Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-v5vhk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-07T20:29:11.216Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Excavations at Nos. 1 and 30 Westgate Street, Gloucester: The Roman Levels1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 November 2011

Carolyn Heighway
Affiliation:
City Excavation Unit, Barbican Road, Gloucester
Patrick Garrod
Affiliation:
City Excavation Unit, Barbican Road, Gloucester

Extract

1 Westgate Street is close to the central crossroads of Gloucester (FIG. 1). The site straddles the line of the main Roman E.-W. street, and is directly in front of the second-century forum. The Roman street alignment is not preserved in the medieval and modern Westgate Street, which has shifted north so that the line of Westgate Street, in its course down to the river crossing, occupies the site of several Roman insulae. The other three main Roman streets, Northgate, Eastgate and Southgate Streets, still run approximately on Roman lines, probably because their course was conditioned by the position of the gates.

Type
Articles
Information
Britannia , Volume 11 , November 1980 , pp. 73 - 114
Copyright
Copyright © Carolyn Heighway and Patrick Garrod 1980. Exclusive Licence to Publish: 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

Barker, P. (1975). ‘Excavations on the Site of the Baths Basilica at Wroxeter 1966–74’, Britannia vi, 106117.Google Scholar
Blagg, T. F. C. & Read, S. (1977). ‘The Roman Pewter-Moulds from Silchester’, Antiq. Journ. lvii, 270–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blagg, T. F. C. (1977). ‘Schools of Stonemasons in Roman Britain’, in Munby, J. J. T. and Henig, M., Roman Life and Art in Britain, B.A.R. 41, 5173.Google Scholar
Board of Health Map (1852). Ten feet and two feet plans of Gloucester surveyed by the Ordnance Survey Department under the provisions of the Public Health Act.Google Scholar
Boon, G. C. (1974A). ‘Roman Glassware from Caerwent, 1855–1925’, Monmouthshire Antiquary iii, 111–24.Google Scholar
Boon, G. C. (1974B). Silchester: the Roman town of Calleva (Newton Abbott).Google Scholar
British Museum (1920). Greek and Roman Life.Google Scholar
Brown, (1976). ‘Archaeological evidence for the Anglo-Saxon period' in McWhirr, A. (ed.), The Archaeology and History of Cirencester, B.A.R. 30.Google Scholar
Bushe-Fox, J. P. (1926). First Report on the excavations of the Roman Fort at Richborough (Oxford).Google Scholar
Bushe-Fox, J. P. (1949). Fourth Report on the excavations of the Roman Fort at Richborough (Oxford).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Charlesworth, D. (1972). ‘The Glass’, in Frere 1972, 196215.Google Scholar
Charlesworth, D. (1975). ‘A Roman cut-glass plate from WroxeterAntiq. Journ. lv, 404–6.Google Scholar
Clarke, J. (1850). Architectural History of Gloucester.Google Scholar
Cra'ster, M. D. (1961). ‘St. Michael's Gloucester, 1956’, Trans. Bristol and Gloucs. Arch. Soc. lxxxi, 5974.Google Scholar
Cunliffe, B. (1971). Excavations at Fishboume: II: The Finds, Soc. Antiquaries Research Report xxvii (Leeds).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dore, J. and Greene, K. (1977). Roman Pottery Studies in Britain and Beyond, B.A.R. supp. series 30 (Oxford).Google Scholar
Fremersdorf, F. (1959). Römische Gläser mit Fadenauflage in Köln (Köln).Google Scholar
Frere, S. S. (1972) Verulamium Excavations I, Soc. Antiquaries Research Report Xxviii (Oxford).Google Scholar
