on its south side. Richborough had a real harbour,
and one that lay open to ships sailing from Gaul or from the Rhenish
ports.
The whole, or nearly the whole, of Richborough hill was
probably occupied at one time or another during the Roman period.
To-day, remains are visible at only one point, the north-east corner, on
the edge of a long, low cliff or bank which drops somewhat steeply
eastwards to the Stour. These are the ruins of the Saxon-Shore fortress
which formed the nucleus of Richborough in its latter days. But the
recent excavations, carried out by Mr. J. P. Bushe-Fox for the Society
of Antiquaries, have shown that the fortress was preceded by a varied
series of works, some of them of military and others, apparently, of
civil origin. The details of these works and the minutia of the evidence
from which their history is being reconstructed are set forth in detail
in the Excavation Reports, and here it will suffice to summarize the
main features.
Fragments of Early Iron Age pottery associated in some
cases with ditches, bear testimony to an occupation of the hill-top in
pre-Roman times. The earliest coherent structural remains, however, fall
within—but only just within—the Roman era. Underlying the western
part of the Saxon-Shore fortress and still extending to a distance of
1,078 ft. northwards from the line of the north wall, two parallel
V-shaped ditches have been found cut into the natural sandy soil of the
site. Not far within the west gateway of the Saxon-Shore fortress, these
ditches were interrupted by a metalled causeway, 30 ft. in width; and
slots and post-holes, which must have formed a part of a barricade, have
been found here. At the northern end the ditches bend slightly
north-eastwards, and then disappear in the encroaching marshland. To the
south of the causeway they have, in 1930, been traced likewise to the
cliff-edge; and the whole surviving work is now seen to have formed a
crescent-shaped defence over 2,000 feet in length.
Both the purpose and the date of these entrenchments are
tolerably clear. They can scarcely be other than the vestige of a
legionary camp which, at one time, extended considerably to the eastward
of the present line of cliff and marsh. Pottery of Late Celtic and
Claudian types, together with coins of Agrippa, Tiberius and Claudius,
have been recovered from the silt in the lower part of them, whilst
objects of Claudian date have been found in sealed layers and mixed soil
above. It is a fair inference, therefore, that they date—as, indeed,
we might expect—from about the time of the Claudian invasion in A.D.
43, and were the work either of the initial army of invasion or of early
reinforcements
(P1. I no. 2).
Apart from the remains of timbering already noted at the
entrance to this camp, other wooden structures only slightly later in
date have been found both to the west and, above all, to the east of the
line of its defences. Traces of upwards of half-a-dozen oblong timber
buildings, 118 ft. in length, 26 ft. in width, lying east and west and
arranged in rows, have, in particular, been found close to the present
brow of the cliff. The foundations of these structures are marked by
long channels cut into the natural surface of the ground and filled with
mixed soil wherein the wooden posts for the walls and floors were set.
The purpose of these buildings is not at present clear; it may be
guessed that they were store-rooms for the housing of military supplies
in the early years of the conquest. Another structure of this early date |