Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-wxhwt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-11T14:52:19.991Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Re-thinking the Southern British Oppida : Networks, Kingdoms and Material Culture

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2017

Martin Pitts*
Affiliation:
University of Exeter, UK
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

This article examines the role of a range of large settlements in late Iron Age and early Roman southern Britain (c. 100 BC–AD 70) conventionally described as oppida. After reviewing current perspectives on the function and chronology of British oppida, new insights are provided through the statistical analysis of assemblages of brooches and imported ceramics at a broad sample of sites. Analysis of material culture reveals distinct similarities and differences between several groups of sites, often transcending regional traditions and supposed tribal boundaries. This patterning is primarily explained by the emergence of new forms of political organization prior to Roman annexation, particularly the creation of the Southern and Eastern Kingdoms.

Cet article examine le rôle d'un éventail de grands villages en Angleterre du Sud datant de l'âge du fer récent et de la première époque romaine (env. 100 BC à 70 AD), conventionnellement décrits comme oppida. Après une revue des opinions courantes sur la fonction et la chronologie des oppida britanniques, l'analyse statistique d'ensembles de fibules et de céramique importée sur un vaste échantillon de sites ouvre des nouvelles perspectives. Des analyses de la culture matérielle révèlent des distinctes similarités et différences entre plusieurs groupes de sites, reflétant généralement la transmission de traditions régionales, et les frontières tribales présumées. Ce schéma est essentiellement expliqué par l'émergence de nouvelles formes d'organisation politique antérieurement à l'annexion romaine, notamment la création des royaumes méridionaux et orientaux.

Zusammenfassung

Zusammenfassung

Diese Studie untersucht die Rolle einer Reihe großer Siedlungen während der späten Eisenzeit und der frührömischen Periode in Südbritannien (ca. 100 BC und 70 AD), die gemeinhin als Oppida beschrieben werden. Nach der Überprüfung der derzeitigen Perspektiven der Funktion und Chronologie der britischen Oppida werden durch die statistische Analyse von Fibeln und importierter Keramik aus einer großen Anzahl von Fundplätzen neue Erkenntnisse erzielt. Die Analyse der materiellen Kultur ergibt klare Ähnlichkeiten und Unterschiede zwischen verschiedenen Gruppen von Fundplätzen, oft überschrittene regionale Traditionen und angenommene Stammesgrenzen. Dieses Bild wird hauptsächlich mit der Erscheinung neuer Formen politischer Organisation vor der römischen Besetzung erklärt, insbesondere mit der Gründung der südlichen und des östlichen Königreiche.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2010 Sage Publications 

