WARBANK, KESTON: A ROMANO-BRITISH SITE
By NANCY PIEROY EOX, B.A.
INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY
(I) THE WARBANK SITE
WARBANK is the name given to the lower south-westerly slopes of
Holwood Hill in the Parish of Keston (National Grid 541250/163250),
where an ancient river has cut a terraced valley (now dry) into the chalk
which forms the foot of the hill. The sunniest and most sheltered of
these terrace slopes was the site chosen for the Roman buhdings in the
Upper and Lower Warbank Fields—the Roman site is over 400 ft.
above sea level and is prominently situated right on the " nose " of the
hill so that any buhdings here would dominate the scene. (Fig. 1.)
I t is a very beautiful site with commanding views; in Roman times
buhdings here would have looked across the vaUey to the highway from
London to Lewes and northwards in the distance to Londinium—
where to-day can be seen St. Paul's Cathedral and Tower Bridge. A
bridleway still in use, recorded in a deed of A.D. 1326 as " the common
lane leading to Chelsham and elsewhere," follows the natural line of
movement between the Roman site at Warbank and the Roman Road
from London to Lewes, meeting the highway near Layhams Farm at a
distance of 1 £ miles. There is a spring above the site and the essential
building materials—sand, clay, gravel, chalk and flints are all found on
the site. (Fig. 1.)
It is interesting to record that the Roman site at Warbank (O.D.
425 ft.) is closely related geographically to the site of Caesar's Camp
(O.D. 450-500 ft.) the Iron Age Camp on Holwood Hill, and that first
century pottery, including buff/grey Belgic wares, was found on the
site during the excavations. The Roman site later became the site of
the Saxon Manor of Kestane or North Court (now represented by
Keston Court Farm), which included in its holdings the whole of Holwood
Hill, and in particular an interesting group of tenements just
outside the southern entrance to Caesar's Camp—an unusual feature
emphasized by the rest of Holwood Hill being heathland.
The southern entrance to Caesar's Camp and the associated ramparts
have been destroyed and Holwood House and its garden occupies
the site of the gateway and the medieval tenements, so that there is
an interesting suggestion of continuity on both archaeological sites.
96
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TEMPLE
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EXCAVATED FOUNDATIONS
1951-3
VILLA
Church
Blackness
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FROM WESTERHAM
SCALE IN FEET ,,£-£ ;£-
FIG. 1. Warbank, Keston.
[face p . 96
WARBANK, KESTON: A ROMANO-BRITISH SITE
(Fig. 1.), supported by the Anglo-Saxon Charter of Bromley A.D. 862
which mentions the boundary of the people of Keston.
(II) DISCOVERY AND PREVIOUS RESEARCH
The Warbank site was first recorded in 1815 (" Investigation of the
Antiquities of Holwood Hill" in John Dunkin's Outline History of
Bromley) and first excavated in 1828 by T. Crofton Croker, F.S.A. and
A. J. Kempe, F.S.A., when the well-known chcular structure and
adjacent inhumation burials in stone coffins were discovered (ArchaiologiaXXII).
(Fig. 1.)
I t was thought that the lost city of Noviomagus had at last been
discovered, and in honour of the occasion the FeUows of the Society of
Antiquaries engaged in the discovery founded a Dining Club—The
Noviomagians—with Mr. Crofton-Croker as High President (see T.
Kendrick, Antiquaries Journal: Vol. XXVII, July-Oct., 1947, pp.
183-5). Mr. Kendrick (now Sir Thomas Kendrick) does not record
that the Noviomagians held an Annual Festival which must have been
an hilarious meeting with plenty of opportunity for the jokes and
contrariwise activities which the Noviomagians so enjoyed.
On one occasion, after breakfast at 10.30 a.m. with the President at
his home in New Kent Road, they were conveyed to the Sacred City
(Caesar's Camp, Holwood Park) in an antique Roman Car, where they
proceeded to beat the bounds and bump new members with becoming
solemnity and according to ancient custom.
