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Excavations at Newport Street, Worcester, 2005: Roman Roadside Activity and Medieval to Post-Medieval Urban Development on the Severn Floodplain [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 286 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 31-Jan-2016
  • Kirjastus: Cotswold Archaeological Trust Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 0955353491
  • ISBN-13: 9780955353499
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 286 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 31-Jan-2016
  • Kirjastus: Cotswold Archaeological Trust Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 0955353491
  • ISBN-13: 9780955353499
Teised raamatud teemal:
Excavation of approximately a third of a hectare in the north-western part of the historic core of Worcester revealed evidence for activity dating from the Roman to the post-medieval and early modern period. The deepest deposits were recorded in geotechnical and archaeological boreholes, and in two sondages: the rest of the site was excavated to the depth of formation level for development. The earliest feature was a Roman road running on the approximate alignment of the present-day Newport Street. Deposits relating to road construction and ground consolidation comprised metal-working waste, with finds of later 2nd to 3rd-century date. No in situ evidence of Roman occupation was excavated. These levels were sealed by alluvial deposits. In the early 13th century the area was divided by boundaries, which were consolidated during the subsequent medieval and post-medieval periods into building plots with frontages onto both Newport Street and Dolday. The Newport Street frontage was developed with substantial stone and timber buildings, some over stone-built cellars. A series of ovens, hearths, structures and surfaces suggest a mixture of craft and domestic activities took place in the back plots of these properties. The style, construction and layout of some of the medieval buildings, coupled with artefactual and environmental evidence, suggest the occupants were relatively prosperous. The major plot boundaries changed little throughout the post-medieval and early modern period, although documentary research indicates a complex history of ownership and holdings featuring sub-division, amalgamation and multiple occupancy. The street frontages of both Newport Street and Dolday continued to be occupied throughout the post-medieval and early modern periods. Open spaces and structural remains, including wells, hearths, ovens and cess pits, in the back plots reflect a variety of activities associated with trade and domestic activity. Finds and environmental evidence has helped to link some of these structures to trades associated with the owners and occupants known from historical records. The remains of bread-ovens, a bake-house, a malthouse and a warehouse for hemp have been identified, and there is more tentative archaeological evidence for cordwaining, cloth-making, brewing and distilling, the latter trades replacing cloth-making as that trade declined in the 17th and 18th centuries. The sub-division of properties and the crowding of small cottages into the back plots during the 18th and 19th centuries reflect the increase in residential occupancy that resulted in over-crowding and a decline in status for this area of the city. The excavations represent the first large-scale archaeological investigation of this part of Worcester. The results complement those of previous major investigations of the Roman and medieval town and provide valuable insights into the economic and social status of the medieval towns expansion onto the former floodplain. An integrated approach, analysing all aspects of the archaeological evidence in combination with detailed study of the available documentary and historical sources, has been particularly valuable in achieving an understanding of the site in later periods, providing the first major archaeological study of the post-medieval development of the city.
