Rudston Roman villa explained

Rudston Roman villa
Map Type:East Riding of Yorkshire
Location:Rudston, East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Coordinates:54.0848°N -0.3361°W
Start Date:3rd century
Style:Romano-British Villa

Rudston Roman villa is a Roman villa and scheduled monument near Rudston, East Riding of Yorkshire.

Villa

The site was first discovered in 1838 by farm worker. In 1933 the 'Venus mosaic' was discovered by the landowner and farmer H. Robson whilst ploughing.[1]

The primary phase of the villa dates to the 3rd - 4th centuries AD. It is a courtyard villa, with mosaics and a small bath house on the east side. The site has some evidence for a 1st - 2nd century AD rectangular enclosure and an earlier Iron Age settlement beneath it.

The site is listed on the heritage at risk register as having 'extensive significant problems' and is vulnerable from plough damage.[2]

Mosaics

H. Robson retained the mosaics he discovered in the ground, and built a shed over them to display them to the public. By the 1960s frost damage was causing the mosaics to deteriorate and they were transferred to the Hull and East Riding Museum where they have been on display since 1963. The 'Charioteer mosaic' was found in excavations in 1971; it depicts a quadriga and dates to the 4th century AD.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Story of the Rudston Mosaics . Hull Museums Collections . 17 October 2020.
  2. Web site: Roman villa site, Rudston - East Riding of Yorkshire (UA) . Heritage at Risk Register (Historic England) . 17 October 2020.
  3. Web site: Rudston Charioteer Mosaic . BBC: A History of the World . 2010 . 17 October 2020.