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Footprints from the Past: The South-eastern Extramural Settlement of Roman Alchester and Rural Occupation in its Hinterland: The Archaeology of East West Rail Phase 1 [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 298 pages, kõrgus x laius: 297x210 mm, 72 tables
  • Sari: Oxford Archaeology Monograph 28
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Sep-2018
  • Kirjastus: Oxford Archaeology
  • ISBN-10: 0904220826
  • ISBN-13: 9780904220827
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 298 pages, kõrgus x laius: 297x210 mm, 72 tables
  • Sari: Oxford Archaeology Monograph 28
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Sep-2018
  • Kirjastus: Oxford Archaeology
  • ISBN-10: 0904220826
  • ISBN-13: 9780904220827
Teised raamatud teemal:
Excavations by Oxford Archaeology in advance of a programme of improvements to the railway between Bicester and Oxford investigated part of the south-eastern extramural settlement associated with the Roman fortress and subsequent town at Alchester, Oxfordshire, as well as rural settlements in its rural hinterland.

The investigations at Alchester extended across two successive routes south to Dorchester-on-Thames, the earlier of which by-passed the eastern side of Otmoor and was superseded by a more direct route across the moor at the end of the 1st century AD. Settlement beside the earlier road may have been a successor to a pre-Roman settlement and appears from artefactual evidence to have been of quite high status during the initial, military phase, although no contemporary structural evidence was found. Stone-founded buildings were constructed during the late 1st-early 2nd century, including two single-celled structures of uncertain function that may represent a gatehouse or a pair of shrines. The buildings were demolished by c AD 200, when the area was abandoned. An insight into the diverse lives of the inhabitants is provided by finds that included part of a priestly headdress, two pairs of slave shackles and a group of roof tiles bearing the footprints of a young child. The extramural settlement may have been partly rural in character, involved in farming the landscape around the town, which was intensively managed for agricultural production, probably as meadow and pasture.

Ditched enclosures beside the later road may have been part of a second extramural area or a discrete farming establishment. No buildings were identified but two large pits contained domestic refuse and building material. Excavations at six other locations investigated farmsteads that dated from the middle Iron Age to the 3rd century AD and included a rare deposit of debris from copper and iron working from a middle Iron Age enclosure ditch.
List of Figures
vii
List of Tables
xi
Summary xiii
Acknowledgements xv
Chapter 1 Introduction
1(14)
Project Background
1(1)
Location, Topography and Geology
1(3)
Archaeological Background
4(4)
Assessment, evaluation and formation of the mitigation strategy
8(3)
Fieldwork and Analysis Methodology
11(1)
Fieldwork methodologies
11(2)
Post-excavation methodology and phasing scheme
13(1)
Structure of the Report
14(1)
Location of the Archive
14(1)
Chapter 2 The excavations
15(66)
Langford Lane East: The Eastern Road And Associated Occupation
15(21)
Phase 1 Early prehistory
18(1)
Phase 3 Late Iron Age/early Roman
18(3)
Phase 4 Roman military phase (c AD 43--70)
21(4)
Phase 5 Early Roman (late 1st--early 2nd century)
25(6)
Phase 6 Middle Roman (2nd--early 3rd century)
31(3)
Phase 7 Late Roman (mid 3rd--4th century)
34(2)
Phase 9 Post-Roman features
36(1)
Langford Lane East: The Scheduled Monument Area
36(2)
Langford Lane South: The Alchester To Dorchester-On-Thames Road And Associated Settlement
38(11)
Phase 1 Early prehistory
40(1)
Phase 5 Early Roman (late 1st--early 2nd century)
40(4)
Phase 6 Middle Roman (2nd--early 3rd century)
44(5)
South of Merton
49(5)
Phase 1 Early prehistory
50(1)
Phase 6.1 Middle Roman (2nd century)
50(3)
Phase 6.2 Middle Roman (late 2nd--early 3rd century)
53(1)
Phase 8 Medieval period
54(1)
Holts Farm Crossing
54(12)
Phase 1 Early prehistory
55(1)
Phase 2 Middle Iron Age
55(6)
Phase 3 Late Iron Age
61(1)
Phase 5 Early Roman (late lst-early 2nd century)
61(2)
Phase 6 Middle Roman (2nd-early 3rd century)
63(2)
Phase 7 Late Roman (mid 3rd-4th century)
65(1)
Phase 8 Medieval period
65(1)
East Of Oddington Grange
66(1)
Phase 1 Early prehistory
66(1)
Phase 2 Middle Iron Age
66(1)
Phase 3 Late Iron Age
66(1)
Undated
66(1)
South of Oddington Crossing
67(3)
Phase 2 Middle Iron Age
67(1)
Phase 5 Early Roman (late lst-early 2nd century)
68(1)
Phase 8 Medieval period
68(2)
Phase 9 Modern period
70(1)
North of Gallos Brook
70(5)
Phase 1 Early prehistory
70(1)
Phase 2 Middle Iron Age
70(3)
Phase 3-5 Late Iron Age or Roman features
73(2)
Phase 8 Medieval period
75(1)
Phase 9 Modern period
75(1)
Palaeochannels
75(1)
North of Oxford Parkway Station
75(6)
Phase 1 Early prehistory
76(1)
Phase 5 Early Roman (late 1st--early 2nd century)
76(1)
Phase 6.1 Middle Roman (2nd century)
77(1)
Phase 6.2 Middle Roman (late 2nd--early 3rd century)
78(1)
Phase 7 Late Roman (mid 3rd--4th century)
79(1)
Phase 9 Modern period
79(2)
Chapter 3 The finds
81(98)
Pottery
81(58)
Paul Booth
Coins
139(1)
Paul Booth
Metal And Glass Objects
140(8)
Ian R. Scott
Vessel and Window Glass
148(1)
Ian R. Scott
Metalworking Debris From Oddington Crossing
149(3)
Edward Biddulph
Marcos Martinon-Torres
Loic Boscher
Lynne Keys
Ceramic Building Material
152(19)
Cynthia Poole
Fired Clay
171(4)
Cynthia Poole
Worked Stone
175(1)
Ruth Shaffrey
Worked Flint
176(3)
Michael Donnelly
Chapter 4 Environmental evidence and radiocarbon dating
179(52)
Animal Bones
179(8)
Lee G. Broderick
Charred Plant Remains
187(6)
Julia Meen
Charcoal
193(8)
Dana Challinor
Waterlogged Plant Remains
201(4)
Julia Meen
Pollen
205(7)
Mairead Rutherford
Insect Remains
212(11)
Enid Allison
Land and Freshwater Snails
223(6)
Elizabeth Stafford
Marine Shell
229(1)
Rebecca Nicholson
Radiocarbon Dating
230(1)
Andrew Simmonds
Chapter 5 Human remains
231(8)
Lauren McIntyre
Alice Rose
Chapter 6 Discussion
239(28)
Introduction
239(1)
Early Prehistoric Activity
240(1)
Middle Iron Age Settlement
241(2)
Settlement forms
243(2)
Metalworking at South of Oddington Crossing
245(1)
Roman Alchester and Its Agricultural Hinterland
245(1)
The development of settlement on the southern outskirts of Alchester
245(10)
Rural settlement in the hinterland of Alchester
255(3)
Economy
258(3)
Burials and other ritual activity
261(2)
Alchester and its hinterland
263(4)
Bibliography 267(12)
Index 279