Saturday 27 April 2024 | 11:30-12:30 | St Mildred’s Church | CT1 2PP
ART, LITERATURE & RELIGION
Professor Paul Bennett
As the recently retired Director of Canterbury Archaeological Trust, Paul Bennett has overseen numerous archaeological excavations both in this country and abroad. In addition to his main interest in the archaeology of Kent, he is an expert in classical Libyan civilisation, having worked in the country over several decades. More recently, he has expanded his overseas interests to northern Iraq, investigating the region’s prehistory. He has an encyclopaedic knowledge regarding Canterbury’s archaeology and history, and his passion for the subject has inspired professionals and amateurs alike, which was recognised in 2017 when he was awarded an MBE.
About the event
The tour will explore St Mildred’s Church in Canterbury which is located by the city wall and next to Canterbury Castle. This gem of a medieval parish church has its roots in the eleventh century, and it may have housed some of the relics of St Mildred at the time of King Canute, after the monks at St Augustine’s Abbey brought her relics from Minster in Thanet to their abbey church in Canterbury. In addition to fabric from this Anglo-Saxon period, the building contains materials and features from throughout the Middle Ages, including a newly-exposed crown post nave roof. Prof. Paul Bennett will guide visitors around the outside and inside of the church to demonstrate what to look for and how to reconstruct the development of medieval church building.
The widening of the road between the Monkton and Mount Pleasant roundabouts on the A253 led to the archaeological investigation of a 3km long strip of land between July 1994 and February 1995. Prehistoric discoveries included Neolithic inhumations and pits, well-preserved Beaker graves and ten ring-ditches of late Neolithic and Bronze Age date.
In the Foreword, Barry Cunliffe writes: "The publication of the excavation of the multi-period settlement site at Highstead near Chislet is a matter for celebration. Highstead, with its long sequence of occupation spanning the first millennium B.C. and early first millennium A.D.
This latest volume in Canterbury Archaeological Trust's Occasional Paper series describes discoveries along the route of the Whitfield-Eastry by-pass. An extensive programme of fieldwalking and evaluation investigated a number of sites: two sites were subject to full excavation.