The Society of Antiquaries' excavation of Silchester's Insula IX in
1893-4 left most of the stratigraphy undisturbed. A new programme of
work has shown that the Insula underwent radical change, c. AD 250/300,
with the construction of new workshop and residential buildings on the
orientation of the Roman street-grid, following the demolition of
mid-Roman buildings arranged on different, pre- and early Roman
alignments. The plans of several properties and individual buildings
were recovered, and analysis of the rich range of artefactual and
biological data has allowed a detailed and differentiated
characterisation of the life and occupations of the inhabitants in the
4th century. The context of the 5th century ogham-inscibed stone is
explored and the history of the insula is followed into the 5th/6th
century.