.3 per cent at Canterbury Marlowe
car park (Anderson 1995). It has been suggested, on the basis of large
numbers of these coins found at Richborough and Canterbury, that there was
a production centre in east Kent, supplying these sites (Brickstock 1987, 90).
The large percentages from Each End and Ickham add weight to this theory.
THE ENVIRONMENTAL EVIDENCE
Martin Bates
A study of the palaeogeography of the Each End area was undertaken by the
Geoarchaeological Service Facility, University College, London Institute of
Archaeology. A total of twenty hand-augered and four mechanically-drilled
boreholes were sunk along the line of the road route corridor in the area
thought to contain alluvial sediments. The core stratigraphies were examined
163
ALISON J. HICKS
(Bates 1992) and illustrated the potential of samples taken to provide
detailed information about past-landscapes and landscape changes in the
Wantsum Channel adjacent to higher, dry ground archaeological sites (Bates
1994). The sedimentary sequences recovered were complex and difficulties
in both characterisation of units and their dating were encountered.
The work undertaken during this study differs in focus and detail from
previous studies in the area (Long 1991; 1992) where regional vegetation
change, sea-level history and tectonic activity were the focus of the study. In
this study, a transect was examined where the objectives were the
reconstruction of local conditions and palaeogeographies of significance to
the adjacent excavated site of Each End. As part of these works, detailed
sedimentology, pollen, diatom and foraminifera and ostracod analyses were
undertaken (Bates 1994).
Two major landscape units have been reconstructed from the evidence
recovered from the boreholes.
c. 3500-5000 B.P.
During this time frame the bedrock controlled the main areas of
sedimentation. A small stream may have drained from south-south-west to
north-north-east across the area of the transect. This stream may have swung
to the east around the higher ground of the eastern part of the transect and
entered an alder carr lowland in the vicinity of the modern Sandwich by-pass.
Coastlines contemporary with this may have existed further eastwards.
Deposition within the stream system may have been relatively high energy
consisting of sand, gravel and later (re)deposited tufa (a freshwater
limestone). This tufa may have been formed as a result of decalcification of
the brickearth cover on the adjacent high ground where lime woodland tree
cover persisted. Some evidence suggests a brackish influence within this
channel towards the end of this phase of deposition suggesting the encroach
of marine conditions into the area of the transect.
c. 2000 B.P.
A major change in the environment took place with the rise in relative
sea-level and subsequent formation of salt-marsh throughout the area. This
change was accompanied by a decrease in lime pollen (Lime decline) - a well
documented feature in the vegetation history of south-east England. The
stream channel identified during the earlier phase persists as a back marsh
channel receiving both brackish water through tidal flux and slope runoff
water. These factors contribute to a mixed terrestrial/salt-marsh fauna and
flora within the channel sediments. The contemporary coastline may have
existed in the vicinity of, or immediately to the east of, the A256. Woodland
on the higher ground persisted and was mixed with some open areas of
grassland/bracken scrub. This environment may have been subject to soil
erosion during this phase. This scenario may have persisted into the Roman
period contemporary with the occupation identified at the site of Each End
and the Roman fort at Richborough.
The reconstructed palaeogeographies provide important models for the
area that should provide a basis for future investigation.
164
APPENDIX A: SUMMARY OF BURIAL CONTENTS
The cremations north of the road. G.21
Set no.
21
22
23
24
Cinerary Urn
Context No
147
165
148
142
Associated Grave Furniture
None - robbed by metal detectorists
Samian dish (C.161); flagon (C.162); copper
alloy sheet object (C.l63); copper alloy
tumbler lock bolt (C.164); copper alloy strip.
Samian cup (C.149); small flask (C.150);
remains of shoes or boots
Bag-beaker (C.143); flagon (C.144); samian
cup and dish (C.469, C.470)
Human
Remains
-
Adult
494gms. bone.
Adult
92gms. bone
Comments
Robbed. No bones remaining.
No bones present.
The cremations south of the road - east G.22
4
13
14
15
260
43
78
37
Jar (C.262); beaker (C.265); 3 samian vessels
(C.267, C.269, C.270); dish (C.268); 2
flagons (C.271, C.273); beaker (C.277);
remains of shoes or boots
None
Beaker (C.80)
Jar (C.38); samian dish (C.39)
Adult 30+ years.
1385gms. bone
Adult. Female
1537gms. bone.
Adult. Female
1108gms. bone
Adult. ?Female
1065gms. bone.
Cinerary vessel underwent CT
scan.
Cremated animal bone also
recovered from the cinerary
urn.
Cinerary vessel underwent CT
scan.
§
en
>
o
X
>
.55
to
16
17
18
19
26
47
70
30
87
471
Flagon (C.48); samian dish (C.49); beaker
(C.83)
Flagon (C.68); samian dish (C.72); beaker
(C.73)
Amphora container in two parts (C.23,
C.67); flagon (C.31); samian dish (C.32);
glass goblet (C.33); remains of shoes or
boots
Flagon (C.89); samian dish (C.91); lamp
(C.92); remains of shoes or boots
Flask (C.473); samian dish (C.475); beaker
(C.476)
Adult.
642gms. bone
Adult
218gms. bone
Adult. Age 18-23.
?Female.
1959gms. bone
Adult.
I060gms. bone
Adult. Female.
859gms. bone
Cremated animal bone also
recovered from the cinerary
urn.
Amphora burial.
Cremated animal bone also
recovered from the cinerary
urn.
Cremated and unburnt animal
bones also recovered from the
cinerary urn.
Cinerary vessel underwent CT
scan.
The cremations south of the road - west G.23
5
10
131
No ceramic vessel
None
None Adult. Female.
1234gms. bone.
No human bones present.
Unburnt animal (rodent) bones
recovered from the cinerary
urn.
Cremated remains had been
deposited in a wooden box
The inhumation G.20A
8 No ceramic vessel None Adult. Female. Wood staining and iron names
indicated on coffin
EXCAVATIONS AT EACH END, ASH, 1992
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The archaeological fieldwork and post-excavation work were
commissioned and financed by Kent County Council Department of
Highways and Transportation. Their assistance and that of Dr John
Williams and his staff at Kent County Council Heritage Conservation
Group is gratefully acknowledged. Thanks are also extended to David
Barwell, Roger Reid and Ron Alexander of the Mid Kent Search and
Recovery Club, who visited the site regularly and retrieved numerous
coins from the spoil heaps and unexcavated areas. The majority of
the pottery and small finds were drawn by Sue Hodgkins; the rest by
Peter Atkinson and Mark Duncan. The photographs were taken by
Andrew Savage.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Ager 1987
Alcock 1980
Anderson 1980
Anderson 1995
Anderson and
Fell 1994
Barrie 1987
Bates 1992
Bates 1994
Bauer et al. 1987
Betts 1992
B. M. Ager, 'Late-Roman belt-fittings from Canterbury',
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