Lyde Green Roman Villa, Emersons Green, South Gloucestershire / / edited by Matthew S. Hobson, Richard Newman.

Lyde Green Roman Villa, Emersons Green, South Gloucestershire was excavated between mid-2012 and mid-2013 along with its surroundings and antecedent settlement. The excavations took place as part of the Emersons Green East Development Area, funded through the mechanism of commercial archaeology by G...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Archaeopress Roman Archaeology Series ; v.85
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Oxford : : Archaeopress Publishing Ltd,, 2021.
Year of Publication:2021
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Series:Archaeopress Roman Archaeology Series
Physical Description:1 online resource (264 pages)
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Table of Contents:
  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright page
  • Contents Page
  • Contents
  • List of Figures
  • Introduction
  • Figure 1.1 The location of Lyde Green
  • Figure 1.2 The location of the trial trenches and excavation areas
  • Research objectives, methodologies and summary of results
  • Figure 2.1 Plan illustrating the location of Iron Age sites in the region of Bristol and South Gloucestershire
  • Figure 2.2 The tribal territory of the Dobunni
  • Figure 2.3 Plan showing the concordance of phasing between all excavation areas
  • Figure 2.4 Archaeological features recorded within Excavation Area A by phase
  • Figure 2.5 Selected sections across archaeological features within Excavation Area A
  • Figure 2.6 Archaeological features recorded within Excavation Area B by phase
  • Figure 2.7 Selected sections across archaeological features within Excavation Area B (1)
  • Figure 2.8 Selected sections across archaeological features within Excavation Area B (2)
  • Figure 2.9 Plan of archaeological features within Excavation Area C by phase
  • Figure 2.10 Selected sections across archaeological features within Excavation Area C
  • Figure 2.11 Plan of archaeological features within Excavation Area D by phase
  • Figure 2.12 Selected sections across archaeological features within Excavation Area D
  • Figure 2.13 Plan of archaeological features within Excavation Area E by phase
  • Figure 2.14 Plan of archaeological features in Excavation Area F by phase
  • The development of the landscape before the 1st millennium AD
  • Figure 3.1 Neolithic stone axe (SF 23)
  • Figure 3.2 Excavation Area A, phase 1 pit [1006]
  • Dating the origins of the rural settlement at Lyde Green: a Late Iron Age enclosure system?
  • Figure 4.1 Plan of the D-shaped enclosure excavated in Area D, with Wardell Armstrong's 2013 Evaluation Trench 1 and gully terminus [118] also shown.
  • Figure 4.2 Plan of phase 1-3 within Excavation Area D, including the D-shaped enclosure ditch
  • Figure 4.3 Plan showing Late Iron Age and Early Romano-British field system and enclosures (Excavation areas A-D, Periods 2, 3.1, 3.2, 3.3 and 4.1).
  • Figure 4.4 Plan of pit [3949] and wind break [4212] plan and section, located within Excavation Area B
  • Figure 4.5 Comparison of the D-shaped enclosure within Excavation Area D with Kingsdown Camp
  • The Romano-British period and the villa estate
  • Figure 5.1 Plan showing pre-villa features in excavation areas A-D
  • Figure 5.2 T-shaped corn-drying oven {6236} with foundation trench (4193) located in Excavation Area B
  • Figure 5.3 Structure {4226} within Excavation Area B
  • Figure 5.4 Excavation Area C, phase 4 rectangular enclosure ditch [2468]
  • Figure 5.5 Plan and section of well {2330} within Excavation Area C
  • Figure 5.6 Three-celled rectangular building {1650} within Excavation Area D
  • Figure 5.7 Plan of Excavation Area B showing features relating to the use-life of the Roman villa
  • Figure 5.8 Floor plan of the tripartite corridor villa found within Excavation Area B
  • Figure 5.9 Plan of structure {4213} found within Excavation Area B
  • Figure 5.10 Plan of structures {4196} and {4235} found within Excavation Area B
  • Figure 5.11 Plan of structure {4219} and furnace 3615 found within Excavation Area B
  • Figure 5.12 Plan of structure {3583} found within Excavation Area B
  • Figure 5.13 Plan showing the location of the cremation burials found in areas B and D
  • The Romano-British artefacts (mid-1st century AD to 5th century AD)
  • Figure 6.1 Profile illustrations of the handmade ceramics produced in the Iron Age tradition
  • Figure 6.2 Illustration of six cremation urns and one accessory vessel (no. 88)
  • Figure 6.3 Profile illustrations of Early Roman pottery.
  • Figure 6.4 Profile illustrations of the Early-mid Roman pottery (1)
  • Figure 6.5 Profile illustrations of the Early-mid Roman pottery (2)
  • Figure 6.6 Profile illustrations of the Mid-late Roman pottery
  • Figure 6.7 Profile illustrations of the Late Roman pottery
  • Figure 6.8 A selection of brooches from Lyde Green
  • Figure 6.9 Selected small finds from Lyde Green. Items of personal adornment and toilet implements
  • Figure 6.10 Selected small finds from Lyde Green
  • Figure 6.11 Ceramic weights
  • Figure 6.12 Lead pipe (SF 62) found within structure {4213} and column base found within structure {6197}
  • Figure 6.13 The 77 coins from Lyde Green, by Reece period
  • Figure 6.14 Comparison of the coins assemblage from Lyde Green with those from ten other villa sites in the region
  • The development of the landscape from the Roman period to the present day
  • Figure 7.1 Archaeological features of medieval and Post-medieval date recorded within the excavation areas
  • Lyde Green and the Romano-British villas of South Gloucestershire
  • Figure 8.1 The excavation areas, shown in relation to a Digital Terrain Model (LiDAR data from the Environment Agency, 2005).
