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4.4.13 Cliffe and Cliffe End Woods, Kent

The area comprises a marshland area of the Medway on the Thames Estuary. Roman burials, pottery kilns and salt working were investigated in the 1960s. The site of an early 6th-century Saxon inhumation cemetery was found in 1880 when cutting a railway line near the marshes. A large quantity of bones was carted away, and the only remains preserved were a spearhead, bronze belt fittings and the bottom of a bronze dish. The base of a Roman skillet and coins of Nero and Maximian were also found. A possible settlement of the 6th century is indicated by a series of pits with associated finds. Finds included pottery, animal bones and a bronze girdle hanger. There are also traces of early medieval enclosures. Cliffe may be a possibility as the location for a monastic site founded at Hoo c. AD 686-7. The VASLE dataset comprises metal-detected finds recorded in the PAS with some coinage from the EMC.

Fingerprint charts for i) artefact date analysis, ii) artefact type analysis, iii) artefact metal analysis and iv) coins – date of production
Artefact date analysis Artefact type analysis Artefact metal analysis Coins - date of production


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Last updated: Tues Apr 21 2009