Number 8 in Canterbury Archaeological Trust's occasional paper
series publishes further findings in Canterbury's northern suburbs,
this time close to Roman pottery and tile kilns recorded during the
relocation of the cattle market in the 1950s. The kilns were
established in an existing agricultural landscape in the mid-1st
century AD and then after the tile and pottery industry declined at
the end of the second century, the area was used for burial. One of
the graves on the site contained a re-used inscribed funerary
plaque. In the early 8th century a new settlement developed, with
the characteristic sunken-featured structures and other domestic
features.
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