  • Figure 8.2 Map showing the altitude of villa sites within the region
  • Figure 8.3 Lyde Green in the context of other Roman villa sites and the principal Roman roads in the region
  • Figure 8.4 Map of villa sites in the region related to modern land-use
  • Appendices
  • Figure 9.1 Rubbings of decorated and stamped Samian ware sherds described in the catalogue
  • Figure 9.2 Thin sections of the selected Roman pottery sherds
  • Figure 9.3 Images of ceramic building material fabrics and mortar
  • List of Tables
  • Research objectives, methodologies and summary of results
  • Table 2.1 Concordance of phasing between excavation areas
  • The development of the landscape before the 1st millennium AD.
  • Table 3.1 Human remains recovered from Bronze Age Vessel 4
  • Table 3.2 The Bronze Age pottery: sherd count, vessel form and context
  • The Romano-British period and the villa estate
  • Table 5.1 Contextual information on cremations excavated in Areas B and D
  • Table 5.2 The Human Remains: summary of the assemblage's state of preservation
  • Table 5.3 The Human Remains: measurements of bone fragmentation
  • Table 5.4 The Human Remains: quantification of neonatal bones
  • Table 5.5 Quantification of human skeletal elements from deposit (3203)
  • Table 5.6 Age Estimates using regression equations from Scheuer et al. (1980) (In. Scheuer &amp
  • Black 2000, 394 &amp
  • 415)
  • Table 5.7 Selected archaeobotanical data
  • The Romano-British artefacts (mid-1st century AD to 5th century AD)
  • Table 6.1 The Iron Age pottery. Distribution of ceramic forms by area and context
  • Table 6.2 The Iron Age pottery: technology and surface finishing
  • Table 6.3 The Iron Age pottery: fabric types
  • Table 6.4 The Iron Age pottery: rim forms
  • Table 6.5 The Iron Age pottery: rim diameters
  • Table 6.6 Pottery summary by ware group and excavation area
  • Table 6.7 Samian by manufacturing region. Incidence across Site Areas A-D and unstratified contexts. Percentage values show relative abundance by area as a proportion of all pottery.
  • Table 6.8 Samian summary showing breakdown by vessel form/fabric.
  • Table 6.9 Pottery attributed to ceramic phases 1-3 by ware group. The quantities given are sherd count, weight and rim EVEs
  • Table 6.10 The Early Roman pottery (Ceramic phase 1: mid-1st c. to early 2nd c. AD)
  • Table 6.11 Pottery from enclosure ditch [1005] in Area D, representative of Ceramic phase 1 (mid-1st c. AD to early 2nd c. AD)
  • Table 6.12 Pottery assemblage from pit [1489] in Area D, representative of Ceramic Phase 2 (mid-2nd c. to mid-3rd c. AD).
  • Table 6.13 Area C ditch [2296] and ditch [2444] (CP2) pottery summary
  • Table 6.14 Area C ditch [2254] and Area B layer 3881 (CP3) pottery summary
  • Table 6.15 Vessel forms summary by 'Ceramic Phase'
  • Table 6.16 Stratified CBM form classes
  • Table 6.17 CBM fabrics as a proportion of the whole assemblage
  • Table 6.18 CBM forms in fabric T01
  • Table 6.19 CBM forms in fabric T11
  • Table 6.20 Number of different key classes on flue tile
  • Table 6.21 List of stratified coins
  • Table 6.22 Roman coins found during the excavations at Lyde Green
  • Table 6.23 Total count and weight of each slag type
  • Table 6.24 Dimensions of the furnace bases
  • Table 6.25 Dimensions of the hearth bottoms
  • The development of the landscape from the Roman period to the present day
  • Table 7.1 Medieval pottery from Lyde Green
  • Lyde Green and the Romano-British villas of South Gloucestershire
  • Table 8.1 Attributes of villas within c. 17 km of Lyde Green
  • Appendices
  • Table 9.1 Summary of radiocarbon dates
  • Table 9.2 HH-XRF analyses of the smelting tap slag samples (weight %)
  • Table 9.3 HH-XRF analyses of the smelting slag and furnaces bases (weight %)
  • Table 9.4 HH-XRF analyses of the hearth bottom samples (weight %)
  • Table 9.5 HH-XRF analyses of the smithing slag samples (weight %)
  • Table 9.7 Comparison of the mean values of the HH-XRF analyses of the tap slags and furnace bottoms from the Saxon Site and the tap slags and smelting slags from the Villa Site (weight %)
  • List of Plates
  • Research objectives, methodologies and summary of results
  • Plate 2.1 The excavation team working on Area B in February 2013
  • The development of the landscape before the 1st millennium AD
  • Plate 3.1 Sherds of Bronze Age pottery, Vessel 3
  • Dating the origins of the rural settlement at Lyde Green: a Late Iron Age enclosure system?.
  • Plate 4.1 Furnace [3949], showing wall {3863}, with wall {3921} in the background. Looking south.