CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
THE ROSE LANE SITES
By SHEPPARD FRERE, F.S.A.
IN the Summer of 1946 the Canterbury Excavation Committee, which
had been examining the basements in Butchery Lane and on the north
side of The Parade (Arch. Cant., LXI, pp. 1-45) extended its operations
to the opposite border of the latter street on each side of the mouth of
Rose Lane. Here a frontage of about 115 feet had been bombed
between the premises of Messrs. J. Lyons and Messrs. Marks and
Spencer. On the north-west side of Rose Lane ceUars H and I occupied
the site of the Rose Hotel: across the lane were ceUars L, K and J,
whUe a small area at surface level, undisturbed by cellars, occupied the
street corner (K 2, Fig. 1).
The first purpose of the excavations was to discover whether the
Butchery Lane Roman buUding extended as far as the south side of
the Parade ; but there was also the general policy of testing all available
areas.
In the event it was found that the cellars had usuaUy been dug too
deep, and little remained below their floors except in the shallower rear
part of cellar H. It was clear, however, that the Butchery Lane
buUding did not extend as far as trenches H 1 or K 2.
The principal discoveries were :
(1) a pre-Roman Belgic ditch running N.E.-S.W. in cellar L with a
contemporary occupation to the east;
(2) a Roman drain running obliquely under Rose Lane. This was
first found in cellar H and was picked up east of Rose Lane in a
trench cut from the surface (K 2). Here the structure was better
preserved (Fig. 10, PI. II), and the seating for its vault could be
seen. In both sections the drain overlay an early ditch which
could not be completely explored. It was probably Belgic in
origin, of larger size than the ditch found in ceUar L ; its filling
contained Belgic pottery and a few Claudian sherds, implying that
it had been closed early in the Claudian period, doubtless as part
of the tidying up of the site after the Conquest. The drain itself
appears to date from the mid-second century. In Section K 2 the
latest material beneath it was dated c. A.D. 100-12Cl#T|J$)&lskyer 5
above this contained no finds. In H 1 the latesfypottery beloW the
ioi f l]ma
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
drain ran down rather later than this, and a date c. A.D. 150/60
seems hkely for its construction ;
(3) a number of Roman and medieval pits, a group in cellar I being of
especial interest;
CANTERBURY MARKS S
SPENCER MEDV WELL
©• 946 SRI!
BELCIC OCCUPATION
AREA ZJ I
I
/
Mt
-i
3: r~ STREET WIDENED rn K. 1952
TD V \
> ©*•* \
Xl
i s t n
%\ J
Dm
11
M8 i
I • MI2
=*, I Ml \ H2 lM9 HI \ -•» J
% Mr H »
MEDIAEVAL FOOTINGS
L y
SCALE : FEET LYONS paxjpGHBKi
0 20 30 40 £0 60
10 ao
t
METRE
FIG. 1. General Site Plan
(4) a large medieval foundation under the rear west wall of cellar H.
This seems to have been part of a thirteenth-century cellar.
CELLAR L
The front part of cellar L was comparatively free of later disturbances,
but had been excavated almost to the level of the natural
yellow loam or brickearth.
102
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
Immediately north-west of Marks and Spencer's appeared a Belgic
occupation area, bounded by a smaU drainage ditch. The occupation
had disturbed the top of the natural. Near the edge of the ditch
natural soil was seen at 35 ft. O.D. capped by still clean yellow loam.
But further east the mixed dirty yellow loam of the occupation went
down 6 in. deeper than this, and below it was at least another 6 in. of
clean yellow loam with flecks of charcoal. This may be partly accounted
for as a drop of natural to the east, and partly doubtless as the result
of farm-yard conditions. We ourselves found it impossible to walk in
this loam after heavy rain.
The occupation soil contained a large number of decayed bone
fragments (horse, dog, cow, pig, sheep1) and small pieces of pottery.
There was a ragged line of post-holes, surviving only 4-6 in. deep, two
of which seemed to be in larger holes packed with clay. There was
also a row of smaller stake-holes about l£-2 in. in diameter, though it
was not always easy to distinguish these from the marks left by the
decay of bones. (PI. I, 1.)
THE BELGIC DITCH (PI. II, 2 and Fig. 2)
Bounding this occupation to the north-west was a small U-shaped
gully cut about 24 in. into the natural soil and with a ledge along its
east edge. Sixteen feet of it were traced in the front part of the cellar,
but towards the south it was lost in some deep medieval disturbances.
This gully is of a type commonly met with on Belgic sites : its
necessity for draining the sticky yellow brickearth was abundantly
demonstrated by heavy rain during the excavation. It contained
occupation material of great archseological interest.
The filling (Fig. 2) consisted of
(1) primary sUt of light greyish yellow loam containing some large
bone fragments, including the jaws of a horse and a large portion
of sheep's skeleton.2
(2) dirty yellow loam with much small charcoal and many pieces of
pottery and bone, evidently flung in from the occupation to the
east.3
(3) over this in places at the south end was a dark shelly Roman
occupation layer about 3 in. thick (not seen in Fig. 2) dated
c. A.D. 90-120.
(4) Light yellowish grey loam, sealing 2 and 3, containing material to
mid II A.D.
1 The majority of bones were of ox, a small type and often adult or old.
2 Also part of an ox jaw, and leg bones of a small horse.
3 The following charcoal has kindly been identified by Mrs. F. L. Balfour-
Browne : Layer 1, Ash and Oak ; Layer 2, Ash, Oak and Willow or Poplar.
103
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
THE BELGIC POTTERY
All the large quantity of broken pottery found in layers 1 and 2 of
the ditch and in the occupation layer beside it was of native Belgic
type except for three sherds showing possible Roman influence, together
with a handful of imported amphora fragments, one sherd of rouletted
white butt-beaker, and three sherds of terra nigra.
The amphorse probably came from Italy, S. Gaul or Spain : the
terra nigra from Galha Belgica. Such imported fragments are common
in pre-conquest Belgic finds. No Samian ware at all was found, and
T V
NORTH-WEST CELLAR. FLOOR.
SOUTH - E A 5T
MEDIEVAL
CHALK o o op*"
FOOTING"
DISTURBANCE
SCALE-FEET
SECTION taaoA&a
BELGIC DITCH
FIG. 2
in a coUection of pottery as large as this such absence is significant.
The excavations at Colchester (Camulodunum, p. 31) have proved that
the importation of Samian ware did not begin before the Conquest :
taken with the typologically early character of the vessels, the total
absence of Samian from so large a group, though Samian is abundant in
Claudian levels at Canterbury, gives good grounds for attributing this
settlement, and thus the beginnings of Canterbury itself, to a pre-
Claudian date. The inclusion of two or perhaps three post-conquest
sherds of coarse ware implies that the ditch was filled in and the site
tidied up as one of the first acts of the new authorities.
Native Belgic pottery (especially combed ware) continued to be
made in Canterbury certainly untU late Flavian times (Arch. Cant.,
LXIII, p. 101, Fig. 10, 23-25), but this later material can often be
104
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
distinguished from the pre-Roman by a better firing and a redder
colour: the present group is grey in colour and shghtly cruder in its
manufacture. The finer bowls and jars, however, quickly assumed a
Roman technique after the Conquest.
The pottery is discussed in detaU below ; here it may be noted that
the Belgic quoit-shaped pedestal bases are rare in Canterbury, and only
•-.
\
ms V
)
m 4
S~\
/
5 X
\ W \
7 V8 t
FIG. 3. Belgic pottery, from primary silt of ditch, Cellar L. (\)
occur in the earliest levels : they seem always to be of pre-Roman
manufacture, though occasionally surviving later as rubbish.
Layer 1, primary silt of ditch (Fig. 3)
1. Bead-rim, very heavUy brush-striated grey porridgy ware.
2. Simple beaded rim, grey paste with brownish-red surfaces ;
arched brush-striations.
3. Dark grey ware ; brush-striations.
105
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
4. Smoothed bowl of grey ware ; weU-made angular cordon at
base of upright neck.
5. Burnished grey-buff surface ; grey paste.
6. Spindle-whorl from cordoned shoulder of burnished grey ware.
7. Corrugated shoulder above brush-striated (?) decorations :
heavy buff gritty ware.
8. Corrugated neck of coarse grey porridgy ware, surface smoothed.
9. Striated simple beaded jar, very sooty outside.
In addition, this layer contained the following unfigured pieces :
(a) pedestal base, as 30 ;
(b) rippled shoulder as 19 ;
(c) lower part of bowl with sharply curved shoulder (cf. Swarling
22, 24) lightly treUised : dark porridgy ware with black glossy
surface ;
(d) base of thick clumsUy made dish like 40 : also one in thinner
better paste ;
(e) two fragments of reddish gritty amphora and one in hard
cream coloured ware with whitish surface ;
( / ) several fragments of burnt daub.
