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Uncovering Roman London

Started by Sheilbh, April 09, 2013, 08:11:55 PM

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Sheilbh

Quote8,000 artefacts and rising: City dig pronounced the 'most important ever' in London
Archaeologists have nicknamed the site 'the Pompeii of the North'
NICK CLARK    TUESDAY 09 APRIL 2013
 
When archaeologists were called to a site in the City of London where an ugly office block and a bar once stood, they were sceptical that it held any secrets.

Yet six months into the dig on Bloomberg Place, a three-acre site close to Mansion House tube station, experts believed they have stumbled across the most important find of Roman London artefacts in recent memory and have dubbed it the "Pompeii of the north".

Sophie Jackson, from the Museum of London Archaeology (Mola), is managing the site. She said: "We have a huge amount of stuff from the first four hundred years of London. It will tell us so much about the people of London. We will get names and addresses, things we've never had before. It's really exciting."

Archaeologists have so far discovered 8,000 objects and expect that to rise to 10,000 by the time the project is finished. These include writing tablets, clothing, jewellery and pottery as well as parts of buildings that will help build a picture of thriving London life from around 40 AD to the fifth century.

Ms Jackson said: "Why the site is so incredibly important is the preservation of archaeological finds which are normally decayed, or lost or destroyed on other sites." The reason many of the objects are so well preserved is that one of London's lost rivers, the Walbrook River, ran under the site, with the damp conditions preserving the objects.

Michael Marshall, Roman find specialist at Mola, said the findings would "completely transform" understanding of Roman London. "There are very few civilian sites. This is the largest assemblage discovered in London."

Bloomberg is building its new headquarters on the site and in late 2010 started demolition of Bucklersbury House, build in 1952.

It was that original development – which made the discovery of the Temple of Mithras on the site – that had led the archaeologists to believe there would be little of historical value left.

Ms Jackson said: "We thought that construction had removed all the archaeology on the site. We thought: 'What a shame, it's all gone.' Then we found that around the edges, archaeology survives."

Yet, the newly uncovered treasures include 250 leather shoes, writing tablets that may give clues to names and addresses of Roman Londoners, as well as several items never seen before.

This included a stitched leather furnishing never before seen in Roman discoveries and an amber amulet in the shape of a gladiator's head.

Over 150 fragments of writing tablets have been discovered in one room - in what was described as similar to finding an abandoned filing cabinet - with information written on or scratched into them about people who lived in London at the time.

Archaeologists expect to double the number of names known in London to over 30, although nothing is certain. Mr Marshall said: "It's an amazing accident when the text survives."

Ms Jackson added: ""These are really exciting; there are only 14 references to London in all of Roman literature."

The objects ended up in the ground generally from two ways, people throwing objects into refuse pits, or throwing them into the river as offerings.

The wetness of the ground proved particularly fortuitous, helping preserve the organic remains, and Mr Marshall called it the "best site in London" for Roman remains.

"No oxygen could get at the organics, so wood, leather, horn, and occasionally textiles survive in these conditions. The rest of the city of London doesn't get that water logging. It gives us a picture of what it would have been all over the whole city."

The Temple of Mithras, which was dismantled and moved down the road in 1954, will also return as part of the building works. It will be restored to the original site with a viewing area built into the new Bloomberg headquarters.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/8000-artefacts-and-rising-city-dig-pronounced-the-most-important-ever-in-london-8566348.html
Gallery:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/8000-artefacts-and-rising-city-dig-pronounced-the-most-important-ever-in-london-8566348.html?action=gallery&ino=1

Some of the finds look amazing. The woven basket, surviving text and the weird 'fist and phallus' things especially.

I was really surprised by the Museum of London when I visited, so hopefully a lot of this will work its way there :mmm:
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Admiral Yi

Isn't "Mansion house" a little redundant?  :hmm:

Valmy

Wow that is amazingly cool.  Despite the enormous political and military importance of Britain (it seems like around half of all Roman Emperors did a tour there and a few even got their start there) there is not much known about it.  Maybe we will soon have something Roman to see in Britain that is not Hadrian's Wall
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Caliga

Quote from: Sheilbh on April 09, 2013, 08:11:55 PM
I was really surprised by the Museum of London when I visited, so hopefully a lot of this will work its way there :mmm:
Yeah, great museum.  I liked it almost as much as the British Museum TBH.
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mongers

My local museum got it's start in the late 19th century from a similar massive collection of things dug up when they were replacing the open air drains.
Again being an anaerobic environment, all sorts of things like bond/ivory combs, mediaeval leather shoes survived as well as extremely delicate iron items like small keys and souvenirs. So then they had to find somewhere to put all of the stuff.
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Jacob

Quote from: Sheilbh on April 09, 2013, 08:11:55 PM... the weird 'fist and phallus' things especially.

If I'm not mistaken, the fist is making the gesture of "the fig" which is - I believe - one of the oldest known rude hand gestures.

Though according to wikipedia it might have been a good luck or fertility symbol as well:
QuoteFig sign is a gesture made with the hand and fingers curled and the thumb thrust between the middle and index fingers, or, rarely, the middle and ring fingers, forming the fist so that the thumb partly pokes out. In some areas of the world, the gesture is considered a good luck charm; in others (including Greece, Indonesia, Japan, Russia, Serbia and Turkey among others), it is considered an obscene gesture. The precise origin of the gesture is unknown, but many historians speculate that it refers to female genitalia. In ancient Greece, this gesture was a fertility and good luck charm designed to ward off evil. This usage has survived in Portugal and Brazil, where carved images of hands in this gesture are used in good luck talismans,[10] and in Friuli.

Gups

Just walked past the site five minutes ago.

Another interesting little factoid. The hideous building on the site which was demolished was, when it was built in the 1950s the tallest office block in the City at five stories tall.

The Museum of London is in charge of the dig and will no dobt get most of the booty. It's an excellent underrated museum.

jimmy olsen

Quote from: Gups on April 10, 2013, 02:21:58 AM
The hideous building on the site which was demolished was, when it was built in the 1950s the tallest office block in the City at five stories tall.

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