Proceedings of the An Iron Age Square Barrow at Diddington, Cambridgeshire. Cambridge Antiquarian Society

Similar documents
Changing People Changing Landscapes: excavations at The Carrick, Midross, Loch Lomond Gavin MacGregor, University of Glasgow

The results of field walking, casual observations, test pitting and an earthwork survey undertaken by CAFG within Haslingfield parish between

Cambridge Archaeology Field Group. Fieldwalking on the Childerley Estate Cambridgeshire

Cambridge Archaeology Field Group. Fieldwalking on the Childerley Estate, Cambridgeshire. Autumn 2014 to Spring Third interim report

This is a repository copy of Anglo-Saxon settlements and archaeological visibility in the Yorkshire Wolds.

Lanton Lithic Assessment

Bronze Age 2, BC

THE UNFOLDING ARCHAEOLOGY OF CHELTENHAM

Test-Pit 3: 31 Park Street (SK )

Former Whitbread Training Centre Site, Abbey Street, Faversham, Kent Interim Archaeological Report Phase 1 November 2009

7. Prehistoric features and an early medieval enclosure at Coonagh West, Co. Limerick Kate Taylor

Moray Archaeology For All Project

SALVAGE EXCAVATIONS AT OLD DOWN FARM, EAST MEON

A visit to the Wor Barrow 21 st November 2015

2 Saxon Way, Old Windsor, Berkshire

THE PRE-CONQUEST COFFINS FROM SWINEGATE AND 18 BACK SWINEGATE

3. The new face of Bronze Age pottery Jacinta Kiely and Bruce Sutton

The Parish of Findon contains archaeology of national and international importance.

Fieldwalking at Cottam 1994 (COT94F)

An archaeological watching brief and recording at Brightlingsea Quarry, Moverons Lane, Brightlingsea, Essex October 2003

New Composting Centre, Ashgrove Farm, Ardley, Oxfordshire

Grim s Ditch, Starveall Farm, Wootton, Woodstock, Oxfordshire

Colchester Archaeological Trust Ltd. A Fieldwalking Survey at Birch, Colchester for ARC Southern Ltd

THE RAVENSTONE BEAKER

A NEW ROMAN SITE IN CHESHAM

Archaeological Material From Spa Ghyll Farm, Aldfield

Archaeological. Monitoring & Recording Report. Fulbourn Primary School, Cambridgeshire. Archaeological Monitoring & Recording Report.

Grange Farm, Widmer End, Hughenden, Buckinghamshire

Church of St Peter and St Paul, Great Missenden, Buckinghamshire

Greater London GREATER LONDON 3/606 (E ) TQ

STONES OF STENNESS HISTORIC ENVIRONMENT SCOTLAND STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE

A Sense of Place Tor Enclosures

St Germains, Tranent, East Lothian: the excavation of Early Bronze Age remains and Iron Age enclosed and unenclosed settlements

Greater London Region GREATER LONDON 3/567 (E.01.K099) TQ BERMONDSEY STREET AND GIFCO BUILDING AND CAR PARK

North West Cambridge, University of Cambridge Archaeological Evaluation Fieldwork

An archaeological evaluation at 16 Seaview Road, Brightlingsea, Essex February 2004

AN EARLY MEDIEVAL RUBBISH-PIT AT CATHERINGTON, HAMPSHIRE Bj>J. S. PILE and K. J. BARTON

Erection of wind turbine, Mains of Loanhead, Old Rayne, AB52 6SX

A Fieldwalking Project At Sompting. West Sussex

39, Walnut Tree Lane, Sudbury (SUY 073) Planning Application No. B/04/02019/FUL Archaeological Monitoring Report No. 2005/112 OASIS ID no.

Overview: From Neolithic to Bronze Age, BC

Human remains from Estark, Iran, 2017

Excavation Report DRAFT. Early Medieval Ditch at Caxton Hall Cambridgeshire. Excavation Report. Client: Mr and Mrs Harrison.

Advanced archaeology at the archive. Museum of London Support materials AS/A2 study day

SHORTER PAPERS NEW RADIOCARBON DATES FOR EARLY MEDIEVAL SOMERSET. Introduction Mick Aston

BALNUARAN. of C LAVA. a prehistoric cemetery. A Visitors Guide to

Caistor Roman Project Interim Summary of 2015 Season of Test pits at Caistor Old Hall

YCCCART is very grateful to Richard Broomhead for permission to publish this report online.

