Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-17T20:02:37.007Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Building Britannia: Pre-Flavian Private and Public Construction across Southern Britain

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 July 2021

Michael Fulford
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, University of Reading [email protected] [email protected]
Sara Machin
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, University of Reading [email protected] [email protected]

Abstract

Excavation of the Roman tilery at Little London, Pamber, Hampshire, has prompted a reassessment of the dating of relief-patterned tile, assigning the bulk of production to the Claudio-Neronian period rather than the late first to mid-/late second century. This material has been privileged for retention in excavation archives but can now be seen as a proxy for the manufacture of a much wider range of ceramic building material, typically discarded on site, which, in the case of products from Little London and pre-Flavian Minety (Wiltshire), travelled distances of up to 100 km. Redating implies more extensive public and private building in town and country south and east of the Fosse Way before the Flavian period than has previously been envisaged. While private building included the construction of bath-houses, heated rooms and the provision of roofing materials, public building, we suggest, provided tabernas et praetoria along the principal roads of the province. In the private sphere such building provides a possible context for Dio Cassius’ mention of the recall and confiscation of large loans made to Britons before the Boudican rebellion. Finally, consideration of fabric needs to be added to the criteria for retaining ceramic building material in excavation archives.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Allen, M. 2016: ‘The south’, in Smith, A., Allen, M., Brindle, T. and Fulford, M., The Rural Settlement of Roman Britain, Britannia Monograph 29, London, 75140Google Scholar
Allen, M., and Smith, A. 2016: ‘Rural settlement in Roman Britain: morphological classification and overview’, in Smith, A., Allen, M., Brindle, T. and Fulford, M., The Rural Settlement of Roman Britain, Britannia Monograph 29, London, 1743Google Scholar
Baatz, D. 1988: ‘Verkleidungsziegel mit Rollstempelmustern aus Südhessen’, Saalburg Jahrbuch 44, 6583Google Scholar
Baxter, K., Boyle, G., and Creighton, L. 2018: Guidance on the Rationalisation of Museum Archaeology Collections, LondonGoogle Scholar
Betts, I.M. 2017: ‘The supply of tile to Roman London’, in Bird, D. (ed.), Agriculture and Industry in South-Eastern Roman Britain, Oxford, 368–83Google Scholar
Betts, I., Black, E.W., and Gower, J. 1997: A Corpus of Relief-Patterned Tiles in Roman Britain: Journal of Roman Pottery Studies 7Google Scholar
Bidwell, P. 1979: The Legionary Bath-House and Basilica and Forum at Exeter, ExeterGoogle Scholar
Bird, D. 2014: ‘The Ashtead (Surrey) Roman villa and tileworks project: an interim report’, The Bulletin of the Association for Roman Archaeology 22, 51–8Google Scholar
Black, E.W. 1985: ‘The dating of relief-patterned flue-tiles’, Oxford Journal of Archaeology 4, 353–76CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Black, E.W. 1995: Cursus Publicus: The Infrastructure of Government in Roman Britain, British Archaeological Reports British Series 241, OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Black, E.W. 1996: ‘Box flue-tiles in Britannia: the spread of Roman bathing in the first and second centuries’, Archaeological Journal 153, 6078CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blagg, T.F.C. 1979: ‘The date of the temple at Bath’, Britannia 10, 101–7CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, A.E. 1994: ‘A Romano-British shell-gritted pottery and tile manufacturing at Harrold, Bedfordshire’, Bedfordshire Archaeology 21, 19107Google Scholar
Cousins, E.H. 2016: ‘An imperial image: the Bath gorgon in context’, Britannia 47, 99118CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crummy, P. 1997: City of Victory: The Story of Colchester – Britain's First Roman Town, ColchesterGoogle Scholar
Cunliffe, B. 1971a: Excavations at Fishbourne 1961–1969 1: The Site, Reports of the Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries of London 26, LeedsGoogle Scholar
Cunliffe, B. 1971b: Excavations at Fishbourne 1961–1969 2: The Finds, Reports of the Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries of London 27, LeedsCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Darvill, T. 1979: ‘A petrological study of LHS and TPF stamped tiles from the Cotswold region’, in McWhirr, A. (ed.), Roman Brick and Tile, British Archaeological Reports International Series 68, Oxford, 309–49Google Scholar
Down, A. 1978: Chichester Excavations 3, ChichesterGoogle Scholar
Drury, P.J. 1988: The Mansio and Other Sites in the South-Eastern Sector of Caesaromagus, Council for British Archaeology Research Report 66, LondonGoogle Scholar
Foster, S. 1986: ‘The tiles’, in Rudling 1986, 203–13CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frere, S. 1972: Verulamium Excavations 1, Reports of the Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries of London 28, LondonGoogle Scholar
Fulford, M. 2008: ‘Nero and Britain: the palace of the client king at Calleva and imperial policy towards the province after Boudica’, Britannia 39, 113CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fulford, M. forthcoming: The Emperor Nero's Tilery and Pottery Works at Little London, Pamber, by Silchester, Hampshire, Britannia Monograph 36, LondonGoogle Scholar
