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Roman Ruins In England Found To Have Mysterious 'Winged' Structure

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First Posted: 01/23/2012 2:11 pm Updated: 01/23/2012 2:11 pm

By: Owen Jarus, LiveScience Contributor
Published: 01/23/2012 09:17 AM EST on LiveScience


A recently discovered mysterious "winged" structure in England, which in the Roman period may have been used as a temple, presents a puzzle for archaeologists, who say the building has no known parallels.



Built around 1,800 years ago, the structure was discovered in Norfolk, in eastern England, just to the south of the ancient town of Venta Icenorum. The structure has two wings radiating out from a rectangular room that in turn leads to a central room.



"Generally speaking, [during] the Roman Empire people built within a fixed repertoire of architectural forms," said William Bowden, a professor at the University of Nottingham, who reported the find in the most recent edition of the Journal of Roman Archaeology. The investigation was carried out in conjunction with the Norfolk Archaeological and Historical Research Group.



The winged shape of the building appears to be unique in the Roman Empire, with no other example known. "It's very unusual to find a building like this where you have no known parallels for it," Bowden told LiveScience. "What they were trying to achieve by using this design is really very difficult to say."

The building appears to have been part of a complex that includes a villa to the north and at least two other structures to the northeast and northwest. An aerial photograph suggests the existence of an oval or polygonal building with an apse located to the east. 

The winged building

The foundation of the two wings and the rectangular room was made of a thin layer of rammed clay and chalk. "This suggests that the superstructure of much of the building was quite light, probably timber and clay-lump walls with a thatched roof," writes Bowden. This raises the possibility that the building was not intended to be used long term. [Photos of Mysterious Stone Structures]

The central room, on the other hand, was made of stronger stuff, with its foundations crafted from lime mortar mixed with clay and small pieces of flint and brick. That section likely had a tiled roof. "Roman tiles are very large things, they’re very heavy," Bowden said.

Sometime after the demise of this wing-shaped structure, another building, this one decorated, was built over it. Archaeologists found post holes from it with painted wall plaster inside.

Bowden said few artifacts were found at the site and none that could be linked to the winged structure with certainty. A plough had ripped through the site at some point, scattering debris. Also, metal detecting is a major problem in the Norfolk area, with people using metal detectors to locate and confiscate materials, something that may have happened at this site.

Still, even when the team found undisturbed layers, there was little in the way of artifacts. "This could suggest that it [the winged building] wasn't used for a very particularly long time," Bowden said.

The land of the Iceni

Researchers are not certain what the building was used for. While its elevated position made it visible from the town of Venta Icenorum, the foundations of the radiating wings are weak. "It's possible that this was a temporary building constructed for a single event or ceremony, which might account for its insubstantial construction,' writes Bowden in the journal article.

"Alternatively the building may represent a shrine or temple on a hilltop close to a Roman road, visible from the road as well as from the town."

Adding another layer to this mystery is the ancient history of Norfolk, where the structure was found.

The local people in the area, who lived here before the Roman conquest, were known as the Iceni. It may have been their descendents who lived at the site and constructed the winged building.

Iceni architecture was quite simple and, as Bowden explained, not as elaborate as this. On the other hand, their religion was intertwined with nature, something which may help explain the wind-blown location of the site. "Iceni gods, pre-Roman gods, tend to be associated with the natural sites: the springs, trees, sacred groves, this kind of thing," said Bowden.

The history between the Iceni and the Romans is a violent one. In A.D. 43, when the Romans, under Emperor Claudius, invaded Britain, they encountered fierce resistance from them.  After a failed revolt in A.D. 47 they became a client kingdom of the empire, with Prasutagus as their leader. When he died, around A.D. 60, the Romans tried to finish the subjugation, in brutal fashion.

"First, his [Prasutagus'] wife Boudicea was scourged, and his daughters outraged. All the chief men of the Iceni, as if Rome had received the whole country as a gift, were stripped of their ancestral possessions, and the king's relatives were made slaves," wrote Tacitus, a Roman writer in The Annals.  (From the book, "Complete Works of Tacitus," 1942, edited for the Perseus Digital Library.)