On another occasion, July 1st, 1847, the Lord High President met
his feUow Citizens at Pontes (London Bridge Station) and they proceeded
via Ferrea and Grenewicum, where curriculi were in readiness to
convey them to Noviomagus—an Ancient Royal Palace and other
conundrums being examined en route! Having done suit and service,
beaten the bounds of Noviomagus and bumped new members, they
returned in state to Grenewic, where Monsieur Quatre Mains (the
celebrated four-handed host of the Crown and Sceptre) had prepared
a Feast at which they elected theh President and Officers and returned
to Londinium as well as may be expected or as they could! The Ohah
of the President of the Noviomagians now stands at the foot of the
main stahcase in the Rooms of the Society of Antiquaries.
The next recorded excavation is that of Mr. C. R. Corner in 1854
(Archceologia, XXXVI) when foundations of Roman buhdings were
discovered lower down the field—notably the " Villa " which is an
early basilican house converted to a non-domestic use, and other
foundations were recorded in the next field called " Eight Acres."
This excavation was a great social occasion with the President, Officers
and FeUows of the Society of Antiquaries, the local gentry and theh
97
WARBANK, KESTON: A ROMANO-BRITISH SITE
ladies decorating the excavated foundations in a very elegant and
charming manner. A contemporary record of this event is fortunately
preserved in the Hayes Portfoho, belonging to the Parish of Hayes.
The Plan, Plate IX, p. 127 of Mr. Corner's Report, is not to scale, and
the exact position of the buildings is uncertain. (Fig. 1.)
An urn containing burnt bone and three other sherds dug up in
1861 on Warbank was discovered recently in a lumber room in Keston;
with the urn were the Roman coins found at Warbank and a Noviomagians'
Notice addressed to G. R. Wright. The urn is of black fumed
ware, decorated with a scored acute lattice pattern carelessly executed
and in form still owing something to the native tradition. It is of
second century date and is published here together with the accompanying
sherds of the same date (Fig. 4). It is most unfortunate that no
finds survive from previous excavations at Warbank, and it is regrettable
that the drawings of upwards of 100 pieces found in 1828, by that
fine draughtsman William Henry Brooke, cannot be traced.
A re-excavation of the chcular structure, locaUy known as the
Temple, by G. R. Wright, is recorded in the Athenaeum for October
28th, 1893, but Mr. Wright's claims were disputed and denied by
Mr. Daniel Kettle in the same journal for November 17th, 1893, and no
reliance can be placed on this record.
Finally, in this brief review of the history of the site, in 1936 Mr.
J. B. Ward Perkins, F.S.A., excavated an undisturbed burial in plaster
in a large stone coffin—an interesting discovery which extended the
known extent of the Warbank Cemetery '(Arch. Cant., 1938, pp. 164-5
and plates). (Fig. 1.)
Reviewing the evidence Mr. Ward Perkins says: " The meagre
accounts indicate a fahly considerable settlement. There were certainly
two buhdings; one of some complexity: and attached to them a
scattered cemetery of which the weU-known chcular tomb structure
and several adjacent inhumations are known. The rather unsatisfactory
evidence points to a date during the 3rd and 4th Centuries for
the occupation of the site and the adjacent burials."
Two smaU finds should be noted in conclusion—a Romano-British
bronze pendant found near the site and bought by the British Museum
in 1929 has been drawn by Mr. Waterhouse and is illustrated here by
courtesy of the Department of British and Mediaeval Antiquities of the
British Museum. (Fig. 5.)
A water-colour drawing by George Clinch, F.S.A., of the fragment
of decorated plaster (Archmologia, XXII, p. 349) found in 1828 has
survived in Mr. Clinch's own grangerized copy of Antiquarian Jottings
now in the possession of Mr. Sydney Hodgson, F.S.A. This shows a
pleasing colour scheme of russet brown, pale yeUow and green on an
ivory-white background, and was submitted to Miss Joan Liversidge
98
WARBANK, KESTON: A ROMANO-BRITISH SITE
who has expressed the view that, so far as she knows, the design is quite
unique in Roman Britain. .
