Willis, S. and Carne, P., eds. (2013). A Roman villa at the edge of Empire. York: Council for British Archaeology. https://doi.org/10.5284/1081825. Cite this using datacite

Title
Title
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Title:
A Roman villa at the edge of Empire
Subtitle
Subtitle
The sub title of the publication or report
Subtitle:
Excavations at Ingleby Barwick, Stockton-on-Tees, 2003–04
Series
Series
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Series:
Council for British Archaeology Research Reports
Volume
Volume
Volume number and part
Volume:
170
Number of Pages
Number of Pages
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Number of Pages:
244
Downloads
Downloads
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Downloads:
RR170_A_Roman_Villa_at_the_Edge_of_Empire.pdf (376 MB) : Download
Licence Type
Licence Type
ADS, CC-BY 4.0 or CC-BY 4.0 NC.
Licence Type:
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ADS Terms of Use and Access
DOI
DOI
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DOI
https://doi.org/10.5284/1081825
Publication Type
Publication Type
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Publication Type:
Monograph (in Series)
Abstract
Abstract
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Abstract:
The Roman villa at Ingleby Barwick, near Stocktonon-Tees in north-east England, is situated on a terrace on the south side of the River Tees some 40km south of Hadrian’s Wall. The villa is notable as one of the most northerly known in the Roman Empire. The excavation is important both for its scale and for being carried out under modern recording conditions. The site was discovered through a programme of aerial reconnaissance and evaluation in advance of a major housing development. Aerial photographs taken in the 1970s had revealed a layout of linear ditches and a probable sub-rectangular enclosure typical of later prehistoric and Romano-British occupation in the region. Trial excavation in 1979 recovered both Romano-British and Iron Age tradition pottery. Large-scale evaluation work in 1997–2000, including geophysical survey, trial trenches and an earthwork survey, identified the site of a Roman winged corridor villa, with outlying stone-built structures. A revised development plan allowed the preservation of the main villa building in situ, in an area of public open space, while extensive excavations were carried out over the other features in 2003–04. Features excavated included an aisled building, a stone circular structure, an isolated caldarium, and the fragmentary remains of several other structures. Around the buildings was an extensive layout of contemporary rectilinear enclosures. Within some of these, there was a variety of evidence for activity associated with the villa, including pits, ovens, burials, paved surfaces and wooden structures. There was limited evidence for settlement on the site in the Bronze Age. There was also evidence for enclosures and settlement, including a circular structure, which preceded the establishment of the villa, probably in the later Iron Age. It is suggested that there was a hiatus in occupation in the 1st and early 2nd century AD, before the villa and associated enclosures were established probably in the late 2nd century, continuing in use into the late 4th / early 5th century. Anglo-Saxon occupation at the site is attested, postdating the collapse of the stone structures, suggesting a rare example of continuity in this region. Pottery deposition has chronological peaks in the Antonine, mid-3rd century, and mid to late 4th century and a fairly detailed phasing of the site is proposed, based primarily on the pottery sequence. A relatively low frequency of finds was recovered, which is typical of the region, although these included highstatus material such as fragments of a rare glass bowl and a large metalwork hoard. There was no evidence for mosaics or tiled roofs. The palaeo-environmental evidence indicates the establishment was a working farm with varied agriculture, incorporating local cereal production. Civilian sites of the Roman era in the hinterland of Hadrian’s Wall are little known, with the focus of archaeological investigations having been principally upon the military. The presence of this villa and its role in the life of the region are discussed on the basis of the excavated evidence and its borderland setting.
Editor
Editor
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Editor:
Steven Willis
Peter Carne
Publisher
Publisher
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Publisher:
Council for British Archaeology
Year of Publication
Year of Publication
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Year of Publication:
2013
ISBN
ISBN
International Standard Book Number
ISBN:
9781902771908
Locations
Locations
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Locations:
Site: Quarry Farm
County: North Yorkshire
Parish: Ingleby Barwick
District: Stockton-on-Tees
Country: England
Location - Auto Detected: River Tees
Grid Reference: 443600, 515100 (Easting, Northing)
Subjects / Periods
Subjects / Periods
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Subjects / Periods:
Iron Age (Auto Detected Temporal)
Bronze Age (Auto Detected Temporal)
1st (Auto Detected Temporal)
early 2nd century AD (Auto Detected Temporal)
late 2nd century (Auto Detected Temporal)
late 4th / early 5th century (Auto Detected Temporal)
mid to late 4th century (Auto Detected Temporal)
VILLA (Monument Type England)
villa (Auto Detected Subject)
Aerial photographs (Auto Detected Subject)
ditches (Auto Detected Subject)
enclosure (Auto Detected Subject)
pottery (Auto Detected Subject)
geophysical survey (Auto Detected Subject)
trial trenches (Auto Detected Subject)
earthwork survey (Auto Detected Subject)
corridor villa (Auto Detected Subject)
aisled building (Auto Detected Subject)
stone circular structure (Auto Detected Subject)
caldarium (Auto Detected Subject)
rectilinear enclosures (Auto Detected Subject)
pits (Auto Detected Subject)
ovens (Auto Detected Subject)
burials (Auto Detected Subject)
wooden structures (Auto Detected Subject)
settlement (Auto Detected Subject)
enclosures (Auto Detected Subject)
circular structure (Auto Detected Subject)
SHERD (Object England)
glass bowl (Auto Detected Subject)
metalwork hoard. (Auto Detected Subject)
mosaics (Auto Detected Subject)
tiled roofs (Auto Detected Subject)
working farm (Auto Detected Subject)
ROMAN (ENG)
Roman (Auto Detected Temporal)
later prehistoric (Auto Detected Temporal)
Source
Source
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Source:
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ADS Archive (ADS Archive)
Relations
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Relations:
Created Date
Created Date
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Created Date:
14 Sep 2020