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Post-Roman BuildingsRoman VillasVillas symbolize the Roman period in the public mind. Some 1100 are known in Britain, ranging from farmhouses to palatial villas such as Chedworth and Woodchester that rivalled the grand houses of the 18th century in size and prestige. They were part of an evolving agricultural estate system and also an important display of status and wealth for the Romano-British aristocracy. Many had developed on the sites of Iron Age roundhouses and probably indicate a continuation of the power of pre-Roman ruling families. According to Guy de la Bédoyère, the entire villa population in Britain is estimated at around 66,000 - a tiny percentage of the island's population. Their existence depended on the Roman trading system, itself linked to the army, tax-raising and imperial coinage. Removal of Roman administration and evacuation of the army led to a rapid collapse of the system in the fifth century. The estates could be self-sufficient in agriculture, timber and local products but income ceased to come in to pay for maintenance and traded items. The result was a gradual decline and collapse in their structure and use. A free quarryIn his Plundering the Past: Roman Stonework in Medieval Britain Tim Eaton describes the extensive reuse of Roman period materials in early medieval buildings. While the inhabitants of most of southern Britain appeared to prefer living in houses made of wood and other organic materials the Church began to build prestigious ecclesiatical structures from the ruins they found around them. The remains of Roman Britain became a vast quarry to be plundered for recycled building material - at the same time destroying vast amounts of archaeological evidence. Eaton contends that quarries were not reopened for fresh building material until the late 10th century whereas the first church constructions made of reused Roman materials occurred in the late 6th century. In effect, Roman Britain was deconstructed over four centuries - and the process did not stop there. Eaton argues that the recycling was not simply due to expediency but involved a degree of symbolic gesture intended to evoke some of the 'kudos' or prestige of the Roman Empire. He uses evidence that the patrons of ecclesiastical structures did not necessarily go to the nearest and easiest sources for material. As an example, according to Bede, St Wilfred founded the abbey church at Hexham in Northumberland c.674AD on land given to him by Queen Aethelryth, wife of the Northumbrian King Ecgfrith. Only the crypt remains of the original structure. Eaton observes that it was constructed of
References Tim Eaton (2000) Plundering the Past: Roman Stonework in Medieval Britain, Tempus Guy de la Bédoyère (2006) Roman Britain: A New History, Thames & Hudson Ltd. |
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