New narratives for lost landscapes in middle England.
Woodward, Ann
ALISON DEEGAN & GLENN FOARD. Mapping ancient landscapes in
Northamptonshire. viii+172 pages, 102 b&w & colour
illustrations, 12 tables. 2007. Swindon: English Heritage;
987-1-905624-42-3 paperback (copy available as print-on-demand from
ehsales@gillards.com or download from
http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/server/ show/ConWebDoc.14150)
JAN HARDING & FRANCES HEALY. The Raunds Area Project: a
Neolithic and Bronze Age landscape in Northamptonshire. xviii+324 pages,
160 b&w & colour illustrations, 14 tables. 2007. Swindon:
English Heritage; 978-1-873592-99-1; paperback (copy available as
print-on-demand from ehsales@ gillards.com or download from
http://www.englishheritage.org.uk/server/show/ConWebDoc.13537)
Setting the scene
In archaeological terms, the English midlands county of
Northamptonshire is truly blessed. Although lacking the upstanding
monuments and nineteenth-century antiquarian tradition of the southern
Pennine counties, during the mid twentieth century the county received
the full attention of the Royal Commission on Historical Monuments for
England, with the publication of six major volumes between 1975 and
1982. The RCHME project also published, in 1980, an A3 volume of
distribution maps, inventively presented as loose transparent overlays.
Meanwhile the County Council initiated one of the better funded and most
innovative of the fledgling Sites and Monuments Records. Furthermore, a
substantial programme of rescue excavations by both professionals and
active amateurs, especially in the mid and upper Nene valley, was
producing important results, and the Northampton Development Corporation
funded most generously the excavation and publication of sites ranging
in date from the prehistoric to the medieval periods within and around
the expanding city of Northampton itself.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Against this background, English Heritage mounted a groundbreaking
survey and excavation project in a lesser-known location along the
reaches of the River Nene. This was the Raunds Area Project, conducted
in the field between 1985 and 1993. The overall aim was to investigate
the archaeology of an intact area of historic landscape, in a zone which
was due to be transformed by gravel extraction, road construction and
residential building. Near the end of this ambitious fieldwork project,
the wide-ranging programme of archaeological air survey, which had been
undertaken by Northamptonshire County Council, and in effect
master-minded by Glenn Foard, was one of the earlier county initiatives
to be taken under the umbrella of the English Heritage National Mapping
Programme (NMP), which was founded in 1992.
The aim of the NMP is to enhance understanding of past human
settlement, by providing primary information and syntheses for all
archaeological sites and landscapes (visible on air photographs) from
the Neolithic period to the twentieth century. Most of the existing air
photographs were mapped digitally during the 1990s and linked to the
Sites and Monuments Record by a GIS system. A total of 20000 photographs
relate to over 14 000 individual archaeological sites. Most of the sites
are cropmarks, but some soilmark and earthwork sites are also
represented. The results of the entire project are now summarised in the
beautifully illustrated volume Mapping ancient landscapes in
Northamptonshire. The Raunds Area Project, on the other hand, was
undertaken by English Heritage in partnership with the (then)
Northamptonshire Archaeological Unit; it has also gathered in the
results of some adjacent field projects undertaken by Oxford
Archaeology. The main project themes that emerged were the development
of early prehistoric monuments, agricultural expansion in the Iron Age
and Roman periods and the formation of Saxon villages. Analysis of the
excavation results relating to Iron Age and later sites is still
ongoing, but an exciting account for the earlier periods is now
available in the first project volume A Neolithic and Bronze Age
landscape in Northamptonshire.
