Villas, Sanctuaries and Settlement in the Romano-British Countryside had its genesis in a conference held at the British Museum in 2009 and brings together a range of papers on buildings that have been categorised as villas, mainly in Roman Britain, from the Isle of Wight to Shropshire. It comprises the first such survey for almost half a century. While some of these structures were indeed country houses and the centres of agricultural estates as their designation as villas implies, others are here shown to have been administrative or industrial centres, hunting lodges or religious sanctuaries, or a combination of more than one such function. The art associated with these prestige structures and its relevance to their function is also considered.
Recenzijos
'... the value and impact of collaborative working shines through; many of the projects described in this volume are helping to transform our understanding of the significance of these sites in the past, simultaneously bringing people and organisations together and demonstrating the value of archaeological research for people and places in the present. This volume will hopefully serve as a catalyst for future research that draws on wider interdisciplinary expertise and sparks new collaborations.' Sarah Scott (2024): Bryn Mawr Classical Review
Roman villas in Britain and beyond Martin Henig, Anthony King and
Grahame Soffe ;
Where, when and what for? Coin use in the Romano-British countryside
Philippa Walton ;
Villa mosaics and archaeology Patricia Witts ;
The Roman villas of the Lower Nene Valley and the Praetorium at Castor
Stephen G. Upex ;
Piddington, Northamptonshire: wealthy private farm or imperial property?
Roy and Diana Friendship-Taylor ;
Whitley Grange villa, Shropshire: a hunting lodge and its landscape Roger
White ;
Moor Park, Hertfordshire: two evaluations of an excavation of the 1950s
Victoria Leitch and Martin Biddle ;
Great Witcombe, Gloucestershire: a reinterpretation of the site as a temple
rather than a villa Bryn Walters and David Rider ;
Chedworth, Gloucestershire: a question of interpretation Bryn Walters and
David Rider ;
Acroterial decoration and cantharus fountains Anthony Beeson ;
The stones with Chi-Rho inscriptions at Chedworth Stephen R. Cosh ;
The St Laurence School villa, Bradford on Avon, Wiltshire Mark Corney ;
Dinnington and Yarford: two villas in south and west Somerset Anthony C.
King, with a contribution by Christina Grande ;
The Ashtead Roman villa and tileworks David Bird ;
Lullingstone Roman villa Martin Henig and Grahame Soffe, with a
contribution by Anthony King ;
Clinging to Britannias hemline: continuity and discontinuity in villa
estates, boundaries and historic land use on the islands of Vectis and
Tanatis David Tomalin ;
Where did Sidonius Apollinaris live? John Collis ;
From Roman villa to medieval village at the Mola di Monte Gelato, Lazio,
Italy Anthony C. King ;
Index
Martin Henig is a Research Associate of the School of Archaeology, University of Oxford and Academic Adviser to the Association for Roman Archaeology.
Grahame Soffe is Chairman of the Association for Roman Archaeology and Editor of ARA, the Bulletin of the Association.
Kate Adcock is a Trustee of the Association for Roman Archaeology and Editor of ARA News.
Anthony King is Emeritus Professor of Roman Archaeology, University of Winchester, and President of the Association for Roman Archaeology.