King Street is the name of a modern road on the line of a
Roman road
Roman roads ( la, viae Romanae ; singular: ; meaning "Roman way") were physical infrastructure vital to the maintenance and development of the Roman state, and were built from about 300 BC through the expansion and consolidation of the Roman Re ...
. It runs on a straight course in eastern
England, between the
City of Peterborough
The City of Peterborough is a unitary authority district with city status in the ceremonial county of Cambridgeshire, England. The area is named after its largest settlement, Peterborough but also covers a wider area of outlying villages and ha ...
and
South Kesteven
South Kesteven is a Non-metropolitan district, local government district in Lincolnshire, England, forming part of the traditional Kesteven division of the county. It covers Bourne, Lincolnshire, Bourne, Grantham, Market Deeping and Stamford, Li ...
in
Lincolnshire. This
English name has long been applied to the part which is still in use and which lies between Ailsworth Heath, in the south and Kate's Bridge, in the north. The old road continued to
Bourne
Bourne may refer to:
Places UK
* Bourne, Lincolnshire, a town
** Bourne Abbey
** Bourne railway station
* Bourne (electoral division), West Sussex
* Bourne SSSI, Avon, a Site of Special Scientific Interest near Burrington, North Somerset
* Bourne ...
thence north-westwards to join
Ermine Street south of
Ancaster Ancaster may refer to:
* Ancaster, Lincolnshire, England
* Ancaster, Ontario, Canada
*Gilbert Heathcote-Drummond-Willoughby, 3rd Earl of Ancaster
Gilbert James Heathcote-Drummond-Willoughby, 3rd Earl of Ancaster, (8 December 1907 – 29 March ...
. This part of Ermine Street is called High Dike. In the south, King Street joined Ermine Street close to the
River Nene, north of ''
Durobrivae''. The whole is
I. D. Margary's Roman road number 26. (Margary pp. 232–234)
Route
Archaeological work has revealed more of its length than is in use nowadays. Its course is regarded as having run from the boundary between
Ailsworth
Ailsworth or Ailesworth is a village and Civil parishes in England, civil parish in the City of Peterborough unitary authority, about west of the city centre. The parish is part of the former Soke of Peterborough, which was considered geograph ...
and
Castor, at the north-west corner of Normangate Field, just north of the
River Nene (TL113980). This is where it left the Roman
Ermine Street, north-west of ''Durobrivae'' in what was by the end of the 2nd century, an extensive industrial region producing
tiles,
metalwork and particularly,
pottery.
To the south of this point, Ermine Street runs along the edge of
The Fens; but to the north, lies further inland. King Street continued the course nearer the fen edge. While Ermine Street crossed the
Welland near the natural ford at
Stamford, King Street crosses at
Lolham Bridges, which required more engineering.
At Kate's Bridge, the road crossed the
River Glen. Until the 1820s the road still used the same crossing point despite the river's having moved from it at some time, probably well over a thousand years before. At Park Wood, the road appears to have come close to the
Car Dyke but this is not well supported by evidence. From near Thurlby crossroads, the Roman line headed straight for the point at which
Bourne Abbey
Bourne Abbey and the Parish Church of St. Peter and St. Paul is a scheduled Grade I church in Bourne, Lincolnshire, England. The building remains in parochial use, despite the 16th-century Dissolution, as the nave was used by the parish, probably ...
was later built on.
In this length, there are points where the road seems to show in the modern landscape - for example, her
In the south, the modern road lies on the Roman one which continued through Elsea Wood and along the field boundary to its north. The Car Dyke lies to the east and the boundary between Elsea Wood and Math Wood seems to lie along the edge of the 2nd century road verge, which was cleared for security. The carriageway, the Car Dyke and the Math Wood boundary are all parallel here. When allowance is made for the now-missing outer works of the Car Dyke, the carriageway lies halfway between the other two features.
