Horcott Quarry, Fairford and Arkell’s Land, Kempsford

Prehistoric, Roman and Anglo-Saxon Settlement and Burial in the Upper Thames Valley in Gloucestershire

Anne Dodd author Edward Biddulph author Alex Smith author Paul Booth author Ken Welsh author Chris Hayden author Granville Laws author Rob Early author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University School of Archaeology

Published:31st May '17

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Horcott Quarry, Fairford and Arkell’s Land, Kempsford cover

Excavations in advance of gravel quarrying in the Upper Thames Valley at Horcott Quarry, Fairford, and nearby Arkell’s Land, Kempsford, revealed contrasting pictures. At Horcott, on the second terrace, there was periodic activity from the early Mesolithic onwards. A major earlier Iron Age settlement contained roundhouses and at least 135 four-post structures, suggesting an exceptional focus on grain storage. An early–middle Roman farmstead incorporated a small stone-founded building, while from c AD 250–350 a large cemetery lay in an adjacent enclosure. Two further groups of burials were contemporary with a substantial Anglo-Saxon settlement including a timber hall and 33 sunken-featured buildings. By contrast, at Arkell’s Land, on the first gravel terrace, activity on a significant scale only began in the later 1st century AD. It comprised enclosures, field systems and trackways, with the most intensive settlement, as at Horcott, in the middle Roman period. The site was probably linked to an adjacent estate centre at Claydon Pike. There was no post-Roman occupation.

ISBN: 9781905905386

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

552 pages