List of Illustrations
viii
List of Tables
xi
Acknowledgements xiii
Summary xiv
Chapter 1 Introduction
Robin Jackson
1.1 Introduction
1(1)
1.2 Site location
2(1)
Chapter 2 Archaeological and Historical Background
2.1 Previous major archaeological investigations in the city
3(1)
Robin Jackson
2.2 Archaeological and historical frameworks
3(5)
Hal Dalwood
Robin Jackson
2.3 The documentary history of Newport Street
8(11)
Pat Hughes
Chapter 3 Project Objectives and Methodology
3.1 Project objectives and research priorities
19(1)
Robin Jackson
3.2 Methodologies
20(7)
3.2.1 Excavation
20(1)
3.2.2 Assessment and updated project design
20(1)
3.2.3 Structural evidence
21(3)
3.2.4 Documentary evidence
24(1)
Pat Hughes
3.2.5 Artefactual evidence
24(1)
Robin Jackson
3.2.6 Leather conservation
25(1)
Ian Panter
3.2.7 Bone and ivory conservation
25(1)
M. Felter
3.2.8 Geoarchaeological survey
25(1)
Keith Wilkinson
3.2.9 Pollen remains
26(1)
Katie Head
3.2.10 Sampling and plant macrofossils
26(1)
Elizabeth Pearson
3.2.11 Animal bone
27(1)
Sylvia Warman
3.3 Retrospective view
27(2)
Huw Sherlock
James Dinn
3.3.1 The consultant's perspective
27(1)
Huw Sherlock
3.3.2 The curatorial retrospective
28(1)
James Dinn
3.4 Archive content and location
29(1)
Chapter 4 Site Narrative
4.1 Introduction
30(1)
Peter Davenport
4.2 Geoarchaeology
31(9)
Keith Wilkinson
4.2.1 Stratigraphy
31(7)
4.2.2 Discussion
38(2)
4.2.3 Conclusions
40(1)
4.3 The archaeological sequence
40(53)
Peter Davenport
4.3.1 Plot 1: the northern part of no. 32/34 Newport Street
40(3)
4.3.2 Plot 2: the northern part of nos 26 and 28 Newport Street (including nos 35 and 37 Dolday)
43(5)
4.3.3 Plot 3: the southern part of nos 26, 28 and 30 Newport Street
48(13)
4.3.4 Plots 4 and 5: no. 24 Newport Street
61(6)
4.3.5 Plots 6 and 7: no. 22 Newport Street
67(6)
4.3.6 Plots 8 and 9: no. 20 Newport Street
73(3)
4.3.7 Plots 10 and 11: nos 18 and 16 Newport Street
76(2)
4.3.8 Plots 12 and 13: no. 14 Newport Street
78(7)
4.3.9 Plot 14: no. 12 and a small part of no. 10 Newport Street
85(8)
Chapter 5 Specialist Reports
5.1 Documentary evidence for individual properties
93(17)
Pat Hughes
5.1.1 Introduction
5.1.2 Properties west of the excavated area (nos 54--36)
93(4)
5.1.3 No. 32/34 Newport Street (Plot 1; Figs 5.3 and 5.4)
97(2)
5.1.4 Nos 26, 28 and 30 Newport Street (Plots 2 and 3; Figs 5.3 and 5.4)
99(3)
5.1.5 No. 24 Newport Street (Plots 4 and 5; Fig. 5.4)
102(2)
5.1.6 No. 20 Newport Street (Plots 8 and 9) and no 22 Newport Street (Plots 6 and 7; Fig. 5.3)
104(1)
5.1.7 Nos 14, 16 and 18 Newport Street (Plots 12 and 13; Fig. 5.3)
105(3)
5.1.8 Nos 10 and 12 Newport Street (Plot 14)
108(1)
5.1.9 Nos 2, 4, 6 and 8 Newport Street (to the east of excavated area)
109(1)
5.2 The Roman pottery
110(1)
Alan J. Jacobs
5.2.1 Analysis
110(1)
5.2.2 Discussion
111(1)
5.3 Medieval and medieval/early post-medieval pottery
111(10)
Laura Griffin
5.3.1 Analysis
111(8)
5.3.2 Discussion (by period)
119(2)
5.4 Post-medieval pottery
121(8)
Alan J. Jacobs
5.4.1 Analysis
121(5)
5.4.2 General discussion
126(3)
5.5 The modern pottery
129(1)
Alan J. Jacobs
5.5.1 Analysis
130(1)
5.5.2 Discussion
130(1)
5.6 Ceramic building material: medieval floor tiles
130(4)
Laura Griffin
5.6.1 Analysis
131(1)
5.6.2 Discussion
132(2)
5.7 Ceramic building material: Roman roof tile
