Good preservation in the western part of 10 Gresham Street has led to an
unusually complete picture of the archaeological sequence.
The discovery here of the largest group of Romano-British round houses
yet excavated in London, clustered round a rectangular building, is of
considerable significance for the Iron Age-Roman transition. Moreover,
the site's main north-south road seems to have been key to determining
the layout of this whole area while evidence pointing to sporadic fires
in the 2nd century AD casts new light on the idea of a single,
catastrophic event. Significant finds include a double gold finger ring
of the 1st century AD, while close study of face pots and tazze leads to
a rethinking of their possible ritual functions.
Abandoned from the late 4th/early 5th century AD until the 10th century,
by the 12th century the site boasted at least four masonry buildings.
The remains of several rare and expensive glass display vessels found in
a 13th-century refuse pit indicate the presence of an extremely affluent
household. Later, two taverns stood on the site or very close by, and
significant numbers of vessels for storing and serving ale and wine were
recovered. Considerable truncation of post-medieval structures and
deposits, however, means that only the deepest cellars and cesspits
survived from that period.