
Excavations at Each End, Ash near Sandwich, 1992
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St. Gregory's Priory, Canterbury: A Re-assessment
The Scribal Work of Eadmer of Canterbury to 1109
Excavations at Each End, Ash near Sandwich, 1992
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^
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G14 . /
Well G9A
" TT
G19B
Cremation burials
O G22 O
O
\ \
\327\
> \G28
V »
\ G32 \
\G26 V'A > \ P
Drainage gullies
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.^Structure G15
V s?^. Well
vG19A,'-
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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