ARCHAEOLOGICAL EVALUATION AT BRIGHTON POLYTECHNIC, NORTH FIELD SITE, VARLEY HALLS, COLDEAN LANE, BRIGHTON. by Ian Greig MA AIFA.

Latest archaeological finds at Must Farm provide a vivid picture of everyday life in the Bronze Age 14 July 2016

Bristol & Gloucestershire Archaeological Society

Archaeological trial-trenching evaluation at Chappel Farm, Little Totham, Essex. April 2013

An archaeological evaluation at the Lexden Wood Golf Club (Westhouse Farm), Lexden, Colchester, Essex

KNAP OF HOWAR HISTORIC ENVIRONMENT SCOTLAND STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE. Property in Care (PIC) ID: PIC301 Designations:

NOTE A THIRD CENTURY ROMAN BURIAL FROM MANOR FARM, HURSTBOURNE PRIORS. by. David Allen with contributions by Sue Anderson and Brenda Dickinson

McDONALD INSTITUTE MONOGRAPHS. Spong Hill. Part IX: chronology and synthesis. By Catherine Hills and Sam Lucy

TIPPERARY HISTORICAL JOURNAL 1994

Barber s Point is a barren and windswept promontory on the River Alde, home now to sheep, grass and wetland birds. It is hard to believe that, 1300

PIGEON COVE, LABRADOR Lisa Rankin Memorial University of Newfoundland

Archaeological sites and find spots in the parish of Burghclere - SMR no. OS Grid Ref. Site Name Classification Period

An Archaeological Resource Assessment of the Neolithic and Early Bronze Age in Lincolnshire

UNIVERSITY OF LANCASTER ARCHAEOLOGY CONFERENCE. 9 March 2002

Fort Arbeia and the Roman Empire in Britain 2012 FIELD REPORT

Is this the Original Anglo-Saxon period site of Weathercote?

Archaeological Watching Brief (Phase 2) at Court Lodge Farm, Aldington, near Ashford, Kent December 2011

Silwood Farm, Silwood Park, Cheapside Road, Ascot, Berkshire

Cetamura Results

Novington, Plumpton East Sussex

The Living and the Dead

BERKSHIRE ARCHAEOLOGY

Brooches, Bathhouses and Bones Archaeology in the Gwash Valley

Peace Hall, Sydney Town Hall Results of Archaeological Program (Interim Report)

A R C H A E O L O G Y. N o. 3 NORTH WEST CAMBRIDGE (2) EXCAVATIONS Assessment Report Craig Cessford and Christopher Evans

The lithic assemblage from Kingsdale Head (KH09)

An archaeological evaluation in the playground of Colchester Royal Grammar School, Lexden Road, Colchester, Essex

ST PATRICK S CHAPEL, ST DAVIDS PEMBROKESHIRE 2015

Chapter 2. Remains. Fig.17 Map of Krang Kor site

A NOTE FROM THE ERMINE STREET DIG HUNTINGDON September 2013 EDITOR

January report prepared by Laura Pooley, Ben Holloway, Philip Crummy and Rob Masefield. on behalf of Taylor Woodrow

Suburban life in Roman Durnovaria

COWLAM ANGLIAN SETTLEMENT

Old iron-producing furnaces in the eastern hinterland of Bagan, Myanmar.

An archaeological evaluation by trial-trenching at Playgolf, Bakers Lane, Westhouse Farm, Colchester, Essex

Teachers Pack

Archaeological evaluation at the Onley Arms, The Street, Stisted, Essex

DEMARCATION OF THE STONE AGES.

E x cav atio n R e p o r t

Pre-Christian Cemeteries

CHAPTER 14. Conclusions. Nicky Milner, Barry Taylor and Chantal Conneller

Chapter 2: Archaeological Description

SCOTLAND. Belfast IRISH SEA. Dublin THE REPUBLIC OF IRELAND ENGLAND ENGLISH CHANNEL. Before and After

PETERBOROUGH CATHEDRAL

Excavation Report. Medieval Occupation at Challis Green Barrington Cambridgeshire. Excavation Report. Client: Hills Partnership Limited.

