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TORKSEY AFTER THE VIKINGS: URBAN ORIGINS IN ENGLAND

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 March 2023

Dawn M Hadley
Affiliation:
Dept of Archaeology, University of York, YO1 7EP, UK. Email: dawn.hadley@york.ac.uk
Julian D Richards
Affiliation:
Dept of Archaeology, University of York, YO1 7EP, UK. Email: julian.richards@york.ac.uk
Elizabeth Craig-Atkins
Affiliation:
Dept of Archaeology, University of Sheffield, S1 3NJ, UK. Email: e.craig-atkins@sheffield.ac.uk
Gareth Perry
Affiliation:
Dept of Archaeology, University of York, YO1 7EP, UK. Email: gareth.perry@york.ac.uk
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Abstract

In ad 872–3 a large Viking Army overwintered at Torksey, on the River Trent in Lincolnshire. We have previously published the archaeological evidence for its camp, but in this paper we explore what happened after the Army moved on. We integrate the findings of previous excavations with the outcomes of our fieldwork, including magnetometer and metal-detector surveys, fieldwalking and targeted excavation of a kiln and cemetery enclosure ditch. We provide new evidence for the growth of the important Anglo-Saxon town at Torksey and the development of its pottery industry, and report on the discovery of the first glazed Torksey ware, in an area which has a higher density of Late Saxon kilns than anywhere else in England. Our study of the pottery industry indicates its continental antecedents, while stable isotope analysis of human remains from the associated cemetery indicates that it included non-locals, and we demonstrate artefactual links between the nascent town and the Vikings in the winter camp. We conclude that the Viking Great Army was a catalyst for urban and industrial development in Torksey and suggest the need to reconsider our models for Late Saxon urbanism.

Information

Type
Research paper
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Society of Antiquaries of London
Figure 0

Fig 1. Location plan, showing study area and approximate outlines of Viking winter camp and Anglo-Scandinavian borough. Map: authors and Helen Goodchild. Base map on this and subsequent figures derived from 2m LiDAR data, © Environment Agency copyright 2014, all rights reserved; field boundaries from Ordnance Survey Mastermap, © Crown Copyright/database right 2014, an Ordnance Survey/EDINA supplied service; general map of Great Britain derived from Ordnance Survey MiniScale map.

Figure 1

Fig 2. Map of Torksey showing the location of the pottery kilns (red dots) and excavated cemeteries (black lozenges). The approximate location of the horse remains is marked by the black triangle (E). Map: authors and Helen Goodchild.

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Fig 3. Torksey geology, showing locations of geological samples taken. Map: from Perry 2016. © Crown Copyright and Database Right (2015) Ordnance Survey (Digimap Licence) and Geology Map Data © NERC 2015.

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Fig 4. Petrographic thin section images of pottery, kiln structure and clay sources from Torksey. Scale bar (a)–(e) 1mm; (f) 0.5mm. The mineral composition of the lining of Kiln 13 (a) and a sample of Mercia mudstone clay (b) show that the kiln was made from Mercia mudstone. In contrast, comparison of thin sections of a sherd of Torksey pottery (c) and fired Rhaetic clay (d) reveal that the pottery was manufactured from this clay source. Pottery from York (e), long assumed to have been a local product copying the style of pottery manufactured in Torksey, has been shown by our petrographic analysis to have been made from the same clay source as Torksey ware and hence is a Torksey product. Thin section analysis also confirms that Torksey pottery is wheel-thrown, principally revealed by the diagonal lines visible in the clay (running from bottom left to top right) which are a product of spinning on the wheel (f). Photographs: Gareth Perry.

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Fig 5. Magnetometer survey interpretation of the Castle Field, showing features referred to in the text, approximate location of Barley’s trenches based on archive sketch plan and location of our excavation trenches. Image: authors and Hannah Brown.

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Fig 6. Density of Torksey ware recovered during fieldwalking in the Castle Field, superimposed on 2012 magnetometer survey data and also showing 2018 Headland Archaeology survey. Image: authors and Helen Goodchild.

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Fig 7. Distribution of artefacts recovered from metal-detector survey in the Castle Field (red dots) superimposed on magnetometer surveys. Image: authors and Helen Goodchild.

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Fig 8. Kiln 16 after exposure of truncated walls, looking south, approximate diameter 1m. Photograph: authors.

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Fig 9. Clay lining of Kiln 16, showing hand impressions where slabs of clay had been pressed into the pit, across an area of c 0.4m. Photograph: authors.

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Fig 10. Example of a fire bar from Kiln 16, showing impression left by wooden rod around which it had been formed. Photograph: authors.

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Fig 11. Kiln 16 during excavation from above showing collapsed kiln furniture and Torksey ware sherds, with pedestal to right, c 0.2m in height. Photograph: authors.

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Fig 12. Profiles of Torksey ware forms manufactured in Kiln 16. Image: authors.

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Fig 13. Examples of Torksey ware splashed with glaze, recovered from the vicinity of Kiln 16. Photographs: authors.

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Fig 14. Cist-lined grave 479 from the cemetery east of Main Street, before and after removal of capping stones. Photographs: from Williams and Field 2002.

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Fig 15. Multiple burial 527 from cemetery north of the village, showing partially excavated burials. Photograph: from Rowe 2008.

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Fig 16. Density of human bones (yellow circles) recovered by fieldwalking within the enclosure. Image: authors and Helen Goodchild.

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Fig 17. Excavated section of cemetery ditch. Photograph: authors.

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Fig 18. Plan of Trench 1, with section of ditch (104) and possible posthole (111). Drawings: Allen Archaeology.

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Fig 19. Radiocarbon dates for the human remains from the cemetery enclosure (Bronk Ramsay 2009). Calibrated using OxCal v4.42 Bronk Ramsey (2021): r5 Atmospheric data from Reimer et al (2020). Image: authors.

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Fig 20. Lead gaming pieces (sf6 and sf166). Photographs: authors.

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Fig 21. Iron clench nail (sf208). Photograph: authors.

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Fig 22. Iron draw knife (sf180). Photograph: authors.