Excavations and a watching brief at St Faith's Lane uncovered part of a
10th- to 12th-century street frontage comprising incomplete remains of
timber structures, pits and ditches. Finds relate to domestic occupation
and a metalworking presence that may indicate a nearby forge. In the
13th century, after a period of decline and possible abandonment, the
site was incorporated into the precinct of the Franciscan Friary. The
Greyfriars soon began burying their dead in a cemetery laid out there,
halting only to dig for minerals for a nearby building programme,
probably in the 14th century. The burials have an unusual demographic
profile which may relate, at least in part, to a Franciscan school of
international renown. The site was fully enclosed by a precinct wall in
the early 16th century and after the Dissolution was predominantly
garden until redevelopment in the 19th century. Fittingly, the site is
now part of a school once more.