Part of the eight acre field was available for excavation through the
kindness of the owners of the land, E. J. Boosey, Esq., and A. Sagar-
Musgrave-Brooksbank, Esq., and theh tenant, Mr. Charhe Claringbold,
and the writer carried out excavations there in 1951, 1952 and 1953
with the advice and guidance of W. F. Grimes, Esq., C.B.E., F.S.A.
The finds have been presented to Maidstone Museum.
(Ill) SUMMARY
The site is on chalk and the cultural sequence starts with the pits
and gullies cut in the chalk. These were, with the exception of one pit,
filled up with a uniform filling of small lumps of chalk and. clay and
containing throughout tiny pieces of charcoal. This filling was sterile
wherever found except in the principal gully, where an interesting
collection of first century pottery was found which securely dates the
filling up of the pits and gullies, and the first building on the site to the
last quarter of the first century A.D.
The first building (possibly the only building) was very carefully
laid out and was a buUding of some strength and pretensions, excellent
materials being used in its construction—a most unusual feature being
the use of roughly squared sandstone from the Folkestone and Hythe
Beds and the Lenham Beds of the Lower Greensand in the construction
of the Walls which were set on a cement foundation 3 ft. wide. The
best preserved floor made up of two layers of tiles and two layers of
cement, altogether 9£ inches thick. The waUs were plastered and as
shown by a few coloured fragments decorated in a refined and not
garish taste—other large pieces of coarse plaster (4 in. thick) were
decorated to imitate marble, and one could visuahze these on an outside
doorway or portico. White roofing tiles were found as well as the more
usual red and portions of huge tiles 3 in. thick with one face smoothed,
and exceptionaUy large flints. AU the usual tiles and flue tiles were
found, but only a few red and white tesserae. The whole site had been
so robbed, smashed and leveUed that only a portion of one floor and
one piece of wall had escaped destruction, and the levels related to the
occupation of the building had been entirely destroyed. Much unstratified
debris had to be shhted, but it was possible with the help of
waU seatings and foundations, leveUed areas, chalk and clay fills and the
surviving edges of cement floor foundations to recover the greater part
of the plan of the building (Fig. 2). It is not therefore possible to
connect the structural remains with the sequence of occupation on the
site which falls within the limits set by the first century pottery and
three fourth century coins. About 100 vessels are represented by
99
WARBANK, KESTON: A ROMANO-BRITISH SITE
sherds. Fhst and second century types predominate, and no characteristic
thhd or fourth century wares were found. The first century
Belgic wares look to Camulodunum rather than to any pubUshed site in
Kent. AU the vessels figured have been reconstructed from small
fragments, and are the work of my husband, Dr. E. V. Piercy Fox.
The purpose of the building, which is a wing or projection of a larger
complex in Lower Warbank Field, is not known, but the width of the
waUs recorded in the present excavation (3 ft. wide) and in previous
excavations in Lower Warbank Field (3 ft. and 4 ft. wide) should be
noted. The smaU amount of pottery, the lack of rubbish pits in the
area examined, the absence of bones in any quantity, and the features
of the building itself do not suggest a domestic site or a burial site, but
rather pubhc buhdings of some kind.
" To induce a people, hitherto scattered, uncivilized and therefore
prone to fight, to grow pleasurably inured to peace and ease, Agricola
gave private encouragement and offered assistance to the buhding of
temples, pubhc squares and private mansions." . . . " Furthermore, he
trained the son of the chiefs in liberal arts."
This quotation from Section 21, Tacitus, Agricola, translated by
H. Mattingly, refers to policy in the year A.D. 78/79 and gives some
indication of the general political and historical background of the
buildings on Warbank which are dated c. A.D. 85. Prominently sited
as they are on the " nose " of Holwood HiU, they could be regarded as a
symbol of the new order which had superseded the old tribal way of life
centred on Holwood Camp.
For the Warbank complex based on all the evidence at present
available the dating is first century A.D. 86 to fourth century (latest
recorded find, coin of Valens, A.D. 364-78).
