Shown in the BBC's "Digging For Britain" archaeology TV series last night was the ongoing excavation of a previously unknown Roman site in Somerset. The site is extensive, possibly even that of a small town.intensively excavated slices through a Roman roadside settlement undertaken in the UK to date. The site is exceptionally well preserved: Layer after layer of settlement remains were meticulously excavated and recorded using cutting edge photogrammetry
See:- https://oxfordarchaeology.com/news/958-bbc-series-digging-for-britain-featuring-somerset-roman-town-excavation
from which this is taken:- ....................................................
"10th January 2022:
The latest series of the BBC's flagship archaeology programme, Digging for Britain, will feature National Grid's Hinkley Connection Project and Oxford Archaeology's excavation of a nationally significant Roman settlement in Somerset this week.
The site was discovered during the pre-construction phase of underground cabling work on National Grid’s Hinkley Connection Project. Over the last two years, Oxford Archaeology with National Grid and Balfour Beatty, completed one of the most
The excavations were planned and carried out as part of the Hinkley Connection Project, a new high-voltage electricity connection between Bridgwater and Seabank near Avonmouth. This project is a significant investment in the SW region’s electricitynetwork and will enable National Grid to connect new sources of low-carbon energy to homes and businesses, including Hinkley Point C, EDF Energy’s new power station in Somerset. The project will play a vital role in delivering electricity safely,
Details of the Hinkley Connection Project: https://hinkleyconnection.co.uk/project-summaryDigging for Britain is hosted by Professor Alice Roberts, and she visited the excavations last year to meet the team.
Future updates on the archaeology: https://hinkleyconnection.co.uk/archaeology
Previously published article on the archaeology: https://www.nationalgrid.com/uk/stories/grid-at-work-stories/going-underground-archaeological-finds-somerset
The site, located near Winscombe in Somerset, is featured in episode 5 of the series, being broadcast at 8pm on Wednesday 12th January on BBC Two and will be available afterwards on demand on BBCiPlayer: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0013f61
Following completion of the archaeological excavations, all artefacts have been recovered and recorded, the underground cables are in place and the land has been reinstated. With our partners National Grid and Balfour Beatty, we gave a presentation onthe results to Local Society members in September 2021. Further academic reports and publicity are in the planning stages."
...............................................................................................
Although the programme made no connection with Saint Patrick, I was struck by the possibilty that this might have been his birthplace.
Back in October 2002 in an s.h.m. thread called "Strathclyde?" I posted the following:-
"Ken Dark writes:-
"Patrick writes at length in Latin, refers to grammatici in Britain (scholars of secular higher education in Latin learning), and expects
his readers to be well-educated in the Roman manner. Like his
contemporary in Gaul, Sidonius Apollinaris, he is a third-generation Christian, well-acquainted with both the Late Roman Church hierarchy
and with monasticism. As a boy he lived at a villa-estate (villula)
near a `small town' apparently close to a major town, with formal Roman-style administration in which his father had a role. That is,
Patrick had grown up in exactly the sort of `settlement pattern'
archaeology tells us characterised the late fourth-century Romano-
British landscape, but this is unlikely to be much before 450. When
he returned home, after his escape from slavery, relatives attempted
to persuade him to run the still-surviving estate. This is clear
evidence that the basic rural fabric of Late Roman Britain survived
well into the fifth century alongside the emergence of a Christian
society with bishops, priests, monks and nuns. Patrick tries to tell
us in the Confessio exactly where his parental home was (Bannaventa taberniae), but the place-name is unknown to modern scholars. It was
clearly an area with villas, `small' and `large' towns, and probably accessible directly from Ireland by sea. The West Country seems the
most likely location, perhaps Somerset near the Severn estuary
but it is impossible to be sure." p.33
_Britain and the End of the Roman Empire_ Tempus 2000"
Stay tuned, I think, is the order of the day.
Cheers,
David Read
Fascinating, but hardly any connective case?
On Friday, January 14, 2022 at 9:34:27 AM UTC, Surreyman wrote:
Fascinating, but hardly any connective case?
Well, quite, which is why I put a question mark in the title of the thread and said "stay tuned".
That said, this new site seems to me to be a reasonable candidate for having been Saint Patrick's birthplace, perhaps even better than any other speculations so far, and certainly better than Strathclyde.
See also:-
http://www.vortigernstudies.org.uk/artgue/guestjelley.htm
where Harry Jelley (what a great name!) places it at Banwell in Somerset.
Cheers,
David Read
I will be pleased and surprised if something is found that can be shown to
be from St Patrick.
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