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Early Settlement at Lincoln

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 November 2011

Margaret J. Darling
Affiliation:
City of Lincoln Archaeological Unit, The Sessions House, Lindum Road, Lincoln.
Michael J. Jones
Affiliation:
City of Lincoln Archaeological Unit, The Sessions House, Lindum Road, Lincoln.

Extract

Evidence for prehistoric activity and settlement in the area covered by the modern city of Lincoln has accumulated gradually. Published accounts of the material from Lincoln have treated it as part of a wider study of the county as a whole, while excavations on various sites in the city prior to 1972 had produced a number of prehistoric artefacts, all occurring in secondary contexts. Since these were residual, a distribution map would not necessarily be of any significance, but it is true that the vast majority were found in the lower part of the city, in the vicinity of (or on the bed of) the River Witham.

Type
Articles
Information
Britannia , Volume 19 , November 1988 , pp. 1 - 57
Copyright
Copyright © Margaret J. Darling and Michael J. Jones 1988. Exclusive Licence to Publish: The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies

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References

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43 Rigby and Stead, op. cit. (note 20) fig. 75, no. 31 from a Neronian-early Flavian context.

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80 Although a sherd occurred at the top of the legionary rampart at East Bight (Darling, op. cit. (note 19), 81). the fabric is not the same and there is no certainty that the layer from which it came belonged to the legionary rampart or was a later modification.

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87 The appearance of vessels in the common legionary Fabric 3 at Old Winteringham and possibly Dragonby as well suggests that distribution was not restricted to military personnel.

88 Numismatic references (RIC) for the coins listed here refer to H. Mattingly, E.A. Sydenham, C.H.V. Sutherland and R.A.G. Carson, Roman Imperial Coinage (1923 ff).

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