Layer 2, secondary filling of ditch (Figs. 4, 5, 6)
In addition to the bronze fibula (p. 140), this layer contained :
(a) two pieces of terra nigra platter of the best period, in whitishgrey
ware with silvery surface ;
(b) three pieces of spindle-shaped amphora (Camulodunum 181-4),
two in gritty red ware, one in hard whitish ware ;
(c) one small fragment of native jug copying an imported
Gallo-Belgic model in fine reddish sandy paste with external
cream slip. The sherd is very thin (only •£ in.). Camulodunum
165 ;
(d) one chip of rouletted pipe-clay butt-beaker.
10. Large jar with corrugated neck and shoulder, decorated with
brush-striations surmounted by a row of jabs, probably done with a
twig-end: grey porridgy paste, hght buff-grey surface, smoothed on
neck and rim.
11. Similar vessel in grey ware with black smoothed outside.
12. As 10, 11 : patchy buff red to black surface : corrugations
smoothed. Fragments of at least three others were present; cf. also
Butchery Lane, Arch. Cant., LXI, p. 34, No. 58.
13. Large thick jar, dark grey ware ; rounded Up and corrugations
smoothed, below which a zone of jabbing apparently with a 3-pronged
fork done on a slow wheel.
106
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
14. Smoothed biconical jar in grey ware with leather-coloured
outside surface : neck shghtly rippled with poor low cordons, shoulder
grooved.
FIG. 4. Belgic pottery from ditch, layer 2, in Cellar L (£)
15. Spindle-whorl from a shoulder sherd of striated grey ware with
reddish-brown surface.
16. Wide-mouthed heavy jar in porridgy grey ware with smoothed
black surface.
107
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
T \ k
FIG. 5. Belgic pottery from ditch, layer 2, in Cellar L. (£)
108
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
)
bifesii-satj:
/
53 /
55
57
FIG. 6. Belgic pottery from ditch layer 2 (41-49), and occupation layer (50-57),
in Cellar L. (£)
109
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
17. Corrugated bowl in hard sandy grey ware : below the shoulder
a matt area with tooled pattern.
18. Very large heavy storage jar : coarse porridgy ware, black
surface. Fragments of three others present.
19. Bowl with weakly corrugated shoulder : hard porridgy grey
ware, reddish-brown surface.
20-22. Bead-rim bowls in coarse dark grey or black ware, striated
surfaces.
23. SimUar bowl in light grey shghtly porridgy ware, rim flattened
to a bevel.
24. Coarse grey ware, buff-brown surface, cf. 2.
25. Coarse dark grey to black ware.
26. Funnel-shaped beaker in smoothed somewhat sandy dark grey
ware. This is the best local Belgic ware.
27. Biconical jar with rippled shoulder, smoothed dark grey
ware.
28. SimUar jar in leathery brown ware with grey surface.
29. Moulded pedestal base in simUar ware to 26, possibly belonging
to it.
30. Broken fragment of pedestal base with rough cordon : ware
as 26.
31. Quoit-shaped pedestal, porridgy red ware with leathercoloured
surface.
32. Bowl in porridgy grey ware with smoothed grey-buff surface.
Recurved rims of this type are rare. Cf. 45.
33. Grooved rim in rough black ware, surface pohshed, furrowed
shoulder.
34. Highly pohshed dark grey to black cup or bowl in fine sandy
ware.
35. Moulded base in Roman-type fine hard light grey ware with
darker surface, probably from a carmated beaker Camulodunum 120 A.
A second simUar base is present in shghtly more native-type ware:
these together with a third smaU sherd of grey ware are the only suggestions
of local Roman influence.
36. Domed base, grey ware.
38. Carmated bowl of smoothed shghtly sandy grey ware, perhaps
copying a metal cup.
39. Cordoned jar. Cf. 16.
40. Smoothed shghtly sandy grey ware : a somewhat crude native
copy of a terra nigra dish, Camulodunum 22.
41-43. Grey dishes simUar to 38.
44. Grey ware with dark burnished surface and groove at base
of neck.
45. Recurved rim, hght grey ware, smoothed surface. Cf. 32.
110
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
46. Base of grey ware with brown surface, striated. A very large
proportion of otherwise featureless sherds were of this type.
47. Shoulder in hard grey ware, with grooves.
48. Rough grey ware with brownish surface, inside much decayed :
flat shoulder, smoothed above, matt below grooves.
49. Deeply corrugated shoulder of rough leathery ware : exact
slope uncertain (restored after Wheathampstead 11-12, but cf. Prae
Wood, Verulamium, Fig. 9, 3).
Occupation layer S.E. of ditch (Fig. 6)
This contained
(a) one base fragment of terra nigra dish of the best period in
hght grey paste and fine sUvery surface, from a platter over
1 ft. in diameter (cf. Camulodunum 2-5) ;
(b) one piece of spindle-shaped amphora in hard reddish paste
with creamy shp. Camulodunum 181-184 ;
(c) the foUowing significant pieces which extend the type series
in some degree.
50. Grey ware dish, as 38.
51. Brown porridgy ware with dark grey-brown smoothed surface.
52. Coarse brown porridgy ware with black smoothed surface ;
cf. 16.
53. SimUar rim in very porridgy dark grey ware with hght reddishbrown
surface, badly crumbled inside.
54. Hard well-made buff-grey ware with very feintly tooled trellis.
Cf. Aylesford 16 (Arch. 52, PL ix, 7).
55. Native butt-beaker in brownish leathery ware. This and 56
are the only two pieces of native butt-beaker present. Cf. Prae Wood,
Fig. 14 (but see also 85, 86 below, from ceUar H I ) .
56. Smoothed buff-grey ware : apparently lower portion of buttbeaker.
57. Porridgy grey ware with smoothed cordons ; crumbled inside.
Cf. 10-12.
We have here the domestic pottery of the later Kentish Belgic
culture, for the first time in a large group. There are interesting
distinctions or changes of emphasis to be seen when comparison is made
with the funerary groups in which the culture was first distinguished,
and by which it is best known. In particular the pedestal urn with
its high pear-shaped body and recurved lip is rare or virtuaUy absent.
The butt-beaker and its local copies is rare1 (55, 56) : only the imported
1 Two others were found in HI, Nos. 85, 86 below. It should be stated,
however, that in the contemporary Belgic site excavated in 1953 at Whitehall
Road butt-beakers were plentiful.
I l l
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
platters seem to have caused a demand which had to be catered for by
the local potters : these were on the whole conservative.
Elsewhere in the Belgic region such domestic groups are now known,
as at Wheathampstead and Prae Wood1 near St. Albans and at
Camulodunum, the Belgic Colchester : but this is the first large
Kentish group. It is interestmg also, therefore, to identify the slight
variations and local characteristics which must indicate tribal individuality.
The group is late : it is tied down to the years immediately preceding
the Conquest by (a) stratigraphy ; (b) the brooch, and (c) the presence
of terra nigra and its copies, of imported amphorse, and two or three
sherds which may be post-Conquest. The pedestal bases are of the
late, flat, type : 29 can show some attempt at modelling and lightness,
but it does not approach the true early type (Swarling 1-3) ; it is closer
to Swarling 8, dated to this same second quarter of I A.D.2
The group being late, an interestmg problem is presented by the
corrugated and striated jars 10-12, 57. This type was also found in a
just pre-Roman level below the Butchery Lane house.3 At Swarling
a similar jar, 31, was found dated early in the series (c. 50 B.C.). This
accords with the Wheathampstead evidence. It wUl be remembered
that of the two Belgic sites published in Verulamium, Wheathampstead
was shown to date before 10 B.C. and is generally regarded as the capital
of Cassivellaunus which Caesar captured in 54 B.C. The finds from
Wheathampstead therefore give us a picture of the first phase of Belgic
culture. Prae Wood, on the other hand, began when Wheathampstead
ended, and may fairly be regarded as its successor. At Prae Wood we
have material dating 10 B.C.-A.D. 43. At Wheathampstead, then,
simUar corrugated (2) and striated (17-20) urns with notched ornament
(18, 19) were found ; this group dates before 10 B.C. and probably
goes back to Caesarian times and before. There is no parallel to this
corrugated type at the later site of Prae Wood. Nor is there a paraUel
in Essex, which became Belgic at the end of the century. North of the
Thames, therefore, it belongs to the early Belgic period, before Christ.
Our group offers other parallels to that at Wheathampstead : e.g.,
Nos. 14,19, 27 to ibid. 8 which is not found at Prae Wood ; Swarling 19,
a comparable form, however, shows that in Kent unlike Hertfordshire
this type, too, continued late. No. 4 resembles Wheathampstead 10,
and 38 is like ibid. 9 ; these also do not appear at Prae Wood.