Archaeological Evaluation at Alconbury Weald Enterprise Zone

Please see our website for up to date contact information, and further advice.

PREHISTORY REVISED: RESEARCH OR DESTROYED MEGALITHIC TOMBS

The Roman Rural Settlement Project

Neolithic and Roman remains on the Lufkins Farm reservoir site, Great Bentley, Essex October-November 2007

Oil lamps (inc early Christian, top left) Sofia museum

Excavation. Post-Medieval Ditches. Land off Norwich Common Road Wymondham Norfolk. Excavation. Client: November 2013

Transcription:

Proceedings of the An Iron Age Square Barrow at Diddington, Cambridgeshire Cambridge Antiquarian Society Third Interim Report of excavations at Little Paxton Quarries: 1996 Alex Jones with contributions by Lynne Bevan and Ann Woodward (incorporating the Cambs and Hunts Archaeological Society) Volume CIV (104) for 2015 Editor Richard Halliday Associate Editor (Archaeology) Professor Stephen Upex Published by the Cambridge Antiquarian Society 2015 ISSN 0309-3606

Article Summaries from Volume CIV presented here Contents Bronze Age and Iron Age settlement and land-use at the Milton Landfill and Park & Ride Sites, Cambridgeshire 1 Later Neolithic and Early Bronze Age activity at North Fen, Sutton Gault, Cambridgeshire 1 Late Iron Age, Roman, Anglo-Saxon and Medieval occupation at the former Church Hall site, High Street, Soham 1 Change in a South Cambridgeshire parish: understanding the Bronze Age to late medieval settlement within Haslingfield 1 Planned Redevelopments in Medieval and Early Post-Medieval Chesterton 2 Iron Age and Romano-British settlement at the Papworth Hospital car park, Papworth Everard, Cambridgeshire 2 The Medieval Schools of Cambridge, 1200 1550 2 Decline and growth in the late medieval fenland: the examples of Outwell and Upwell 2 Anglo-Saxon work boxes and the Burwell Grave 42 Box, Christian or Pagan? 3 Papists and Non-jurors in the Isle of Ely, 1559 1745 3

Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society Volume CIV (104) for 2015: Article Summaries 1 Bronze Age and Iron Age settlement and land-use at the Milton Landfill and Park & Ride Sites, Cambridgeshire Tom Phillips with contributions by Michael Bamforth, Ian Baxter, Steve Boreham, Lisa Brown, Matt Brudenell, Chris Faine, Rachel Fosberry, Val Fryer and Sarah Percival. Illustrations by Sarah Lucas, Lucy Gane, Gillian Greer and Charlotte Davies Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society CIV pp. 7 30 Excavations at two sites to the west of Milton, Cambridgeshire have revealed evidence for settlement and land-use in the Cam Valley spanning the earlier Bronze Age to the later Iron Age. Waterholes were the dominant features in almost all phases and these produced significant artefactual and ecofactual assemblages. Waterlogged remains include three log ladders that will add to the growing corpus of these items found in the region. Although the foci of settlement altered over time, and changed from open in the earlier Iron Age to enclosed in the later Iron Age, the general picture of a grassland-dominated landscape and predominantly pastoral-based farming economy, heavily focused on cattle, appears to have remained fairly constant. The large pottery assemblage (over 6000 sherds, c. 71kg), which is primarily earlier Iron Age in date, makes an important contribution to regional ceramic studies of the period and shows clear affinities with groups of material from sites further up the Cam Valley and within its hinterland to the east of Cambridge. Later Neolithic and Early Bronze Age activity at North Fen, Sutton Gault, Cambridgeshire Jonathan TaborWith contributions by Lawrence Billington, Steve Boreham, Charles French,Val Fryer, Mark Knight, Vida Rajkovača and Simon Timberlake Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society CIV pp. 31 54 Excavations at North Fen, Sutton Gault undertaken in 2010 revealed evidence of significant later Neolithic and Early Bronze Age activity comprising artefact scatters within preserved buried soil deposits and features, including pits, watering holes and ring ditches. Analysis of a substantial later Neolithic flint scatter suggests that during this period the North Fen island was the focus for task-specific activity related, in part at least, to hunting. In contrast, evidence suggests a more long term commitment to place during the Beaker/Early Bronze Age period that resulted in the establishment of watering holes and funerary monuments, which were recorded alongside more tangible evidence of settlement/occupation. In addition, pollen analysis of samples from a watering hole considered in conjunction with the results of previous palaeoenvironmental work has provided evidence of a relatively dramatic change in the local environment during the later Neolithic and Early Bronze Age, comprising woodland clearance and an increase in arable activity. Late Iron Age, Roman, Anglo-Saxon and Medieval occupation at the former Church Hall site, High Street, Soham Tom Woolhouse with Andrew Peachey, Julia EM Cussans, John R Summers and Antony RR Mustchin Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society CIV pp. 55 70 Between June and July 2011, archaeological excavation on the site of St Andrew s church hall in Soham town centre revealed well-preserved multi-period settlement remains. The most significant discovery was a late Iron Age-toearly Roman (c. 50 BC AD 70/80) ditched enclosure with associated rubbish pits, and evidence for high-status occupation, including potsherds from imported Gallo-Belgic vessels. Activity shifted away from the site before resuming in the late Roman period. A pit and residual Ipswich ware provide the first archaeological evidence for middle Anglo-Saxon occupation in the town centre. Important late Anglo-Saxon settlement remains were also present. Wheat formed the mainstay of the arable economy in all periods, although significant quantities of cereal grains were only encountered in Saxo-Norman and later contexts. The Saxo-Norman and medieval site also yielded numerous arable weed species. Change in a South Cambridgeshire parish: understanding the Bronze Age to late medieval settlement within Haslingfield Cambridge Archaeology Field Group (CAFG). Illustrations by Lucy Gane Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society CIV pp. 71 87 Extensive investigation within Haslingfield parish was intermittently undertaken between 1979 and 2012 by the Cambridge Archaeology Field Group (CAFG). It comprised field-walking about a quarter of available land within the parish, an earthwork survey, the excavation of 27 test pits and eight casual observations during other excavations largely within the present village. Several likely settlement sites have been identified: a probable Late Bronze Age/Early Iron Age site, a Middle/ Late Iron Age to Roman settlement, a probable villa, an Anglo-Saxon settlement which may have been the nucleus of the present Haslingfield village, and a medieval-to-late medieval hamlet lying 500m to the north of the present village. This work gives new insights into how the present village probably represents a consequence of expansion in both the Saxo-Norman and medieval periods around, as well as within, an earlier large green.

