Monument record 8202/1 - Evidence of the Roman North Wall at Water Tower Street
Please read our guidance about the use of Cheshire Historic Environment Record data.
Summary
Map
Type and Period (2)
Full Description
Traces of the Roman north-west angle tower at Water Tower Street were encountered during archaeological investigations in 1964 in advance of construction of the inner ring road. The planned works required the demolition of a length of the North Wall west of Morgan’s Mount. Although the ashlar facing of the Roman wall was recorded it was not possible to investigate it in any detail.
The first trace of the wall was encountered some 24.5m west of Morgan’s Mount within the core of the medieval wall surviving to a height of 4.57m and traced over a distance of 4.25m leading up to the north west angle tower, the wall at this point had been reduced to a height of 3.3m with a base course 28cm high. The width of the wall was in places recorded at 2m at its base. The facing stones comprised well made sandstone blocks varying in height between 28-58cm and in depth between 50-74cm. The line of the Roman wall was recorded to be around 0.90m in advance of the present city wall in this area where it encountered the tower.
The rubble core of the fortress wall was also encountered with no evidence of an inner face. (1)
The date of construction of the stone revetment wall is disputed. It is possible that the southern and eastern sectors were started at the beginning of the second century, along with the towers, but that remaining sectors were not completed until the early third century. Evidence of two phases of reconstruction incorporating re-used stones has been found on all but the south side, accompanied in some cases by rubble in the ditch. It is suggested that reconstruction to the original width is to be dated to the start of the fourth century, but that doubling of the width may belong to the Saxon period.
<1> Chester Archaeology, 1964, Excavation record for the North West Angle Tower (Unpublished Report). SCH6625.
<2> Morris, Richard K, 1997, 22 Cuppin Street, Chester: an Outline Analysis, R3170 (Client Report). SCH6303.
<3> Harris, B.E. (ed), 1987, Victoria County History - A History of the County of Chester: Volume I, p122,124,127 (Book). SCH3556.
<4> Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies, 1911-Present, Journal of Roman Studies, Vol 55 p204 (Journal/Periodical). SCH1519.
<5> Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies, 1911-Present, Journal of Roman Studies, Vol 56 p200 (Journal/Periodical). SCH1519.
Sources/Archives (5)
- <1> SCH6625 Unpublished Report: Chester Archaeology. 1964. Excavation record for the North West Angle Tower.
- <2> SCH6303 Client Report: Morris, Richard K. 1997. 22 Cuppin Street, Chester: an Outline Analysis. R3169. N/A. N/A. R3170.
- <3> SCH3556 Book: Harris, B.E. (ed). 1987. Victoria County History - A History of the County of Chester: Volume I. p122,124,127.
- <4> SCH1519 Journal/Periodical: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies. 1911-Present. Journal of Roman Studies. Vol 55 p204.
- <5> SCH1519 Journal/Periodical: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies. 1911-Present. Journal of Roman Studies. Vol 56 p200.
Related Monuments/Buildings (1)
Related Events/Activities (1)
External Links (0)
Location
| Grid reference | Centred SJ 402 666 (24m by 26m) (2 map features) |
|---|---|
| Map sheet | SJ46NW |
| Civil Parish | CHESTER NON PARISH AREA, CHESTER, CHESHIRE WEST AND CHESTER |
| Historic Township/Parish/County | CHESTER, CHESTER HOLY TRINITY, CHESHIRE |
Protected Status/Designation
Record last edited
Jul 4 2024 1:28PM