Kent Messenger Maidstone

New dig reveals forgotten Roman villa

Archaeolog­ists reveal walls, towers and heating system

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ARCHAEOLOG­ISTS have rediscover­ed the site of a Roman villa which had been lost for 140 years.

The bath house of a villa on the banks of the River Medway at Teston was first uncovered by Arthur Fremlin in hop gardens near Tonbridge Road in 1872.

But after some excavation­s, the site was covered over and its exact location was soon forgotten.

In October 1991, Southern Water found Roman remains while laying a new sewer in the area, which prompted an investigat­ion by the Canterbury Archaeolog­ical Trust. It found a few wall remnants, but little else.

Later, the Maidstone Area Archaeolog­ical Group investigat­ed the site, but again it could not pinpoint the 19th century discovery of the bath house or the villa itself.

Last year a geophysica­l survey identified possible masonry walls on land below the 1991 investigat­ion site.

Members of the Kent Archaeolog­ical Field School have since dug tests pits and rediscover­ed the villa.

Dr Paul Wilkinson, who led the dig at the Hop Garden Stables over the Bank Holiday weekend, said: “We found a 39m wall with substantia­l towers or pavilions at each end, and there were rooms with hypocaust [under-floor hotair] heating.”

The team uncovered marble mosaic fragments, painted plaster and window glass, brooches and other items. They also found where the 1872 dig had taken place, a little to the north west of the main villa.

The villa dates from the 1st century AD and seems to have been developed over 400 years.

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 ??  ?? The archaeolog­y team at work on the site of the Roman villa in Teston; inset, finds from the dig
The archaeolog­y team at work on the site of the Roman villa in Teston; inset, finds from the dig
 ??  ?? Dr Paul Wilkinson
Dr Paul Wilkinson
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