Monthly Archives: September 2014

VM_365 Day 83 Early Saxon Settlement at Margate?

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The image for VM_365 today shows the heavily eroded remains of an Anglo-Saxon structure, under excavation in 2005 at a site near the QEQM hospital, Margate .

Evidence for large early Anglo-Saxon cemeteries is abundant on Thanet, with remains having been excavated at Ozengell, Sarre, Valletta House, Half Mile Ride, Monkton, St Peters, Thorne Farm and Cliffsend. Aerial photographs have provided further evidence of  cemetery sites at Brooksend and Crispe Road, Birchington. However, contemporary settlement, indicating where the people buried in the cemeteries might have lived, is much less frequently encountered in Thanet.

Few, if any,  early Anglo-Saxon timber framed hall style buildings have been recognised in the area and the only early structures of this date recognised so far  on Thanet have been a type known to archaeologists as ‘Sunken Featured Building’or SFB’s for short. Where these structures have been identified elsewhere in the country, they have been dated to the post Roman ‘migration’ period of the 5th century, when the Anglo-Saxon people first arrived in Britain, with the form living on into later centuries.

The SFB is usually formed of a rectangular pit, with an arrangement of postholes around its edge in which upright posts had been placed. Reconstructions from sites such as West Stow in Suffolk suggest the rectangular pit formed a void or cellar over which a planked floor was laid and timber posts in various arrangements around the edge formed the supports for a superstructure above. Examples of SFB’s excavated at Dover suggest the sides of the void could also have been lined with timber planking. Reconstruction look something like a large garden shed with a timber lined pit under its floor.  The elements of the pit that remain to be discovered by archaeologists because they were cut deep into the ground and have survived the later erosion of the ground surfaces through ploughing, which destroyed much of the evidence for the surrounding structure.

The  remains of the SFB at Margate, shown in the picture, comprises a shallow rectangular cut measuring 3m by 2.5m, with two deep postholes in the centre of each of the short sides. A large fragment of  stone, part of a quern, that was found in the centre of the rectangular cut may have been a pad supporting an additional upright timber. The SFB was dated to the mid-6th to 7th century by fresh sherds of chaff tempered pottery from two or three vessels that were found in the backfill of the cut.

What were these buildings for?

Sunken Featured Buildings are most likely to have served several purposes, but they were probably not  domestic dwellings as was once suggested. The planked floor over a void has been interpreted as evidence that the SFB’s were used to house large weaving looms, the floor void allowing the loom weights to be suspended below a working platform and giving a better working area. The two upright postholes may have supported the frame of the loom. Shale loom weights and a bone pin beater have been excavated from an SFB at Ramsgate and an SFB found in Dover contained clay loom weights, preserved in their rows following a fire that destroyed the loom. Other examples have been found with hearths on the floors and it is possible that one of the many uses an SFB could be adapted to was a smoke houses for drying or preserving produce.

 

 

 

 

VM_365 Day 82 Iron Age structure at Fort Hill, Margate

Fort HIll, Margtae
Fort Hill, Margate

Today’s VM_365 image shows a group of six postholes that formed the foundations of a structure, which were recorded in part of an Early Iron Age settlement that was excavated at Fort Hill, Margate in 1998. The postholes, which are shown in the foreground of the picture, were dated to  by 17 sherds of flint tempered pottery found in the fills of two of the postholes to the Early Iron Age.  Other finds from the fills included flintwork and burnt flint.

It is difficult to say what form the  structure would have taken above ground.  The dimensions of the  timbers contained within the six supporting posts  indicated by the postholes, suggest they would have been fairly substantial and could have formed the internal supporting structure of a roundhouse with a front porch. Four of the posts with a horizontal beam tied to their tops supporting a series of timber rafters and the other two supporting a door opening joined to the main body of the building.

An alternative suggestion is that they represent free standing platforms, supporting drying racks for grain or perhaps hides during the process of tanning. Although the postholes provide valuable evidence of a durable structure, it is very difficult to interpret the true form of the features beyond our efforts to make comparisons with existing examples in living cultures, or conjecture the form of the buildings or platforms based on layout of the posts that we assume occupied the holes.