The sealed filling containing first century pottery submitted to
Mr. A. G. Davis, F.G.S., and Mr. John Carreck has produced a molluscan
assemblage indicating calcareous grassland with scrub, but no woodlands
and a damper climate than at present (APPENDIX II). The
fauna would not live on the site now and the viper, which was also
represented, appears to be absent or rare on the chalk at Keston at the
present time.
THE STRUCTURES AND THE FINDS
See Fig. 2.
(I) THE UNDERLYING STRUCTURES
Pit I
Pit IV
The Principal Gully
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Era. 2. Plan of Excavation.
[face p. 100
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O I 2 3 4 5 Inch*,
PIG. 4. Urn and Sherds found at Warbank in A.D. 1861
PIG. 5. Romano-British Pendant found at Warbank and purchased by the
British Museum in 1929 (f)
103
WARBANK, KESTON: A ROMANO-BRITISH SITE
The Ditch. A ditch 2 ft. 6 in. wide and 2 ft. deep crossed the southern
end of the site (Fig. 1 and Sections AB and CD, Fig. 3). It cut through
the area leveUed up with chalk and clay, just clearing the line of the
waU. The silted filling contained building debris, animal bones and
potsherds; of these two wares are significant:
3 sherds of a Poppyhead Beaker, decorated with barbotine dots ;
4 sherds of a Castor-ware Beaker;
indicating that the ditch was open during the second century.
(II) THE WALLS AND FLOORS
The Walls
The structural remains were scanty, and were foundation levels.
In Fig. 2 the waUs are shown in situ in two places, and in heavy broken
line where there were vestiges stiU remaining. The light broken line shows
line of the walls only where it is certain. Fig. 6 shows my conjectural
of Feet
PIG. 6. Conjectural reconstruction of the ground plan of the building in
eight acres
"reconstruction of the ground plan, based on all factors. The method
of construction used for the waUs could be seen in a section 9 ft. long.
After the site had been prepared the cement foundation for the waUs
was laid in a coarse yeUow pebble cement 2 in. thick. Roughly squared
pieces of sandstone were then laid, with the squared face outwards and the
104
WARBANK, KESTON: A ROMANO-BRITISH SITE
space between the stones filled up with pale yeUow mortar, small pieces
of sandstone and flints. One change of plan could be seen. A gap in
the cement foundation had been fined up using a different cement and
two stones used to fill the gap on one face, but a block of chalk had
been used on the other. A slot 18 in. by 6 in. by 4 in. was left and the
remainder of the space filled in with mortar. The purpose of the slot,
which was faced with cement, is not known. The stone surface of the
waU facing Floor II was covered with plaster and a small amount of
coloured plaster was in situ where indicated on Fig. 2. There was no
design, but the range of colours appeared to be very similar to the
fragment from the chcular structure (p. 98).
On the side of the wall facing Floor I it could be seen that when the
first cement floor foundations was laid it was continued up the face of
the sandstone waning, making a waterproof junction between floor and
walls (see Fig. 3).
The Floors
The greater part of Floor I and the excavated area of Floor I I were
covered with the layer described as yellow building debris (Section AB,
Fig. 3). But this did not cover the whole area of Floor I. Another
type of bunding debris—the heavy pink building debris—occupied
part of the floor (Section CD, Fig. 3) and continued into the area
adjoining the platform or raised floor where the heaviest debris was
found.
The yellow building debris contained broken white and red roof
tiles, tiles, flue tiles, rough squared sandstone blocks, chalk nodules and
plaster mixed with quantities of the characteristic yeUow cement and
mortar such as was used for the walls and floor, giving the debris a
clearly yeUow appearance in striking contrast to the heavy pink
building debris, which contained very large heavy flints—many 16 in.
long, roof tiles, flue tiles, pieces of very large bricks 3 in. thick, pohshed
on one side, massive pieces of pink OP. SIG 5 in. thick, white plaster,
pink plaster, yellow plaster and quantities of a composition flooring.
A fourth century coin (FEL. TEMP. REP TYPE. c. A.D. 350) was
found in this debris, an hon object, too corroded for laboratory treatment,
and potsherds.
