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Heybridge: A Late Iron Age and Roman Settlement: excavations at Elms Farm 1993–5, volume 1

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Late Iron Age settlement at Heybridge was centered on a shrine, with a series of plots to north and south. In the mid 1st century AD the settlement was remodeled with metaled roads, a new temple on the earlier sacred site and a reworking of the plots into enclosures. North of the settlement were a number of burials, pyre sites and pyre debris dumps, at least one of which may have been ‘aristocratic’, suggesting the presence of a local elite. A period of stability followed when there was little substantive change to the settlement, except that the temple precinct was remodeled. The settlement seems to have been a large village or small town with a market and a religious function. Gradual decline and contraction is evident through the 3rd and 4th centuries, yet the religious focus remained into the late 4th century, when a substantial building — possibly an early Christian chapel — was placed over the former precinct wall. High-status burial continued at Heybridge into the late 4th century, despite the apparent decline in settlement status. What remained of the former Roman settlement into the 5th century, and whether there was continuity of occupation into the early Saxon period, is unclear. The main focus of early Saxon settlement was on higher ground to the north-east.

200 pages, Paperback

Published March 4, 2016

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Mark Atkinson

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