Essex was inhabited by the non-Belgic Trinovantes, the story of
whose resistance to the house of Cassivellaunus and his successors is
1 Both these sites are published in Verulamium, to whioh the references relate.
* Cf. also Prae Wood 49 a, b and o.
» Arch. Cant., LXI, 34, Fig. 16, 58.
112
PLATB I
to
I. < v|l«r U Belgie post-bolei
2. Cellar L, Belgic ditch looking north
timet p. lit
PLATE II
# * . .""S •$
1. Cellar H, Roman drain looking west
2. Section K2, Roman drain looking north-east
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
weU known.1 When Addedomarus, the last native Trinovantian king,
ceased to reign about A.D. 1, his coins were superseded, however, by
those of DubnoveUaunus of Kent. It seems that there was an invasion
across the estuary ; and Hawkes and HuU, noting that the distribution
of Belgic pottery-types suggests infiltration up the rivers from the coast,
have not hesitated to suppose that it was DubnoveUaunus " who was
responsible for the decisive drenching of the Trinovantes with Belgic
culture."2 It is odd if this were so, that the comparatively common
Canterbury form of large jar with corrugated shoulder and striations
should be unknown in Essex. The explanation can hardly be that the
Canterbury group is earlier than here suggested, nor that it did not
become current till after A.D. 1 : perhaps Kentish settlement did
not play so large a part in the Belgic culture of Essex, despite the
distribution, as did influence from Catuvellaunian sources in Hertfordshire.
Other individual Kentish types not found or rarely found in Essex
include 26 and 38. To the former a vague cousinly parallel is known
from Billericay not far from the estuary, but it is not closely simUar.
No. 38 is akin to Camulodunum 214 B, but the metallic projecting
carination of the Wheathampstead prototype, present at Canterbury,
is lost at Colchester, and again there is only a general resemblance.
No. 54 is an example of a generalized Belgic type of wide-mouthed
cordoned bowl, but its particular feature of upright neck, double
cordon, and treUised shoulder are not found together at either Prae
Wood or Camulodunum. There is, however, an Aylesford parallel
(no. 16) : so this, too, may be Kentish Belgic. SimUarly the neckless
in-sloping rims 7, 13 and 44 are unknown at Colchester as, too, at Prae
Wood, though a prototype for 7 and 13 can be seen in Wheathampstead
8.
In general, too, the Camulodunum series is remarkable for the range
of recurved rims on bowls or jars with simple bulging shoulders
demarcated by cordons : Prae Wood, too, is mainly characterized by
necked jars. Such rims and shoulders are markedly rare at Canterbury
(32 and 45 are the only such rims actuaUy found) ; instead the bowls
seem to be mainly bead-rimmed. The bead-rim, and in particular the
furrowed bead-rim bowl, is an integral feature of eastern Belgic culture
as has been recognized from the beginning,3 though this fact has tended
to be overlooked by the popularity of the type among the western
Belgae. The type with incurving shoulder and furrowed decoration,
in particular, has been recognized as a Kentish type at Richborough
1 Caesar, B. G., V. 20, 23. Allen, Arch. XL, 16, Hawkes and Hull, Camulodunum
6.
2 Camulodunum 6.
3 Hawkes and Dunning, " The Belgae of Gaul and Britain," Arch. Journ.,
LXXXVH, 278, 288-90.
113
11
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
where it occurs plentifuUy in Claudian deposits.1 The type has been
studied by Bushe-Fox who points out that the Essex forms usually have
not a beaded but a recurved rim.2
It is thus possible to suggest that this Canterbury group displays a
tribal individuality, somewhat archaic in form, distinct from the Belgae
not only of Hertfordshire but also of Essex ; and that this individuality
survived the political vicissitudes of the times3 until the Claudian
conquest itself.
THE ROMAN AND LATER LEVELS, CELLAR L
Layer 3, A.D. 90-120 (Fig. 7)
Over the Belgic filling of the ditch was a thin dark sheUy Roman
occupation soil; this only occurred in the vicinity of Pit M I (which was 1 58 y f 59
62
*5>
\
Kwswl
J 64
% 60 I
LT
~ ~ > #61
F 65
6 6^**''M®#S?2K5i
7
FIG. 7. Pottery from Roman layers, Cellar L. (£)
in fact of the eighteenth century). This Roman layer contained :
(i) a small fragment of mosaic, six white chalk cubes c. 0-5 by 0 • 7 in.
cemented together ; (U) a flue tUe fragment with roller-die pattern (see
p. 115); (in) a flagon neck of granulated orange-buff ware; the rim is
missing but appears to be of late I A.D. ; (iv) a flagon rim fragment
apparently of Camulodunum form 136 A (cf. ibid. Fig. 51, 7) in similar
ware to (U). This is Claudian or earlier, and is clearly a rubbishsurvival.
Also the foUowing :
58, 69. Two deep coarse grey-ware bowls with reeded lip.
60, 61. Coarse grey-ware bowls of types 71, 72 below (Fig. 8).
1 Richborough, II, 135, 136 (pp. 97-99).
2 Cf. Oamulodunum 267, a rare type there, and mistakenly, called Roman.
» Arch., 90, 29-36.
114
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
62. Girth-beaker in terra rubra 3.1
63. Rather larger girth beaker in terra rubra 3.
64. Cup of terra nigra, whitish paste, fumed dark grey surface.
65. Rough-cast cup, reddish hard ware with dark slate-to-brown
coloured shp : also, unfigured, a sherd in white paste with purplishchocolate
shp.
Nos. 60, 61 are a common Canterbury Flavian type : 58 and 59 are
descended from Camulodunum 246, but such thick large and heavy bowls
are not common before Flavian times and can be as late as A.D. 120.
No. 65 is contemporary. The occupation layer therefore dates about
A.D. 90-120, with rubbish survivals from the underlying Belgic levels.
Layer 4. A.D. 120-150 (Fig. 7)
Layer 3 was sealed by layer 4, a fighter loamy earth which contained
(i) Samian form 18/31 stamped BIGA[ -FEC (Fig. 23, 3). Biga
of La Graufesenque, c. A.D. 90-100.
(ii) Samian form 37, perhaps by CINNAMVS of Lezoux,2
A.D. 140-150.
(iii) Two other unidentifiable fragments of form 37.
66. Small piece of Gallo-Belgic platter. Cf. Camulodunum form 3
in terra rubra 2.
67. Fragment of wall of terra nigra platter, Camulodunum form 13 ;
white paste, sUvery grey surface. Both of these are rubbish survivals.
Further south a trench was cut to trace the Belgic occupation below
a stUl-standing cellar-vault; but the area was found to be deeply
disturbed by medieval pits which would have lain behind the houses
fronting the Parade ; they contained nothing of consequence.
TRENCH K 3 (Fig. 1)
This trench was a small test hole dug to explore what turned out to
be a Roman rubbish pit, R 2, having useful contents. The stratification
was : (a) blackish sheUy occupation material sealed by (b) mixed clay.
Both layers contained pottery, and the former also a flue-tile fragment
with a roUer-die diamond pattern.3 This is die 16 : a second piece
from this die was found in ceUar L, layer 3 (see p. 114) closely adjacent.
A piece from die 41 (plain chevron) was found in Pit M 14, ceUar I. It
should also be recorded that two pieces from die 29 (plain chevron)
came from the Butohery Lane site, one from the medieval " black stony
soil with shells " in Fig. 5 (Arch. Cant., LXI) and one from Pit M 6
1 For description see Camulodunum, p. 204.
2 Kindly identified by Dr. F. Oswald, F.S.A., together with all Samian
mentioned in this report.
3 A. W. G. Lowther, A study of the patterns on Roman Flue-Tiles and their
Distribution, Surrey Arch. Soc. Research Paper No. 1.
115
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
(ibid. Fig. 6). Two pieces from die 43 (plain chevron) came from
ceUar F in the same report, in the buUders' debris associated with the
first phase of the west wing (ibid. Fig. 7, section LM). In so far as these
tUes are stratified their date appears to be late I-early I I A.D., which
is in accordance with Mr. Lowther's conclusions.
The pottery from this Pit is here published, as it forms a useful
group ; with it were associated the foUowing Samian sherds :
(a) lower level, form 36 (Fig. 24, 14). Trajan-Hadrian.
(6) upper level form 36, ? Vespasianic, A.D. 70-80.
form 27 ? Flavian.
(a) Lower Level. Hadrianic (Fig. 8, 68-71)
68. Bowl with inturned rim shghtly beaded. This shape is found
in Flavian times (Caerleon Amphitheatre, Arch. 78, Fig. 20, 22) but the
heavy fumed grey fabric, pohshed surface, and tooled trellis suggest an
early II A.D. date. Cf. Needham (Norfolk Arch., XXVIII, 187),
No. 9, A.D. 100-150.
