NHER 65099 (Monument record) - Potentially medieval or early post-medieval features and remains of late post-medieval buildings

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Summary

The excavation of a single trial trench at this location in 2015 revealed several features of probable medieval or early post-medieval date, including a potentially structural linear feature. This possible sill beam contained two reasonably substantial post-holes and produced a single sherd of medieval pottery. These features were only visible following the removal of a reasonably deep and apparently relatively undisturbed subsoil layer. A brick floor and wall foundation present immediately beneath the modern overburden were the remains of late post-medieval cottages that had been demolished during the 1960s.

Protected Status/Designation

  • None recorded

Location

Map sheet TG12NE
Civil Parish AYLSHAM, BROADLAND, NORFOLK

Map

December 2015. Trial Trench.
Evaluation of proposed development site.
A single trench was excavated, with machine excavation halted when post-medieval structural remains were exposed immediately beneath the modern overburden. Hand excavation of the remainder of the trench demonstrated that a relatively undisturbed subsoil lay beneath a modern demolition layer. Removal of this deposit exposed a number of archaeologically-significant features, including a shallow pit, a possible east-to-west aligned ditch and an adjacent, similarly-aligned narrow linear feature. The latter contained two reasonably substantial post-holes and therefore potentially represented the remains of some form of timber structure. A single sherd of medieval pottery found in this possible beam slot was the only dating evidence recovered from any of these features. A medieval to early post-medieval date is though likely, particularly given than none of these remains were visible until the subsoil was fully removed.
The post-medieval structural remains comprised the footings of a single wall and a brick floor. These related to a group of cottages that were demolished in the 1960s. Bricks from the floor were of 18th or 19th century date. The construction and demolition of these buildings appears to have resulted in only minimal disturbance of the underlying subsoil.
Unstratified finds included two medieval pottery sherds, a single late post-medieval/modern pottery sherd and single fragments of post-medieval floor tile and brick, all of which were recovered from the subsoil layer.
Information from report uploaded to OASIS. HER copy awaited.
P. Watkins (HES), 17 June 2021.

Associated Sources (0)

  • SLAG (Unknown date)
  • POT (Medieval - 1066 AD to 1539 AD)
  • BRICK (Post Medieval - 1540 AD to 1900 AD)
  • FLOOR TILE (Post Medieval - 1540 AD to 1900 AD)
  • POT (18th Century to Late 20th Century - 1701 AD to 2000 AD)

Related NHER Records (0)

Record last edited

Jun 17 2021 11:25AM

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