By the gap in a hedge bordering the entrance off a muddy lane in
Hampshire, the young diggers on one of the most fascinating
archaeological sites in Britain have made a herb garden: four small
square plots. The sudden blast of sunshine after months of heavy rain
has brought everything into bloom, and there’s a heady scent of curry
plant and dill, marigold and mint.
Many of the plant seeds are familiar from Roman sites across Britain,
as the invaders brought the flavours and the medical remedies of the
Mediterranean to their wind-blasted and sodden new territory, but there
is something extraordinary about the seeds from the abandoned Iron Age and Roman town of Silchester.
The excavation run every summer by Dr Amanda Clarke and Professor Michael Fulford of the archaeology department at Reading University, using hundreds of volunteer students, amateurs and professionals, now in its 15th season, is rewriting British history.
The banal seeds are astonishing because many came from a level dating to a century before the Romans. More evidence is emerging every day, and it is clear that from around 50BC the Iron Age Atrebates tribe, whose name survived in the Latin Calleva Atrebatum, the wooded place of the Atrebates, enjoyed a lifestyle that would have been completely familiar to the Romans when they arrived in AD43.
The banal seeds are astonishing because many came from a level dating to a century before the Romans. More evidence is emerging every day, and it is clear that from around 50BC the Iron Age Atrebates tribe, whose name survived in the Latin Calleva Atrebatum, the wooded place of the Atrebates, enjoyed a lifestyle that would have been completely familiar to the Romans when they arrived in AD43.
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