Articolo pubblicato su Artnet News,
While the Leicester Cathedral undergoes major restoration work, excavations around its grounds have uncovered surprising evidence that points to its ancient past.
Researchers from the University of Leicester Archaeological Services (ULAS), who are excavating the area around the church as part of the Leicester Cathedral Revealed project, have discovered a semi-subterranean structure nearly 10 feet below ground, at the eastern end of the cathedral. Within the 13-by-13-foot space, they found painted stone walls and the broken base of an altar stone.
“What we’re likely looking at here is a private place of worship, either a family shrine or a cult room where a small group of individuals shared in private worship,” said Matthew Morris, the ULAS project officer who is leading the dig.
“It would have been the primary site for sacrifice and offerings to the gods,” he said, “and a key part of their religious ceremonies.”
In the late 3rd or 4th century, the chamber was deliberately dismantled and infilled, as indicated by the site’s rubble.
The Leicester Cathedral Revealed project has also turned up more than 1,100 burial remains dating from the 11th to 19th century, in addition to artifacts including coins, hair pins, and pottery shards from the Anglo-Saxon period.
Leicester was once home to a Roman settlement, Ratae Corieltauvorum, which, as indicated by a major excavation in 2016, contained elaborately decorated houses, public baths, an open marketplace, and two temples. The ULAS team is hoping this latest project might provide a window into the region’s deep history, perhaps going back to the early Iron Age.
“The project allowed us to venture into an area of Leicester that we rarely have the opportunity to investigate, and it certainly did not disappoint,” said John Thomas, deputy director of ULAS.
With further analysis and study, he added: “We’ll have a much clearer idea of what was happening on the site in the Roman period, when the parish church of St. Martins was founded, and a unique insight into the story of Leicester through its residents who were buried here for over 800 years.”