69. Heavy bowl or possibly lid : ware as 68 but no trellis. The
angle is not certam, nor easy to parallel. Cf. Verulamium (Arch. 90,
Fig. 17, 9), A.D. 200-250 ; but this is too late for our group. See 82.
70. Rough-cast cup, cf. Richborough III, Nos. 300-302. 300-301
are the bulbous type, A.D. 80-120 ; 302 straighter, as here A.D. 90-140.
Also Caistor (Norfolk Arch., XXXVI, 197), T 2, A.D. 110-160. Ours
not so degenerate as Verulamium, Fig. 27, 9, A.D. 160-90. Hadrianic.
71. Cooking pot, soot-encrusted, with rim grooved for lid ; coarse
light grey ware. See 108 there dated A.D. 100-20 ; also 60-61, 72.
(b) Upper Level (Fig 8, Nos. 72-84, A.D. 100-150)
72. Ware as 71. Cf. bulbous jar, Richborough IV, 405, A.D. 75-100 ;
for simUar grooved rim, but on necked jar, cf. Leicester, Fig. 25, 9 ;
37, 27 (Flavian and down to A.D. 130) ; cf. Verulamium, Fig. 31, 42
(A.D. 120-60) but in different ware.
73. TreUised pie-dish, ware as 68 ; cf. Verulamium, Fig. 27, 6,
A.D. 160-90, but there chamfered ; for an earher example of Richborough
III, 339 (A.D. 80-120). This type is uncommon before c. A.D. 150, and
is normal in Antonine times.
74. Cooking pot with girth-groove ; coarse brown-grey granulated
ware.
75. Flagon, reddish paste, yellowish-orange slip; cf. 102,
apparently a first century type at Canterbury. Flavian.
76. Carinated bowl with reeded rim ; coarse hard grey ware.
This type is Flavian and continues to c. A.D. 150 ; ours with its pronounced
carination should be of I A.D.
116
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
77. Carinated jar, fine hard thin grey ware with thin grey-brown
shp ; cf. Richborough I, 76, 77 (first half of I I A.D. or earher).
78. Pie-dish with everted grooved lip (two examples); cf. Angmering
(Sussex A.C., 86, 21), Fig. 10, 39, late I A.D.
79. Pohshed grey pie dish with internal bead, a Belgic derivative,
cf. Leicester, Fig. 41, 23 (A.D. 125-30) but in different ware.
68 >69 r7 0 S
7 i 7 7\ A 72
\
\
73 7 4 I
/
75 *> 76 :> 77
78 7 79
? BO \
E=^ \ 82
mwmmmmm®m%% mM M * 81
*f 85 | V ^ 841 7
FIG. 8. Roman pottery from K 3 ( | )
80. Jar in Belgic porridgy fabric which survives at Canterbury
into Flavian times.
81. Poppy-head beaker in fine grey paste with thin white wash
over outside and down inside rim; pohshed to lip. An early style
of rim ; cf. Leicester, Fig. 26, 33 (Trajan, Hadrian), 42, 1 (A.D. 125-30);
Verulamium, Fig. 31, 39 ; Richborough IV, 418 (A.D. 90-125).
117
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
82. Pie dish or lid with light trelhs pattern, ware as 68, 73 ;
vide 69 ; cf. very simUar vessel from Pit R I at 47 Burgate Street,
Arch. Cant., LXIII, Fig. 11, 28 (Flavian).
83. Jar with reeded everted rim, coarse light grey ware. This type
has a Claudian ancestry, Richborough I, 11 : a Hadrianic parallel exists
at Verulamium (Arch., 90, Fig. 15, 17); cf. Leicester, Fig. 27, 2 (late
first century and down to A.D. 160) ; also 42, 1 (A.D. 125-30) if ours
is a bowl rather than a jar.
84. Small jar or cooking pot; cf. Leicester, Fig. 26, 3 (A.D. 125-30),
rare by middle of II A.D. ; Richborough III, 320, a jar of larger size,
A.D. 90-140.
The majority of the pottery is therefore to be dated to the reign
of Hadrian or earher, but 73 and perhaps 69, the latest pieces of the
group, may bring the date down to c. A.D. 140/50.
THE ROMAN DRAIN : CELLAR H TRENCH I, AND SECTION K 2
SECTION H 1 (Figs. 1 and 9)
West of Rose Lane trenches were cut in cellar H, which had been
part of the Rose Hotel. The north part of this cellar had been deepened
w
m
PAR
EART
1
PIT M9 SSs PAuB I ROMAN
LICIT. \ P I T AM LI
t-t.-i S ' . ' ^ l i RRTH
±fr\-t XIII CENT TIP £*\6
BLACK SHELLY OCCUPATION PO HOL
6
FLOOF
mini ASH
RN LOAM
DARK GREY EARTH
\
.;.. I YELLOW LOAM
I ' I
WITH MORTAR
34 65 0D
* BRICK. 2, TILE KOSE LANE SECTION K 2
BUILD-UP
®.«%
SCALE, FEET
BSBKSU
4- a LOAM
FIG. 10. Section from surface, east of Rose Lane
SECTION K 2 (Fig. 10 and Plate II, 2)
Here again the early ditch was picked up, but the depth of the
section prevented fuU excavation. (This ditch does not appear in
cellar L). Its top here had been consolidated with a layer of buhders'
debris, over which was one of dark earth corresponding to layer 4 in H 1.
The drain itself was built in a trench cut into layers 5 and 4 ; layer 5
1 The Roman Pit R 3 contained a British Tin coin, Allen class 2, which
unfortunately dissolved in cleaning.
8 Kindly identified by Dr. K. C. Dunham as a greyish-white siliceous glauconitic
limestone, with a few quartz grains and glauconite pellets up to 0 • 1 mm. diameter
in a matrix of calcite carrying abundant chaloedonic silica, in places showing
perfect spherulitic structures. Large .shell-fragments, partly silicified, are present.
Cf. Nos. 5, 6, Arch. Cant., LXI, pp. 42, 43.
119
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
contained no closely datable objects ; layer 4 was dated c. A.D. 100-120.
The structure was better preserved here and the seating of a tUe
voussoir could be seen in the east face. On the floor lay a coin of
Constans (3AE, A.D. 337-342). The fall was towards the west. In
K 2 the floor was at 34-65 O.D.; two consecutive levels in H read
34-53 and 34-47 going west; the third, however, taken at the end of
the surviving portion, read 35-12, but this rise is probably due to later
distortion. At any rate a fall to the west is in accordance with the
natural faU of the vaUey-floor towards the Stour.
The drain was robbed in Saxon times ; layer 6 contained a sherd
(112) of coarse Saxon pottery of about the eighth century, and the
dark grey compact fine soU of layer 7 also appeared to be of this date.
It contained very little apart from a coin of Constantine1 and a few
scraps of Roman pottery, but one sherd (113) is probably from a
seventh or eighth century vessel.
Through this layer were cut two pits, Pit S I containing nothing
but a few late Roman scraps, and Pit S 2 (not shown on section) which
contained two Saxon sherds simUar to 112 and probably eighth century.
Next came a late eleventh century occupation consisting of a yellow
loam floor associated with post-holes, and burnt red round a central
hearth. Above this were layers of thirteenth century buUd up.
THE FINDS, SECTION H 1 (Fig. 11)
Layer 1
85. Butt-beaker in smoothed soft grey ware, identical with the
best native Belgic fabric in cellar L.
Layer 2
86. Butt-beaker with neck cordon, as 85.
87. Gallo Belgic terra nigra platter in the best whitish fabric with
slaty grey surface, silvery outside below collar.
Also, unfigured, ribbed handle of white pipe-clay Gallo-Belgic jug
(Camulodunum 161) and a rough flint cleaver.
Layer 3
88. Narrow necked butt-beaker : leathery grey ware.
89. Soft grey-ware Belgic platter-base with almost rudimentary
foot-ring, imitating Gallo-Belgic form.
90. Terra nigra platter in same fabric as 87.
91. Roughly-made bowl in grey ware with leathery surface ; the
ware is hardly yet Roman, but this form with constricted neck seems
1 A follis (Prinoipi Juventutis type).
120
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
to be post-Conquest. The lower part inside and out has a black coating
which might be soot but looks like a bituminous shp.
92. Pedestal base of hard grey ware bearing same black coating
on both surfaces of pedestal; this links it with 91, though the ware
is not quite identical.
93. Romanized bowl in simUar native fabric ; shoulder rUled as 94
which is in a harder dark grey more Roman ware.
