Roman Villa (Boxmoor)
First remains of a Roman villa were already excavated in 1837. A plan, the finds and a drawing of a mosaic found were published. Further and full excavations were done in 1969 up to 1970 as a school was built on the site of the Roman villa.
The excavations uncovered five building phases of a Roman villa. The earliest remains are a timber building dating to the first century AD. Around AD 150 the timber house was replaced by a stone building, not exactly on the same spot, but slightly further north. The new Villa consisted of a range of rooms with a veranda on the west side. Several rooms had hypocaust heating. Mosaics were found. and wall paintings. The villa was abandoned in the fourth century AD.
Conservation
Some finds are held by the Dacorum Heritage Trust.
References
- ^ Evans, John (1853). Account of excavations on the sites of two Roman villas at Box Moor, Herts. London: Printed by J.B. Nichols and Sons. OCLC 44829406.
- ^ Neal, David Stanley (1976). Northchurch, Boxmoor, and Hemel Hempstead station the excavation of threee [sic] Roman buildings in the Bulbourne Valley. S.l.: s.n. OCLC 493598361. Reprint of "Hertfordshire archaeology". Hertfordshire Archaeology. 1970. ISSN 0440-7342. OCLC 929763687.
- ^ Neal, David S.; Cosh, Stephen R. (2009). Roman mosaics of Britain, Volume III, South-East Britain. London: Illuminata Publishers for the Society of Antiquaries of London. pp. 296–298. ISBN 978-0953784523. OCLC 51902114.