References

Atkinson, M. and Preston, S.J., forthcoming. Heybridge: A Late Iron Age and Roman Settlement, Excavations at Elms Farm, 1993–5. Chelmsford: East Anglian Archaeology.Google Scholar
Biddulph, E., 2005. Last orders: choosing pottery for funerals in Roman Essex. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 24(1):2345.Google Scholar
Bidwell, P., 1999. A survey of pottery production and supply at Colchester. In Symonds, R. and Wade, S. (eds), Roman Pottery from Excavations in Colchester, 1971–86: 488499. Colchester: Colchester Archaeological Trust (Colchester Archaeological Report 10).Google Scholar
Blockley, K., and Blockley, P., 1989. Excavations at Bigberry, near Canterbury, 1981. Archaeologia Cantiana 107:239–51.Google Scholar
Blockley, K., Blockley, M., Blockley, P., Frere, S.S. and Stow, S., 1995. Excavations in the Marlowe Car Park and Surrounding Areas. Canterbury: Canterbury Archaeological Trust.Google Scholar
Bryant, S., 2007. Central places or special places? The origins and development of ‘oppida’ in Hertfordshire. In Haselgrove, C.C. and Moore, T. (eds), The Later Iron Age in Britain and Beyond: 6280. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Carr, G., 2006. Creolised Bodies and Hybrid Identities. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (British Series 418).Google Scholar
Clay, P. and Mellor, J.E., 1985. Excavations in Bath Lane, Leicester. Leicester: Leicestershire Museums, Arts and Records Service Archaeological Report 10.Google Scholar
Clay, P. and Pollard, R., 1994. Iron Age and Roman Occupation in the West Bridge Area, Leicester. Leicester: Leicester Museums, Arts and Records Service.Google Scholar
Clifford, E.M., 1961. Bagendon: A Belgic Oppidum. A Record of the Excavations of 1954–56. Cambridge: W. Heifer and Sons.Google Scholar
Colin, A., 1998. Chronologie des oppida de la Gaule non Méditerranéenne. Paris: Documents d'Archéologie Française.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collis, J. 1971. Markets and money. In Hill, D. and Jesson, M. (eds), The Iron Age and its Hill-Forts: 97–10 3. Southampton: Department of Archaeology, University of Southampton.Google Scholar
Collis, J., 1984. Oppida: Earliest Towns North of the Alps. Sheffield: University of Sheffield.Google Scholar
Connor, A. and Buckley, R., 1999. Roman and Medieval Occupation in Causeway Lane, Leicester. Excavations 1980 and 1991. Leicester: Leicester Archaeology Monogra ph 5.Google Scholar
Cool, H.E.M., 2006. Eating and Drinking in Roman Britain. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Cool, H.E.M. and Baxter, M.J., 1999. Peeling the onion: An approach to comparing vessel glass assemblages. Journal of Roman Archaeology 12:72100.Google Scholar
Corder, P. and Pryce, T.D., 1938. Belgic and other early pottery found at North Ferriby, Yorks. With comments on pre-Claudian Romano-Gaulish influence in Britain. Antiquaries Journal 18:262277.Google Scholar
Creighton, J., 2000. Coins and Power in Late Iron Age Britain. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Creighton, J., 2001. The Iron Age-Roman transition. In James, S. and Millett, M. (eds), Britons and Romans: Advancing an Archaeological Agenda: 411. York: Council for British Archaeology (Research Report 125).Google Scholar
Crowther, D. and Didsbury, P., 1988. Redcliff and the Humber. In Price, J. and Wilson, P.R. (eds), Recent Research in Roman Yorkshire: 320. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (British Series 193).Google Scholar
Crummy, N., 1983. The Roman Small Finds from Excavations in Colchester 1971–9. Colchester: Colchester Archaeological Trust (Colchester Archaeological Report 2).Google Scholar
Crummy, N., 2007. The brooches. In Crummy, P., Benfield, S., Crummy, N., Rigby, V. and Shimmin, D. (eds), Stanway: an Elite Burial Site at Camulodunum: 314320. London: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies (Britannia Monograph Series No. 24).Google Scholar
Crummy, P., 1992. Excavations at Culver Street, the Gilberd School and Other Sites in Colchester 1971–85. Colchester: Colchester Archaeological Trust (Colchester Archaeological Report 6).Google Scholar