Floor I
Floor I was the best preserved floor. On the roughly leveUed chalk
was laid a layer of cement 2£ in. thick; on this was closely set a layer
of old roofing tiles 16 in. by 12 in. (tiles, Series II, Fig. 2). Another
layer of cement 2 | in. thick was laid over the roofing tiles, and on this
was laid square floor tiles 9 in. by 9£ in. (tiles, Series I) making a floor
105
WARBANK, KESTON: A ROMANO-BRITISH SITE
9 | in. thick. In the sandy debris of this floor two Constantinian coins
were found. There were smaU blackened areas on the floor, but no
evidence to suggest that the building met its end by fire. The square
the set on pink OP. SIG. indicates a shallow step in this section of the
floor (Fig. 3).
Floor II
The whole extent of this floor was not recovered as it passed under
the hedge into Lower Warbank Field. The chalk had been very carefully
levelled, and on the chalk had been laid a fine sandy cement
foundation which survived in patches. This floor was covered to a
depth of 2 ft. 6 in. with yellow bunding debris and the white roofing
tiles seemed to be associated with this floor.
Platform or Raised Floor III
It will be seen on Fig. 2 that a small sloping ramp has been cut in
the chalk to connect the platform with the lower area adjoining. The
platform or raised floor was a dehberately leveUed area composed partly
of natural chalk and partly of the filling of the pits and gullies—as can
be seen in Fig. 2, Section AB. Flints set in hard mortar survive as
shown, but are too fragmentary to describe as walls. The heaviest
debris on the site was found in the platform area.
(Ill) THE POTTERY
SAMIAN WARE FROM PRINCIPAL GULLY. Fig. 7.
1. Form 67. Decorated globular vase or cup. Early version.
A.D. 75-100. Ovolo with plain tongue difficult to paraUel. Cf.
Richborough. Plate LXXXIV, No. 66, where dated pre-
Flavian, probably Claudian.
2. Form Ritterling 8. Red hemispherical bowl. Stepped footring.
At latest A.D. 50.
3. Form 18. Platter, A.D. 75-100.
This group is consistent with a Flavian dating, c. A.D. 85.
SAMIAN WARE FROM FLOOR I—not stratified. Fig. 8.
4. Form 38. Flanged bowl. Hadrianic.
5. Form 35/36. Ivy leaf bowl. Fragment of rim. Not figured.
UNGLAZED WARES. All the pottery was recovered in fragments,
and these have been put together wherever possible; fortunately it is
possible to figure some part of every vessel represented in the first
century coUection. The remaining sherds (all of which were unstratified)
have been dealt with by analysis of fabrics.
106
WARBANK, KESTON: A ROMANO-BRITISH SITE
r nr
3
O J 2 3 4 5
FIG. 7. Samian ware from Principal Gully Filling
inches
r T T
O | 2 33 4 5
FIG. 8. Samian ware from Floor I unstratified. No. 4
inches
107
PS
0 1 2 3 4 3
FIG. 9. Buff/Grey Belgic wares from Principal Gully Filling
108
WARBANK, KESTON: A ROMANO-BRITISH SITE
GROUP I—FROM PRINCIPAL GULLY. Fig. 9.
Fig. 9 iUustrates the buff to grey Belgic wares found in the filling of
the Principal GuUy with Samian Forms 67, 18 and Ritterling 8, dated
to c. A.D. 85.
6. Grey ovoid beaker. SmaU, sharply everted rim and round
shoulder. Polished with tooled pattern. Cannot be paralleled.
Fine paste, thin yellow core, grey exterior.
7. Grey carinated bowl—with concave waU and tooled decoration.
This bowl or cup is closest to Camulodunum Form 211 B. Fine paste
baked to the clear light grey.
Camulodunum. Form 211. Seventeen examples. Dated A.D.
10-61.
Verulamium. No. 35. P.161. Discussion. Dated A.D. 10-35.
Archceologia Cantiana. 1954. Discussion on carinated cups by
Mr. S. S. Frere. P.113.
