EYO6143 - 20 Bishophill EVALUATION

Type

EVALUATION

Location

Location 20 Bishophill
Grid reference SE 5997 5140 (point)
Map sheet SE55SE
Unitary Authority City of York, North Yorkshire

Technique(s)

Organisation

Wessex Archaeology

Date

2015

Map

Description

Archaeological evaluation in advance of a proposed development, at 20 Bishophill. Following an initial watching brief on bore holes an evaluation was required to assess the further potential of significant archaeological remains. Five evaluation trenches were initially proposed, but two trenches could not be completed due to on-site logistical issues. The trenches revealed a possible robbed out wall and a 4th-century buried soil at a depth of 1.6m in the south of the site. Evidence for cobble, gravel and mortar surfaces with redeposited fragments of painted plaster were revealed at a depth of 1m below ground level immediately to the east. In the north a large deposit of medieval garden soil was revealed to at least a depth of 3.4m BGL, overlain by post-medieval soils and a possible brick and stone garden feature at a depth of 1.5m BGL. The medieval soils appeared to fill a large cut feature, possible a quarry dug for the construction of the nearby Holy Trinity Priory or 10th-century church of St Mary. Our understanding of the revealed deposits is limited by the agreed evaluation strategy to not unduly disturb unknown deposits through keyhole excavation. However, it is clear that the Site lies close to a mid to late Roman building, if not over a domestic dwelling within the colonia of Roman York. The pottery assemblage, painted plaster and other finds point to a relatively high status dwelling with the caveat that the material may have been imported from elsewhere in York.

Sources/Archives (2)

  • --- Unpublished document: 2015. 20 Bishophill EVALUATION.
  • --- Unpublished document: 2016. 20 Bishophill Junior Deposit Model.

Related Monuments/Buildings (0)

Record last edited

Aug 1 2017 2:14PM

Feedback

Your feedback is welcome; if you can provide any new information about this record, please contact the City Archaeologist.