Crummy, P., 2007. Aspects of the Stanway cemetery. In Crummy, P., Benfield, S., Crummy, N., Rigby, V. and Shimmin, D. (eds), Stanway: an Elite Burial Site at Camulodunum: 423456. London: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies (Britannia Monograph Series No. 24).Google Scholar
Cunliffe, B., 1971. Excavations at Fishbourne 1961–1969. Vols I-II. Leeds: Society of Antiquaries of London (Reports of the Research Committee No. 26).Google Scholar
Cunliffe, B., 1976. The origins of urbanisation in Britain. In Cunliffe, B. and Rowley, T. (eds), Oppida: the Beginnings of Urbanisation in Barbarian Europe: 135161. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (Supplementary Series 11).Google Scholar
Cunliffe, B., 1978. Chichester: The first hundred years. In Down, A. (ed.), Chichester Excavations III: 177183. Chichester: Phillimore.Google Scholar
Cunliffe, B., 1987. Hengistbury Head, Dorset. Volume 1: The Prehistoric and Roman Settlement, 3500 BC-AD 500. Oxford: Oxford University Committee for Archaeology (Monograph No. 13).Google Scholar
Cunliffe, B., 1988. Greeks, Romans and Barbarians. Spheres of Interaction. London: Guild Publishing.Google Scholar
Cunliffe, B., 2005. Iron Age Communities in Britain. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Down, A., 1978. Chichester Excavations III. Chichester: Phillimore.Google Scholar
Dunning, G.C., 1976. Salmonsbury, Bourton-on-the-Water, Gloucestershire. In Harding, D. W. (ed.), Hillforts: Later Prehistoric Earthworks in Britain and Ireland: 75118. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Eckardt, H., 2005. The social distribution of Roman artefacts: the case of nailcleaners and brooches in Britain. Journal of Roman Archaeology 18:139160.Google Scholar
Elsdon, S.M., 1997. Old Sleaford Revealed. A Lincolnshire Settlement in Iron Age, Roman, Saxon and Medieval Times: Excavations 1882–1995. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Feachem, R.W., 1966. The hill-forts of northern Britain. In Rivet, A.L.F. (ed.), The Iron Age in Northern Britain: 5987. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.Google Scholar
Feugère, M., 1985. Les fibules en Gaul Méridionale. Paris: Revue Archéologique de Narbonnaise, Supplement 12.Google Scholar
Fichtl, S., 2000. La ville celtique. Les oppida de 150 av. J.-C. à 15 ap. J.-C. Paris: Errance.Google Scholar
Frere, S.S., 1972. Verulamium Excavations, Vol. I. Oxford: Society of Antiquaries of London (Reports of the Research Committee No. 28).Google Scholar
Frere, S.S., 1984. Verulamium Excavations, Volume III. Oxford: Oxford University Committee for Archaeology.Google Scholar
Fulford, M.G., 2000. Synthesis. In Fulford, M.G. and Timby, J. (eds), Late Iron Age and Roman Silchester. Excavations on the Site of the Forum-Basilica 1977, 1980–86:545581. London: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies (Britannia Monograph Series No. 15).Google Scholar
Fulford, M.G. and Timby, J. (eds), 2000. Late Iron Age and Roman Silchester. Excavations on the Site of the Forum-Basilica 1977, 1980–86. London: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies (Britannia Monograph Series No. 15).Google Scholar
Gaspar, N., 2007. Les fibules gauloises et Gallo-Romaines du Titelberg. Luxembourg: Dossiers d'Archaéologie du Musée Nationale d'Histoire et d'Art XI.Google Scholar
Haselgrove, C.C., 1976. External trade as a stimulus to urbanisation. In Cunliffe, B. and Rowley, T. (eds), Oppida: the Beginnings of Urbanisation in Barbarian Europe: 2549. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (Supplementary Series 11).Google Scholar
Haselgrove, C.C., 1982. Wealth, prestige and power: the dynamics of late Iron Age political centralisation in south-east England. In Renfrew, C. and Shennan, S. (eds), Ranking, Resource and Exchange: 7988. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Haselgrove, C.C., 1987. Iron Age Coinage in South-East England: The Archaeological Context. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (British Series 174).Google Scholar