VM_365 Day 81 The first recorded discovery of a Bronze Age hoard in Thanet

 

Mutrix Hoard
Mutrix Hoard

Today’s image shows an illustration of some of the objects in the first Bronze Age Hoard whose discovery was recorded on Thanet. The hoard, consisting of twenty seven palstave axes dating from the Middle Bronze Age,  was found in 1724 at Mutrix Farm ( a place name also recorded as Mutterer or Motherwicks) on the cliff top near St Mildred’s Bay, Birchington. A record of this discovery, with the illustration shown above, was published in 1736 by the Reverend John Lewis in his book on the History and Antiquities of the Isle of Thanet:

‘Betwixt this place and the Sea were found AD 1724 by William Castle, who occupied a small Farm here, as he wwas digging a Sea-gate, or a Way thro’ the Cliff into the Sea, to fetch up Oore or Waure for his Land, XXVII such instruments as I have described in the adjoining Plate lying all together about two Feet underground, so that it is a little strange, that they were not before this discovered by the plough. They were of mixt Brass, or what they call bell or Pot-metal, of several Sizes, and somewhat different shapes, but on both Sides alike, as they are here represented. The largest of them were 7 Inches one quarter long, and 2 Inches three quarters broad at the bottom the lesser ones were 5 Inches in Length and 2 Inches and one half in Breadth at the Bottom. Two of them had Ringles on one Side about the middle, which was the thickest or deepest part.’

It has been suggested that the illustration reproduced by Lewis was copied from an original drawing made by the famous Antiquarian William Stukeley while he was travelling through Kent (Ashbee 2001).

References

Ashbee, P. 2001. William Stukeley’s Kentish Studies of Roman and other Remains. Archaeologia Cantiana 121, 61-102.

Lewis, J. 1736. The History and Antiquities of the Isle of Tenet. London. 2nd Edition

Perkins, D. R. J. 2000. A Gateway Island. Thesis submitted for the Degree of Ph.D to the Institute of Archaeology, University College London.

VM_365 Day 80: Late Neolithic Polished Axe, Margate

VM 365 80Today’s image shows a very large, polished, late Neolithic flint axe from Northdown, Margate. The axe was found in 1940 by a Mr Kelf while he was digging an Air Raid shelter behind his shop on Northdown Road.

The axe is unused and made of non-local flint. The true reason for making it is unclear; it may have been more a status object rather than a useful tool, or perhaps,  for ceremonial use, or maybe it was made to show off the skill of its creator. We can only guess at its purpose.

VM_365 Day 79: Anglo Saxon Cemetery at Half Mile Ride, Margate

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Perkins’ plan from Arch. Cant. CIV.

One of the sites recorded by Dr. Arthur Rowe was an Anglo Saxon cemetery loctaed at Half Mile Ride off Manston Road, Margate. In 1922 he was called to examine human remains that had been found during road improvements, next to the ancient track which was known as Half Mile Ride. Burials had already been uncovered nearby in 1848 and a further nine burials were exposed when the road gradient was reduced in 1863, another burial was exposed in 1893.

Rowe recorded 20 more graves in 1922  and from the paucity of grave goods he found, he suggested that these burials represented a small and early community that was somewhat impoverished. The finds from the graves, along with a buckle found near the cemetery wall in 1924, were included in the Rowe bequest and were stored in the Margate Museum.

Buckle found near the cemetery wall in 1924
Buckle found near the cemetery wall in 1924

In the mid 1980’s the late Dr David Perkins, former  Director of the Trust for Thanet Archaeology, reviewed the Half Mile Ride archive and using data which was not available to Rowe at the time, concluded that the burials were actually part of a larger cemetery, dating to the late sixth to seventh century which extended along the brow of the hill (hatched in the plan above). Rather than an impoverished community, Dr Perkins suggested that from the descriptions in Rowe’s notes, the graves he had encountered had in fact been robbed of their valuable grave goods in antiquity. A similar pattern  of grave robbing seems to occurred in cemeteries of a similar date on Thanet at Sarre and Ozengell that were investigated by Dr. Perkins.

References

Perkins, D. R. J. 1987. The Jutish Cemetery at Half Mile Ride, Margate: A Re-Appraisal. Archaeologia Cantiana CIV, 219-236.

VM_365 Day 78: Metalwork from Tivoli Villa, Margate

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Doctor Arthur Rowe recovered a number of Iron objects from the Tivoli Villa excavations, including the nails, reaping hooks, knives and brackets that are as shown above. He also found a more unusual item shown below,  part of a window grille.

 

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Window grilles were structures that retained small panes of window glass, held by the star shaped clips riveted to the bar, within a wider frame. The grille let in light over a larger opening than could be covered by any single pane of glass that could be made at that time. The presence of a window  indicates the high status of this building. Examples of the type of window glass that would have been used have been excavated locally at Abbey Farm Villa, Minster.

VM_365 Day 77: Tivoli Villa

Tivoli Villa excavation facing across Tivoli Park toward Hartsdown
Tivoli Villa excavation facing across Tivoli Park toward Hartsdown c. 1924

In 1924, a Roman building known as Tivoli Villa was discovered while laying out new roads on the west side of Margate. The building was discovered at the southern end of the new Tivoli Park Avenue and was excavated and recorded by Dr Arthur Rowe. Only a single photograph, shown above, and a sketch plan survive although Roman finds from the site are at Margate Museum and the British Museum.

