More information : (SK 0089 9505) Melandra Castle (NAT). Roman Fort (R). (1)
An Agricolan earth-wood fort rebuilt in stone, in part at least, probably under Trajan. (2) The Fort has been excavated, very badly, on various occasions since 1899, notably (1906-7), by the Classical Association (3). (3-4) Occupation evidence, mainly pottery, indicates an abandonment in the first half of the 2nd century. A few 3rd c. potsherds and one or two later coins do not add up to re-occupation.
Part of a female sandal, in one of the ditches, suggests civilians, but the settlement has not been found; neither has the bath-house which may, however, be nearer the river (Etherow). The name Melandra is attributed to the Rev John Watson (1772) (4), but the site is identified by Richmond and Crawford as the (Ze)rdotalia (Erdotalia or Ardotalia) of the Ravenna Cosmography; (5) an identification not entirely certain (6). Scheduled. For the designation record of this site please see The National Heritage List for England.(5-7 & 29-30)
Re-surveyed at 1:2500. An extensive collection of material from the site is in Buxton Museum. (8) In 1969, earthmoving operations for the Gamesley Overspill Scheme made possible renewed excavation by DOE on the area of civil settlement adjacent to the Roman fort. An almost complete plan was revealed of the supposed mansio (160' x 60') which was partly excavated in 1966. It was constructed of timber and fronted by a road to the W, and backed by a rampart and ditch system. The excavations indicate demolition rather than destruction as the ultimate fate of the building. A date for the demolition of c.AD 140 was arrived at from pottery evidence. The 1969 season concluded the rescue excavation, and the overall impression of the sizeable defended vicus can now be gained. For a fort that can never have occupied a key position in the overall strategy ofthe Northern Military Zone, it is remarkable that it had such a considerable civil population, and so large a mansio, if such it be. (See plan). Name `ARDOTALIA' ? accepted for 4th. edition R. B. Map. (9) A bath-building, of coursed sandstone slabs set in mortar, was discovered outside the north west corner of the fort by the Melandra Field Group in 1973. It proved to be of Reihentyp, with an apsidal hot room, a warm room and a cold room. The hypocaust pilae were of tile. Much of the masonry had slipped down the hillside. This first phase appears to be Flavian but additions were made early in the 2nd. century about 120 A.D. A secondary wing of finely dressed gritstone on a base of sandstone slabs, was located to the south of the cold room in phase 1 running N-S. It consisted of two rooms, one heated and one unheated. The pilae were of squared sandstone blocks and the flues of box tiles. Between AD 120-140 during a third phase of building a possibly heated room, maybe a dressing-room, was added to the east of the secondary wing. This room was 5.6m by 5.0m and was built of sandstone blocks. Between the baths and the fort wall there was a timber-lined drain, about 25cms wide, which may have diverted surface water aroundthe baths. A circuit road of pebbles, 2.5m wide and 20cms thick, lay along the outer lip of the fort ditch. The early phase of this road ante-dated the baths. (10-14) Excavations in 1980 and 1982 continued work on the bath-house. In addition part of the clay and cobble footings of the Trajanic fort all were exposed to the east of the North Gate and an area of the vicus examined. Considerable evidence for iron-smelting and lead and glass working came from the vicus (15,16) ARDOTALIA-the Roman fort of Melandra Castle (17). (15-17) Additional reference. (18) SK 00959495. Excavated material suggests the presence of a pottery kiln in or near the civil settlement. (19) Tricephalic well-head showing 3 heads: the flanking ones in profile bear rams-horns,the central face has `water weeds' on either side. Link with Melandra appears more hopeful than proven. (20) The `large iron ring' found in 1906 appears to be a pipe collar (Buxton Museum Acc No Der SB 3850). This will either have supplied a distribution tank in the fort or the extra-mural bath-house outside its north wall. The pipeline probably dates from the Trajanic period, when the fort was rebuilt in stone. (21)
SK 0091 9505. Melandra Castle was visited by English Heritage field investigators in May 1999 as part of the National SAMs Survey Pilot Project.
The fort occupies a high promontory above the River Etherow, with extensive views to north, east and west. The outline of the fort is preserved by the earthwork remains of the ramparts, which stand up to 2.0m high in places. A slight break of slope is visible in the external scarp of the south-east rampart which may be evidence of stone-robbing or alternatively may mark the course of a later hedge boundary. Faint traces of infilled excavation trenches can be seen cutting across the north-west rampart. All the angle towers have been excavated and the remains, although slight, consolidated for public display. At the northern angle one corner of the stone tower survives, to a height of 0.8m; the excavation of this structure has destroyed part of the inner scarp of the rampart to its east. The site of the eastern angle tower is marked by a rectangular platform cut into the rampart, measuring 3.5m by 4.0m. A similar platform at the southern angle reveals wall foundations protruding through the turf. Part of the outer face of the fort wall beneath it has been exposed to a height of 0.6m but is in a dilapidated condition. The western angle is situated very close to the edge of the steep cliff above the river and is beginning to be eroded as the land slips downward.
None of the external ditches revealed by excavation are visible on the ground; a linear depression flanking the south-eastern rampart appears to be a drainage ditch. Outside the north gate is a rectangular feature defined by slight banks not more than 0.1m high which corresponds to a structure depicted on the 1:2500 survey of 1965 (see authority 8). Its date and function are unknown.
In the interior of the fort the only identifiable remains are those of the consolidated principia, which are once more disappearing under vegetation. To the south-west of the fort ridge-and-furrow cultivation is visible; the smoothed appearance of both the interior and exterior of the fort demonstrate that it has been extensively ploughed while the ramparts have latterly formed field boundaries topped by hedges. There is a small quarry outside the south-west rampart, probably of post-medieval date.
1:2500 survey revised. (22)
Finds from the site indicate the presence of two auxilliary units, the 1st Cohort of the Frisavones and the third cohort of the Bracara Augustani. The former unit were recruited from north of the Rhine. the latter were probably from the Braga area now in Portugal. The centurial stone of Melandra refers to the Frisians as the builders of the fort. (23)
Further references to excavations in the fort, vicus and bath house at Melandra. (24-27)
The interior of the fort has never been ploughed, but was subjected to a leveling of archaeological excavation upcasts from the early C20th by use of heavy grading machines. (28) |