Fulford, M., Pankhurst, N., Wheeler, D., and Machin, S. 2017: The Silchester Environs Project: The Roman Tilery and Pottery Industry at Little London, Pamber 2017, interim report, Department of Archaeology, University of Reading, https://research.reading.ac.uk/silchester/interim/Google Scholar
Hill, J., and Rowsome, P. 2011: Roman London and the Walbrook Stream Crossing: Excavations at 1 Poultry and Vicinity, City of London 1, LondonGoogle Scholar
Hingley, R. 2018: Londinium: A Biography: Roman London from its Origins to the Fifth Century, LondonCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lancaster, L.C. 2012: ‘A new vaulting technique for early baths in Sussex: the anatomy of a Romano-British invention’, Journal of Roman Archaeology 25, 419–40CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Linford, N., Linford, P., and Payne, A. 2016: Silchester Environs Project: Little London Roman Tilery, Pamber, Hampshire: Report on Geophysical Survey, July 2015, Historic England Research Report 41, PortsmouthGoogle Scholar
Lowther, A.W.G. 1927: ‘Excavations at Ashtead, Surrey’, Surrey Archaeological Collections 37, 144–63Google Scholar
Lowther, A.W.G. 1930: ‘Excavations at Ashtead, Surrey, second Report (1927 and 1928)’, Surrey Archaeological Collections 38, 117Google Scholar
Lowther, A.W.G. 1948a: A Study of the Patterns on Roman Flue-Tiles and their Distribution, Surrey Archaeological Society Research Paper 1, GuildfordGoogle Scholar
Lowther, A.W.G. 1948b: ‘Relief-patterned flue-tiles from the forum site’, in Kenyon, K.M., Excavations at the Jewry Wall Site, Leicester, Reports of the Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries of London 15, 275–8Google Scholar
Machin, S.L. 2018: Constructing Calleva: A Multidisciplinary Study of the Production, Distribution, and Consumption of Ceramic Building Materials at the Roman Town of Silchester, Hampshire, unpub. PhD thesis, University of ReadingGoogle Scholar
Machin, S. 2020: ‘The ceramic building material’, in Fulford, M., Clarke, A., Durham, E. and Pankhurst, N., Silchester Insula IX: The Claudio-Neronian Occupation of the Iron Age Oppidum, Britannia Monograph 33, London, 412–27Google Scholar
Machin, S. forthcoming: ‘The ceramic building material’, in Fulford, M., The Emperor Nero's Tilery and Pottery Works at Little London, Pamber, by Silchester, Hampshire, Britannia Monograph 36, LondonGoogle Scholar
Manley, J., and Rudkin, D. 2005: Facing the Palace: Excavations in Front of the Roman Palace at Fishbourne (Sussex, UK) 1995–99: Sussex Archaeological Collections 141Google Scholar
Manning, W.H. 2002: ‘Early Roman campaigns in the south-west of Britain’, in Brewer, R. (ed.), The Second Augustan Legion and the Roman Military Machine, Cardiff, 2744Google Scholar
Marsden, P. 1976: ‘Two Roman public baths in London’, Transactions of the London and Middlesex Archaeological Society 27, 170Google Scholar
Mattingly, H. 1948: Tacitus on Britain and Germany, HarmondsworthGoogle Scholar
Middleton, A.P., Cowell, M.R., and Black, E.W. 1992: ‘Romano-British relief-patterned flue tiles: a study of provenance using petrography and neutron activation analysis’, in Mery, S. (ed.), Sciences de la terre et céramiques archéologiques: experimentations, applications, Documents et travaux de l'Institut géologique Albert-de-Lapparent 16, Cergy, 4959Google Scholar
Niblett, R. 2001: Verulamium: The Roman City of St Albans, StroudGoogle Scholar
Niblett, R., and Thompson, I. 2005: Alban's Buried Towns: An Assessment of St Alban's Archaeology up to AD 1600, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Phillips, B., and Walters, B. 1977: ‘A mansio at Lower Wanborough, Wiltshire’, Britannia 8, 223–7CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rudling, D.R. 1986: ‘The excavation of a Roman tilery on Great Cansiron Farm, Sussex’, Britannia 17, 191230CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rudling, D.R. 1998: ‘The development of Roman villas in Sussex’, Sussex Archaeological Collections 136, 4165Google Scholar
Russell, M. 2006: Roman Sussex, StroudGoogle Scholar
Scammell, A.J. n.d.: Report on the Excavation of a First Century Tile and Pottery Complex at Park Farm, Oaksey, Wilts., unpub. report from archive held in Devizes MuseumGoogle Scholar
Scott, L. 1938: ‘The Roman villa at Angmering’, Sussex Archaeological Collections 79, 344Google Scholar
Timby, J. 2020: ‘The pottery’, in Fulford, M., Clarke, A., Durham, E. and Pankhurst, N., Silchester Insula IX: The Claudio-Neronian Occupation of the Iron Age Oppidum, Britannia Monograph 33, London, 320–75Google Scholar
Trow, S., James, S., and Moore, T. 2009: Becoming Roman, Being Gallic, Staying British: Research and Excavation at Ditches ‘Hillfort’ and Villa 1984–2006, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Wallace, L.M. 2014: The Origin of Roman London, CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Warry, P. 2006: Tegulae: Manufacture, Typology and Use in Roman Britain, British Archaeological Reports British Series 417, OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Warry, P. 2012: ‘The Silchester tile industry’, in Fulford, M. (ed.), Silchester and the Study of Romano-British Urbanism, Journal of Roman Archaeology Supplementary Series 90, Portsmouth RI, 4975Google Scholar
Wickenden, N.P., and Drury, P.J. 1988: ‘The building materials’, in Drury 1988, 77–90Google Scholar