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Iron Age, Roman and Anglo-Saxon Settlement along the Empingham to Hannington Pipeline in Northamptonshire and Rutland (Paperback)
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Iron Age, Roman and Anglo-Saxon Settlement along the Empingham to Hannington Pipeline in Northamptonshire and Rutland (Paperback)
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Between January 2008 and July 2009, Northamptonshire Archaeology,
now part of MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology), carried out a
series of excavations along the route of a new water pipeline being
constructed by Anglian Water Services as part of a major project to
increase the supply of water to new homes and businesses in the
south-east Midlands region. Nineteen sites were investigated,
dating primarily to the Iron Age, Roman and Anglo-Saxon periods.
The earliest remains were a late Bronze Age/early Iron Age pit
alignment near Seaton, Rutland. The Iron Age and Roman sites were
small rural settlements comprising ditched enclosures, the remains
of roundhouses and pits. Settlements were located near Seaton and
Caldecott in Rutland and in Northamptonshire at Swinawe Barn near
Corby, Thorpe Malsor, White Hill Lodge, Great Cransley and Willows
Nursery. A Roman site near Rushton, Northamptonshire may be
associated with a villa estate. Other sites included part of a
Roman field system at Violet Lane, near Corby, and Roman cremation
burials near Gretton, Northamptonshire. The settlements mainly date
from the late middle Iron Age, 2nd century BC, through to the 4th
century AD, although there was little evidence for direct
continuity of settlement between the Iron Age and Roman periods. An
Anglo-Saxon cremation cemetery dated to the late 5th century to
mid-7th century AD, at Glaston, Rutland, contained 16 cremation
burials deposited in decorated and plain urns along with small
assemblages of grave goods, often also burnt on the pyre, and
including a brooch, glass beads, and fragments of a bone comb and
mount. Later features generally comprised medieval and
post-medieval furrows from ridge and furrow field systems and field
boundary ditches.
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