Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 September 2008
Since their excavation in the 1950s and early 1960s, the palace buildings at Yeavering (Northumberland) and Cheddar (Somerset) have exemplified the physical impact of kingship on the Anglo-Saxon landscape. When, in 1980–2, massive eighth- and ninth-century halls were found at the heart of Northampton, the temptation to recognize a major residence of the Mercian kings was irresistible. Thanks to archaeology, the image of the king's tūn as the one fixed point in a shifting, uncertain world, encouraged by poetic sources and adopted in the first detailed studies of Anglo-Saxon local organization, was assuming concrete reality.
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8 The coloured frontispiece of RCHM, Inventory gives a good impression of this topography.
9 Lee, F., ‘A New Theory of the Origins and Early Growth of Northampton’, ArchJ 110 (1953), 164–74.Google Scholar Excavations between the two roads were inconclusive, though they encountered what might be interpreted as a ditch c. 15m wide which remained open into the post-Conquest period: RCHM, Inventory, fiche pp. 326–7.
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13 Summarized in Williams, St Peter's Street; Williams et al., Middle Saxon Palaces; and RCHM, Inventory, fiche. Full reports on the peripheral sites are: Williams, F., ‘Excavations on Marefair, Northampton, 1977’, Northants. Archaeol. 14 (1979), 38–79Google Scholar; J. H. Williams and M. Shaw, ‘Excavations in Chalk Lane, Northampton’, ibid. 16 (1981), 87–135; and M. Shaw, ‘Excavations on a Saxon and Medieval Site at Black Lion Hill, Northampton’, ibid. 20 (1985), 113–38.
14 Excavations have concentrated in the St Peter's and castle areas. The few others within the primary circuit are small, but probably do constitute negative evidence against mid-Saxon occupation spreading much further: RCHM, Inventory, p. 49 (map) and fiche, pp. 383–96. Recent excavations in Woolmonger Street, to the east of St Gregory's, found tenth-century occupation but none of the pre-Viking period (South Midlands Archaeology, 25 (1995), 40–1Google Scholar, and pers. comm. M. Shaw).
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29 Cf. Wormald, P., ‘Bede, Beowulf and the Conversion of the Anglo-Saxon Aristocracy’, Bede and Anglo-Saxon England, ed. Farrell, R. T., BAR Brit. ser. 46 (Oxford, 1978), 32–95, at 43–5 and 53–4Google Scholar, for the social and cultural context.
30 RCHM, Inventory, pp. 57–9 and fiche pp. 371–8. Martin Biddle (pers. comm. 1995) also notes that St Peter's contains ‘megalithic’ column-shafts which seem ‘out of place as post-Conquest’.
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36 Michael Shaw points out (pers. comm. 1995) that RCHM, Inventory mislocates St Mary's; its correct site is marked as ‘St. Mary's Burying Gd.’ on Wood and Law's map (1847).
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40 Williams, J. H., ‘Northampton's Medieval Parishes’, Northants. Archaeol. 17 (1982), 74–84, at 77–8, uses as evidence for the royal status of Northampton the fact that its parochial dependencies, Upton and Kingsthorpe, were Domesday royal manors and later hundredal manors. This seems to me to underline its ecclesiastical importance, but to say nothing about its secular importance.Google Scholar
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46 Rahtz, P., The Saxon and Medieval Palaces at Cheddar, BAR Brit. ser. 65 (Oxford, 1979).Google Scholar
47 Ibid. p. 29.
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51 C. and N. Hollinrake (pers. comm. 1995) compare this layout with the village plans of Dundon, Shapwick, Carhampton and Hardington Mandeville, where fieldwork suggests origins during the tenth to twelfth centuries.
52 Blair, , ‘Minster Churches in the Landscape’, pp. 48–9 and fig. 2.3Google Scholar, notably Wimborne Minster, which bears a marked resemblance to Cheddar.
53 Rahtz, P., ‘Cheddar Vicarage, 1965’, Proc. Somerset Archaeol. and Nat. Hist. Soc. 110 (1966), 52–84Google Scholar; S. M. Hirst and P. A. Rahtz, ‘Cheddar Vicarage, 1970’, ibid. 117 (1973), 65–96; Rahtz, , Palaces, pp. 12–13 and 32–3.Google Scholar A Roman ditch, enclosures and cobbled surfaces have since been found well to the west of the villa, beyond the railway embankment: J. Hawkes, ‘Archaeological Evaluation at Kings of Wessex School, Cheddar, June 1991’ (AC Archaeology, unpublished typescript, copy in Somerset SMR), summarized in Hawkes, J., ‘Cheddar: Kings of Wessex School’, Proc. Somerset Archaeol. and Nat. Hist. Soc. 135 (1991), 142–3.Google Scholar
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58 Ibid. p. 282 and fig. 95, item C.A.14. Leslie Webster (pers. comm. 1995) confirms that a date of manufacture earlier than c. 900 is extremely unlikely.