This led Boudicea (more commonly spelled Boudicca) to form an army and lead a revolt against the Romans. At first she was successful, defeating Roman military units and even sacking Londinium. In the end the Romans rallied and defeated her at the Battle of Watling Street. With the Roman victory the rebellion came to an end, and a town named Venta Icenorumwas eventually set up on their land.  [Top 12 Warrior Moms in History]

"The Iceni vanish from history effectively after the Boudicca revolt in [A.D.] 60-61," said Bowden.

But while they vanished from written history, archaeological clues hint that their spirit remained very much alive. Bowden and David Mattingly, an archaeologist at the University of Leicester, both point out that the area has a low number of villas compared with elsewhere in Britain, suggesting the people continued to resist Roman culture long after Boudicca's failed revolt.

This lack of villas, along with problems attracting people to Roman settlements in the area, "can be read as a transcript of resistant adaption and rejection of Roman norms," writes Mattingly in his book "An Imperial Possession: Britain in the Roman Empire" (Penguin Books, 2007). 

There is "still a fairly strong local identity," said Bowden, who cautioned that while local people may have lived at the complex, the winged building is out of character for both Roman and Iceni architectural styles, a fact that leaves his team with a mystery.

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By: Owen Jarus, LiveScience Contributor Published: 01/23/2012 09:17 AM EST on LiveScience A recently discovered mysterious "winged" structure in England, which in the Roman...
By: Owen Jarus, LiveScience Contributor Published: 01/23/2012 09:17 AM EST on LiveScience A recently discovered mysterious "winged" structure in England, which in the Roman...
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05:04 PM on 01/25/2012
I always wanted to wear roman armor.
collectsrocks
It's good to be good & nice to be nice
01:37 PM on 01/25/2012
One wing was for storage and the other was a stall to keep the cow in, so the homeowner didn't have to go outside on a cold morning to milk it. A wing on each side of the structure would also be great for insullating the home year round. This I believe was one of the original "honey do" tasks.
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Claudia L
Time is the seed of the Universe
01:28 PM on 01/25/2012
The Romans were really tolerant of other religions. There were hundreds of temples in Rome honoring all kinds of gods. They wanted to keep everyone happy. I think they even embraced the Greek Oricle of Delphi (who was originally the keeper of the hearth or flame) The Romans gave her a temple, renamed her Vesta, gave her the eternal flame to watch (Ignitus Inextinctus) and a bunch of Virgins (Vestal Virgins). Today that flame is the same flame used to light the Olympics. "Old Flame" has a whole nother meaning.

It could be they might have wanted to appease the locals after their bad Budicca behavior and may have wanted to build a temple for the locals maybe in the local fashion. The Romans stole a good deal of their architecture from the Greeks. Just a thought.
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spilkus
I'm in the art world, for Pete's sake.
11:33 PM on 01/30/2012
Gimme a break. The Romans destroyed only what was necessary to destroy. They didnt give a fig about keeping anyone happy. They just didn't worry about it if it didn't interrupt the flow of revnenues back to Rome.
Please don't idealize these thugs.
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Claudia L
Time is the seed of the Universe
08:14 AM on 01/31/2012
All you have to do is look at old maps of the city. You'll see a temple on every corner. They even built, in Rome, a small Egyptian style mausoleum for Arsinoe, Cleopatra's sister. Educate yourself.

Constantine became Christian because the tides of public opinion had changed. And that's why Pontius Pilate, "washed his hands of it".
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Claudia L
Time is the seed of the Universe
08:26 AM on 01/31/2012
Caesar had brought Arsinoe to Rome, as a captive in chains, after the Alexandrian War. He was going to execute her but the public saw that she was just a little girl, a beautiful exotic little girl and she won their admiration. Caesar feared the rathe of the people and gave her sanctuary.

