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Les environs:

Ad Pontem

Localisation:

  • Royaume-Uni, Farndon
  • geo:53.045303,-0.870124
  • Précision ± 0-5 m.

Classification:

  • Habitat rural
  • Invisible

Identificateurs:

  • vici:place=12343

Annotations

Il n'y a pas une annotation en français. Présenté est une annotation en Anglais.

A first century fortlet or road-post and nearby kite shaped enclosure with a military style turf wall. In the second century a town developed on the site of the fortlet with earthwork defences, which was later rebuilt in stone in the 3rd century. Roman occupation extends from the 1st century to the mid/late 4th century AD1.

Although scattered surface finds have been recorded over an area in excess of 30½ acres (c.12.4 ha), a polygonal defended enclosure in the field known as 'Odd House Close', covered a maximum area of about 5¼ acres (c.2.1 ha), and was crossed by the Fosse Way from south-west to north-east; finds from excavations conducted by Oswald in the early-1930's and Inskeep in the mid-1960's were meagre but showed that occupation lasted from the late-1st century A.D. until at least the 4th (Finch-Smith pp.284-5)2.

See

  • The Roman Invasion of Britain by Graham Webster (Batsford, London, 1993);
  • Roadside Settlements in Lowland Roman Britain by Roger Finch Smith (B.A.R. British Series #157, 1987);
  • Air Reconnaissance of Southern Britain by J.K. St. Joseph in J.R.S. xliii (1953) pp.81-97;

Références

  1. Pastscape AD PONTEM ROMAN FORTLET
  2. RBO: Ad Pontem

A first century fortlet or road-post and nearby kite shaped enclosure with a military style turf wall. In the second century a town developed on the site of the fortlet with earthwork defences, which was later rebuilt in stone in the 3rd century. Roman occupation extends from the 1st century to the mid/late 4th century AD1.

Although scattered surface finds have been recorded over an area in excess of 30½ acres (c.12.4 ha), a polygonal defended enclosure in the field known as 'Odd House Close', covered a maximum area of about 5¼ acres (c.2.1 ha), and was crossed by the Fosse Way from south-west to north-east; finds from excavations conducted by Oswald in the early-1930's and Inskeep in the mid-1960's were meagre but showed that occupation lasted from the late-1st century A.D. until at least the 4th (Finch-Smith pp.284-5)2.

See

  • The Roman Invasion of Britain by Graham Webster (Batsford, London, 1993);
  • Roadside Settlements in Lowland Roman Britain by Roger Finch Smith (B.A.R. British Series #157, 1987);
  • Air Reconnaissance of Southern Britain by J.K. St. Joseph in J.R.S. xliii (1953) pp.81-97;

Références

  1. Pastscape AD PONTEM ROMAN FORTLET
  2. RBO: Ad Pontem


À proximité

Ad Pontem

Ad Pontem

Roman Road from Lindum to Aquis Sulis (1 km)

Roman Road from Lindum to Aquis Sulis

Villa at Southwell (6 km)

Villa at Southwell (MONUMENT NO. 322403)