;
l
96
97
T 98
D
% 100
1 } 10]
EIG. 11. Belgic and Roman pottery, Section H 1 (£)
95. Rounded bead-rim jar in native smoothed buff-grey ware.
Also, unfigured, rim and corrugated shoulder of large jar as 10-12 ;
and a smaU fragment of Samian, unidentifiable.
Layers below drain
96. Bowl with reeded flange and girth groove ; brick coloured
ware with small granules, somewhat fire-warped : possibly a product of
the St. Stephen's kilns ; Pit R 3.
97. Heavy grey ware bowl: layer 7.
121
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
98. Dark grey pie-dish : layer 10.
99. Dirty whitish mortarium with yeUow surface : ibid.
100. Light grey pie-dish : Pit R 3.
101. Poppy-head beaker, grey ware : layer 10.
The significant type is undoubtedly the pie-dish. The various levels
earher than the drain, deficient as they were in datable pottery,
produced in aU ten examples. This type of dish (Leicester, type A) is
most popular in the reigns of Hadrian and Pius. The reeded rim jar 96
is of a type common from late I to mid I I A.D., and 101 is of the early
type c. A.D. 80-120 ; 82, also, is paralleled among mortars of the first
half of I I A.D., cf. Arch. Cant., LXI, p. 24, Fig. 9, 13 (Butchery Lane).
A terminal date, therefore, for these layers about A.D. 150/60 seems
likely, emphasized by the predominance of pie-dishes ; and this is
borne out by the few Samian sherds found. Layer 4 produced a scrap
of form 27 (c. A.D. 60-75) and form 29 (c. A.D.70-80) : the Roman pit,
a scrap of form 33 ; layer 7, a form 38 as Oswald and Pryce, LXXII, 2
(c. A.D. 115-25) and layer 10 a piece of form 31 described by Dr. Oswald
as ? Antonine.
The medieval pottery from pits M 8 and M 9 is discussed on p. 128.
THE FINDS, SECTION K 2 (Figs. 12, 13)
Layer 2, c. A.D. 60-80
102. Flagon, red granulated paste, dirty buff surface ; flanged lip
not easy to parallel : for shape cf. Richborough I, 39 (? mid. I A.D.) and
ibid. I l l , 200 (A.D. 70-100) ; see 75 above.
103. Cordoned jar in porridgy grey clay ; laiife-smoothed surface ;
a first century type derived at no great remove from Belgic. Also
present, similar rim in hard fine grey paste with brownish-grey smoothed
surface.
104. Jar in reddish paste, granulated grey surface ; late first
century type, Richborough III, 267 (A.D. 70-100), May, Colchester 238
(A.D. 50-100).
Layer 3, A.D. 80-100
This contained three fragments of Samian form 18, one of them
identifiable as ? Flavian, as well as 4 lids, and one chamfered dish base
with traces of gold mica dust ; also one graffito, see p. 142, No. 13.
105. Dark polished cordoned jar, mid first century ware.
106. Jar in coarse grey ware. Cf. Richborough III, 263 (A.D. 70-
100).
107. Everted rim, coarse grey ware; a late lst-early 2nd century
type not easily paralleled, but cf. Richborough I, 28 (late I A.D.),
Leicester, Fig. 42, 38 (A.D. 125-30).
122
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
103 104-
T
109 i
)
111
106
\07
108
T 10
7
T 119
W 7 115
SZ7 116 T 18
^ ;
120
Fio. 12. Roman, Saxon and medieval pottery from Section K 2 (£)
123
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
Layer 4, A.D. 100-120
This contained one orange sherd with gold mica dust, one grey
reeded handle, and the foUowing Samian : form 18 and form 27, both
not closely datable, and a form 30 perhaps Trajanic (A.D. 110-20).
108. Bowl of granulated grey ware with rim grooved for hd ;
cf. Richborough I, 22 ; III, 215 (A.D. 50-75), but a simUar form is found
at Verulam in the first half of I I A.D., Verulamium, Fig. 30, 31.
109. SimUar rim, coarse grey ware ; cf. Richborough IV, 405
(A.D. 75-100); but this type can go down to A.D. 120 (Leicester, p. 145,
Nos. 7, 8).
122
T 124 J
127
FIG. 13. Medieval pottery, section K 2, layer 9 (J)
110. Thin walled bowl, probably carinated ; coarse granulated
grey ware ; a late first-early second century type, cf. Richborough I,
22 ; III, 216 (A.D. 50-75); also Verulamium, Arch., 90, 110, No. 9
(A.D. 55-65).
111. Bowl in hard pohshed grey ware with wide grooved cordon ;
cf. Richborough II, 144 ; III, 271, 273 (A.D. 80-120).
Layer 5 contained no datable finds.
Layer 6. Saxon, Eighth or Ninth Century
112. Coarse hand-made rim of dark grey granulated paste roughly
burnished below neck. Saxon, eighth or ninth century. It approximates
in paste to the late ninth century pottery from Canterbury
Lane, but the rounded rim and burnished surface have an earlier
appearance. It is not yet certain when the hard granulated paste of
medieval fabric appeared in Canterbury. It seems Hkely that in
VII A.D. they were stUl using straw-fUled ware.
124
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
Layer 7. Saxon
113. CoUar-rim of soft fine grey ware apparently wheel made.
This has been restored after a sixth century vessel from Gresham
Street1 but Mr. G. C. Dunning tells me its paste resembles the eighth
century pitcher from Richborough (Richborough, III, 362).
Pit S 2. Saxon
114-115. Two rough coarse Saxon pots, 114 with a httle sheU grit,
115 in sandy granulated ware, surface shghtly burnished. ? VIIVIII
A.D.
Layer 8. XI A.D.2
116. Small crucible, fine grey ware slightly fused ; on floor.
117. Cooking pot with sparse shell-grit; flattened everted lip ;
on floor.
118-120. Cooking pots, coarse sandy grey to black ware.
121. Bowl.
Nos. 117-121 are all of the simplified flaring type of profile which
is certainly pre-thirteenth century. A certain amount of flattening or
bevelling of the rim is perceptible, and evidence from Pits M 14, M 8
and M 9 points to this being an introduction of late XI A.D., the vessels
of the middle of XI A.D. being plainly beaded. A late twelfth-early
thirteenth century group from Butchery Lane may be contrasted (Arch.
Cant., LXI, p. 37, Fig. 17).
Layer 9. XIII A.D.
122-123. Coarse grey-brown jars, carefully knife-trimmed inside
and out; short everted rims.
124. Flagon rim, with traces of green-brown glaze below carination.
125. Bowl or large lamp, crudely made grey ware.
126. Cooking pot, cf. 118 ; twelfth century survival.
127. Club-headed bowl, red ware.
128. Flat-rimmed bowl, red ware.
124,127-128 are recognizable thirteenth century vessels, 127 amongst
the early thirteenth century group (Butchery Lane, I.e.), 124 and
128 later in the century (ibid., Fig. 18). Also of late XIII A.D. were
four sherds with scratched decoration below greenish-brown glaze, and
one sherd of cream-coloured shghtly granulated ware, with a good
1 Wheeler, London and the Saxons, 166, Fig. 32, 1.
2 This layer contained a fragmentary silver coin which Mr. R. H. Dolley says
cannot be earlier than Edward the Elder nor later than Aethehed I I : he is
reasonably sure that it can be placed between A.D. 916 and 970. This coin must
be a survival : the pottery cannot be put back a century. Vide also Fig. 23. 6,
a bone tool with Saxon affinities, from this layer.
125
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
thick yeUow glaze over a shght horizontal ribbing, the ribs being
7-8 mm. apart. This is an Enghsh but non-local vessel. There was
also a piece of Niedermendig lava quern.
CELLAR K. TKENOH 1
Pit M 3, a straight, vertical-sided cut fuU of animal bones contained
only three sherds, of which one might be Saxon.
Pit M 2 contained two medieval sherds, and Pit M 4 a twelfth
century cooking pot.
Around these pits was about 16 in. of dirty loam becoming cleaner
towards the base ; natural soil was 29 in. below the cellar floor.
CELLAR J
Two trenches were cut parallel with Rose Lane; they produced
little. Natural soil was about 30 in. below the cellar floor ; above this
was about 8 in. of dirty loam with little pottery, and above this a thin
layer of dark later Roman earth.1 Around pit M 5 this contained
lumps of disintegrated opus signinum. Pit R 4 was cut through the
dirty loam ; around it the surface of the loam was very hard and
beaten, yet clean. This could not be explained at the time of excavation,
but later knowledge suggests that one of the east-west streets of
the Roman city crosses the south end of this ceUar (removed by the
ceUar excavation) and this may have caused compression of the loam ;
yet there was no trace of metal immediately above, nor was there enough
occupation material for it to have been a hut floor.