The walls of the building were constructed from flint and there was also evidence of painted plaster and mosaic floors. The layout of the part that Rowe excavated suggests that the structure was foundations of a series of rooms from a much larger range of buildings.

 

 

VM_365 Day 76: Dr Thomas and Dr Arthur Rowe

From left to right: Dr. T. Smith Rowe and Dr. A. Rowe.
Dr. Thomas Smith Rowe (Left) and Dr. Arthur Rowe, Margate archaeological investigators.

Dr Arthur Rowe was born in Margate in 1858 and practised as a GP and surgeon until he retired at the age of 51 to concentrate on his other interests, microfossils, the formation of chalk and local history and archaeology in Margate.

Rowe took a great interest in archaeological discoveries that were made as the town of Margate expanded and he was responsible for recording a number of Anglo Saxon burials during roadworks at Half Mile Ride, next to the present cemetery and Council Tip, in 1922; excavating the Iron Age settlement and Roman building found whenTivoli Park Avenue was being constructed in 1924 and recording a number of burials that were eroding from the cliffs at Westgate in 1925.

Rowe was a contemporary of Howard Hurd who had carried out archaeological research in Broadstairs and the two men corresponded by postcard while Rowe was excavating the Tivoli Villa, with Hurd offering Rowe advice on his excavation.

Rowe died of an untreated tooth infection in 1926, while working on a report of his excavations. On his death he bequeathed his collection of Margate books, pictures and prints to  the corporation of Margate and his collection of archaeological artefacts, mainly pottery, to the British Museum.

Arthur Rowe’s Margate collection formed the Rowe Bequest and various parts of the collection are to be found in Margate Library’s Local Studies Collection and at the Margate Museum.

Part of the archaeological collection in the Rowe bequest was probably built up by Arthur Rowe’s father, Thomas Smith Rowe, who is less well known than his son but passed on an interests in local history to his son. Thomas Smith Rowe was also a Doctor and Surgeon and was well respected in Margate. Amongst other appointments he was Senior Visiting Surgeon to the Royal Sea Bathing Infirmary and Honorary Surgeon to the Alexandra Orphanage and Victoria Hospital for Children . Thomas Rowe also took part in the formation of the Margate Centre of St John’s Ambulance Association in 1879.

Dr T. Smith Rowe died in 1907 aged 82.

References

Moody, G. 2008. The Isle of Thanet from Prehistory to the Norman Conquest. The History Press, 20.

Perkins, D. R. J. 1987. The Jutish Cemetery at Half Mile Ride, Margate: A Re-appraisal. Archaeologia Cantiana CIV, 219-236

With thanks to Bob Pantony for his research on the Rowe Bequest presented in a lecture in 2012 celebrating 25 years of the Trust for Thanet Archaeology.

 

VM_365 Day 75. Decorated Medieval Floor Tile from Salmestone Grange

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Today’s image shows a fragment of a 14th century glazed medieval floor tile found in 1979 during excavations at Salmestone Grange, Margate by the Isle of Thanet Archaeological Unit.

Salmestone Grange was a Benedictine Monastic Grange founded in the 12th century by the Monks of St Augustine’s Abbey, Canterbury. The Grange operated as an administrative centre for their large estate, part of which covered most of Thanet. The Grange was also occasionally used as a retreat for the Monks.

The excavations, carried out in 1979, were located in the now ruined south western end of the domestic range, in the area of the garderobe and dormitory built in the 14th century by Thomas Ickham, Sacristan to the Abbot of St Augustine’s.

VM_365 Day 74. Reverend John Lewis: Thanet’s first Historian

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John Lewis 1675-1746

Today’s image is of the Reverend John Lewis, vicar of the parish of Minster and Thanet’s first historian. His book, The History and Antiquities of the Isle of Thanet published in 1736 was a study of the area that had been his home for 30 years. His book covered the etymology of local place names, the geography of the island and local miscellanea but also, and most importantly, he was aware of a growing interest in the survival of ancient features in the landscape and ancient artefacts found locally, which he described in detail. He included plans and illustrations of places and finds of antiquarian interest including the first Bronze Age Hoard recorded on Thanet at Birchington and the standing Bronze Age Barrows at Hackemdown Banks, North Foreland.

Lewis’ work was heavily drawn on by a number of publishers of traveller’s guides and also by Edward Hasted whose Thanet volume of The History of the County of Kent,  published in 1800, largely reproduced Lewis’ account with minor amendments. Lewis’ History and Antiquities remains to this day an interesting and valuable source of local history of the late 16th and 17th centuries which should be a first port of call for anyone interested in the history of the area.