With specialist contributions from S. Anderson, T. Ashwin, S. Cottam, J. A. Davies, B. Dickinson, Tony Gregory, David Gurney, J. Hillam, D. Mackreth, G. McDonnell, C. Mortimer, P. Murphy, J. Price and D. Williams.
Truncated remains of an extensive settlement dating from the mid-first to the late second century survived beneath the modern ploughsoil at Snettisham. The Romano-British settlement was based on a mixed economy of farming and low intensity industry and demonstrated the survival of traditional techniques of house construction, and the continued importance of handmade pottery well into the Roman period. The excavation produced a useful pottery assemblage which complements other groups from the Saxon Shore Fort at Brancaster, and a number of Fenland sites. A decline in valley floor activity occurred at approximately the same time as construction of a villa on higher ground to the east, and it is possible that environmental changes in the Fenland region during the third century resulted in a shift of settlement to the east. This eastern focus persisted in the Saxon and medieval periods, and no evidence was found for intensive post-Roman use of the excavated area.
Author(s): Myk Flitcroft
Series: East Anglian Archaeology, 93
Publisher: Archaeology and Environment Division, Norfolk Museums and Archaeology Service
Year: 2001
Language: English
Pages: 96
City: Dereham
Contents
List of Plates
List of Figures
List of Tables
List of Contributors
Acknowledgements
Summary/Resume/Zusammenfassung
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. 1983-1984 Fieldwork
Chapter 3. The 1989 Excavation: Site 1555
Chapter 4. Excavated Features
Chapter 5. Watching Brief Results
Chapter 6. Finds Summaries
Chapter 7. Environmental Evidence
Chapter 8. Discussion
Appendix 1. Structure of the Archive Report
Bibliography
Index