Senses of place: rethinking urbanism in late Roman Britain

2011 ◽  
pp. 176-182
Author(s):  
Adam Rogers
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
David A. Hinton

If gold and silver are a measure of wealth, late Roman Britain was very rich. Hoards of coins, jewellery, and plate buried in the late fourth and early fifth centuries show that their owners’ lifestyle was coming to an end as central imperial authority broke down, troops were withdrawn from the island, villas fell into disuse, and towns lost their markets and trade. Raiders threatened by land and sea: Irish from the west, Pictish from the north, Frisian, Saxon, and others from the east; and as civic order broke down, the likelihood of robbery by people living south of Hadrian’s Wall grew worse. The hoards’ owners were right to worry, and their subsequent failure to retrieve their valuables must testify to many personal catastrophes. Hoards containing dishes, bowls, and spoons as well as coins and jewellery have been found on the east side of Roman Britain from Canterbury, Kent, in the south to Whorlton, Yorkshire, in the north. Further west, coin-hoards are quite plentiful, although none has any plate. Some contain jewellery, like one found in 1843 at Amesbury, Wiltshire, that included three silver finger-rings; in the same area, another hoard with eight gold coins and one of silver was found in 1990, apparently concealed in a pot around the year 405, to judge from the date of the latest coin. But as with plate so with jewellery, the contrast with the east is still considerable; Thetford, Norfolk, has gold finger-rings as well as ornamental chains, bracelets, and a buckle; Hoxne, Suffolk, has gold bracelets, and again chains, these with elaborate mounts. Some of the craftsmanship shown in these pieces is of a high order, that only well-off patrons could have afforded. The plate suggests displays of tableware by a society that set great store on being able to offer lavish feasts and entertainment. These late Roman treasures may be giving a slightly false impression of Britain’s prosperity. Silver was probably extracted from the same native deposits that yielded lead, so would have been more available than in most parts of the Empire. Some may also have entered Britain from Ireland, where evidence of Roman intervention is accumulating.


Britain - Bryony Coles. Beavers in Britain's Past (WARP Occasional Paper 19). x+242 pages, 158 illustrations. 2006. Oxford: Oxbow; 978-1-84217-2261 paperback £40. - Don Benson & Alasdair Whittle (ed.). Building Memories: The Neolithic Cotswold Long barrow at Ascott-Under-Wychwood Oxfordshire. xxxvi+380 pages, 269 illustrations, 24 colour plates. 57 tables. 2007. Oxford; Oxbow; 978-1-84217-236-0 hardback £55. - Stuart Needham, Keith Parfitt & Gill Varndell (ed.). The Ringlemere Cup: Precious Cups and the beginning ofthe Channel Bronze Age. x+116 pages, 67 illustrations, 14 colour plates, 5 tables. 2006. London: The British Museum; 978-086159-163-3 paperback. - John Lewis et al. Landscape Evolution in the Middle Thames Valley: Heathrow Terminal 5 Excavations Volume 1, Perry Oaks (Framework Archaeology Monograph 1). xii+250 pages, 122 b&w & colour figures, 56 colour plates, 30 tables, CD-ROM. 2006. Oxford & Salisbury; BAA, Oxford Archaeology & Wessex Archaeology; 978-0-9554519-0-4 hardback £15. - Ian Armit. Anatomy of an Iron Age Roundhouse: The Cnip Wheelhouse Excavations, Lewis. xxxvi+272 pages, 106 illustrations, 11 colour plates, 74 tables. 2006. Edinburgh: Society of Antiquaries of Scotland; 978-0-903903-32-6 hardback. - Ray Howell. Searching for the Silures: An Iron Age tribe in South-East Wales. 160 pages, 41 illustrations, 15 colour plates. 2006. Stroud: Tempus; 978-0-7524-4014-9 paperback £19.99. - Martin Millett (ed.). Shiptonthorpe, East Yorkshire: archaeological studies of a Romano-British roadside settlement (Yorkshire Archaeological Report 5). xvi+344 pages, 140 illustrations, 92 tables. 2006. Leeds: Yorkshire Archaeological Society & East Riding Archaeological Society; 1-9035-6465-4 paperback £25+p&p. - Michael Fulford, Amanda Clarke & Hella Eckardt. Life and labour in late Roman Silchester: excavations in Insula IX since 1997 (Britannia Monograph Series 22). xviii+404 pages, 125 illustrations, 71 tables. 2006. London: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies; 978-0-907764-33-5 paperback. - H.E.M. Cool. Eating and Drinking in Roman Britain. xvi+282 pages, 30 illustrations, 43 tables. 2006. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 978-0-521-80276-5 hardback £55 & $99; 978-0-521-00327-8 paperback £19.99 & $36.99.

Antiquity ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 81 (312) ◽  
pp. 505-505
Author(s):  
Madeleine Hummler

1981 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine Johns

SummaryIn 1729, a decorated fourth-century Roman silver dish bearing a Christian inscription was found at Risley Park, Derbyshire. Damaged when found, the fragments of the vessel were soon lost, but an illustrated account of it was published by William Stukeley in 1736. Stukeley and later authorities interpreted the inscription as implying that the dish had belonged to a late Roman church in France, and considered that it had been brought to Britain as loot in the Middle Ages. This paper presents a description and assessment of the Risley Park lanx in the light of the greater knowledge of late Roman silver plate now available, and makes the suggestion that the vessel may have been imported into Britain in the Roman period.


1988 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dorothy J. Watts

The Thetford Treasure of late Roman gold jewellery and silver utensils was published in 1983 by Catherinejohns and Timothy Potter, who believe it to be connected with the cult of Faunus, an ancient Latian god hitherto unattested in Roman Britain. There do appear to be iconographical links between the jewellery and several of the inscriptions, yet a number of inscriptions would, in another fourthcentury context, have been considered Christian. Johns and Potter have rejected such identification. The purpose of this paper is to re-examine these particular inscriptions and also to investigate the possible use for the silver implements in the Treasure. Such examination suggests a Christian element. An attempt is made to explain the presence of this component in an otherwise pagan hoard against the background of religious instability in the second half of the fourth century.


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