Haselgrove, C.C., 1996. Roman impact on rural settlement and society in southern Picardy. In Roymans, N. (ed.), From the Sword to the Plough. Three Studies on the Earliest Romanisation of Northern Gaul: 127187. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.Google Scholar
Haselgrove, C.C., 1997. Iron Age brooch deposition and chronology. In Gwilt, A. and Haselgrove, C.C. (eds), Reconstructing Iron Age Societies: 5172. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Haselgrove, C.C. and Millett, M., 1997. Verlamion reconsidered. In Gwilt, A. and Haselgrove, C.C. (eds), Reconstructing Iron Age Societies: 282296. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Haselgrove, C.C., Fitts, L., Lowther, P. and Willis, S., forthcoming. Excavations and Fieldwork in the Tofts Field, Stanwick, North Yorkshire, 19842004. London: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies (Britannia Monograph Series).Google Scholar
Hawkes, C.F.C. and Crummy, P., 1995. Camulodunum 2. Colchester: Colchester Archaeological Trust (Colchester Archaeological Report 11).Google Scholar
Hawkes, C.F.C. and Hull, M.R., 1947. Camulodunum. First Report on the Excavations at Colchester 1930–1939. Oxford: Society of Antiquaries of London (Reports of the Research Committee No. 14).Google Scholar
Henig, M., 2002. The Heirs of King Verica. Culture and Politics in Roman Britain. Stroud: Tempus.Google Scholar
Hill, J.D., 2007. The dynamics of social change in later Iron Age eastern and south-eastern England c.300 BC-AD 43. In Haselgrove, C.C. and Moore, T. (eds), The Later Iron Age in Britain and Beyond: 1640. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Jundi, S. and Hill, J.D., 1998. Brooches, and identities in first century AD Britain: more than meets the eye? In Forcey, C., Hawthorne, J. and Witcher, R. (eds), TRAC 97. Proceedings of the Seventh Annual Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference, Nottingham 1997 : 125–137. Oxford: Oxbow Books.Google Scholar
Kenyon, K.M., 1948. Excavations at the Jewry Wall Site, Leicester. Oxford: Society of Antiquaries of London (Reports of the Research Committee No. 15).Google Scholar
Lockyear, K., 2000. Site finds in Roman Britain: a comparison of techniques. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 19(4):397423.Google Scholar
Martin, E., 1988. Burgh: Iron Age and Roman Enclosure. Scole: Suffolk County Planning Dept.Google Scholar
May, J., 1996. Dragonby. Report on Excavations at an Iron Age and Romano-British Settlement in North Lincolnshire. Vols 1- 2. Oxford: Oxbow (Oxbow Monograph 61).Google Scholar
Metzler-Zens, N., Metzler-Zens, J. and Méniel, P., 1999. Lamadelaine. Une nécropole de l'oppidum du Titelberg. Luxembourg: Dossiers d'Archaéologie du Musée Nationale d'Histoire et d'Art.Google Scholar
Millett, M., 1990. The Romanization of Britain. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Neal, D.S., Wardle, A. and Hunn, J., 1990. Excavation of the Iron Age, Roman and Medieval Settlement at Gorhambury, St Albans. London: English Heritage (Archaeological Report No. 14).Google Scholar
Niblett, R., 1985. Sheepen: An Early Roman Industrial Site at Camulodunum. London: Council for British Archaeology (Research Report 57).Google Scholar
Niblett, R., 1999. The Excavation of a Ceremonial Site at Folly Lane, Verulamium. London: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies.Google Scholar
Olivier, A.C.H., 1988. Brooches. In Potter, T.W. and Trow, S.D. (eds), Puckeridge-Braughing, Hertfordshire: The Ermine Street Excavations 1971–72: 3553. St Albans: Hertfordshire Archaeology 10.Google Scholar
Partridge, C., 1981. Skeleton Green: A Late Iron Age and Romano-British Site. London: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies (Britannia Monograph Series No. 2).Google Scholar
Pitts, M., 2005. Pots and pits: drinking and deposition in late Iron Age south-east Britain. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 24(2):143161.Google Scholar
Pitts, M., 2007. Consumption, deposition and social practice: a ceramic approach to intra-site analysis in late Iron Age to Roman Britain. Internet Archaeology 21, URL (accessed 1 June 2007: http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue21/2/toc.html Google Scholar
