Monument record SKT 011 - Iron Age Features, pits & post holes at Cedars Field Moated site

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Summary

Iron Age Features, pits & post holes at Cedars Field Moated site.

Location

Grid reference Centred TM 606 257 (279m by 330m) Centred on
Map sheet TM62NW
Civil Parish STOWMARKET, MID SUFFOLK, SUFFOLK

Map

Type and Period (3)

Full Description

Features: pits & post holes found cut into natural gravel during excavation of moated area (S5).
Worked flint, pot boilers.
Small pit containing fragments of a collapsed, though complete, large pot (S1). Radio-carbon date from charcoal associated with the pot: 520 +/- 70 bc HAR-4473 (cal BC 790-400 at one sigma, 800-400 at two sigmas).
See also Med.

The area of a known medieval moated site (partly excavated in 1981) was examined in advance of a commercial development. Eight phases of human activity were identified, ranging from prehistory through to the post-medieval period. The earliest phases consisted of dispersed pits and other features, some of which contained Neolithic pottery and worked flint. There was some evidence for a Roman presence in the form of abraded pottery. The main phases of occupation, however, belong to the early to high medieval periods, when a moated complex was constructed. No structures were identified, but several phases of infilling and clearance of the surrounding ditches were charted. Artefactual evidence indicates abandonment at some point after the 14th century, perhaps with final infilling of the exposed and weathered ditches in the 18th or 19th centuries. A brick structure of uncertain function was then built at the edge of the moat, and the area remained in agricultural use before dumping of constructional waste occurred in the 1960s.
Documentary evidence has revealed that in 1581 the moated site lay on a free tenement of the manor of Combs called Broughtons. In a survey of 1537, copying an earlier one of 1437, the same property is named as Pulhams tenement, belonging to the Stonham family, and included ‘a site formerly built’, which is probably a reference to the abandoned moated site. In 1327 Roger de Stonham was taxed 2s in Combs and may well have been living on the site. The lands of the Stonham family in Combs appear to have been inherited by the branch of the family that owned Stonham’s Manor in Rattlesden, and from them the lands passed, in the mid 15th century, to the Broughton family of Denston Hall, hence the name Broughtons. The documentary study has provided a detailed insight into the post-medieval and early modern land use of the area.Included in the Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and History annual round up of individual finds and discoveries for 1999. (S6)

Sources/Archives (8)

  • <S1> (No record type): SAU, Wade K, Stowmarket moated site: A Summary, ms, 1980.
  • <M1> Unpublished document: Suffolk Archaeological Service. Parish Files. Parish file: (S1)(3).
  • <M2> (No record type): Excavation archive:.
  • <S2> Bibliographic reference: Suffolk Institute of Archaeology. Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology. PSIA, 35, 1981, 79.
  • <S3> Unpublished document: Davison, S.. 1999. Archaeological Excavation Report - Cedars Field, Stowmarket.
  • <S4> Article in serial: Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and History. Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and History. PSIAH, 35 (1), 1981, 79.
  • <S5> Unpublished document: Anderson, S.. 2002. Archaeological Excavation Report- Cedars Field Moated Site.,Stowmarket.
  • <S6> Article in serial: Martin, E.A., Pendleton, C., Plouviez, J. & Thomas, G.. 2000. Archaeology in Suffolk 1999. XXXIX (4).

Finds (4)

Protected Status/Designation

  • None recorded

Related Monuments/Buildings (0)

Related Events/Activities (3)

Record last edited

Aug 5 2024 3:50PM

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