THE MEDIEVAL FINDS, CELLARS H AND I
TRENCH H 4 (Fig. 1)
Along the west and south sides of cellar H ran a very deep medieval
footing of loose gravel flints and mortar-dust. The area was very
deeply cut by intersecting medieval pits ; most were earlier than the
foundation but one pit, which was later, contained spUls of mortar
from the footings. At one point these had been dug down 9 ft. from
the ceUar floor in an endeavour to reach natural soU through the pits.
It seems that the foundation was for the medieval predecessor of the
ceUar, and that the modern cellar had been enlarged by cutting back the
thick medieval wall.
The pottery from the pits through which the foundation has been
cut is of late XII A.D. Rims of the flattened or beveUed type (cf. Pits
M 8, M 9, Nos. 14-16, 19-22 below) are common, and there is one
1 Containing three coins, (a) 1 Barbarous Fel. Temp. Reparatio, ? diademed
head ; (6) ? Radiate crown of c. A.D, 270 ; (o) fragmentary, third or fourth century.
126
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
example of the clubbed type (Butchery Lane, Arch. Cant., LXI, Fig. 17,
9, there dated c. A.D. 1200 ; cf. No. 127 above).
This type does not appear in any of the twelfth century groups
pubhshed below, and this fact reinforces the Butchery Lane evidence.
The foundation, therefore, was not constructed untU the end of XII A.D.
Overlying the pits was a gravelly layer containing late thirteenth
century pottery ; this was probably the medieval cellar floor.
Y SOUTH - WEST NORTH
CONCRETE FLOOR OF CELLAR.
I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I
t » / i ACy
7/ ?.
DIRTY t . < l
MORTAR PIT ^ \ \ YELLOW LOAM
I
DISINTEGRATED MORTAR
a-SteL£u?c? o
^
DIRTY PIT LOAM
R 7
DARK BROWN
OAM SECTION 1,1
SCALE : FEET
?
FIG. 14. Section Cellar I
CELLAR I (Figs. 1 and 14)
A trench cut in cellar I produced an interestmg sequence of medieval
pits at its north end. M 12 contained a plain stiff black filling with a
little late Saxon pottery and two pieces of Niedermendig lava quern.
It cut M i l and was cut by M 13 which was full of loose soft brown
vegetable matter suggestive of a cess-pit. M 14 contained a soft black
sticky filling, with very large quantities of animal bones1; the pottery
dated from the middle of XI A.D. Cutting M 14 was M 15 with much
stiffer black filling, many oysters and flints, and a large series of
restorable pots of late XIII A.D. (Figs. 18-22) together with an ampulla-
1 Goat horn, cut; sheep or goat, jaw; sheep, skull; calf; ox, tibia and
mandibles ; horse, pony size, tibia and fore cannon bone.
127
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
mould portraying St. Thomas of Canterbury (PI. I l l , 3) and a roof
slate (Fig. 24, 9).
South of this series of pits was a Roman Pit R 7 containing two
sherds, sealed by a layer of chalk lumps and a mass of disintegrated
yeUow mortar recalling the footing on Trench H 4. Above this was a
yeUow loam floor sealed by black medieval pit material. There is no
real clue to the date or purpose of this mortar. It is pre-Norman,
for Pit M 14 cut it on the east face of the trench ; but when the west
part of this pit feU away after heavy rain, it was seen that the mortar
did not continue northwards ; natural loam lay 28 in. below the
cellar floor, and was capped by dirty brown loam (Fig. 14). The
original north edge of the mortar thus lies where shown in the Section,
and its north termination has been disturbed by the deepening of
the medieval black soU. All that can be said is that it is later than
Pit R 7 and the dirty loam over natural soU (neither of which are closely
dated) and earlier than Pit M 14 : if it is connected with the buUding
of the medieval ceUar, this ceUar is a century older than the one
investigated in H 4.
The Medieval Pottery
The Rose Hotel site covered a valuable series of medieval pits, the
pottery groups from which are Ulustrated below. To some extent,
in the absence of coins, the dating is still subjective ; but as associations
are increasingly noted and more homogeneous groups are published
from the city, this element of uncertainty will decrease. The grounds
of dating are discussed below : they are in part stratigraphical and in
part typological. As far as typology is concerned, it may be said that
the late llth-early 13th century pottery of Canterbury is very homogeneous
in ware and shape, and distinction is rarely possible except
in a group. Overlaps occur, so that it is not yet possible to place
individual pieces with certainty ; but a group from a pit or layer does
seem on analysis to possess a subtle distinction, unapparent though
this may be at first inspection.
GROUP I. PIT M 12 (Fig. 15, Nos. 1-5)
In this group the ware is the usual coarsely granulated dark grey or
buff ware. Nos. 2, 3, 5 have been wheel turned ; 1 and 4 lack obvious
traces of this. Except 2, they all bear traces of vertical knife-tooling.
The neck of 3 has been slashed as the knife has been drawn up ; the
neck of 5 has been facetted, apparently by downward strokes of a
knife ; and 1, 3, 5 all bear shght facetting on the body. Nos. 3 and 5
appear to have horizontal knife-tooling inside the shoulder. The
vertical smoothing, indicated by the dragging of sandy particles on
128
PLATE 111
1. Thirteenth century jugs from Rouen. Museum of Antiquities. Rouen
fnrhes
< • '2 *
i. Sherd of imported
French pottery, Pit M 16
(p. 138)
3. Ampulla-mould from Cellar I, Pit M IS (p. 13(1)
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
the surface, is not found on any of the other groups and is a late Saxon
characteristic at Canterbury.1 This conclusion is borne out by the
simple form of the rims ; 2 is the only rim of more developed character,
which if isolated might be thought to be later. A date around A.D. 1000
would seem likely for this group.
i
t >•'
* ( ? ?-
FIG. 15. Medieval pottery, Group I, from Pit M 12. ? Early XI A.D. (J)
GROUT? II. PIT M 14 (Fig. 16)
6. Cooking pot of dirty brownish granulated ware ; simple everted
rim from shght shoulder ; roughly beaded lip : knife-smoothed (rather
than knife-trimmed) round base.
7. SimUar to 6 ; greyish-brown granulated ware.
8. SimUar ware, more carefully modelled rim with flat top and
thinner walls though of same diameter.
9. Reddish granulated ware; simple beaded lip flattened and
sharply angular internally.
10. Grey granulated ware; large cooking pot; J-round rim
section.
11. Large cooking pot; hard brownish grey ware; roughly
beaded lip, and base knife-smoothed.
12. Reddish-grey granulated ware ; simple rim concave internally
perhaps for lid.
13. Reddish-brown ware ; simple beaded lip, bevelled internally.
Also in the pit was a small sherd of hard white granulated paste
c. 3 mm. thick decorated with a whorl of brownish red paint. Mr.
G. C. Dunning tells me this is certainly imported and may be late
Rhenish, from Pingsdorf or Dutch Limburg or possibly from Normandy.
This group is useful both because it is stratigraphically senior to
that in Pit M 15, and also because of the uniformity of its contents.
1 Eor a slightly different teohnique see the Norman " scratch-marked"
Pottery discussed in Arch. Journ., CVII, 34.
129
12
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
The knife-smoothing round the base does not amount to actual
trimming noticed in late Saxon wares of East Anglia and the Oxford
region1 but it is likely to belong to the same tradition. The group
noticeably does not contain any of the thickened rim sections of the
late 12th-early 13th century Butchery Lane group,2 still less any of
)
7
M
y 10
Y r
FIG. 16. Medieval pottery, group II, from Pit M 14. ? second half of XI A.D. (J)
the flattened hammer-head type common hi the late 13th century
(ibid., Fig. 18, and Nos. 25-36 below). On the other hand, although
the lips are in some cases irregularly moulded, they do have an incipient
bead and the pottery is on the whole competent and cleanly buUt up,
1 See Oxoniensia, V, 42-6 ; VII, 73, and the references given there ; also
Leicester, Fig. 59.
a Arch. Cant., LXI, p. 37, Fig. 17. For the type see Fig. 13, 127, above.
130
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
and not simUar to the black rather crudely-made wares of Alfred's
time found in Canterbury Lane, nor yet to Group I here published from
Pit M 12 and assigned to the beginning of XI A.D. We may notice,
too, that the internal bevel (13) is rare and simple : clearly it is only
just beginning. The group therefore must be placed earlier than
Group III from Pits M 8 and M 9, where the internal bevel is more
pronounced, leading to a definite flattening on top ; in these pits this
is the leading type, and it is fairly clear that the typological sequence
is from Group I I to Group III rather than the reverse, because of the
greater sophistication of this flattening, which leads on to the angular
rims of Group IV.
