Number of records found: 3466
(Note: the map is limited to 3000 records)
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Monument record: MCC7920 Colchester - Culver Street (Find Spot)A total of 4801 fish bones recovered - mainly Roman/Medieval.
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Monument record: MCC7959 Colchester - South Street, 54 (Find Spot)Roman pottery, a post-medieval clay pipe bowl (mid C17 Civil War type) and animal bones found during work om foundations for an extension to a private house in ?1984.
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Monument record: MCC8209 West Bergholt-north of Colchester Road (Find Spot)Spread of material mainly Roman (?first and second centuries) including Roman fine wares, amphora, tile and flue tile.
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Monument record: MCC8522 Colchester - High Street (Monument)Foundations are medieval or early post medieval.
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Monument record: MCC89 Post-medieval well, the Red Lion Hotel, Colchester Post-medieval Well, the Red Lion Hotel, Colchester (Element)Post-medieval well constructed of septaria with some tile fragments, recorded in 1988.
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Monument record: MCC100 Element Group, Angel Yard, Colchester (Element Group)Late 1st-century and early 2nd-century pits, midden and hearth, Anglo-Saxon pits and 11th to 14th-century robber trenches, pits, hearth, gullies and post-holes, recorded during excavations between 1986 and 1989.
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Monument record: MCC151 12 High Street, Colchester (site of) (Monument)Medieval House of rebuilt c.1700 date but retaining medieval cellar, now demolished.
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Monument record: MCC7640 Near Mile End (Monument)Late C12-early C13 kiln site excavated in advance of the diversion of Mile End - Nayland Road during the Colchester Northern by-pass scheme.
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Monument record: MCC9203 ?Roman burial at 38-40 Crouch Street, Colchester (Element)During the excavation of the north lift shaft pit a small quantity of human bone was recovered near the base of the excavation, during a watching brief and excavation in advance of redevelopment at 38-42 Crouch Street, Colchester, on the site of the (later) medieval Crouched Friars friary (Grave 53, find number 127). As no burials were located during the watching brief on the central or west areas of the site and all of the medieval burials were located on the west side of the site it appears likely that this bone represents a disturbed Roman inhumation. A small number of Roman inhumation burials were located just to the west of the current site during the 1988 excavation (CAR 9, 247-48) and a larger number were excavated to the south of the current site during excavations in advance of the construction of the inner relief road in 1971 (CAR 9, 236-41).
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Monument record: MCC439 St John's Abbey, Colchester (Monument)11th century Abbey, founded in 1096 by Eudo Dapifer and dissolved 1538. The most significant surviving element is the N. gatehouse (see MCC415), probably C15 in date, with parts of the original C12 precinct wall surviving along Mersea Road, Napier Road and Flagstaff Road (see MCC441). The site of the Abbey Church is recorded by archaeological investigations (see MCC419, MCC3067).