Monument record HMG 007 - Findspot of one sherd of Iron-Age flint gritted hand-made pottery. (IA)

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Summary

One sherd of flint gritted hand-made pottery found in fieldwalking.

Location

Grid reference Centred TM 614 254 (117m by 99m)
Map sheet TM62NW
Civil Parish HEMINGSTONE, MID SUFFOLK, SUFFOLK

Map

Type and Period (1)

Full Description

One sherd of flint gritted hand-made pottery found in fieldwalking. Finds mainly Rom (S1).

With the cooperation of both the owner and the farmer, Mr R .Miles, cropmarks indicating foundations and postholes of a Roman building, confirmed by a magnetometry survey, were examined. Areas over the postholes and across the line of an enclosure ditch were stripped, revealing the footing of a back wall with a short return, plus one line of three postholes. The shallow footings contained much chalk and wall plaster throughout, with the junction angle of the footings being of dumped large flints, broken tile, imbrices and occasional box tile (one of which had unusual vertical combing), with coarse wall plaster scattered in with traces of opus signinum. I had mistakenly assumed that a badly laid brick tesserae floor previously found would be here, but this was finally re-located inside the enclosure ditch, in an area of heavily magnetised deposits on the geophysical survey. The finds associated with the small area opened, indicated that this was the rubble spread from the house preceding the aisled building and the source of the ceramic building material in the latter’s footings. The long footings ended in a clean, deliberate end and as there was no sign in our stripped area of a return wall at that end, it looks oddly as if there was an open end to the building. The platform on which the building was situated has been much eroded at its downslope side, causing those features to be either truncated or missing. We are not sure whether it was ever completed; the sectioned posthole showed a post-pipe backfilled with the same fill mix as covered the floor area, the post having been cleanly removed. The flooring layer itself had late 4th-century bowls and part of a hard-chalk, chiselled ‘brick’, presumed to be from the former buildings’ internal partition walling. The enclosure ditch section downhill was rich in finds, the base having cordoned and decorated pottery typical of the mid 1st to the early 2nd century, along with prehistoric flint- tempered pottery; finds becoming later at the top (late 2nd century at provisional dating). Some excellent fine glass, and a turned jet bead came from the top, plus part of a grey ware coarse beaker with “*(N?)IO” scratched on the base, while a blue glass bead of a type popular in the Iron Age came from a part-excavated linear feature nearby.
Included in the Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and History annual round up of individual finds and discoveries for 2011 (S2).

Sources/Archives (3)

  • <M1> Unpublished document: Suffolk Archaeological Service. Parish Files. Parish file: finds report.
  • <S1> (No record type): Fulcher J, Coddenham Local History Group, 1988.
  • <S2> Article in serial: Brown, A., Martin, E.A. & Plouviez, J.. 2012. Archaeology in Suffolk 2011. XXXXII (4).

Finds (1)

Protected Status/Designation

  • None recorded

Related Monuments/Buildings (0)

Related Events/Activities (1)

Record last edited

Aug 7 2024 9:18AM

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