Group II, then, is typologically earlier than Group III, and pottery
of both groups was found beneath the Castle Keep in 1953. The date
of the Keep is doubtful and cannot be discussed at length here. It
may go back to WUliam I, as Toy1 believes ; it was certainly in existence
by 1158, when the Pipe Rolls begin, for under the years 1172-4 they
record expenditure on the Keep, insufficient, however, for building
it de novo. It is reasonable to believe that the Keep dates at least
from the first quarter of XII A.D. Pottery of Group III was found
beneath it and also in association with its earliest floor ; the group
therefore dates at least from c. 1100-1150. In 1954 pottery was found
stratified beneath the buUding level of the undercroft of Lanfranc's
Dormitory in the Precincts ; this suggested that the transition from
Group II to I I I was in fact occurring c. 1070-5. Group I I is earlier, as
both typology and the Castle stratification suggest. We may provisionally
date it to the middle of XI A.D. (C. 1030-70).
GROUP III. PITS M 8 AND M 9
The pottery from these pits is contemporary and simUar, and
together gives a conspectus of the pottery of the first half of XII A.D.
(see above). Sherds of this type were found in 1953 to be contemporary
with the erection of the Castle Keep. In Pit M 14 the rims were simple
straight everted types rising from unobtrusive shoulders ; the lip was
shghtly beaded and rounded; the flattened or bevelled type was
only beginning to appear. In Group III, however, the simple rounded
beaded type survives as a rarity (17), and the internally bevelled (15,
19, 21, 22, 23) or flattened (14, 16, 20) type has become the rule. This
is reaUy only an advance in finish : the basic form is stUl the straight
everted rim type, though the shoulders are now perceptibly more
rounded; the curved clubbed form of lip dated at Butchery Lane,
c. A.D. 1200 is stiU absent. The group, therefore, may be provisionally
placed in the decades A.D. 1100-1150.
1 S. Toy, The Castles of Great Britain, 1953, p. 64.
131
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
The ware of all pots is a very coarse granulated plain buff, reddish,
or grey, and is irregularly modelled (though wheel made), so that the
thickness varies round the perimeter at the same level. Knife-smoothing
round the lower part is still present.1
T 14
7
Y YY 18
T 22
LO
\ 23 \ 24
FIG. 17. Medieval pottery, Group III, from Pits M 8 and M 9. ? First half of
XII A.D. (£)
GROUP IV. PIT M 15. (SECOND HALE OE THIRTEENTH CENTURY)
This pit contained the stone ampulla-mould of St. Thomas (PI.
I l l 3), a roofing slate (Fig. 24, 9), and some sherds of a jug imported
from Normandy as well as a large group of local wares (Figs. 18-22).
25-36. Cooking pots mainly in coarse buff or reddish granulated
ware, often soot-encrusted outside and burnt grey. 25 is in black very
shelly ware with rim rather warped. 28 is of reddish-brown fine paste
with medium shell-grit, mainly dissolved out on inside. Most of the
rest bear a little fine or medium shell grit round the shoulder, but this
rarely appears on the fracture or inside, as if it were dusted over the
finished pot. Some have low vertical ribs on the body : the rims are
carefully moulded and often bear small spaced stabs on top.
37-38. Crudely made conical cresset lamps, 37 with a small
pinched spout.
39. Very large dish, 21 • 8 in. in diameter with heavy hammer-head
rim bearing two rings of stabs ; red granulated ware with scattered
shell-grit on surface, but none in the breaks.
40. Smaller simUar dish with brownish-green glaze-patches within.
1 Pit M 9 also contained a second century mortar rim with chevron stamp
(Fig. 24, 10).
132
Fro. 18. Medieval pottery, group IV, from pit M 15, second half of XIII A.D. (£)
133
58 n
FIG. 19. Medieval pottery, group IV, from pit M 15, second half of XIII A.D. (J)
134
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
J «Mll4
.ffll.l «
FIG. 20. Medieval pottery, group IV, from pit M 15, second half of XIII A.D. (•})
135
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
41. Top part of fine pitcher, reddish granulated ware, grey in
section, brownish-green glaze up to carination of neck ; wide deeply
stabbed handle bordered each side by a moulded rib deeply incised to
resemble cabling, glazed ; a zone of oblique incisions round neck and
on shoulder.
•*-*?!?
48 49
V
/
V.
50
u
i
II
FIG. 21. Medieval pottery, group IV, from pit M 15, second half of XIII A.D. (£)
42. Pitcher in granulated dirty brown ware, grey in section ; body
rUled by parallel grooves and covered with greenish-brown glaze up to
neck and patchily to lip ; stabbed strap handle.
43. Simple squat pitcher unglazed except for small patch on
shoulder ; sandy brown ware ; soot-stained round base, so has been
used for cooking.
136
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
44. Pitcher in fine bright orange sandy ware decorated down to
base of ribs with white shp covered by a patchy green glaze caused by
inclusion of copper filings in glaze ; over the white slip but under the
glaze are vertical ribs of brown barbotine. A non-local English
product, possibly from the London region.
45. Buff sandy pitcher with traces of yellowish-green glaze near
shoulder ; base pierced after firing by seven smaU holes.
46. Part of shoulder of pitcher in fine sandy red ware, perhaps
non-local; the surface is worked up into vertical ridges, covered with
a glossy bottle-green glaze. Also present another simUarly but more
•e=» 51
s fr \
(/ i/ %
V/
•I >s ?
as«»
rtitKtiiTif--
^Cj=^«3SSii
FIG. 22. Medieval pitcher, group IV, from pit M 15, second half of XIII A.D. (\)
crudely ridged shoulder, patchUy covered in greenish-brown glaze over
local ware as 42 ; this is imitating the non-local 46.
47. Central part of pitcher, ware as 41 ; two horizontal grooves
on shoulder which is sparsely splashed with greenish-brown glaze :
below the bulge the surface has been finished with a vertical movement
which has left striations.
48. Pitcher in red sandy only slightly granulated ware with grey
core ; thin and rather friable with a disproportionately heavy plain
handle fixed at the top by two finger impressions and facetted with a
knife : the body decorated with applied ribs of reddish clay running
slightly obliquely except behind handle where the small groove and
cordon demarcating the neck still shows : covered with good yellowish
to bright green glaze mottled with copper-filings, except patchily on
137
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
handle and round rim and base. An ambitious yet unskilful local
product.
49. Ware and patchy glaze as 41 ; spout very slightly pinched out.
50. Large pitcher in thin reddish-brown granulated ware with
buff-grey core, crudely decorated with zones of obhque comb-incisions
separated by grooves ; the shoulder bears a decayed patchy greenishbrown
glaze.
51. Orange-brown fine sandy paste : thin patchy glaze showing
orange-red on upper part of body : fine wheel-turned tilling over upper
part, but hardly showing where covered by glaze.
IMPORTED FRENCH POTTERY FROM P IT M 15 (PI. I l l 2, and Fig. 24, 11)
Mr. G. C. Dunning, F.S.A., has kindly contributed the following
note :
The fragment (PI. I l l 2) is of fine whitish ware, light buff inside and
showing fine wheel marks ; the ware is very hard and thin and skilfully
turned, and the thickness is uniformly only 2-5 mm. The outside has
a dark brownish-red shp, on which are seven smaU pellets of white clay
in no obvious arrangement. On the right edge of the sherd is a white
apphed strip with deeply impressed square-cut rouletting. The sherd
has an overaU thin lustrous pale yellow glaze. A second smaller sherd
from the same vessel (not illustrated) also has red slip and a white
strip, now mostly flaked away. A third sherd (Fig. 24, 11) bears a
neck cordon as PI. I l l 1, b and has a matt scar where a rib has flaked
away.
The fineness and lightness of the fabric and the style of decoration
are characteristic of a series of highly decorated jugs found at Rouen,
and preserved in the Museum of Antiquities at Rouen. Two Rouen
jugs are illustrated in PI. I l l 1 chosen to show the ranges in types and
decoration. The jugs may be either tall with a retracted base or
squat and globular, and both shapes have a cylindrical neck with
grooved surface, sometimes emphasized as broad corrugations.
The decoration on the body is usually carried out in applied strips
and pellets, often forming a series of medalhons or panels, as on the
two jugs Ulustrated. The inside of the motifs is usually covered with
dark red slip, which serves to emphasize the major elements of the
pattern and contrasts with the white strips and pellets forming the
subsidiary elements of the decoration. Sometimes, as on the larger
jug Ulustrated, the strips are rouletted by diamond-shaped or square
notches made by a roller-stamp, as on the Canterbury sherd.
Pottery imported from Normandy, and almost certainly originating
at Rouen, has been found at two other sites on the S.E. coast of England.
At Pevensey Castle several green glazed sherds with narrow applied
strips or ribs running vertically, exactly matched on a small jug at
138
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
Rouen, were found in 1936 sealed beneath a layer of clay in the outer
bailey of the Castle.1 The clay is that removed for the foundations of
the curtain walls and towers enclosing the courtyard of the Castle and
the surrounding moat, which belong to the middle of the thirteenth
century and were buUt by Peter of Savoy, who became Lord of
Pevensey in 1246.
