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Field Report: Updated Research Design

5.0 Updated Research Design

The scheme of investigation at Blue Bridge Lane and Fishergate House represent the largest scale investigation within York since the 1980s. Excavations produced new information for three main periods: Roman, Early Medieval and medieval. In each case new information about the developing form of the city of York over the first and second millennia AD has been won. There are also potential rewards specific to each period: for the Roman period the first modern contact with a cremation cemetery beside the south road; for the early medieval period new light on the organisation of craft-working in the Anglian wic (or trading station), and for the medieval period a rediscovered lost church and cemetery and new information about the Gilbertine Priory and its industries.

A well-defined programme of research is proposed which will provide further understanding of the form and function of the southern area of the Roman, Anglian and Medieval city. York is of national significance in each of these periods. In addition, the study of the Anglian settlement has the power to address international issues, in that it can throw light on poorly understood political and economic strategies in the centuries between the fall of the Roman Empire and the rise of Catholic Europe.

5.1 Period 2

Aspects of economic activity, funerary practice and transport networks are not often evidenced within the same area in York, and as such the Roman period archaeology provides valuable evidence for the organisation of the Roman landscape on the outskirts of the city.

The cremations are significant as a group in themselves, since this is the first modern archaeological contact with the cemetery, using detailed excavation and recording techniques. The Blue Bridge Lane cremation demonstrates that the cemetery extended at least that far north. Further north still, excavations at 46-54 Fishergate by York Archaeological Trust made contact with Roman material. Although this is not extensively published, the assemblage includes vessels of late 1st to early 2nd century date, which may have arrived at the site not by manuring but as complete funerary urns or accompanying vessels. In contrast to both 46-54 Fishergate and Blue Bridge Lane, the four Fishergate House cremations in the new excavations to the south were found intact and largely undisturbed in a sealed cemetery-soil layer. Publication of the full osteological and zooarchaeological analysis will make an important contribution to the sparse osteological information that exists for early Roman burials in York.

5.2 Anglian

Research on the Anglian settlement focusses on the nature of the socio-economic or 'proto-urban' function of the site, as reflected in the assemblages and their distribution. Integration of the new results with those from 46-54 Fishergate will provide a fresh model of Eoforwic, which can then be compared with similar settlements known at Southampton, London, Ipswich and Norwich. Such comparisons should contribute directly to the understanding of, and latest debates about, the wics which are claimed as England's earliest towns (Anderton 1999, Hill and Cowie 2001). Fruitful analyses are promised in four main study-areas: determination of the physical extent of the Eoforwic settlement, mapping and organisation of activities within it, investigation of the intensity of use through time and studies of trade and craft-working.

Some indication of the original form of the Eoforwic settlement can be deduced from the Roman landscape, and in this respect the intact Roman cremations and their associated horizon are significant. The four Fishergate House cremations were found intact and largely undisturbed in a sealed layer which was overlain directly by post-medieval and later deposits associated with Fishergate House. There was little or no Anglian settlement (only one Anglian feature was present), so these undisturbed Roman burials mark an end, or at least an interruption, to the physical extent and layout of the later ' wic'. It thus seems possible that the settlement confined itself to a natural bowl that existed along the Ouse/Foss, focussing on a location where boats could draw up into the shallows of a beaching point.

Mapping the physical extent and potentially the buried topography of the settlement will allow a more accurate model for the limits of the settlement and its potential size to be reached. Once quantified, comparison with other similar sites will be possible, for example, as provisionally mapped, the settlement at York extends for an area of four hectares, or four football pitches, as compared with forty hectares of Early Medieval settlement contacted in Southampton, the equivalent of forty football pitches.

Mapping and organisation of activities

The features and assemblages provide pointers to the different activities carried out in each area, and thence of 'municipal' organisation, planning and maintenance. Excavation at 46-54 Fishergate had identified three main indicators of external planning and control: an eastern boundary ditch lacking synanthropic insects in its basal fills (Kemp 1996, 67), the maintenance of routes and layout in the area excavated and the supply of food to the inhabitants. The apparent absence of a formal ditched southern boundary, to accompany the eastern ditch identified by Kemp, raises questions about the planned and pre-determined nature of the settlement. The density of archaeology across the excavated areas appears to have been greater and more stratified including structures and metalled routes (46-54 Fishergate), presumably where the most intensive occupation had taken place; less dense and unstratified archaeology has been encountered towards the peripheral south (Fishergate House), much as one might expect from an organic rather than planned settlement. The lack of activity to the east of the eastern ditch at 46-54 Fishergate also equates with the line of modern Fishergate, which is probably a Roman route. The lack of activity to the east may be due to the road persisting in the landscape rather than a formal pre-determined layout imposed on the site prior to occupation.

No formal metalled routes or easily identifiable structures were present at Blue Bridge Lane or Fishergate House, and so 'municipal' maintenance will be hard to identify, although shared sequences of fills, backfills and silting will be sought amongst the complicated sequences contained in negative features at Blue Bridge Lane and Fishergate House.

By far the most persuasive indicator for artificial maintenance of the settlement is the zooarchaeological evidence from 46-54 Fishergate (O'Connor 1991). O'Connor found the settlement was provisioned, being supplied with live cattle and receiving jointed pork. Recent assessment concurs with O'Connor's conclusions, but has revealed slightly different species counts with caprovid numbers being greater, also being brought into the site on the hoof.

