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Excavations at Wanborough, Wiltshire: An Interim Report
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 November 2011
Extract
The Roman site at Wanborough is usually identified with the Durocornovium of the Antonine Itinerary. The settlement lies some 20–22 kilometres south-east of Cirencester, on Ermin Street, at a point where a branch road diverges to Mildenhall, and just before the main road ascends the northern scarp of the Berkshire Downs.
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- Copyright © A. S. Anderson and J. S. Wacher 1980. Exclusive Licence to Publish: The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies
References
1 It. Ant. 485. 4; see also Britannia i (1970), 57, 73.Google Scholar
2 JRS lvii (1967), 196Google Scholar; lviii (1968), 201; lix (1969), 230.
3 Britannia i (1970), 300Google Scholar; ii (1971) 282; J. S. Wacher in W. Rodwell and T. Rowley (eds.), Small Towns of Roman Britain (1975), 233–5.
4 Britannia viii (1977), 416.Google Scholar
5 Wilts. Arch. Mag. lxvi (1971), 188–9.Google Scholar
6 Recorded largely by photogrammetric methods–see Antiquity xliv (1970), 214–16.Google Scholar
7 J. S. Wacher, The Towns of Roman Britain (1974), 294; J. S. Wacher and A. D. McWhirr, The Excavations at Cirencester, Vol. I. The Early Military Occupation (forthcoming).
8 Britannia viii (1977), 223–7.Google Scholar
9 ibid.
10 E. Ritterling, Das frührömische Lager bei Hofheim im Taunus (1913).
11 J. W. Brailsford, Hod Hill Volume I (1962).
12 Webster, G., ‘The Roman military advance under Ostorius Scapula’, Arch. Journ. cv (1958), 49–98.Google Scholar
13 Isings form 3a; C. Isings, Roman Glass from Dated Finds (1957).
14 Harden, D., ‘The Glass’, in Hawkes, C. and Hull, M. R., Camulodunum, Res. Rep. Comm. of Soc. Ants, of London, xiv (1947), 293.Google Scholar
15 Harden, ibid, 289.
16 There is a similar piece in the Jewry Wall Museum, Leicester. Harden dates the bulk of the mosaic glass in Camulodunum to the first half of the first century, after which monochrome blown wares began to predominate over the heavier cast ware.
17 A similar vessel with a discoid body, in yellow-brown, is described by Price in Trans. Lon. and Middlx. Arch. Soc. xxviii (1977), 154–61.Google Scholar
18 Possibly of Isings form 27.
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