The other site is Stonar, the medieval town and port near Sandwich,
where for many years Mr. W. P. D. Stebbing, F.S.A., has watched the
commercial digging, rescuing a considerable amount of pottery, and
other finds, and also conducted excavations.2 The foreign trading
relations of Stonar are already demonstrated in the twelfth century
by sherds of red-painted pottery imported from Normandy.3 In the
thirteenth century there is a much greater quantity of imported pottery,
showing the increasing prosperity of the place. The majority of the
sherds are of the polychrome type from W. France,4 together with green
glazed jugs of simUar origin, but also including a few sherds with dark
red slip and small pellets, exactly comparable with the Canterbury
sherd.
The interest of the imported pottery from these three sites in
S.E. England is therefore in showing the trade connection with
Normandy, established in the Norman period, continuing into the
middle and second half of the thirteenth century. At that time the
intensive wine trade with Gascony was bringing along a much greater
quantity of pottery from Aquitaine,5 which reached ports mainly on
the W. andS. coasts of Britain.
AMPULLA-MATRIX FROM PIT M 15 (PI. I l l 3)
The matrix comprises half a mould for the manufacture of lead or
pewter ampullae. These small flasks were sold to pilgrims to take away
holy water, oil, or water from Becket's well, as a souvenir of their
pilgrimage.8 The neck is missing, but two dowel-holes can be seen,
and the crudely incised figure of St. Thomas Becket in mitre, chasuble,
cope and pallium, holding crozier and in act of blessing. Dr. K. C.
Dunham kindly reports that the rock of which the matrix is composed
1 Ministry of Works Guide to Pevensey Castle (1938), p. 7. 2 Arch. Cant., LIII, p. 62 ; LIV, p. 41 ; and LV, p. 37.
3 Cf. the red-painted pitcher found at Dover, Antiq. Journ., XXV, 153. 1 Arch. Oant., LIV, p. 56.
6 For further discussion of the trade connections with France in the thirteenth
century, see " Dating Medieval Pottery," Part XV, Archceological News Letter,
August, 1949.
0 See Arch., LXXIX, 33, London Museum Mediaeval Catalogue 261, and
references there given ; for other moulds see British Museum Guide to Mediaeval
Antiquities, 1924, 24. It is noteworthy that ours is of considerably cruder
workmanship than the majority illustrated.
139
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
is a clay ironstone.1 He suggests that it was made from a clay ironstone
nodule, and that its most probable source would be Wealden ironstone.
The rock occurs as nodules in the Wadhurst Clay and Ashdown Sand
of the Kent and Sussex Weald. It is interestmg to note that G. S.
Sweeting2 states that the ironstone was being quarried during the
Middle Ages, and mentions for example that important works were
opened up at Tudeley near Tonbridge during the reign of Edward III.
The present example, however, must be at least half a century older
than this.
THE SMALL FINDS (Figs. 23, 24)
1. Bronze brooch, Belgic, cellar L, ditch layer 2. Mr. M. R.
Hull, F.S.A., has kindly examined this brooch and writes that it is of
the Aucissa group but thinner and narrower than the true Aucissa;
the bow seems to have run into the foot directly, not through a moulding.
The type is very rare; one was found at Camulodunum in a
deposit dated to A.D. 43 (op. cit. no. 133) and Schulz shows another from
Stossen, Kreis Weissenfels, which has the same three frond-like ornaments
on the head (Germania, X, 112 abb. 3). With this brooch was
found part of the pin and spring of a very large brooch of Camulodunum
type 111 or Swarling, PI. XIII, 9.
2. Very decayed bronze fitting from H I layer 3. It is thus of
Claudian date. It appears to be a hinge, now bent double, but
illustrated in a restored form in the left hand drawing ; each plate is
double, the top bearing two rivets and the lower one. This closely
resembles the hinges from the back of the legionary cuirass (Camulodunum,
pp. 337-8, PL CH, 15 ; Richborough, I I I , PI. XII, 39, g-j). If so,
this is the first piece of military equipment identified in the excavations,
and it indicates that the ditch was filled in during the earliest phase of
the occupation.
3. Samian potter's stamp BIGA[-FEC from CeUar L, layer 4
(see p. 115).
4. Small solid bronze figure crudely modeUed and with divided
base to receive a tang or flange ; from Pit M 1, eighteenth century or
earher.
5. Small fluted metal button from the gravel floor of medieval
cellar, trench H 4 ; thirteenth century.
1 Consisting of a mixture of ohalybite in rhombs averaging 0-005 mm., and
lhnonite. Angular grains of quartz of about 0-02 mm. average size and tiny
flakes of detrital mica are scattered through the rock. Fossil shell fragments,
preserved in calcite, are present, and there are a few small grains of the phosphate
collophanite, and a few streaks of pyrite.
2 " Wealden Iron Ore and the History of its industry," Proc. Geological Assoc,
LV, 1944, 1-20 ; reference from Dr. Dunham.
140
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
6. Very highly polished bone weaving tool pointed at both ends,
but seemingly recut at one. Perhaps a thread-picker, as suggested
for the simUar Saxon object at Harston (G. C. Dunning, Trans. Leics.
Arch. Soc, XXVIII, 49-50). Section K 2, layer 8.
SE=> V\ ^Yll -» mB. @ \m •*-.
c 2
2
4-
3 5
6
• r
mimiUWHUi/
ifihi&tout,^
8
FIG. 23. The small finds (£).
7. Bronze signet ring with incised W surmounted by coronet.
K 2, layer 10, a layer dated by half-pennies of WUliam and Mary and
George II.
8. Roman blue glass melon bead, a stray in the thirteenth century
layer 9 in section K 2. This is a first century type, cf. Leicester,
Fig. 93, 8.
141
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
9. Roof-slate from Pit M 15 ; late thirteenth century. It has
been compared with a number of Scottish, Enghsh and Welsh slates
at the Geological Survey, but cannot be assigned to a particular locality
of origin, nor has Mr. J. Setchell been able to identify it.
10. Pale yellow mortarium with maker's mark ; late first century
type and probably a local potter. Pit M 9.
11. Neck sherd of imported Normandy ware, Pit M 15; see p. 138.
12. Graffito on Samian form 18/31 ; from medieval pit in
trench H 4.
13. Graffito scratched on tile before firing : K 2, layer 3. Mr.
R. P. Wright, F.S.A., reads the upper line as ]GE[ and the lower line
as ]AVA[ a poor V between two A's. (J.R.S., XXXVII, 1947, 182,
no. 16.)
14. Samian form 36, half the vessel present; diameter c. 186 mm.;
groove inside below flange. Cf. Oswald & Pryce, PI. LIII, 10 (Trajan-
Hadrian). Trench K 3, layer A, p. 116 above.
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL ABBREVIATIONS
The following are additional to those already cited in previous
reports in this series.
Oxoniensia Journal of the Oxford Architectural and Historical
Society.
Norfolk Arch. Norfolk Archseology, journal of the Norfolk and
Norwich Archseological Society.
Arch. Journ. The Archseological Journal, of the Royal Archseological
Institute of Great Britain and Ireland.
Leicester K. M. Kenyon, The Jewry Wall, Report of the
Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries,
No. XV.
May, Colchester T.May, Catalogue of Roman Pottery in the Colchester
and Essex Museum.
Sussex A.C. Sussex Archseological Collections, journal of the
Sussex Archseological Society.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The writer records his grateful thanks to all who helped with the
work. To Major F. W. Tomlinson, F.S.A., the first Hon. Secretary of
the Excavation Committee, especial gratitude is due for all he did in
arrangement of preliminaries, smoothing out of difficulties, and encouragement
whUe excavation was in progress ; to the owners of the sites
for permission to dig; to Dr. F. Oswald, F.S.A., for examining and
142
zzzzz^SZZZ2ZZZ^2ZZ2^ZZffiZZZZZMZ
YELLOW
GLAZE
MATT
FIG. 24. The small finds (§).
[face p. 142
CANTERBURY EXCAVATIONS, SUMMER, 1946
reporting on the Samian ; to Mr. M. R. Hull, F.S.A., for helping with
the Belgic material, and for drawing the brooch : and to the various
experts to whom acknowledgment is made in the text. Mr. B. H.
St. J. O'NeU, F.S.A. as usual reported on the coins ; Mr. A. Martyr
Smith made the preliminary surveys ; and Mr. J. Mann took the levels.
Without the help of these, and of all the volunteers in the field,
especially Mr. V. J . Newbury and Mr. J. S. Wacher, no progress could
have been made.
143