Monument record TR 34 SW 1440 - Norman Cess pits located to the rear of the crypt resturant, Bench Street, Dover
Summary
Location
Grid reference | Centred TR 3198 4127 (32m by 19m) (25 map features) |
---|---|
Map sheet | TR34SW |
County | KENT |
District | DOVER, KENT |
Civil Parish | DOVER, DOVER, KENT |
Map
Type and Period (1)
Full Description
Towards the southern end of Bench Street and to the rear of the Crypt Restaurant site evidence for Norman occupation was uncovered during work associated with the A20 road and sewer scheme. The evidence consisted of numerous rubbish pits cut into the natural sands. No certain structural remains were apparent and there was no evidence for the documented fire of 1066. The pits produced pottery datable to the period c. A.D 1075-1175 and contained large quantities of well-preserved fish remains. The general absence of structural remains, however, indicated that this region was not a settlement area but merely waste land convenient for burying rubbish. The occurrence of rubbish pits under the line of Bench Street itself, together with the general absence of early road metalling here indicates that this street had not yet come into existence at this point. (Taken from source) (1)
<1> Canterbury Archaeological Trust, 2001, Dover Sewers/A20 Project 1991–3, Assessment Report and Updated Project Design (Unpublished document). SKE31815.
Sources/Archives (1)
- <1> SKE31815 Unpublished document: Canterbury Archaeological Trust. 2001. Dover Sewers/A20 Project 1991–3, Assessment Report and Updated Project Design.
Finds (0)
Protected Status/Designation
- None recorded
Related Monuments/Buildings (0)
Related Events/Activities (2)
- Event Boundary: The Dover Sewers/A20 Project, 1991-1992, Programme of Investigation (EKE15202)
- Intrusive Event: The Dover Sewers/A20 Project, 1991-1992, Programme of Investigation: The Crypt Restaurant (EKE15215)
Record last edited
Apr 26 2017 11:55AM