With contributions by Miranda Armour-Chelu, Richard Brickstock, John Casey, Mike Charles, Sue Colledge, Rowena Gale, Mark Hassall, Robert Ixer, Alison Locker, Mick Monk, Sidney Renow, Robin P Symonds, Roberta Tomber, Felicity Wild, and Leonard Wilkinson.
Ebook (PDF) published 2013.
The excavations at Viroconium cornoviorum (Wroxeter), Shropshire, on the site of the baths basilica, built c 150 AD have provided seminal information of considerable importance for the study of the late and post-Roman periods in Britain. This is presented here in detail, with lavish illustrations including a large number of conjectural reconstructions of buildings and site panoramas, and 177 loose leaf plans. The final chapter considers the difficulty of dating late and sub-Roman sites, and locates the site within the broader framework of Roman and sub-Roman Britain. Considerable quantities of artefacts and environmental material were recovered, but only information related to the interpretation of the structures is presented here. The life of the baths basilica continued to the end of the fifth century. The site and neighbouring town blocks were then redeveloped with the construction of up to seventy timber buildings set on rubble and posthole foundations. Analysis of these buildings show that they were laid out using Roman modules. Chief among them, and occupying the centre of the site, was a massive winged house, apparently indicating the conversion of a former public space into a private demesne. Subsequently parts of the area seem to have again changed status with part of the east-west street taken over and occupied by market booths. Abandonment is indicated by a radiocarbon date of between 600 and 790 AD obtained from a single burial cut into the latest structures.
Author(s): Philip Barker, Roger White, Kate Pretty, Heather Bird, Mike Corbishley
Series: English Heritage Archaeological Reports, 8
Publisher: English Heritage
Year: 1997
Language: English
Pages: 602
City: London
Illustrations vi
Loose-leaf illustrations x
Tables xiii
Acknowledgements xiv
Summaries xvi
1. Introduction 1
2. Previous archaeological work 15
3. Summary of the structural development of the baths basilica and its surroundings 20
4. A structural history of the baths basilica site 27
5. A catalogue and structural interpretation of the buildings 169
6. The finds 192
7. Archaeology and history: the site in its setting 211
The Appendices
A: The Artefacts 249
B: The Environmental Evidence 324
C: Context information 371
Bibliography 375
Index 383
Loose leaf plans