59 Ibid. p. 53.
60 Fabric ‘G’: ‘early 10th or earlier’, or ‘may well be of 9th-century or earlier date’; Fabric ‘A’: ‘early 10th to early 11th’, but ‘too generalised a fabric to be closely datable’ (ibid. pp. 310 and 314–15). Doubts about the dating of this pottery are reinforced by petrological analysis by Christopher Gerrard, who writes (pers. comm. 1995) that the material classified as ‘A’ and ‘G’ actually includes several different fabrics. For ninth- to tenth-century parallels for the bow-sided ‘long hall’, see Beresford, G., Goltho: the Development of an Early Medieval Manor (London, 1987), pp. 12 and 38–47.Google Scholar There are grounds for suspecting that the Goltho hall also dates from the tenth century rather than the ninth: Higham, R. and Barker, P., Timber Castles (London, 1992), p. 56.Google Scholar
61 Rahtz, , Palaces, pp. 140 and 147.Google Scholar The coin was found in West Hall context 84/18A, with a tenth-or eleventh-century sherd (M.P.18).
62 Given the massive quantities of food-bones, the plausible alternatives are (1) that Ditch A was filled at the inception of the Period 1 buildings, using debris carted from the minster site; or (2), perhaps more likely, that it was filled during the life-span of Period 1, maybe a decade or two after its inception, using palace debris.
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64 Ibid. pp. 202–3 and 228–34. For late use of the basketwork technique, see Heywood, S., ‘The Round Towers of East Anglia’, in Minsters and Parish Churches: the Local Church in Transition, 950–1200, ed. Blair, J. (Oxford, 1988), pp. 169–77, at 170 and fig. 63.Google Scholar
65 Rahtz, , Palaces, pp. 196, 203 and 310.Google Scholar Christopher Gerrard (pers. comm. 1995) states that fabric ‘C’ actually represents several different fabrics, mostly matched elsewhere from eleventh- to twelfth-century contexts, and that fabric ‘EE’ is similarly dated at Glastonbury Tor.
66 Ibid. p. 89.
68 Cf. ibid. p. 290: ‘The [Roman] coins are doubtless derived from the neighbouring Roman site at Cheddar Vicarage.’ Twenty-five Roman coins were found, five of them in the Ditch A fills; the ninth-century objects could just as easily have come from outside the site.
69 Ibid. pp. 77–80 and 83–7, concluding that the ditch is unlikely to have undergone much scouring or maintenance before the rapid silting.
70 Ibid. pp. 78–81 and figs. 6, 8 and 20–4; Hawkes, ‘Archaeological Evaluation’. It is an odd feature of the 1991 test pits (Trench 2) that they lay in the same area as Rahtz's Trenches 69–73, but found much less clear evidence for Ditch A. The non-continuance of Ditch A in a south-westerly direction seems, however, to be proved by the 1991 Trench 4, and by the intact Roman features located by geophysical survey in this area.
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82 HMC, Calendar of Wells MSS I,439.
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84 Cf. Keynes, and Lapidge, , Alfred the Great, pp. 317–18Google Scholar, tending towards a similar conclusion as regards royal occupation of Cheddar.
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86 The high-status secular complex at Sprouston lies beside a river, but is not on a site of the promontory or confluence kind so characteristic of minsters.
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93 Ibid. pp. 426–7, observing that under the Carolingians ‘the ruler, on a visit to a civitas, no longer necessarily resides in a palatium intramuraneum, but in a monastery outside the walls, where the ruler from now on has at his disposal a domus or palatium of his own’.
94 My foremost thanks are to the two excavators, Philip Rahtz and John Williams, for their helpful and constructive responses. Earlier drafts were read by Mick Aston, Steven Bassett, Martin Biddle, Sarah Blair, Glenn Foard, Richard Gem, Nancy and Charles Hollinrake, Simon Keynes, Christine Peters, Michael Shaw and Barbara Yorke, and I am much indebted to their criticisms and advice. For information and help of various kinds I am very grateful to Bob Croft, Christopher Gerrard and Leslie Webster.