Roman cemetery found at roadworks site is 'unique'

Emma Baugh & Andrew Woodger
BBC News, Cambridgeshire
Emma Baugh/BBC Jessica Lowther crouching next to a stone Roman sarcophagas, which does not have a lid, and has some wear/damage on the top of one side.Emma Baugh/BBC
Jessica Lowther says the different burial practices in such a small area makes the cemetery "unique"

Archaeologists who excavated a Roman cemetery say it is "unique" due to the range of different types of burial and grave goods, including bracelets buried with young child.

The dig team has been showing the BBC some of the jewellery discovered at the site at Wansford, near Peterborough, where the A47 is being dualled.

The personal treasures of those buried have been provisionally dated to the late Roman Britain period (3rd-4th Centuries), and include a solid stone coffin containing a corpse set in gypsum.

Headland Archaeology's Jessica Lowther said further investigation of the artefacts would help "answer questions about those that lived here".

Headland Archaeology Bird's eye view of an stone coffin, with no lid, still in the ground, but with earth removed down to the bottom of the sarcophagus, revealing its shapeHeadland Archaeology
The solid stone sarcophagus is about two metres long, and contains a corpse encased in gypsum, which would have been poured over it in liquid form, which then solidified

One of the significant finds is jewellery found in the grave of the child, who was believed to have been about five years old, giving a possible indication of their wealth and high status.

The team said it was still unclear what community the cemetery served, as no evidence of other settlement buildings had been found in the immediate area.

Sara Machin, senior specialist at Headland, said the team had been studying the finds at their base at Silsoe in Bedfordshire.

"It's a collection of bracelets all found with the same child. What it tells us is what people thought about them and what they thought was appropriate to go into the grave," she said.

"It's a little picture of the community and how they were burying their people.

"The collection in the child's grave is similar to another grave and suggests a connection."

Headland Archaeology Two copper alloy bracelets side by side showing signs of corrosionHeadland Archaeology
Copper alloy bracelets showing signs of corrosion were found in the grave of a five-year-old child
Emma Baugh/BBC Sara Machin sitting with her arms resting flat on a table which has some finds on itEmma Baugh/BBC
Senior specialist Sara Machin says they will investigate the DNA from some of the skeletons to see if they are related

Ms Machin said they could use DNA to establish links.

"Looking at skeletons we will be able to find out if they are related and what relationships there might be with the rest of the population," she said.

Emma Baugh/BBC Nine transparent plastic display containers filled with solid white foam and the bracelets and other items on top of each container.Emma Baugh/BBC
The jewellery discovered in the five-year-old child's grave may give an indication of wealth
Emma Baugh/BBC A large stone coffin in a archaeological storage areaEmma Baugh/BBC
The stone coffin, which weighed three-quarters of a tonne with sides that were 90mm thick, was believed to have been brought from Ancaster

The solid stone coffin, or sarchophagus, weighed the same as a small caravan, and featured in the latest series of the BBC's Digging for Britain programme.

It was made of Ancaster stone, so the team said it might have been transported 30 miles south from the Lincolnshire village that gives its name to that type of stone, indicating the high status of the person buried in it.

Ms Lowther said its lid was made using Barnack stone, which is local to the Peterborough area, therefore it was possible the original lid may have been broken and this was a replacement.

"This is how we tell stories about people that lived everyday lives. We don't [always] have history books written about us, but archaeology can tell us those stories," she said.

Emma Baugh/BBC Archaeologist sitting behind the stone coffinEmma Baugh/BBC
Community archaeologist Jessica Lowther said the sarcophagus had a lid made using local Barnack stone, which was different to the rest of the coffin

She added that the different burial practices in such a small area made the cemetery "unique". These included:

  • the solid stone coffin containing the gypsum
  • a cist burial - using separate slabs of stone forming a coffin
  • cremations
  • goods placed at both the heads or feet of the skeleton
  • decapitated skeletons
  • iron nails, suggesting wooden coffins, since decomposed

Headland Archaeology A glass Roman cup with signs of cracks and repairHeadland Archaeology
A glass vessel found next to the sarcophagus could have once been used to toast the deceased
Headland Archaeology A single earring found as part of a pairHeadland Archaeology
A silver earring found as part of a pair in the child's grave
National Highways A stone coffin in a wooden frame next to a forklift truck with archaeologists in hi-vis orange jackets and trousers surrounding itNational Highways
The stone coffin was transported to Silsoe within a wooden frame - "a big task, and we have modern vehicles and roads which are not bumpy"
Emma Baugh/BBC Man in yellow hi-vis jacket on A47 siteEmma Baugh/BBC
Chris Griffin said the coffin find was "extremely exciting"

Chris Griffin, National Highways programme lead for the A47 project, said the finds would add to the tapestry of knowledge about the area, including the discovery of a small section of Roman road nearby, which the stone coffin may have been transported on.

"It's fascinating that we found a Roman road while we were building a road. Isn't that just great?

"We didn't know that the road was there but the find shows us how important the A1 and A47 has been, going back to Roman times."

Ms Lowther said: "Transporting the gypsum coffin at all would have been a major feat with lifting and manoeuvring, but then to add 30 miles of journey is quite a lot.

"Pulling the cart on a Roman road, which would have acted a little bit like a cobbled street, would not have been the smoothest."

Headland Archaeology A map showing the position of 21 graves - some within a boundary ditch. The graves are colour-coded: skeletons only (green), with skeleton and other finds (blue), with no contents (pink) and one "stone coffin" (yellow). The position of a Roman road along the top of the cemetery is also shown. TR16 marks the position of the first trench dug by the teamHeadland Archaeology
Headland's map of the cemetery showing 15 graves within a boundary ditch and six without - marked as skeletons only (green), skeletons and other finds (blue), no contents (pink) and the gypsum stone coffin (yellow)
Headland Archaeology A skeleton in a earth grave with a marker in the ground to show the person was buried their body aligned north-southHeadland Archaeology
Another of the graves shows how the head appears to have been removed from the rest of the body and laid at its feet. Archaeologists are still unsure why the practice was carried out
Steve Hubbard/BBC Aerial picture of the excavation site with earth removed, next to a roundabout and a small area of trees next to the road. The A47 goes over the A1 in the backgroundSteve Hubbard/BBC
The excavation site is just off one of the A47 roundabouts, just east of the A1 at Wansford

Ms Machin said it was "early stages" in piecing together information about how long the site was in use for burials, its place in the surrounding landscape and the stories of the individuals laid to rest there.

"What we have got now are all clues. Now we have a huge list of questions and we're moving on to the next stage to see how many answers we can get," she said.

None of the items are currently available for the public to see, and Headland said it was too early in the process for any decisions to be made about putting things on display.

Full reports of all the archaeology found will be uploaded to Peterborough's Historic Environment Record, the team said.

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