Don't you think history is fascinating?
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lensamy
23, this is a jocular remark of infinite regress
08:35 AM on 01/25/2012
Hmm... they need to check around for more clues, but i have two theories either bathrooms or shed that they would use to keep stuff in. Or just a random building I mean my dad built a weird shaped storage like room next to our house that certainly looks like flying saucer fast forward 2000 years and archeologist are going to be like "what in the world is next to that house?!" lol
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anitafeeney
no matter where you go there you are
04:50 AM on 01/25/2012
very interesting
04:21 AM on 01/25/2012
Maybe they had artists that built eclectic buildings like in the present. People always think that we are so dominant. How did civilization get this far if the ancient peoples were stupid?
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Rich Cash
Enlisted in 1971 - Retired in 1996
05:06 AM on 01/25/2012
Could be, but they likely had a more utilitarian use. Anne Marie313 had the best idea so far.
03:48 AM on 01/25/2012
In the 100+ years of our local church, you would have found the same thing - an existing building converted for use - added on as the congregation expanded and then rebuilt to accomdate the congregation and services.

The more things change. . .
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Anne Marie313
Christian Conservative-
02:24 AM on 01/25/2012
first thing that came to mind when I saw the picture? Public bathroom
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Rich Cash
Enlisted in 1971 - Retired in 1996
05:03 AM on 01/25/2012
Yeah, it could very well be bathrooms or toilets, male and female. I first thought they might be an entrance and exit for flowing water from wells that no longer exist, but your idea makes more sense than mine. Fanned and faved, Anne!
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Mustangallee
What you write here will be in cyberspace forever!
02:08 AM on 01/25/2012
I feel the two wings were most likely built by the first two pigs, and the center room was most likely built by the wiser older pig who knew no wolf could blow it down!
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june53
Common Sense with Civility, Please!
06:00 AM on 01/25/2012
Aren't you a clever little wolf. Kudo's for the levity. The world
needs far more of the quick wit; rather than the dimwits we
usually hear from =routinely- Oy!
mscellanus
U may kiss it!
01:03 AM on 01/25/2012
Every time they discover some ancient site, there is always some new tribe mention. I have to check the "Iceni people" now. I'm sure they were probably Celts.
12:46 AM on 01/25/2012
Its simply a his/hers potty off the main room, "L" shaped for privacy...
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fattrucker
12:32 AM on 01/25/2012
someday in the far distant future there will be nothing left of us except our granite countertops, archeologist of the future will marvel at how such a primitive culture could slice granite up so thin and will of coutse assume that they were used for religious purposes
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mandomitch
04:27 AM on 01/25/2012
Food preparation isn't religious?
05:43 AM on 01/25/2012
hopefully by then they will believe the world is a little older then several thousand years
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hman570
12:27 AM on 01/25/2012
Enjoy it when the scolars are stumped by something they have dug up. I will be following this story as I would like to see how many differant reasons they come up with to say what it is?
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fhmjam
11:06 PM on 01/24/2012
It's an early version of Al Gore's private jet that left an even bigger carbon footprint than the one he flys around in now.....lol
10:55 PM on 01/24/2012
Why is it that every structure discovered that does not have obvious purpose is deemed a, "temple." Did no one in the ancient world need a place to store their cart-wheels, jars, or left-overs from the last move? Centuries of "Pickers," have long-since looted the artifacts that might evidence the structure's purpose. Conjuring images of robed priests and sacrificed goats does nothing to help the science of Archaeology. I suppose a zillion decades from now my tool shed can be decreed a shrine as well.
11:05 PM on 01/24/2012
As a trained archeologist, I can tell you that if a professor had NO idea what an object was it had " deep religious significance".
12:07 AM on 01/25/2012
I flat love Archaeology, have since diaper stage. I'm one of those old-fashioned purists that likes to combine physical evidence with sound anthropological principle. Hogwash, I know... Who knows, maybe they'll unearth the holy Grail or a crystal skull on this site. ;-)
12:09 AM on 01/25/2012
I'm voting it's an ancient outhouse, with a view ... Bring your own papyrus ...
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Bills Catz
Don't believe everything you think.
11:48 PM on 01/24/2012
I think the word gets used as a generic term, maybe for lack of any honest clue, but the public gets a morbid thrill of imagining there were SACRIFICES there. May even generate more funding for people who want to root around in the dirt and imagine such things. LOL