North of Bourne, little of the road is still in use but it has left its mark in the form of property boundaries and soil marks. This section is sometimes called the 'Long Hollow Road' because some of it runs along the bottom of the Long Hollow, a broad, shallow valley which is the upper part of the
drainage basin, basin of the
River East Glen.
From Bourne Abbey, it passed along Meadowgate, then by Cawthorpe to Clipseygap Lane,
Hanthorpe and the Roman town at ''
Stainfield
Stainfield is a village and civil parish about east of the city of Lincoln, in the West Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. The population of the civil parish at the 2011 census was 189.
History
The name Stainfield derives from "a ston ...
''. On the
boulder clay ridge, it forms boundaries of woods before, in the East Glen valley, its line is picked up by a minor road at
Hanby. It passed through the small Roman town at
Sapperton and up the Long Hollow to
Ropsley Heath
Ropsley is a village in the South Kesteven district of Lincolnshire, England. The village is situated approximately east from Grantham, and falls within the civil parish of Ropsley and Humby .
Ropsley is the location of the source of the Riv ...
whence it is more or less closely followed by a modern road to its junction with Ermine Street, a kilometre south of the Roman town of
Ancaster Ancaster may refer to:
* Ancaster, Lincolnshire, England
* Ancaster, Ontario, Canada
*Gilbert Heathcote-Drummond-Willoughby, 3rd Earl of Ancaster
Gilbert James Heathcote-Drummond-Willoughby, 3rd Earl of Ancaster, (8 December 1907 – 29 March ...
. The road can be seen as a soil mark in The Long Hollow, just right of centre i
this aerial photograph
Economic significance
Ermine Street was one of the strategic roads built in the 1st century, early in the period of the Roman occupation of ''
Britannia''. The features of King Street are consistent with its having formed part of a development of the region along with the Car Dyke, in the reign of
Hadrian
Hadrian (; la, Caesar Trâiānus Hadriānus ; 24 January 76 – 10 July 138) was Roman emperor from 117 to 138. He was born in Italica (close to modern Santiponce in Spain), a Roman ''municipium'' founded by Italic settlers in Hispania B ...
(117–138). It may well have been a result of his visit to ''Britannia'' in 122; fairly early in his reign and just after he had spent time sorting out the ''
Limes'' between the
Rhine and the
Danube.
From Bourne, the
tidal waterway known to archaeologists as the
Bourne–Morton Canal
The Bourne–Morton Canal is an archaeological feature to the north-east of Bourne in Lincolnshire, England. In old maps and documents, it is known as the Old Ea. It was a 6.5 kilometer artificial waterway linking the dry ground at Bourne to ei ...
and to the
Middle Ages as the
Old Ea, seems to have given Bourne access by boat to the sea, which lay only at the far end of Bourne North Fen. This meant that the products of the
fen and
coast such as
salt and animal products such as
fowls
Fowl are birds belonging to one of two biological orders, namely the gamefowl or landfowl (Galliformes) and the waterfowl ( Anseriformes). Anatomical and molecular similarities suggest these two groups are close evolutionary relatives; togethe ...
,
meat
Meat is animal flesh that is eaten as food. Humans have hunted, farmed, and scavenged animals for meat since prehistoric times. The establishment of settlements in the Neolithic Revolution allowed the domestication of animals such as chic ...
,
wool,
fish and
leather, could be brought across the fen which would normally have obstructed such traffic. This trade may be enough to explain the six Roman roads which radiated, directly or separating a short distance away, from the site. The Long Hollow Road and King Street were two of these, linking respectively, north and south, into the trunk road system by way of Ermine Street.
Construction
In an archaeological excavation of the road at the southern edge of Bourne (TF098193), where it ran across a margin between
Kellaways clay
Kellaways, also known as Tytherton Kellaways, is a village and former ecclesiastical parish in the present-day civil parish of Langley Burrell Without and ceremonial county of Wiltshire, England. Its nearest town is Chippenham, which lies southw ...
and the argillaceous (clayey)
Kellaways sand
Kellaways, also known as Tytherton Kellaways, is a village and former ecclesiastical parish in the present-day civil parish of Langley Burrell Without and ceremonial county of Wiltshire, England. Its nearest town is Chippenham, which lies southw ...
