|
Victoria
County History of Kent Vol. 3
1932 - Romano-British
Kent - Towns - Page 99
|
a slight claim to distinction as a spot of exceptional
Convenience where this riverside population may have been a little more
numerous than elsewhere.
Let us glance at the remains of Roman masonry within the
environs of Maidstone: (1) At the Mount, just south of the Maidstone
Barracks and north of the Southern Railway station (and near Pybus
wharf,), a part of the western bank, 25 ft. above the river, fell in 1843
and disclosed Roman masonry. In an adjacent garden, about 15 ft. from this
abrupt face, remains of walls were then excavated, and were found to
extend northwards into an orchard where they were not followed. The
foundations as exposed extended 65 ft. from east to west and 35 ft.
from north to south. The walls were of Kentish rag pitched in some
cases in herringbone fashion. In the north-west room of the excavated area
was a pavement of square red tiles, and in an adjoining room were large
masses of ‘rudely ornamented pavement’ made largely of Roman tile. On
one side several large piers abutted upon the house. Much Roman pottery
and a coin of Gordian Ill were found during the work (Journ. Brit.
Arch. Assoc. ii, 86). (2) South-eastwards across the river, near Upper
Stone Street, in a field east of the road to Loose, just beyond the
turning to ‘Tovil and 250 yds. south-east of St. Philip’s Church, part
of a Roman dwelling-house was opened up in 1870. the 2-ft. walls were of
ragstone with tufa quoins.
|
|

Fig. 19. Plan of the Villa at the Mount,
Maidstone
|
|
The plan (fig. 20) shows a fragment of a residence, 160
ft. long so far as excavated. It has a range of rooms lying north and
south and opening on to an eastern corridor, which is interrupted by a
long Projecting room with an apse at its east end. At the north end
of the excavation part of another room or rooms with an apse cast was
uncovered; this may, as often, mark the original centre of the range. At
the south end of the range was a buttressed octagonal room with traces of
a tessellated pavement and a channelled hypocaust. Burnt wheat was found
in an adjacent compartment, but is insufficient to indicate the original
use of these rooms.89 Two other hypocausts were noted in
the building. Ill-recorded discoveries of other walls in the vicinity
suggested that the whole structure may have been of courtyard type ( Arch.
Cant. x, 163). (3) At Combe Farm or West
Town, 450 yds. south of the Railway and just east of Tovil and not far
from No. 2, ‘foundations of a Roman ‘villa’ were observed in 1830
and in 1838; the only recorded object was a coin of Florian. The site does
not seen to have been further examined. (Brit. Arch. Assoc. Journ. ii,
75.) (4) On the West bank of the Medway, ¼ mile from it, at Little
Buckland Farm, ‘foundations of an apparently extensive Roman Villa’ or
‘a species of terrace’ were observed when planting an orchard about
1835. Nothing more is known of this site, which lies to the south of
Allington. (Arch. Cant. i, 156).
The principal Roman cemetery seems to have lain to the
north-west of Maidstone, not very far from the villa at the Mount It was
found in 1859-60 at Westborough, on the left bank of the
89 For this room, cf. the
villa at Ashstead (J.R.S. xix, 208, pl. xvi), Loose, Lockham,
Boughton Monchelsea.
|
Previous Page
Page 99 Next Page
For details about the advantages of membership of the Kent
Archaeological Society click
here
Back to Towns page listings
Back to Contents Page
Back to
Research Back
to Homepage
Kent Archaeological
Society is a registered charity number 223382
© Kent Archaeological Society May 2006
This website is constructed by
enthusiastic amateurs. Any errors noticed by other researchers will be
to gratefully received so
that we can amend our pages to give as accurate a record as possible.
Please send details to research@kentarchaeology.org.uk
|