Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- List of tables
- Preface and acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Edward Gibbon: growth, the Golden Age, and decline and fall
- 3 Approaches to Roman urbanism and studying the late Roman town
- 4 Establishing the urban context: pre-Roman place and Roman urbanism
- 5 Structures of the public buildings in the later Roman period: framing place and space
- 6 New public structures within towns in the later Roman period
- 7 Industrial activity within public buildings
- 8 Timber buildings and ‘squatter occupation’ within public buildings
- 9 Senses of place: rethinking urbanism in late Roman Britain
- References
- Index
6 - New public structures within towns in the later Roman period
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 April 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- List of tables
- Preface and acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Edward Gibbon: growth, the Golden Age, and decline and fall
- 3 Approaches to Roman urbanism and studying the late Roman town
- 4 Establishing the urban context: pre-Roman place and Roman urbanism
- 5 Structures of the public buildings in the later Roman period: framing place and space
- 6 New public structures within towns in the later Roman period
- 7 Industrial activity within public buildings
- 8 Timber buildings and ‘squatter occupation’ within public buildings
- 9 Senses of place: rethinking urbanism in late Roman Britain
- References
- Index
Summary
Another important area to consider comprises new structures dating to the later Roman period that have the appearance of being public buildings. The most common type is a rectangular aisled building, although there are other forms, including large gravelled or paved areas. The size and location of many of these suggest some kind of public function. The rectangular aisled structures have usually been interpreted either as churches or agricultural storage buildings (e.g., Esmonde Cleary 1989; Faulkner 2000a; Wheeler and Wheeler 1936), although there is often much uncertainty about their use.
Some of the ‘church’ buildings were excavated in the late nineteenth or early twentieth century, and the interpretation of their function has been questioned in later times (e.g., at Silchester: Fox and St. John Hope 1893: 563–8; King 1983). The identification of churches in Britain has often been encouraged because of known events in the Empire, such as the conversion of Constantine (Mitchell 2007: 259–65) and the order to close temples in the Theodosian Code (Sirmond and Pharr 1969). Gibbon's narrative of the Christianisation of the Empire will also have encouraged people to search for churches. The identification of agricultural storage buildings within late Roman towns in Britain is also based partly upon Empire-wide events, with Diocletian reforms resulting in late Roman taxes being collected in kind, the state annona system (e.g., Faulkner 2000a: 112–14). As with the so-called churches, this interpretation of the function of the buildings is not always straightforward.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Late Roman Towns in BritainRethinking Change and Decline, pp. 117 - 129Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011