Monument record 8213/4 - Evidence of the Roman West Rampart at 11a Nicholas Street
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Summary
Map
Type and Period (2)
Full Description
A series of archaeological investigations at 11a Nicholas Street (formerly the site of the Carlux Electrical Services Ltd workshop) carried out between 1954 and 1959 identified the remains of the western Roman defences. The first opportunity in investigate arose in 1954 when the Carlux company extended their premises east towards Weaver Street when the work was observed by G Webster of the Grosvenor Museum. The company again extended their premises this time to the south in 1957 with the work observed by F H Thompson. Finally in 1959 a further small area of work was carried out on the site.
The earth rampart was recorded up to the west wall of the rampart building which had been cut into it and extending for a distance of some 5.79m to the rampart wall and surviving to a height of 1.97m. The rampart consisted of the typical construction matrix of a timber strapping base with two concentrations of turves to the front and rear of the bank and a rubble sandstone core between them. (2) Later investigations in 1957 encountered the timber strapping at the base of the earth rampart within the structure of the interval tower.
The defences of the Roman fortress comprised several components: The rampart (artificial bank), built in the late first century, consisted of a core of sand, clay or rubble held in place to the front and rear by revetments of stacked turves. It was set on a base of close-set transverse logs and measured approx 6m wide by perhaps 3m high. The top of the rampart would have been flattened to create a walkway that could be patrolled and would have had been protected by a wooden palisade. In all the defences defined a rectangular space some 592m long and 411m wide.
<1> Thompson F.H, 1962, Excavations in Nicholas Street, 1957 (Article in Journal). SCH5869.
<2> Webster, Graham, 1955, A Section Through the Legionary Defences on the West Side of the Fortress (Article in Journal). SCH5738.
<3> Harris, B.E. (ed), 1987, Victoria County History - A History of the County of Chester: Volume I, p122,127 & 132 (Book). SCH3556.
Sources/Archives (3)
- <1> SCH5869 Article in Journal: Thompson F.H. 1962. Excavations in Nicholas Street, 1957. Journal of the Chester Archaeological and Historic Society. 49.
- <2> SCH5738 Article in Journal: Webster, Graham. 1955. A Section Through the Legionary Defences on the West Side of the Fortress. Journal of the Chester Archaeological and Historic Society. Volume 42.
- <3> SCH3556 Book: Harris, B.E. (ed). 1987. Victoria County History - A History of the County of Chester: Volume I. p122,127 & 132.
Related Monuments/Buildings (1)
Related Events/Activities (2)
External Links (0)
Location
| Grid reference | Centred SJ 403 661 (12m by 27m) (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
Mar 9 2023 12:49PM