Archaeologists discover body of man with shield and teenage girl at Roman Northamptonshire villa

This article originally appeared on Culture24.

Two-metre man and adolescent girl found at Whitehall Farm by archaeologists investigating Roman and Iron Age periods

A photo of a human bone being excavated from a brown pit at a Roman villa site in NorthamptonshireThe boss of a shield, belonging to a Roman man found in Northamptonshire, shown in situ while archaeologists carried out a delicate excavation© CLASP
Two new skeletons of a shield-bearing man and an adolescent female have been found buried in an early Anglo-Saxon cemetery first discovered more than ten years ago near Northampton.

Archaeologists say the man and teenager were both buried with personal knives within Whitehall Farm, at Nether Heyford. Metal detectorists identified nine graves at the site in 2004.

A photo of a human bone being excavated from a brown pit at a Roman villa site in NorthamptonshireThe underside of the boss after lifting, showing the shield-carrying handle © CLASP
“The same detectorists were re-examing the field and located two further graves which were excavated,” says David Hayward, of the Community Landscape Archaeology Survey Project.

“The first grave contained a male, 1.98 metres in height, who had been buried with a shield laying on his chest and also a personal knife.

“The boss of the shield was still in the grave in remarkably good condition and has been recovered intact. This burial was on a north-south alignment, probably from the 6th century.

A photo of two human skeletons being excavated from a brown pit at a Roman villa site in NorthamptonshireThe two graves - the male, with shield boss still in-situ, is to the right© CLASP
“The second grave revealed an adolescent female of fairly tall stature, buried with her domestic knife.

“This grave was on an east-to-west alignment and was probably the earlier of the two, from the 5th century.

“The previous burials were also on mixed alignments, the earliest being east-to-west. From other indications in this area, there was possibly a very early Christian heritage that was subsequently changed to the pagan religion of later influence.

A photo of two human skeletons being excavated from a brown pit at a Roman villa site in NorthamptonshireThe male skeleton after the removal of the boss, showing its height and the good quality of the bones© CLASP
“A lot more research, including scientific testing, is required into this and other aspects of the earliest post Romano-British activity in this part of Northamptonshire.”

Archaeologists originally excavated the graves to protect them from damage caused by farming activities. The developments are the latest discoveries made by the community archaeology project, which has been investigating a villa at the site and the walled Roman posting station of Bannaventa, which could have been a high-class overnight guest house for high-status travellers.

A triangle of landscape east of Watling Street, in west Northamptonshire – one of Roman Britain’s main arterial roads, connecting London with the north-west via a busy and commercial highway – has been explored by the group in an area covering 148 square kilometres near the River Nene.

A photo of a mud-caked shield being excavated from a brown pit at a Roman villa site in NorthamptonshireThe start of the conservation and lifting process for the boss© CLASP
The evidence shows that the area was densely occupied by the late Iron Age, suggesting that the Roman conquest witnessed a slow absorption of the local population of small, enclosed farmsteads.

Many of the survey areas have sight lines to Iron Age hillforts at Borough Hill and Hunsbury Hill, and previous fieldwork suggests that the area may have been extensively occupied during the Bronze Age.

A wide consultation took place on the reinterment of the original remains, with their religion remaining uncertain. Having consulted historical papers, the group reburied the bodies with replica items during a respectful ceremony.

A photo of a mud-caked shield being excavated from a brown pit at a Roman villa site in NorthamptonshireThe male knife in situ© CLASP
“You’ve got to do something,” says Hayward. “You can’t put everything into museums. I think it was proper to treat them respectfully. I hope someone would treat me respectfully in 1,000 or 1,500 years’ time.”

“When these people were buried, it was thought important enough that they actually had something of personal worth to them interred with them,” says Stephen Young, the Archaeology Director of the project.

“We can’t actually do what the Saxons would have done because we’re not able to discuss it at first-hand with them, nor can we really make up something and think that’s what they did.

“Although we can’t replace the original, we’re recognising the fact that that is something they wanted with them in the next world, whether that is a Christian one, a Pagan one or a mixture of both.

“In the past, when people have recovered grave goods and skeletons in cemeteries, they’ve often just laid on archive shelves for years. These people were buried by people who loved them and the idea was to leave them in perpetuity within the landscape that they were part of.”

The project aims to piece together an overall picture of the locality between late Iron Age and early post-Roman times. CLASP is also assisting Oxford University’s attempt to construct an Iron Age Hillforts Atlas.

Ancient villas

  • The military collapse on the Rhine during the 270s devastated the north-west provinces and destroyed their industrial and agricultural base.Many villas in north Gaul were abandoned, while British villas - especially on the Jurassic limestones of the south-west and Midlands - begin to appear and flourish on a large scale. This indicates a 'flight of capital' from the stricken areas.

  • The construction of villa complexes in Britain may have been part of an organised response to the economic challenges of Rome's north-western provinces. By the mid-300s, Rome relied on Britain's grain output and fleet to maintain power in the north-western provinces during the reign of the emperor Julian.

  • The coins and pottery from the villa complexes suggest that prosperity based on continental trade went on until around 340AD. The collapse of the trade was probably initiated by the death of Constantine II and the upheavals caused by the civil wars that followed. This probably heralded the break-up of the large privately owned 'latifundia' with their far-flung trading contacts, turning them into either state-run operations or a series of smaller independent estates, as the local landlord paid the price for supporting the losing imperial faction.

  • Local estates were managed to meet more limited local requirements. Analysis of the finds recovered in the survey shows that some villas remained prosperous well into the late 300s, and that several estates continued into the mid-400s.

  • Continuity of occupation in the area is further illustrated by the excavation of the post-Roman timber phase of buildings at Whitehall Farm which survived into the mid-500s — although for the estates and farms in the Northamptonshire this was most likely to have been subsistence agriculture.


What do you think? Leave a comment below.

Three Roman villas to see

Chedworth Roman Villa, near Cheltenham
The remains of one of the largest Roman villas in Britain provide a fascinating insight into the period. The site was discovered in 1864 by a local gamekeeper and subsequently excavated. More than a mile of walls survive.

Bignor Roman Villa, Pulborough
Bignor Roman Villa is the stunning remains of a Roman home and farm with world-class mosaic floors in a spectacular Downland setting. Learn why the Roman owners chose to develop such a magnificent settlement at Bignor in the 3rd Century AD and how they acquired wealth from its location.

Crofton Roman Villa, Orpington
Crofton Roman Villa is the only villa open to the public in Greater London. It was inhabited from about AD 140 to 400 and was the centre of a large farming estate. Today you can see the remains of ten rooms protected inside a public viewing building.


Source: http://www.culture24.org.uk/history-and-heritage/archaeology/art537070-archaeology-roman-adolescent-shield-man-whitehall-farm-northampton


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