Lost landscapes
The air photography volume begins and ends with discussions
relating to the biases in the distribution of air cover caused by the
variation in soils, geology and past and present land use, and careful
assessment of the methodologies employed. The meat of the book is a
series of six period chapters ranging in date from the Neolithic to
modern military installations, but the most detailed treatment applies
to the prehistoric and Roman periods. The chapter on Neolithic and
Bronze Age sites (Chapter 4) uses data from excavated sites to provide
additional chronological data, and especially the results from the
Raunds project. The pages of site plans by type are very useful and
illuminating, but the maps could have been related to the text better by
the addition of some key site names. The round barrows and ring ditches
do not seem to cluster to form cemetery groupings in the river valleys,
and this is in contrast to some areas in southern England. Further
contrast is provided by the paucity of classic henge or cursus
monuments, and it would be interesting to compare this situation in
detail with the pattern of monument concentrations that is known for the
west midlands region. Although the project admittedly largely missed the
boat in relation to recording medieval ridge and furrow cultivation or
twentieth-century military remains (Chapters 8 and 9), the summary of
achievement in relation to sites of Iron Age and Roman date is
outstanding (Chapter 6). In addition to recording and classifying
enclosures relating to occupation and pastoral use, it has been possible
to map whole areas of agricultural landscape, sub-divided by ditch
systems and/or pit alignments, both along the valley floors and in some
higher zones, and these are clearly illustrated in colour. The
accompanying distribution maps are now enhanced by the addition of the
names of key sites described in the text. A total of nearly 5000
enclosures of possible Iron Age or Roman date have been plotted, and
there is also air photographic evidence relating to 34 of the total of
93 Roman villas known within the county. The Saxon and medieval sections
(Chapters 7 and 8) contain impressive illustrations which map crop or
soilmarks against earthwork evidence within deserted or shrunken villages and hamlets, and the consideration of the striking soilmark
signature for charcoal burning associated with the iron industry during
these periods is both stunning and of national importance.
New narratives
The prehistoric Raunds Area Project volume is a fine example of a
totally integrated excavation report, which incorporates all the key
results from the large team of specialists involved within a single
carefully paced narrative. The book will be accompanied by a second
volume containing all the specialist reports and detailed excavation
accounts; however, this volume was sadly not available at the time of
writing. The results are particularly remarkable in that they describe a
prehistoric monumental landscape which had been almost totally obscured
by a thick layer of early medieval alluvium on the floor of the Nene
valley. Activity in the Mesolithic and earliest Neolithic periods at a
river confluence led to the construction, soon after 4000 cal BC, of the
first major monument (Long Mound) in an area of pasture which had been
grazed by livestock. This was a communal monument constructed in
segments which may have been built by different social groups. It was
followed by three more, mainly linear, monuments, including a Long
Barrow with a small limestone burial chamber. Waterlogged environmental
data showed that this was built in a grazed clearing in recently cleared
woodland. During the later Neolithic period the sites were less
frequented and there was some woodland regeneration; activity may have
been more focused on a nearby probable henge monument which lay outside
the study area. However, from c. 2200 cal BC monument building increased
in pace and, from a total of over 20 round barrows, nine were excavated.
Almost all of these contained burials, including the intriguing burial
of a man in Barrow 1, buried with many exotic objects and covered by a
cairn of limestone and then a layer of about 200 cattle skulls. As the
cremation rite became more common through time, many of the barrows were
enlarged and reused down to c. 1000 cal BC. Finally, two systems of
paddocks were evidence for a pastoral landscape, developed over and
around the barrows. The results of the carefully considered programme of
radiocarbon dating are outstanding.
The Raunds site narratives can be checked against the full
provision of plans and section drawings, bur unfortunately not quite
enough information is provided for the finds. The grave goods are shown
on the burial plans, which is useful, but cross-sections of the objects
are not included. Without resort to the supplementary volume it is not
possible to rapidly assess raw materials and typological aspects of the
finds; and this could easily have been provided in an extra page or two
of text. Both books use a system of 'panels' to provide more
detailed information on selected topics, and this works well. Less happy
is the incidence of typographic errors in the air photography volume,
and indeed a discontinuity in pagination, and some missing pages, in the
copy supplied for review. The text of the air photography book is dense
and tightly written. Maybe readers will mainly dip into it as a
reference tool, but much can be gained by 'reading' the
excellent sequence of illustrations. In comparison the Raunds volume is
an easy read, which should be enjoyed by all those interested in
Neolithic and Bronze Age Britain. The burial sections encompass a
microcosm of developing funerary customs and, with its thoughtful
discussion of the entire dataset of burials from a wide area of the east
midlands, provides a welcome contrast with the picture usually derived
from Wessex. English Heritage has demonstrated through these volumes the
wealth of detail that exists relating to archaeological landscapes in
middle England, and both books are highly recommended.
Ann Woodward, Institute of Archaeology and Antiquity, Arts
Building, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK
(Email: annwoodward0@btinternet.com)