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Late Iron Age and Roman Settlement at Bozeat Quarry, Northamptonshire: Excavations 1995-2016 (Paperback)
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Late Iron Age and Roman Settlement at Bozeat Quarry, Northamptonshire: Excavations 1995-2016 (Paperback)
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MOLA (formerly Northamptonshire Archaeology), has undertaken
intermittent archaeological work within Bozeat Quarry over a
twenty-year period from 1995-2016 covering an area of 59ha. The
earliest archaeological features lay in the extreme northern area
where a Bronze Age to Iron Age cremation burial was possibly
contemporary with an adjacent late Bronze Age/early Iron Age pit
alignment. In the middle to late Iron Age a settlement was
established at the southern part of the site over a c170m by 150m
area. It was a well organised farmstead, mostly open in plan with
two roundhouses, routeway, enclosures, boundary ditches and pits.
In the early 1st century AD, cAD 30, two separate settlements lay
c0.5km apart. The former southern Iron Age farmstead had perhaps
shifted location c150m to the north-west and a there was new
farmstead to the north. Both settlements were located on a west
facing slope of a valley side and were sited on sands and gravels
at between 64m and 66m aOD. The Northern Settlement was only
occupied for about 150 years and was involved in pastoral farming,
but local coarseware pottery production was of some importance with
a group of 12 pottery kilns dated to the middle to late 1st century
AD. This is seemingly the largest number of pottery kilns from a
single settlement of this period yet found in the regionally
important Upper Nene Valley pottery producing area. The Southern
Settlement was larger and continued to the end of the Roman period.
In this area there was a notable scatter of 12 Iron Age and 1st
century AD Roman coins as well as 24 contemporary brooches found
over an area measuring c170m by c130m. This collection of finds may
suggest the presence of a shrine or temple located in the area. It
is perhaps significant that in 1964 directly to the west of the
excavation, a middle Roman round stone building was found, perhaps
an associated shrine. Within the excavation area in the latest Iron
Age to early Roman period there was a possible roundhouse, a large
oval enclosure and a field system. The latter largely related to
pastoral farming including areas where paddocks were linked to
routeways suggesting significant separation of livestock had
occurred. Four cremation burials, including one deposited in a box,
and an inhumation lay in three locations. Pastoral farming was a
significant activity throughout the Roman period with enclosures,
paddocks and linked routeways uncovered. In the late 2nd to 4th
century there were two stone buildings and a stone malt oven at the
extreme western extent of the site, within 50m to the east of the
probably contemporary shrine recorded in 1964. There was minor
evidence of early to middle Saxon occupation within the area of the
former middle to late Iron Age settlement. No structures were
found, although a few pits may date to this period and mark short
stay visits. A small cemetery of five individuals respected the
former Roman field system and probably dated to the late 6th to 7th
centuries. The burials included a decapitation and a burial with a
knife and a buckle. The site was then not re-occupied and became
part of the fields of Bozeat medieval and post-medieval
settlements.
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