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XVI.—Further Notes upon Excavations at Silchester

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2012

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Some years have now elapsed since any paper has been read before this Society upon Silchester, which is without doubt the most interesting Roman city in this country. Comparatively speaking, very little has been done there since the death of the Rev. James Gerald Joyce, F.S.A., the rector of Stratfieldsaye, whose elaborate and valuable papers upon Silchester, amply illustrated with plans and drawings, published in vols. xl. and xlvi. of Archaeologia, are well known to you all. Had it not been for him we should probably have remained in ignorance of the existence of the city, as it was he who inspired the late Duke of Wellington with such a keen interest in the place that he authorised excavations to be undertaken.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1887

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References

page 265 note a The ordnance map of 25 inches, 344 parts, to a mile, enlarged seven times, given 14 feet 9 inches to a mile. For rough measurements with an inch rule, 3⅜ inches slack = 100 feet, and 1 inch = 29 feet 4 inches.

page 266 note a Vol. XL. page 404.

page 266 note b Ibid.

page 267 note a See Archaeologia, vol. XLVIGoogle Scholar. Plate xvii.

page 267 note b Ibid. vol. XLVI

page 267 note c Ibid. vol. ix. p. 370.

page 271 note a Vegetable mould and earthworms.

page 272 note a Vol. XXVII. p. 418.

page 272 note b “Some labourers employed in cutting a drain in the nine-acre field, within the walls of Silchester, and about 200 yards to the south-westward of the church, struck upon some foundations of Roman buildings. The Rev. John Coles being informed of the circumstance, obtained permission of Mr. Burton the farmer to prosecute the discovery, which he liberally did at his own expense.

In a short time the foundations of a large building, upwards of 80 feet in length, probably the Thermae or public hot-baths of the city, were revealed, disposition of the rooms of this edifice.

Nos. 1, 2, 3, were apartments, the dimensions of which I derive from a neat lithographic plan presented to me by Mr. Coles, and from the information of John Bruce, Esq. F.S.A. No. 1, 11 feet 8 inches by 25 feet. No. 2, 12 feet 9 inches by 25 feet. No. 3, 19 feet by 25 feet. These were hypocausts, or sudatory apartments, the floors of which stood upon numerous round and square pillars of Roman brick, each about 3 feet 4 inches in height. The walls were 3 feet thick. The easternmost chamber is No. 1; the floor of this room had been supported by seven ranges of pillars, seven in a row; the three first rows from the east were circular, the remainder square. The diameter of the pillars 9 inches; they stood on a plinth formed of a single tile of larger dimensions. The apertures 6 and 7 afforded a brisk draught to the praefurnium or furnace, and heat was thus diffused all over the floor of the sweating rooms, and to the general volume of air by flue-tiles placed as pipes, perforated with holes, in ranges against the walls. The floor was composed of large square tiles, on which, in a bed of cement, was probably laid a tesselated pavement. 5 was undoubtedly the natatio or water-bath; here, at figure 8, was a leaden pipe inserted in a tile, having a triangular aperture, through which the element was supplied. 4 was probably the apodyterium or frigidarium, the anti-room, where the bathers undressed, as 3 was the media cella, or tepidarium, where they were shampooed (to adopt a term in modern use) by the strigils of the alijptae or unctores. The anti-room was paved with large square tiles, surrounded by a border of tesserae, each an inch square. A quantity of fractured window glass, full of air bubbles, and having a coarse surface, somewhat resembling the graining of wood, was found on the spot. Such a substance must have been peculiarly necessary in the sudatories, as light would be transmitted, while the cold external air was excluded.”—Gent. Mag. ciii. 124, 125.

page 273 note a Mr. A. J. Kempe's Map, etc. Archaeologia, vol. XXVII. p. 419Google Scholar, Plate xxxii. Appendix. Mr. Maclaughlan, Archaeological Journal, vol. VIII.