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Caerleon Lodge Hill Cemetery: the Abbeyfield Site 19921
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 November 2011
Extract
In 1990 the Glamorgan-Gwent Archaeological Trust was approached by Gwent Health Authority with respect to the archaeological potential of the areas of three developments proposed in the grounds of St Cadoc's Hospital on Lodge Hill, Caerleon. These were a College of Nursing and Midwifery at ST 3344 9095, a sheltered housing development to be built by the Abbeyfield (Gwent) Extra Care Society at ST 3280 9097, and a housing estate on an area centred at ST 3283 9090. All three lay within the area of the Lodge Hill Roman cemetery, close to where a cremation and two tombstones (RIB 358 and 392) had been found in 1909 and a sculptured head of Attis in 1972 (see FIGS 1-2). The sheltered housing scheme had already received outline permission. At the same time a watching-brief was being carried out on the widening of Pil-bach Road and the insertion of a new sewer adjacent to the Abbeyfield site.
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References
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4 No further work has been done on the third site, the proposed housing estate, since at the time of writing there are no plans to proceed with this development.
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13 Puberty is taken as being at 12 years. For children under this age no sex determination can be given from the skeletal remains, whereas the two individuals in the next age group (15-18) to appear on the Abbeyfield could both be identified as to sex.
14 This figure includes those for which no age or sex determination was possible and which therefore do not appear on Table 2.
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48 To be published by J. Compton and P.V. Webster in E.M. Evans, The Caerleon Canabae: Excavations in the Civil Settlement 1984-90 (forthcoming).
49 Note for example a number of BB 1 wasters from the cemeteries of Roman London.
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53 The names used for tile types follow G. Brodribb, Roman Brick and Tile (1987).
54 On-going work by the author.
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