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Victoria
County History of Kent Vol. 3
1932 - Romano-British
Kent - Towns - Page 97
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a glass phial and was associated with a double-handled glass vessel
bearing the stamp OBINI in relief upon
the base. This coffin is now in the Maidstone Museum. In 1871 a fourth
leaden coffin, lying with its head to the south, was found with elaborate
ornamentation of’ Medusa heads,’ lions and vases containing torches—symbols
which probably had a Mithraic significance. Outside the coffin and at its
head was a green glass jug of a type which occurs on 1st-century sites,
but is here presumably at least a century later. Upwards of four other
leaden coffins associated with pottery, jet pins, etc., have been found on
the same site. It is noted that some of the leaden coffins had been ‘enclosed
in planks of wood, bolted together with clenched bolts of iron, and
further fastened with stout iron bands’ (G. Payne, Collectanea
Cantiana, 23; C. R. Smith, Collect. . Ant. vi, 263).
(2) Some 300 yds. north of Bexhill cemetery, in a corner of
the field by the last stile before the marshes are reached below Kemsley
Downs, several urn-burials were found in 1889—90 on the right-hand side
of the path. Each group of urns was surrounded and covered by tiles (Proc.
Soc. Ant. 2nd series, xiii, 188). Nearby a Saxon inhumation-burial was
discovered (Arch. Cant. xviii, 207, and Payne, Coll.
Cant. 118).
(3) Sepulchral urns are somewhat vaguely recorded from behind
the White Hart Inn (Ibid.).
(4) To the east of the creek a richly furnished cemetery has
been found in a field at Bayford, on the eastern side of the road leading
from Crown Quay Road to Adelaide Dock, Murston. The burials found in and
after 1875 were in two cases by inhumation, but mostly by cremation.
Vessels of pottery, glass and bronze were unearthed here, the bronze
vessels in particular
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Fig. 18. Leaden coffin from
Sittingbourne
(From G. Payne, Collectanea Cant. 54)
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being unusually ornate. They include a bronze
lamp-stand with crescent-shaped handle, and ornamented bronze jugs of 1st
and early 2nd-century types (P1. XV, nos. 2, 3). Some of these objects are
in the British Museum. It is clear that the greater part of this cemetery
was pre-Hadrianic. Near the burials were found three burnt areas,
associated with iron nails, oyster-shells, tiles, animal-bones, etc.,
which were thought to be the sites of funeral pyres, but may rather have
been those of hutments not necessarily coeval with the cemetery (G. Payne,
Collect. Cant. 44; Arch. Cant. xi, 47; Proc. Soc. Ant 2nd
series, viii, 276; Journ. Brit. Arch. Assoc. xxxiii, 263).
(5) A little to the north-east of the Bayford cemetery, on
the left of the private road leading to East Hall, Murston, a further
Roman cemetery or perhaps an extension of the preceding was discovered 800
yds. south-east of Murston Old Church in and after 1871. The burials seem
to have been wholly by cremation, with the possible exception of a single
skull which was, however, associated with 1st-century glassware, and may
therefore have been part of an incomplete cremation. The burial-groups
were, at least in some cases, ‘arranged in line from north to south’
and included Pottery which seems to have been almost exclusively of about
the period 70—110 A.D. (G. Payne, Coll. Cant. :33 ; Arch.
Cant. x, 178). More burnt burials were found a few hundred yards N. of
Mere Court in 1924 (see Top. Index, s.v. Murston).
(6) About half a mile north of the preceding, in 1869, a
Roman lead coffin decorated with rope moulding, bound together with iron
bands and containing the fragments of two or three glass vessels ‘in one
of which were the bones of a very minute creature,’ was found 9 ft. deep
in Eleven
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