Intensity of use - longevity and continuity

Coins and pottery provided the phasing for excavations at 46-54 Fishergate and the coins and pottery recovered at Blue Bridge Lane and Fishergate House provide a broadly comparable chronology.

Trade and craft-working industry

Further investigation of the range and distribution of crafts practised will help to identify the tradeable commodities produced at the site. Spatial analysis of artefacts should show whether craft-working was organised in specific zones. Such zones were not detected in the YAT excavations (Rogers 1993), but the addition of new data from a different area of the settlement hints that different areas were used preferentially for certain crafts. The increased numbers of caprovid bones identified in preliminary bone assessment, alongside artefactual evidence in the form of iron shears and needles, large numbers of loomweights, and the presence of spindlewhorls and a picker-cum-beater, may suggest an area designated for textile-working. It may be that an area of more specialised production has been contacted. Bone- and antler-working have also been identified, and small-scale glass and non-ferrous metal-working have been implied by occasional finds, but the complete lack or general paucity of other craft-working indicators requires further investigation. No direct evidence for non-ferrous metal- or glass-working has been encountered in recent excavation which is to be contrasted with evidence from 46-54 Fishergate where thirty-seven crucibles used for glass-, bronze- and silver-working and fragments of gold wire, an ingot mould and slags were recovered (Rogers 1993). Thus the addition of Blue Bridge Lane and Fishergate House allows the distribution of crafts to be considered on a wider scale.

Trade links identified indicate direct or indirect contact with the Eifel region of Germany ('Niedermendig' lavastone), more broadly the Rhineland (some pottery, coins and glass), the Baltic (preliminary source of raw amber), and various places within mainland Britain (alternative source of amber, most pottery and stone hones). Identification of the finds from Blue Bridge Lane and Fishergate House and amalgamated quantification of finds with those from 46-54 Fishergate House will allow comparison with the wealth of material from other ' wic' sites.

5.3 Period 6, 7 & 8

The end of Anglian occupation at the site is followed by another hiatus in occupation and the provisional reoccupation of the site is dated to the late 10th century. By the 11th century a timber church with cemetery had been established at 46-54 Fishergate, and the Gilbertine Priory with its church of St Andrew was established in the area in 1195. The new excavations made contact with part of the outer precinct of the Gilbertine Priory which represents the industrial zone, and with a church, cemetery and possibly a hospital beyond the precinct, which are likely to represent the lost church of St Helen.

Potential

The date and nature of reoccupation at Fishergate House and Blue Bridge Lane, some way from the site of the early church, has revealed a picture of the pre- and post-Conquest occupation of the suburb. The medieval and later phases also promise useful results from analyses in two areas of study: new light on monastic industry and the reconstruction of the site of St Helen's Church, alongside more targeted documentary research.

Monastic industry

The discovery of the remains of a pottery kiln, archaeomagnetically dated to the 14th century, and large amounts of wasters, indicates pottery production at the periphery of the monastic site. The pottery belongs to the Humber Ware tradition and is highly significant to the general understanding of urban pottery production and more specifically to the ceramic history of York. A full catalogue of the products and fabrics of the kiln will be prioritised.

It is the urban context of St Andrew's which justifies further analysis. Many other institutions of the Gilbertine order have been the subject of investigation, but without exception the claustral remains have been favoured. The periphery of the monastic precinct has been contacted along the route of Blue Bridge Lane where it revealed itself to be an area given over the refuse disposal and industrial activity. Aston (2000) asserts that the organisation of space within the monasteries of large orders stretched into all areas of the estate and this is a unique opportunity to explore the use of space in an urban Gilbertine precinct.

During the late medieval period, timber and stone buildings have been identified which may be associated with rich food consumption, as suggested by preliminary zooarchaeological assessment. More importantly, the use of the periphery of the monastic precinct for refuse disposal may indicate that Blue Bridge Lane contained the food refuse which was lacking from earlier excavations of the claustral range. The zooarchaeological assessment detected rich and varied food refuse for the high medieval period; later the quality of food appears to be much poorer with a higher presence of scavengers in the form of crows, ravens, red kites and rats. These indicators, of a decline in the cleanliness of the surrounding environment and the poor quality of food, may be suggestive of a segregated secular occupation at the site associated with the investment in pottery production and light industry.

It is intended that distribution analysis of industrial indicators be undertaken to elucidate the use of space and the nature of activities being undertaken throughout the life of the Priory. These phases of activity will be securely dated by pottery. The associated finds and building materials originating from the Priory as rubbish will also be analysed and integrated with the material published by Kemp and Graves (1996, 2002).

Medieval cemetery

A total of 249 medieval inhumations was encountered in the grounds of Fishergate House. This is the first medieval cemetery to be excavated in the city on a large scale since St Helen's-on-the-Walls (cf Magilton 1980). Full osteological analysis of the human bone, including pathology, demography and spatial analysis has been completed. A total of eight burials have been selected for radio-carbon dating and have been selected in order to provide a broad date bracket for the use of the cemetery.

The reconstruction of the layout of the church and cemetery of St Helen has been archived, but will be enhanced with more detailed documentary research. This is intended to augment the information gained during excavation with regard to the history and layout of the space and any possible indicators for the associated hospital.

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