Roman remains found buried at infirmary site
Dr Denis Williams, county archaeologist, examines some of the thousands of Roman pottery shards fuond on the Castle Street site. |
A MEDIAEVAL skeleton, a human tooth and hoardes of Roman pottery have been found buried under modern-day Worcester.
Archaeologists excavating the former Worcester Royal Infirmary site,
in Castle Street, have unearthed more than 1,700 years of history.
Beneath the five-acre site, which is being transformed into the
University of Worcester’s new city campus, they found evidence of a
busy, noisy, dirty Roman district.
As well as two Roman buildings and large pits used for disposing
rubbish, they found proof of metal-working and huge amounts of pottery,
some of which proves the people of Roman Worcester had trading links
with Roman France.
There is a mysterious circular ditch, 13m in diameter and dating to the third century AD, which has baffled archaeologists.
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