8. Grey cordoned flask—of La T6ne type.
Camulodunum. Form 231 B. and Form 232 A b. Discussion
P.263. Dated A.D. 10-65.
Verulamium. 45 A and B. P.165. Dated A.D. 10-35.
Richborough I. PI. XX. No. 4 and 5.
This example is not closely paraUeled. There is a strong family
resemblance to the later Ospringe flasks. Paste well fired to uniform
clear light grey; faintly tooled decoration.
9. Black Ovoid pot. Rim missing. Fine paste baked to a uniform
clear hght grey. Exterior fumed black with " soapy " polish surviving
in places.
10. Ovoid cooking pot. Simple everted rim. Part of a second pot
with lid. The pot figured is in a poor soft brownish pink fabric; and
the second pot, of which the lid is figured, is a better fired brownish
grey paste.
Camulodunum. Form 256 B. Dated A.D. 10-48, diminishing
later. Prominent in British Camulodunum in contrast to the rest
of S.E. England. Discussion. Camulodunum P.269.
THE GRITTED WARES FOUND WITH THE SAMIAN AND
BELGIC WARES IN THE FILLING OF THE PRINCIPAL
GULLY. Fig. 10.
11. Large bead rim cooking pot. Blackish brown, heavily gritted
ware. Pinkish buff inside rim. Intermittent tooled fine on shoulder.
Camulodunum. Form 257. P.268. Fig. 56, No. 7. Dated
A.D. 43-65 and later. Not common.
Archaeologia Cantiana. 1954. Excavations at Canterbury. S. S.
Frere. P.113-114 and Footnote 2.
109
WARBANK, KESTON: A ROMANO-BRITISH SITE
12. Beaker. With smaU everted rim, horizontal grooves on round
shoulder. Fine pinkish brown Native ware gritted with crushed
limestone. The fabric can be matched at Lullingstone—otherwise
unparalleled at present.
13. Heavy reddish brown native ware base and part of side. A
parallel fabric to patch grove. Grey core reddish brown externally.
A weU-fhed hard fabric of good colour which can be matched at
Lullingstone.
~*~
(
stc^
^
1
3 V
2 133 \ B
O ! 2 3 3 I Inchd
FIG. 10. The Gritted wares from Principal Gully Filling
GROUP II—SHERDS FROM PIT II. Fig. 11.
The sealed Black filling from Pit II contained:
4 fragments of a large rim;
2 grey sherds;
3 sherds. Patch Grove fabric;
2 black sherds.
AU first century in date.
14. Large " soapy " rim, diameter 12 in. Four fragments, Pit II.
Probably from large native bowl, similar to Camulodunum. 230 A, a.
The rim and fabric can be exactly matched at Lullingstone, where it is
110
WARBANK, KESTON: A ROMANO-BRITISH SITE
dated to A.D. 90 or earher.
surface. Leather brown.
Grey core, pinkish brown under outer
f 2)
FIG. 11. Rim of Native Bowl from Pit I I . Diameter 12 in. No. 14.
Fig. 12
15. Rim fragment of mortar, unstratified. Part of a rim 12 in. in
diameter, with uprising flange and thin wall. Reminiscent of flanged
pie-dishes such as Richborough I, 122. Similar rim form to bowl from
Charlton Earthworks, pubhshed by Mr. F. C. Elliston Erwood, F.S.A.
(Arch. Cant., LXIV, p. 159, Fig. 3), but this fragment cannot be
paraUeled at present among mortaria. Hard pinkish white clay with
mixed grit on interior surface.
O I 2 - 3 4 5 inches
FIG. 12. Mortar rim fragment unstratified. No. 15
ANALYSIS OF SHERDS
Fabric
Buff-grey,
Belgic wares.
Coarse rim
Gritted native wares
tooled lattice
Pohshed bands
Cordons
Plain
Coarse red wares (including a few 'Patch Grove
No stabbing)
Very coarse gritted wares. Black/brown as Class
sherds.