2 Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society Volume CIV (104) for 2015: Article Summaries Planned Redevelopments in Medieval and Early Post-Medieval Chesterton Richard Newman. Incorporating material from Martin Allen (numismatics) Richard Darrah (timber), Val Fryer (environmental remains), David Hall (ceramics), Quita Mould (leather), Vida Rajkovača (faunal remains) and Simon Timberlake (worked stone) Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society CIV pp. 89 105 Previous excavations conducted in and around the periphery of Chesterton have revealed details of the settlement s origins and early development. More recent work undertaken within the settlement core provides additional information pertaining to its subsequent medieval and post-medieval reorganisation and expansion. Here, c. 1200, a series of burgage-type plots were established. Probably occupying former strips within the preceding open fields, their establishment marks the culmination of a wider process of village nucleation that may have been initiated by nearby Barnwell Priory. Numerous medieval features, including a stone-lined well, were investigated. In c. 1560 an extensive redevelopment was undertaken; the existing buildings were demolished, the ground-surface raised and a series of narrow tenements established. This latter event most probably represents a property speculation undertaken following the sale of the Priory s former demesne. Iron Age and Romano-British settlement at the Papworth Hospital car park, Papworth Everard, Cambridgeshire Yvonne Wolframm-Murray and Andy Chapman with contributions by Simon Carlyle, Dana Challinor, Pat Chapman, Val Fryer, Matilda Holmes, Tora Hylton, Ian Meadows, Ed McSloy, Paul Kajewski Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society CIV pp. 107 124 Part of a middle/late Iron Age and Romano-British settlement complex at Papworth Hospital and Business Park was excavated in advance of a new car park. The earliest artefact is a Neolithic polished flint axe. Settlement probably commenced in the middle/late Iron Age (2nd-1st centuries BC), but only the northern corner of a ditched enclosure lay within the excavated area; with the focus of settlement further south. This enclosure remained in use into the early Roman period, but by the later 1st century AD there was a new and more extensive system of boundary ditches and small sub-enclosures, which were modified over time. The coarse ware pottery indicates that this was a small rural farmstead, although a kiln plate may indicate short-lived pottery manufacturing. In the late Roman period there was a new ditch system, perhaps the corner of a large enclosure lying largely beyond the excavated area. The settlement was abandoned in the 4th century AD. Cropmark evidence and other nearby excavations indicate that the excavated area lay at the northern end of an extensive area of Iron Age and Romano-British rural settlement, and this is compared with other nearby contemporary settlement. Pottery from the final fills of the latest enclosure ditch is broadly dated to the 5th to mid-8th centuries AD, indicating nearby activity during the early/ middle Anglo-Saxon period. The Medieval Schools of Cambridge, 1200 1550 Nicholas Orme Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society CIV pp. 125 136 Cambridge was an important centre of school, as well as university, education from at least the thirteenth century. In addition to elementary teaching, which has not left traces, there came to be several grammar schools, most of them charging fees, with an endowed institution at Jesus College that was free and open to the public from 1506 to 1568. The article lists the known schools and schoolmasters, discusses what may be learnt about their pupils and studies, and examines the history and nature of the officer known as the master of glomery. The university had an additional influence on school education beyond the city. In the late fourteenth century a course of study was introduced for a degree of master of grammar, which was mainly followed by serving or prospective schoolmasters in eastern England, and in 1439 William Bingham founded Godshouse to support the training of such schoolmasters. These initiatives faded away in the early sixteenth century, when the rise of humanist or classical Latin, followed by the Reformation, introduced a new era in the history of school education in Cambridge. Decline and growth in the late medieval fenland: the examples of Outwell and Upwell John S Lee Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society CIV pp. 137 147 This article looks at the evidence for growth and decline in the late medieval economy, a theme which has long been debated by historians, by examining the fenland communities of Outwell and Upwell. The fenland landscape shaped the local economy and society, with activities based around the exploitation of natural resources and the use of waterways as key transport routes. The landscape had itself been shaped by the embanking and diverting of rivers, and these efforts may have had to intensify during the 14th and 15th centuries to counter increased flooding risks. The reduced demand for land in this period is reflected in the accounts of the bishop of Ely and several monastic landowners. Nonetheless, the wills of smaller landholders, the prevalence of trading activities and guilds, and building works at Beaupré Hall, Welle Manor Hall and particularly at the parish churches, point to evidence of prosperity in Outwell and Upwell in the later Middle Ages.

Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society Volume CIV (104) for 2015: Article Summaries 3 Anglo-Saxon work boxes and the Burwell Grave 42 Box, Christian or Pagan? Anthony Gibson Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society CIV pp. 149 160 The article discusses a highly decorated box recovered from Burwell (Anglo-Saxon cemetery) Grave 42, and attempts to establish if this and other boxes had solely a secular use or whether the possession of such boxes reveals the social identities of their owners and their beliefs, pagan or Christian. Since their earliest discovery, archaeologists and historians have been unable to reach a consensus on their purpose. These enigmatic containers have been variously described as work boxes, needle cases, amulet containers or relic boxes. A typology of such containers is outlined. Papists and Non-jurors in the Isle of Ely, 1559 1745 Francis Young Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society CIV pp. 161 170 The Cambridgeshire Fens were one of the most strongly Protestant areas of early modern England, yet the incarceration of Catholic priests at Wisbech Castle brought into being a network of Catholic sympathisers in the area that allowed both priests and converts to escape. A small number of men from the Isle of Ely became (or tried to become) Catholic priests in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and there is strong evidence that some families, such as the Prances of March, were at least crypto-catholic in sympathy. In the eighteenth century Catholics and Jacobite Non-jurors owned extensive lands in the Fens, and while some were absentee landlords, others such as Simon Hake and John Pitchford were residents. In the light of the evidence, this article argues that the perception that Catholicism was virtually non-existent in the Isle of Ely is in need of reappraisal.