Three near-complete Roman houses discovered under park

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,435
1,825
113
The remains of three near-complete Roman buildings have been discovered under a city centre park, archaeologists have revealed.

Scans using ground-penetrating radar appear to show two large masonry houses and an unusually-shaped third building dating back nearly 2,000 years.

Civic leaders in Chichester, West Sussex, have hailed the discovery of the three properties - worth millions of pounds in today's property market - as being of national historical importance...

Discovery of three 'near-complete' Roman mansions found under a Chichester park stuns archaeologists


Scans show two large masonry houses and an unusually-shaped third building

What's remarkable is that they survived nearly 2,000 years in a currently occupied city

Experts have hailed the discovery of the three properties - worth millions of pounds in today's property market - as being of national historical importance


By Press Association
26 January 2017

The remains of three near-complete Roman buildings have been discovered under a city centre park, archaeologists have revealed.

Scans using ground-penetrating radar appear to show two large masonry houses and an unusually-shaped third building dating back nearly 2,000 years.

Civic leaders in Chichester, West Sussex, have hailed the discovery of the three properties - worth millions of pounds in today's property market - as being of national historical importance.


The remains of three Roman buildings have been discovered under a city centre park, archaeologists have revealed. Scans using ground-penetrating radar appear to show two large masonry houses and an unusually-shaped third building dating back nearly 2,000 years

James Kenny, archaeologist at Chichester District Council, said it was very unusual to find Roman properties survive in such a setting and be so complete.

He said: 'What's remarkable about the discovery is that it has survived nearly 2,000 years in a currently occupied city.

'The only reason they have survived is because they are under a park that has never been built on.'

The discovery was made after geophysics specialist David Staveley used radar equipment with the agreement of Mr Kenny, who felt Chichester's parks were the most likely place to find remains.

Following the results from the scans, Mr Kenny and the local archaeology society carried out a very small dig in Priory Park, and the findings were confirmed - leaving experts stunned.

Mr Kenny said: 'The location marks what may have been one of the more affluent parts of the Roman town, with these houses being the equivalent to a property worth millions of pounds in today's society.


Experts believe the houses were originally located on a street, which has not survived as a reservoir was built in the park during the Second World War. The dig was undertaken in Priory Park

'The two houses have walls surrounding complete rooms, which are set around a courtyard or atrium.

'There is also a deep masonry building with a rounded end. We are intrigued to find out what this building is.'

Experts believe the houses were originally located on a street, which has not survived as a reservoir was built in the park during the Second World War.

Intriguingly, the scans also revealed another Roman street running further east under Priory Park, but this will not be uncovered, Mr Kenny added.

'We are just going to focus our attention on the area south of The Guildhall building that is located in the park,' he said.

The district council is now looking to seek funding to carry out a more detailed dig, and a bid is expected to go to the Heritage Lottery Fund.


In the centre of Chichester, Priory Park was given to the people of the city by the Duke of Richmond as a First World War memorial

It is hoped site tours will eventually be run to provide the public with more information as the dig progresses.

But there are no plans to keep the remains on permanent display.

Mr Kenny said: 'When the work has been completed it is more likely that we will return the ground to its current state.

'Instead, the likelihood is that we will create 3D imaging and information that will provide people with all of the information that they need in the long term.'

In the centre of Chichester, Priory Park was given to the people of the city by the Duke of Richmond as a First World War memorial.

Chichester, known in Roman times as Noviomagus Reginorum, was developed from a military fort.

Roman artefacts and several building sites have been found in the city centre.

CHICHESTER IN ROMAN TIMES


A section of the Chichester Roman walls

Chichester, known in Roman times as Noviomagus Reginorum, was developed from a military fort.

Roman artefacts and several building sites have been found in the city centre.

In the centre of Chichester, Priory Park was given to the people of the city by the Duke of Richmond as a First World War memorial.

 
Last edited:

Ludlow

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 7, 2014
13,588
0
36
wherever i sit down my ars
Hey Blackloaf in those old Roman shacks did they dig big holes in the ground away from the living quarters and put outhouses over them?

I bet it smelled pretty bad as the wind blowed. Who'd want to have a bbq in those days?
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,435
1,825
113
Hey Blackloaf in those old Roman shacks did they dig big holes in the ground away from the living quarters and put outhouses over them?

I bet it smelled pretty bad as the wind blowed. Who'd want to have a bbq in those days?

Roman toilets were very sophisticated.

Unlike us, the Romans thought nothing of going to the toilet in a public place. They had rooms with stone benches with lots of holes in them where people would go to the loo as they sat next to each other.

In fact rich Romans would use public toilets as places to discuss the day's news and to maybe even make a business deal.

The toilets had their own plumbing and sewers, sometimes using water from bath houses to flush them. The Romans did not have toilet paper. Instead, they used a sponge on a stick to wipe their arses.




Roman toilets at Ephesus, on the western coast of modern Turkey


Roman toilets at Hadrian's Wall, on what was the northernmost reaches of their vast empire
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,435
1,825
113
You mean to tell me those nasties would sit and hold conversations between grunts. Gross.

Oh yeah, definitely. In partaking in gentlemanly conversation about business matters and the running of their conquered territory whilst conducting faecal evacuation the Romans were showing that they were a civilised, advanced and highly enlightened race in contrast to the brutal savagery of the natives. It's much like the British and their empire 2,000 years later.
 

Ludlow

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 7, 2014
13,588
0
36
wherever i sit down my ars
Oh yeah, definitely. In partaking in gentlemanly conversation about business matters and the running of their conquered territory whilst conducting faecal evacuation the Romans were showing that they were a civilised, advanced and highly enlightened race in contrast to the brutal savagery of the natives. It's much like the British and their empire 2,000 years later.
You boys sit around and shoot the shyt whilst,,shooting the shyt ? :)
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,435
1,825
113
You boys sit around and shoot the shyt whilst,,shooting the shyt ? :)

Well I don't. But I bet many of the governors who ran the British Empire did. They went to public schools like Eton and Harrow.