Pitts, M., 2008. Globalizing the local in Roman Britain: an anthropological approach to social change. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 27(4):493506.Google Scholar
Pitts, M. and Perring, D., 2006. The making of Britain's first urban landscapes: the case of late Iron Age and Roman Essex. Britannia 37(1):189212.Google Scholar
Potter, T.W. and Trow, S.D., 1988. Puckeridge-Braughing, Hertfordshire: The Ermine Street Excavations 1971–72. St Albans: Hertfordshire Archaeology 10 (whole volume).Google Scholar
Qualmann, K.E., Rees, H., Scobie, G.D. and Whinney, R. 2004. Oram's Arbour: The Iron Age Enclosure at Winchester. Val.: Excavations 1950–1959. Winchester: Winchester Museums Service.Google Scholar
Rigby, V., 1988. Gaulish imports. In Potter, T.W. and Trow, S.D. (eds), Puckeridge-Braughing, Hertfordshire: The Ermine Street Excavations 1971–72:110118. St Albans: Hertfordshire Archaeology 10.Google Scholar
Rodwell, W.J., 1976. Coinage, oppida and the rise of Belgic power in south-eastern Britain. In Cunliffe, B. and Rowley, R.T. (eds), Oppida: The Beginnings of Urbanisation in Barbarian Europe: 181367. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports International Series 11.Google Scholar
Roymans, N., in press. Becoming Roman in the Rhineland frontier zone. The impact of ethnic recruitment and returning veterans on the romanisation of rural populations. In Dräger, O. (ed.), Proceedings of the 13th International Congress of Celtic Studies. Bonn: Beihefte Bonner Jahrbiicher.Google Scholar
Schendzielorz, S., 2006. Feulen. Ein Spätlatènezeitlich — frührömiches Gräberfeld in Luxembourg. Luxembourg: Dossiers d'Archaéologie du Musée Nationale d'Histoire et d'Art IX.Google Scholar
Sealey, P.R., forthcoming. ‘Amphoras’. In Atkinson, M. and Preston, S.J. (eds) Heybridge: A Late Iron Age and Roman settlement, Excavations at Elms Farm, 1993–5. Chelmsford: East Anglian Archaeology.Google Scholar
Stead, I.M., 1976. Excavations at Winterton Roman Villa and Other Roman Sites in North Lincolnshire 1958–1967. London: HMSO (Department of the Environment, Archaeological Reports No. 9).Google Scholar
Stead, I.M. and Rigby, V., 1986. Baldock: The Excavation of a Roman and Pre-Roman Settlement, 1968–72. London: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies (Britannia Monograph Series No. 7).Google Scholar
Stead, I.M. and Rigby, V., 1989. Verulamium: The King Harry Lane Site. London: English Heritage (Archaeological Report No. 12).Google Scholar
Thompson, I., 1982. Grog-Tempered ‘Belgic’ Pottery of South-Eastern England. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (British Series 108).Google Scholar
Trow, S., James, S.J. and Moore, T., 2009. Becoming Roman, Being Gallic, Staying British: Research and Excavation at Ditches ‘Hillfort’ and Villa 1984–2006. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Wheeler, R.E.M., 1954. The Stanwick Fortifications, North Riding of Yorkshire. Oxford: Society of Antiquaries of London (Reports of the Research Committee No. 17).Google Scholar
Wheeler, R.E.M. and Wheeler, T.V., 1936. Verulamium. A Belgic and Two Roman Cities. Oxford: Society of Antiquaries of London (Reports of the Research Committee No. 11).Google Scholar
Willis, S., 1996. The Romanization of pottery assemblages in the east and north-east of England during the first century AD: a comparative analysis. Britannia 27:179221.Google Scholar
Willis, S., forthcoming. The Iron Age tradition and Roman pottery. In Haselgrove, C.C., Fitts, L., Lowther, P. and Willis, S. (eds), Excavations and Fieldwork in the Tofts Field, Stanwick, North Yorkshire, 19842004. London: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies (Britannia Monograph Series).Google Scholar
Woolf, G., 1993a. European social development and Roman imperialism. In Brun, P., van der Leeuw, S.E. and Whittaker, C.R. (eds), Frontières d'Empire. Nature et signification des frontières romaines: 1320. Nemours: Mémoires du Musée de Préhistoire d'Ile-de-France 5.Google Scholar
Woolf, G., 1993b. Rethinking the oppida. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 12(2):223234.Google Scholar