2015
Lindy Casson, James Drummond-Murray and Antony FrancisThe process of urbanisation north of the city’s main east–west road (beneath modern Cheapside) in the Roman and again in the medieval period is illustrated by an unusually full archaeological sequence. Round houses, and evidence for glass working in an Iron Age British tradition, in the AD 60s were superseded by timber buildings alongside a new south–north road. The site was reoccupied from the 10th century AD and the remains of masonry buildings and later tenements and taverns were recovered. A fine mosaic in a 2nd-century AD town house and high-quality imported 13th-century glassware are evidence of affluent households in both periods.
MOLA Monograph Series 67