Reay, D. (2009). St Marys Church, St Marys Street, Southampton: Archaeological Excavation and Watching Brief Report. Wessex Archaeology. https://doi.org/10.5284/1075320. Cite this using datacite

Title
Title
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Title:
St Marys Church, St Marys Street, Southampton: Archaeological Excavation and Watching Brief Report
Series
Series
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Series:
Wessex Archaeology unpublished report series
Number of Pages
Number of Pages
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Number of Pages:
49
Downloads
Downloads
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Downloads:
SOU1503_69361_report.pdf (3 MB) : Download
Licence Type
Licence Type
ADS, CC-BY 4.0 or CC-BY 4.0 NC.
Licence Type:
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence icon
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
International Licence
DOI
DOI
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DOI
https://doi.org/10.5284/1075320
Publication Type
Publication Type
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Publication Type:
Report (in Series)
Abstract
Abstract
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Abstract:
Wessex Archaeology was commissioned by Stephens Cox Associates to undertake an archaeological excavation and watching-brief during works at St Mary's Church, St Mary Street, Southampton (hereafter 'the Site'). The works comprised the construction of a new car parking area and access ramp, trenching for new external lighting and CCTV surveillance, and drainage repairs around the perimeter of the Church building. St Mary's Church is located on a plot of land to the north-east of the junction of St Mary Street and Chapel Road, Southampton, centred on NGR 442610 111685.The access ramp for the car park occupied an area of 81m2 and was excavated by hand to the required formation level after the machine removal of topsoil. In the deeper portion of the ramp flanking the existing road, a considerable number of inhumation burials and several funerary structures were revealed. The remains of 14 in situ burials were investigated, 11 of which were exhumed and reburied within the churchyard. The remainder were not lifted as they were below the formation level within brick-lined graves. Six funerary structures were encountered, four of which were brick lined graves.There was a significant quantity of disarticulated human remains present in all excavated deposits on the site, especially in the graveyard soils. This is suggestive of a considerable density of burials, with a substantial amount of reworking and recutting of the cemetery soil. This is supported by the partial and truncated nature of a number of the in situ skeletons, and is to be expected in an urban graveyard with a prolonged period of use. Remains of further burials were visible below the formation level of the ramp, within the bases of the excavated graves. It is highly probable that there are considerably more burial remains within the ramp area below the finished level.All of the coffined burials appear to have been made in the later half of the 18th and first half of the 19th century. It is possible that some of the graves without coffin furniture are earlier in date.The assemblage within this area of the cemetery appears to represent a normal, domestic population, with a slightly higher proportion of immature individuals than comparative contemporary populations that have been analysed. The two male skeletons for which stature was estimated were both well above the mean for the period. Whilst caution must be applied to such limited data, this, together with other observations on skeletal morphology and the absence of evidence for childhood stress-related illnesses, suggests the individuals were not living in poverty and did not represent the lowest social strata. They generally appear to have been well nourished, and the large size and robusticity of the male skeletons suggest many of the men were involved in strenuous physical work, perhaps in the dockyards nearby. The results of the osteoarchaeological analysis, although limited by the small sample size, highlights the high potential of the cemetery population for future analysis should any further work be done within the cemetery.
Author
Author
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Author:
D Reay
Publisher
Publisher
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Publisher:
Wessex Archaeology
Year of Publication
Year of Publication
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Year of Publication:
2009
Locations
Locations
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Locations:
District: Southampton
Place: Southampton
Location - Auto Detected: Mary's Church
Country: England
County: Hampshire
Location - Auto Detected: St Marys Street
Subjects / Periods
Subjects / Periods
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Subjects / Periods:
POST MEDIEVAL (ENG)
20TH CENTURY (Historic England Periods)
21ST CENTURY (ENG)
VICTORIAN (ENG)
BURIAL (Monument Type England)
CHURCHYARD (Monument Type England)
CEMETERY (Monument Type England)
COFFIN (Object England)
funerary (Auto Detected Subject)
Human Bone (Object England)
WATCHING BRIEF (Event)
EXCAVATION (Event)
coffin furniture (Auto Detected Subject)
CHURCH (Monument Type England)
INHUMATION (Monument Type England)
HUMAN REMAINS (Object England)
brick (Auto Detected Subject)
HUMAN REMAINS (Monument Type England)
Identifiers
Identifiers
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Identifiers:
Report Id: 69361.02
Source
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Source:
Source icon
ADS Library (ADS Library)
Relations
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Relations:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5284/1075320
Created Date
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Created Date:
14 Apr 2020