1920
DOI: 10.1017/s0958841800024297
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A Romano-British Site at Santon

Abstract: At the eastern foot of Bromehill, where the prehistoric trackway known as the “Drove” (antea Vol. I., pp. 427–434) passes from Weeting to Santon, it approaches within yards of the river Little Ouse, and cuts at right angles through a series of six earthen banks, which come from the southern end of the Grime's Graves plantation, and originally ran to the edge of the marshland, until their ends were removed in making the railway. From west to east the distances between these banks are 7, 3, 3, 9, and 82 yards, a… Show more

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“…Not surprisingly, places within these areas align with places which traditionally had high concentrations of local maltster expertise in the 1840s, as indicated in Map 4. 79 It seems unlikely that many of these men had known each other before starting work in Burton. Map 2.…”
Section: Persisters: Settlement and Relationshipsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Not surprisingly, places within these areas align with places which traditionally had high concentrations of local maltster expertise in the 1840s, as indicated in Map 4. 79 It seems unlikely that many of these men had known each other before starting work in Burton. Map 2.…”
Section: Persisters: Settlement and Relationshipsmentioning
confidence: 99%