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

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This is a repository copy of Anglo-Saxon settlements and archaeological visibility in the Yorkshire Wolds. White Rose Research Online URL for this paper: http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/1172/ Book Section: Richards, J.D. orcid.org/0000-0003-3938-899x (2000) Anglo-Saxon settlements and archaeological visibility in the Yorkshire Wolds. In: Geake, H. and Kenny, J., (eds.) Early Deira: Archaeological studies of the East Riding in the fourth to ninth centuries AD. Oxbow Books, Oxford, UK, pp. 27-39. Reuse Items deposited in White Rose Research Online are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved unless indicated otherwise. They may be downloaded and/or printed for private study, or other acts as permitted by national copyright laws. The publisher or other rights holders may allow further reproduction and re-use of the full text version. This is indicated by the licence information on the White Rose Research Online record for the item. Takedown If you consider content in White Rose Research Online to be in breach of UK law, please notify us by emailing eprints@whiterose.ac.uk including the URL of the record and the reason for the withdrawal request. eprints@whiterose.ac.uk https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/

Anglo-Saxon Settlements and Archaeological Visibility -in the Yorkshre Wolds Julian D. Richards Summary Rural Anglo-Saxon settlements in the hinterland of York are notoriously invisible. As a result of major urban rescue archaeology campaigns in the 1970s, more could be inferred about Anglo-Saxon Yorkshire from finds in York than from rural sites. That picture is gradually changing. During the last ten yews, research on two sites in the Yorkshire Wolds - Wharram Percy and Cottam - now allows us to explain this invisibility, and to characterise settlements of this period. This paper describes how a battery of archacoiogica1 techniques, including aerial photography, resistivity, magnetometry, fieldwalking, excavation, and collaboration with metd-detectorists have been used in combination to identify and map these sites, with Geographical Information Systems (GIS) used to integrate the information. The conclusion to be drawn is that early medieval sites are not so much invisible as hitherto unrecognised, and the foundations have now been laid for aprogrme of identification based upon remote sensing and cropmark morphology. liatpoduction The Yorkshire Wolds are rolling chalk uplands in eastern Yorkshire. They are bounded to the north by the Vale of Pickering, to the west by the Vale of York, and to the south-east by the Holderness plain. One arm extends directly south as far as the Humber estuary which, from around the seventh century AD, appears to have formed the southern boundary of the early medieval kingdom of Northumbria. To the north-east the Wolds extend as far as the North Sea coast at Flamborough Head. The underlying chalk geolo,qy results in little surface drainage, aithough there are a number of dry valleys which are thought to date from an andent glaciation. There is one substantial watercourse, the Gypsey Race, which rises not far from the medieval settlement at Wharram Percy, and flows down the Great Wold Valley into the North Sea at the modern seaside town of Bridlington. Today the Wolds are lightly populated, with settlement mainly in dispersed farms and villages. The thin chalk soils are largely given over to arable farming, although both cows and sheep are also grazed on the uplands. There are market towns at Malton and Driffield, lying off the chalk to the north-west and south-east respectively, but the nearest major urban centre is the city of York, which lies some twelve miles (c. 20 km) from the western Wolds edge. The -welds appear to have been extensively farmed from at least the middle Bronze Age. There are numerous round barrows, but the most significant features from this period are the linear earthworks which divide the landscape into large territories. It was in the late Iron Age, however, that the WoIds became fully settled. Mapping of cropmarks from aerial photographs reveals a landscape dissected by ancient trackways and partitioned by extensive field systems. Many of these form so-called 'ladder patterns', comprising series of rectilinear fields or paddocks defined by ditches and often fronting onto a trackway, with occasional settlement enclosures. That this landscape is pre-roman is clearly demonstrated south of Wharram-le-Street, where the Roman road south of Malton cuts obliquely across the field systems and trackways. Where such ladder settlements have been excavated, as at Wharram Percy, a late Iron Age origin has been confirmed, although they have generally been shown to continue in use into Romano-British times (Beresford and Rurst 1990, 87-92). The spacing of the settlements is generally every half-mile (1 km), shown for exampie along the Thixendde valley, where there are medieval viilages every mile (1.6 km) with Romano- British farms halfway between (Beresford and Hurst 1990,92). The trackways look like cattie droveways and the paddocks may have served as animal enclosures, although excavation of some of the medium-sized local villas and their associated corn-drying ovens shows that cereal crops were also already important by the Roman period. The immediate post-roman settlement pattern of the Wolds is much less well understood. Ancient pollen does not survive well on the chalk soils, but most environ-