, it was found that the construction of the carriageway had been done by digging two parallel shallow trenches into the subsoil and over-filling them with gravel ballast so as to form kerbs. Coarse sand was used to form the carriageway between them. This was a skilful use of the available materials as south of Kate's Bridge, the road passes over such minerals but little but rather friable
Cornbrash is available near the excavated site. Clearly, this part of the road was constructed from the south, northwards and the materials carried along it. However, further north, in the Long Hollow, cornbrash from Sapperton TF019239, seems to have been used (Lane p. 23.) Again, the use is north of the source.
B.B. Simmons has spent much time excavating a roadside Roman town in the parish of Sapperton. His publications are listed in Lane's Ropsley and Humby book. The latter (plates 7a & b) also shows aerial photographs of the road as a soil mark around TF003367. This is the same mark as appears in photo 4 below.
Aerial photographs
King Street meets High Dyke (Ermine Street) near Ancaster.
High Dike (Ermine Street) and King Street meet at the top of this photograph.
Soil mark of King Street in the Long Hollow, near the A52.
By Ropsley Heath quarry.
The small roadside Roman town at Sapperton is centred on the long, green field.
Road, soil marks and field boundaries at Lenton.
Soil marks in the bare field at top centre and in the long field west of the airfield.
Woodland boundaries on the chalky till near Kirkby Underwood.
Property boundaries from Stainfield Roman town north-westwards.
Stainfield Roman town and Clipseygap Lane, Hanthorpe.
Clipseygap Lane and soil mark.
The road, heading northwards turns aside from its Roman course as it meets Elsea Wood. The white patches towards the eastern edge of the field to the east of the road are the ploughed-out banks of the Car Dyke.
The present road runs up the picture while the old turnpike bridge over the Glen is to its east. Until the 1820s the road northward descended from it to the tight turn seen under the crop in the pale field.
John Loudon McAdam, McAdam took the tight bend out and in the 1970s, his new line was projected across a new bridge.
The northern end of the modern King Street.
The Maltby Drive houses are built on the Urns Farm early
English people, English cemetery, dated around the year 500. This was at the limit of the English advance into Britain at the time when the ''
Dux Bellorum'' known as Arthur held the spread of settlement back for fifty years by his battles, beginning at the mouth of the Glen.
Lolham Bridges. The diagonal brown feature is the London to Edinburgh railway.
The junction between the two roads, Ermine Street and King Street, which are here, both defunct (just west of Station Road).
See also
*
Mareham Lane
Mareham Lane is an unclassified road between Graby and Sleaford in Lincolnshire, England. It is approximately long.
The Roman Road
For most of its length Mareham Lane follows the route of a minor Roman road, and the name is also used for that Ro ...
References
*
Margary, I.D. ''Roman Roads in Britain'' (1973)
*Phillips, C.W. ''The Fenland in Roman Times'' Royal Geographical Research Series No. 5. (1970)
*Bennett, S. & Bennett, N. ''An Historical Atlas of Lincolnshire'' (1993)
*Hayes, P.P. & Lane, T.W. ''The Fenland Project Number 5: Lincolnshire Survey, The South-West Fens.'' (1992)
*Lane, T.W. ''The Archaeology and Developing Landscape of Ropsley and Humby, Lincolnshire''. (1995)
*Simmons, B.B. ''Sapperton, an interim report'' Lincolnshire Hist. & Archaeol. Vol.11, 5-11 (1976)
*Anon Institute of Geological Sciences ''One-Inch Series, Sheet 143, Bourne''. Drift Edition (1971).
External links
There is a little information in these two but you will need use Edit - Find - King Street.
Vicar of Maxey’s Talk
{{DEFAULTSORT:King Street (Roman Road)
Roman roads in England
Archaeological sites in Cambridgeshire
Archaeological sites in Lincolnshire
Roads in Lincolnshire