Posted on 06/04/2007 2:04:30 AM PDT by Jedi Master Pikachu
By Trevor Timpson
Two very different finds, dug up close to each other by Trafalgar Square, shine new light on the greatest puzzle of London archaeology - the "silent" centuries after Roman rule. That the skeleton of "London's Last Roman" - or anything ancient and unknown - can be discovered in 2006 in Trafalgar Square is remarkable. But when it comes to yielding secrets, the square's church, St Martin-in-the-Fields, has a long record.
When the present church was being built in the 18th Century a body was found in a reused Roman stone coffin. And in the 13th Century the authorities had to step in after treasure hunters ransacked the then church in search of "a gold hoard". So in 2006 it was assumed that the man in a limestone coffin - dug up in the space between Victorian burial vaults and the church's boundary - was also a later burial in a reused Roman sarcophagus. His head had been lost, probably in the 19th century. Then the result of the radio carbon dating came back from the lab in Florida to which a small bone had been sent. With 70% certainty, it said, the Last Roman had died some time between 390 and 430 AD.
To enthusiasts, the midpoint stood out - 410, the year that the hard-pressed Roman empire abandoned all claims to Britain. It was not a later burial at all. Suddenly, says Francis Grew, senior curator at the Museum of London, there was "huge interest" in the find.
"We can say with some confidence that this is the latest scientifically dated burial from Roman London," he says. Just metres away from where the coffin was discovered was something else which, if dug up in the garden, would probably be thrown away - a squashed, grey pot, hand-moulded, not made on a wheel, and with a crude decoration of lines and punch-marks. "I assembled all the finds, laid out on a table for the first time," says Mr Grew, "and I got specialists from different fields and said: 'Tell me what you think of all this'." He expected the Anglo-Saxon experts to show interest in the later Saxon jewellery found on the site. Instead they went straight for the pot lying in fragments - grey and nondescript but massively important. A type of pottery used by the earliest Saxon immigrants from northern Germany, it is dated to about 500AD - the earliest near-complete Saxon pot to have been discovered in central London. 200-year gap This made the St Martin's dig hugely significant, shining a new light on the mystery of London's lost centuries.
Plenty happened in London in the 450 years following the end of Roman rule in 410. It became the seat of an English bishopric. Bede in the 730s called it "a mart of many nations".
So why could archaeologists find almost no evidence that London was inhabited at that time? It was not until the 1980s that they realised they had been looking in the wrong place. The Anglo-Saxon London, Lundenwic, was not on the site of Roman London - what is now the City - but in the West End, around Aldwych, the Strand and Trafalgar Square. Then objects and traces of buildings which had already been found in these places began to make sense. But still there was a 200-year gap. Even Lundenwic remains could not be dated to before the seventh century. Now, with the latest Roman burial and the earliest Saxon pot found within metres of each other, the gap has narrowed to just 90 years - and set everyone thinking about what it means for the transition from Roman to English London and the significance of the St Martin's site.
Anyone coming there in 500 would have been aware of the notable remains
The site was surely a prominent place in ancient times - raised up above the Thames with views back to the ancient walls of Londinium and down towards what is now Whitehall and Westminster. Its reputation as a place where treasure could be found was still notorious in the 13th Century. But what did it mean to the two sets of people - the ones who buried the "last Roman" and the ones who owned the grey pot - who are now almost in sight of each other in the archaeological record? Moving
One thing Mr Grew is sure of is that enough remained of the cemetery in which the Last Roman lay and other graves now lost, to make it clear that this was a very special place. "Anyone coming there in 500 would have been aware of the notable remains - perhaps a brick mausoleum crumbling away," he says. A Roman brick-kiln has also been found nearby. And if there was a religious, sacred site, could it have been Christian? When the Last Roman died, Christianity had been officially favoured in the Roman Empire for decades - yet there are few Christian remains from Roman Britain and no identifiable churches in Roman London. For the vicar of St Martin's, Nicholas Holtam, the discovery of the burial of the Last Roman is a moving experience.
The man was a contemporary of St Martin himself, Nicholas Holtam points out. And he believes there are signs that it may well have been a Christian burial.
It raises the possibility that St Martin's (first recorded in the 13th Century) has been a sacred site for much longer than we previously thought, he says. He recognises that the evidence must be looked at scientifically, but adds: "I'd love it to be proved that this was a Christian site dating back to 410." The Last Roman and the pot are both in The Missing Link display at the Museum of London until 8 August.
|
|
Warning: This could be a high volume pinglist. Note: This pinglist covers--but not as much--Eastern Europe. There is already a moderate volume pinglist for that region. Ping if you see a pertinent thread. |
No message is necessary. To get on or get off this pinglist, freepmail here, with the appropriate subject. |
|
|
|
|
Rest assured that the Mohammedan hoardes will destroy all archeological connections to any Western or Christian past once they inherit London.
Londinium->Lundenwic->London->Londonstan.
Pity.
The Brits have two choices, and they only have one generation in which to exercise them.
1. Make Islam illegal, proclaiming it for the evil death cult and pruveyor of hate and mayhem that it is, closing all the mosques, and deporting all the foreign Mohammedans, starting with the “imams”.
or
2. Outbreed the Mohammedans.
My guess is that neither of these will happen.
‘My guess is that neither of these will happen.’
You are correct, both for the UK and the US.
Very interesting. Thanks for the ping.
Ping
Please FREEPMAIL me if you want on or off the
"Gods, Graves, Glyphs" PING list or GGG weekly digest
-- Archaeology/Anthropology/Ancient Cultures/Artifacts/Antiquities, etc.
Gods, Graves, Glyphs (alpha order)
I feel bad about the guy loosing his head.
Fascinating
Love this kind of stuff.Thanks for posting!
Yes.
When I lived in Libya, before Gadhhafi took over, the following story was relayed to my mother by a member of the diplomatic cops in Libya.
An archeologist working local digs took a find to the pertinent Minister of Culture with enthusiasm. It data from the time of the Roman colonies at Sabratha and Leptis magna.
The bureaucrat threw it against the wall, hissing "It's not Arab."
fascinating. Traditionally British people do not look up to Greco-Roman culture for inspiration, notwithstanding the 17-19th century classics education. It has always been claimed the Anglo democracy is British with no consciousness of Athens and the Roman Republic - unlike the American Republic.
I fear that you are correct.
FYI... It’s “horde”. :-)
The “hoard” at this point should be weapons and ammunition.
> FYI... Its horde. :-)
Ah, yes! Thank you!
> The hoard at this point should be weapons and
> ammunition.
Very good advice in light of what we are facing.
Most interesting.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.