134(1)
Laura Griffin
5.7.1 Analysis
134(1)
5.7.2 Discussion
135(1)
5.8 Ceramic building material: medieval, post-medieval and modern roof tile
135(5)
Laura Griffin
5.8.1 Analysis by fabric type
136(3)
5.8.2 Discussion by period
139(1)
5.9 Ceramic building material: bricks
140(6)
Angus Crawford
5.9.1 Analysis
142(2)
5.9.2 Discussion
144(2)
5.10 Fired clay artefacts
146(1)
Angus Crawford
5.11 Architectural stonework
146(11)
Christopher Guy
5.11.1 Introduction
146(5)
5.11.2 Discussion
151(6)
5.12 Other stone
157(6)
Angus Crawford
Alan J. Jacobs
5.12.1 Spindle whorls
157(1)
Alan J. Jacobs
5.12.2 Rotary querns and millstones
157(1)
Angus Crawford
5.12.3 Other stone objects
158(5)
Angus Crawford
5.13 Metal artefacts
163(3)
Alan J. Jacobs
5.13.1 Period 2: medieval metal artefacts
163(1)
5.13.2 Period 3: post-medieval metal artefacts
164(2)
5.13.3 Period 4: 18th-century metal artefacts
166(1)
5.13.4 Period 5 and unassigned metal artefacts
166(1)
5.14 Coins, tokens and jettons
166(3)
Alan J. Jacobs
Martin Allen
5.14.1 Analysis
166(3)
5.15 Clay tobacco pipes
169(20)
Allan Peacey
5.15.1 Analysis and discussion
172(16)
5.15.2 Conclusions
188(1)
5.16 Glass
189(2)
Angus Crawford
Alan J. Jacobs
5.16.1 Medieval and post-medieval glass
189(1)
Alan J. Jacobs
5.16.2 The later bottle glass
190(1)
Angus Crawford
5.17 Ironworking residues
191(1)
Robin Jackson
5.17.1 Analysis
101(91)
5.17.2 Discussion
192(1)
5.18 Leather
192(1)
Ian Panter
5.19 Cloth hose fragment
193(2)
Penelope Walton Rogers
5.20 Wooden small finds
195(2)
Steven J. Allen
5.21 Bone and ivory objects
197(1)
Nicola Rogers
5.22 Pollen
198(3)
Katie Head
5.22.1 Results
198(1)
5.22.2 Discussion
199(2)
5.23 Plant remains
201(15)
Elizabeth Pearson
5.23.1 Results
201(13)
5.23.2 Discussion
214(2)
5.24 Animal Bone
216(9)
Sylvia Warman
5.24.1 Results
216(3)
5.24.2 Analysis
219(4)
5.24.3 Discussion
223(1)
5.24.4 Conclusions
224(1)
5.25 Synthesis of environmental evidence
225(3)
Elizabeth Pearson
Sylvia Warman
5.25.1 Early deposits, build-up of alluvium and phases of flooding, and the site over time
225(1)
5.25.2 Environment of the site during the medieval period
225(1)
5.25.3 Medieval industry on the riverside
225(1)
5.25.4 Introduction of new crops, crop varieties and animal breeds
225(1)
5.25.5 Trade and imported exotics
226(1)
5.25.6 Information on specific documented households
226(1)
5.25.7 Comparison with similar sites, locally, regionally and nationally
226(2)
Chapter 6 Thematic Discussion
6.1 Chronological overview
228(1)
Peter Davenport
6.2 The river, the floodplain and its transformation
229(2)
Hal Dalwood
6.3 The development of the street system and medieval town planning
231(3)
Hal Dalwood
6.4 Colonisation and property division
234(2)
Peter Davenport
6.5 Buildings and houses
236(6)
Peter Davenport
6.5.1 Period 1: Roman
236(1)
6.5.2 Period 2: medieval
237(2)
6.5.3 Period 3: post-medieval (c. 1550--1700)
239(2)
6.5.4 Period 4: 18th century
241(1)
6.5.5 Period 5: 19th to mid 20th century
241(1)
6.6 Industry and craft
242(5)
Peter Davenport
6.6.1 Period 2: medieval
242(3)
6.6.2 Period 3: post-medieval (c. 1550--1700)
245(1)
6.6.3 Period 4: 18th century
246(1)
6.6.4 Period 5: 19th and 20th centuries
247(1)
6.7 Consumption and urban households
247(2)
Hal Dalwood
6.7.1 Period 2: medieval urban households and trade
247(1)
6.7.2 Period 3: post-medieval households and trade
248(1)
6.8 Patterns of wealth and social change
249(3)
Peter Davenport
6.8.1 Period 1: Roman
249(1)
6.8.2 Period 2: medieval
249(1)
6.8.3 Periods 3 and 4: post-medieval and 18th century
250(2)
Chapter 7 Conclusions
252(3)
Hal Dalwood
Appendix: The Brick Catalogue 255(22)
References 277(10)
Index 287