Fullbrook-Leggatt, L. E. W. O. (1968). Roman Gloucester (Bristol & Gloucestershire Archaeol. Soc.)Google Scholar
Goethert-Polaschek, K. (1977). Katalog der römischen Gläser des Rheinischen Landesmuseum Trier (Mainz am Rhein).Google Scholar
Gracie, H. S. (1970). ‘Frocester Court Roman Villa, Gloucestershire, First Report 1961–71Trans. Bristol and Gloucs. Arch. Soc. xc, 1586.Google Scholar
Green, C. (1949). ‘An excavation in Westgate Street, Gloucester, 1935Antiq. Journ. xxix, 202–4.Google Scholar
Harcourt, L. V. (1846). ‘Vessels of Glass and Earthenware, and Ornaments, discovered near Chilgrove, SussexArchaeologia xxxi, 312–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harden, D. B. (1962). ‘Glass in Roman York’, in Eburacum (RCHM), 136–41.Google Scholar
Harden, D. B. and Price, J. (1971). ‘The Glass’ in Cunliffe B. 1971, 317–68.Google Scholar
Harden, D. B. (1974). ‘Window Glass from the Romano-British Bathhouse at Garden Hill, Hartfield, SussexAntiq. Journ. liv, 280–1.Google Scholar
Hassall, M. and Rhodes, J. F. (1974). ‘Excavations at New Market Hall, Gloucester, 1966–7’, Trans. Bristol and Gloucs. Arch. Soc. xciii.Google Scholar
Heighway, C. M., Garrod, A. P. and Vince, A. G. (1979). ‘Excavations at 1 Westgate Street, Gloucester’, Medieval Archaeology, xxiii, 159213.Google Scholar
Heighway, C. M.et al. (forthcoming). The North and East Gates of Gloucester (CRAAGS monograph in preparation).Google Scholar
Hull, M. R. (1958). Roman Colchester, Soc. Antiquaries Res. Report xx (Oxford).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunter, A. G. (1960). ‘Building excavations at 2-4 Northgate Street, and 1-3 Eastgate Street, Gloucester, 1960’ typescript at Gloucester City Museum.Google Scholar
Hunter, A. G. (1968). ‘The Westminster Bank, Westgate Street, Gloucester, 1959’, Trans. Bristol and Gloucs. Arch. Soc. lxxxvii, 5664.Google Scholar
Hurst, H. (1972). ‘Excavations at Gloucester, 1968–1971, First Interim Report’, Antiq. Journ., lii, 2469.Google Scholar
Isings, C. (1957). Roman Glass from Dated Finds (Groningen).Google Scholar
Kenyon, K. M. (1948). Excavations at the Jewry Wall site, Leicester, Soc. Antiquaries Res. Report xv (Oxford).Google Scholar
Lawson, A. J. (1976). ‘Shale and Jet objects from SilchesterArchaeologia cv, 241–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacKreth, D. F. (1977). Gloucester brooches, Manuscript available at Gloucester City Museum Excavation Unit.Google Scholar
Maxwell, G. (1974). ‘Objects of Glass’, 197–9, in A. and V. Roe, ‘The Roman Fort at Cramond, Edinburgh; excavations 1954–66’, Britannia v, 163–224.Google Scholar
Medland, H. (1894). ‘Discovery of medieval and Roman remains on the site of the Tolsey at Gloucester’ The Illustrated Archaeologist i, ed. Allen, J. Romilly (London).Google Scholar
Medland, H. (1895). ‘An account of Roman and medieval remains found on the site of the Tolsey at Gloucester in 1893–94Trans. Bristol and Gloucs. Arch. Soc. xix, 142–58.Google Scholar
Painter, K. S. (1968). ‘Roman Glass’ in Harden, D. B. et al. , Masterpieces of Glass (British Museum), 3690.Google Scholar
Peel, C. A. (1967). Proc. Cambridge Antiq. Soc. ix, 1937.Google Scholar
Price, J. (1976). ‘Glass’ in Jarrett, M. G., Maryport, Cumbria: a Roman fort and its Garrison (Kendal), 4954.Google Scholar
Wedlake, W. J. (1958). Excavations at Camerton, Somerset (Bath).Google Scholar
Wheeler, R. E. M. (1932). Excavation … of Lydney Park, Gloucestershire, Soc. Antiqs. Res. Rep. ix.Google Scholar
Young, C. J. (1977). Oxfordshire Roman Pottery, B.A.R. 43.Google Scholar