SNN76292 - Excavations at the medieval village of Wythemail, Northamptonshire

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Type Article
Title Excavations at the medieval village of Wythemail, Northamptonshire
Author/Originator
Date/Year 1969

Abstract/Summary

Excavation of a single enclosure revealed a sequence from early I3th-century timber buildings to structures with stone foundations, or completely stone-built, in the later I3th and I4th centuries. A two-roomed long-house was replaced by a more complex four-roomed long-house built on a different alignment. Also in the enclosure were a sequence of six outbuildings rebuilt in various positions. In the I3th century there were changes in property boundaries and in the I 4th century a road was cut obliquely across the enclosure leading to fundamental changes in planning. Evidence for climatic deterioration was given by the increasing use of drains and of paved and cobbled surfaces in the early I4th century. Finds included metal objects, animal bones, local shelly pottery, and 12th- to I 4th-century sherds from Lincolnshire, Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire and Warwickshire.

External Links (1)

Description

Location

NCC Archives Service, Heritage Team

Referenced Monuments (2)

  • Medieval toft at Wythemail (Monument)
  • Wythemail (Monument)

Referenced Events (1)

  • Wythemail Deserted Village, 1954 (Excavation) (Ref: 8472005)

Record last edited

Jul 10 2023 9:58AM

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