Vessels
represented
11
4
2
23
1
12
14
17
111
WARBANK, KESTON: A ROMANO-BRITISH SITE
Fhst century, from Pit I I 4
Pink with grey core (Roman not native) 1
Upchurch 1
Barbitone dot 2
Castor ware 1
Mortaria 3
Amphorae 2
Total 95
The analysis gives a picture of first and second century fabrics with
first century predominating and no characteristic thhd or fourth
century wares.
DISOTJSSION
The pottery from Warbank, although a smaU series, contains two
Samian forms (No. 1 and 2) which are nowhere common forms and
includes among the Belgic wares a carinated cup (No. 7), and two
cooking pots which are characteristic of Camulodunum (Nos. 10 and 11)
and two ovoid beakers for which exact paraUels are not known (Nos. 6
and 12). In addition there is the notable absence of native bead rims
and stabbed Patch Grove ware.
The Belgic wares as a group are grey and are aU of similar paste and
firing, and in form they look to Camulodunum. This raises the threefold
question of the relationship of the Warbank site to Caesar's Camp
on Holwood HiU, and the relationship of both to Camulodunum. It
would not be surprising to find northern Belgic affinities here based on
the coin distribution of Tasciovanus and Cunobelinus; and the assemblage
of pottery could reflect a family preference. Here the matter
must rest unth Caesar's Camp, which has become known as Holwood
Camp, is excavated.
The rather unusual character of this assemblage in West Kent in
early Flavian times is emphasized by the character of the pre-Flavian
and Flavian wares which Col. G. W. Meates, F.S.A., has recovered at
the Lullingstone Roman ViUa which is 7 J miles from Warbank, Keston,
and which he has most generously aUowed me to examine. The form
and fabric of the large "soapy" rim (No. 14) can be exactly matched at
Lullingstone, where it is dated A.D. 90 or earlier. The good red gritted
native fabrics of (No. 11 and 12) can be matched exactly, as can a black
sherd with pohshed band which is dated at Lullingstone Pre Villa
A.D. 50-70. There at the present time the resemblance ends, and the
difference is accentuated by the quantities of stabbed Patch Grove rims
and plentiful native bead rims at Lulhngstone.
112
WARBANK, KESTON: A ROMANO-BRITISH SITE
APPENDIX I
CONSOLIDATED COIN LIST OF ALL RECORDED FINDS AT WARBANK
Date found
CLAUDIUS
A.D. 41-57
HADRIAN
A.D. 117-38
FAUSTINA II
A.D. 161-80
ALBINUS
A.D. 193-4
VlOTORTNUS
A.D. 265-267
CLAUDIUS II
A.D. 268-70
CARAUSIUS
A.D. 287-93
ALLECTUS
A.D. 293-6
CONSTANTINE I
A.D. 306-37
CONSTANTIUS II
A.D. 337-61
VALHNS
A.D. 364-78
1854 ?1854 '
i
1861
1
I 1951-53
!
i t
I !
! 1
i
1 1 j
1
1
!
1
1
2
1
2
1
t
j
1
1
2
i
i
i
1
i
2
i
1
|
Total
1
2
1
1
1
2
2
1
6
1
1
19
The two Oonstantinian Coins found in 1951-53 associated with
Floor I were a Constantinopolis and an Urbs Roma.
113
WARBANK, KESTON: A ROMANO-BRITISH SITE
APPENDIX II
REPORT ON ANIMAL REMAINS EROM THE ROMAN SITE AT WARBANK
By J. N. CARRECK, F.G.S., and A. G. DAVIS, F.G.S.
In 1952 and 1953 samples of the sealed filling from Pit II were submitted
to the writers for study, by Mrs. Piercy Fox.
1. 1952 sample of the black filling of Pit I I dated to first century
A.D., and sealed by a mortar or cement layer. This filling yielded a
fauna of 18 species, tabulated below. Washed residues of the deposit
also contained much charcoal, fragments of red brick or tile, and pieces
of mortar or cement, with broken Tertiary flint pebbles and pieces of
chalk.
2. 1953 sample of material from sealed black filhng of Pit II, dated
to the first century A.D. This yielded an assemblage of 16 species,
given below. In addition, a few indeterminate fragments of marine
moUuscan shells, one bearing a polyzoan, small pieces of charcoal, red
brick or the, mortar or cement, and chalk debris, were present.
FAUNAL LISTS
Pit II, first century
1952 sample 1953 sample
MAMMALIA
(J.N.C.)
Clefhrionomys sp. Sp. of Bank Vole 1 left m2. —
Sus scrofa (Linn£) Pig 1 cheek tooth —
Ovis or Capra Sheep or Goat 1 cheek'tooth 1 cheek tooth
REPTTLIA
(A.G.D., J.N.C.)
Cf. Vipera berus (Linne) Cf. Viper —- 2 teeth,
1 vertebra
MOLLUSCA
(A.G.D.)
Pomatias elegans (Muller) Fragments and 4 Fragments
opercula
Carychium tridentatum (Risso) 2 1
Cochlicopa lubrica (MuUer) . 2 2
Vertigo pygmaea (Draparnaud) — 1
Pupilla muscorum (Linn6) 2 6
Vallonia costata (MiiUer) 6 4
114
WARBANK, KESTON: A ROMANO-BRITISH SITE
V. pulchella (MiiUer)
Cecilioides acicula (MiiUer)
Helix nemoralis (Linn6)
Hygromia hispida (Lhm6)
Helicella itala (Linne)
Discus rotundatus (Miiller)
Anon sp. (granules)
Vitrea crystallina (MiiUer)
Retinella radiatula (Alder)
R. nitidula (Draparnaud)
Vitrina pellucida (MiiUer)
Limax maximus Linne
Limax sp.
1
1
Fragments
5
—
2
Common
1
2
—•
2
—
6
—
4
1 and fragments
1
4
1
40
4
—
2
—
1
—
In Mr. Davis's opinion the above molluscan assemblage is indicative
of calcareous grassland with scrub, but no woodlands. The climate was
damper than at present, and this fauna would not live there now. The
total absence of aquatic forms in the first century filling of Pit II
appears to show that the pit from which the remains were coUected did
not contain water at the time of its infilling. The remains of pig, sheep
or goat, and marine moUusca, are evidently human food debris. The
viper appears to be absent or rare on the chalk at Keston at present.
Samples of the chalky layer at a depth of 5 ft. in Pit IV, and the humic
filling sealed under the first layer of cement of Floor I and resting on
chalk, were also examined by the writers, but yielded no animal
remains.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
To my husband, and aU who have encouraged me by helping with
different aspects of the Excavation and the Report and to the numerous
visitors to HoUy Lodge who have examined and commented on the
pottery. Miss Eileen Andrews and Mr. Paul Rook for help with the
final copy of the map and plans, Mrs. Freda Coleborn for help in
figuring the pottery, Mr. Dudley Jackson for making the preliminary
survey and taking the levels, and Mr. C. Claringbold, who not only
aUowed his ground to be dug but took a most active part in the heavy
work, Mr. W. W. Groves, Mr. G. Smith and Mr. D. C. Harben and other
volunteers from Keston Field Club and aU the workmen who were
employed on the site. To Col. G. W. Meates, F.S.A., and to Mr. M. R.
HuU, F.S.A., for examining sherds and lastly to Mr. W. F. Grimes,
C.B.E., F.S.A., for his kindness in visiting the site and giving me his
advice and guidance with the excavation and with the Report.
115
WARBANK, KESTON: A ROMANO-BRITISH SITE
BIBLIOGRAPHY
C. F. C. Hawkes and M. R. HuU, Camulodunum Report.
R. E. M. and T. V. Wheeler, Verulamium.
Derek Allen, The Belgic Dynasties of Britain and their Coins. Archceologia,
90
J. P. Bushe-Fox, Richborough, Swarling and Ospringe Reports.
G. W. Meates, Lullingstone Reports in Arch. Cantiana.
S. S. Frere, Canterbury Report, Arch. Cantiana, 1954.
J. B. Ward Perkins, Oldbury Report, Arch. Cantiana, 1938, and
Archceologia, 90.
116