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Wixoe

Coordinates: 52°03′32″N 0°30′14″E / 52.059°N 0.504°E / 52.059; 0.504
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Wixoe
St Leonard's Church, Wixoe
Wixoe is located in Suffolk
Wixoe
Wixoe
Location within Suffolk
Population140 (2005)[1]
145 (2011)[2]
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townSudbury
Postcode districtCO10
PoliceSuffolk
FireSuffolk
AmbulanceEast of England
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Suffolk
52°03′32″N 0°30′14″E / 52.059°N 0.504°E / 52.059; 0.504

Wixoe is a village and civil parish in the West Suffolk district of Suffolk in eastern England. Located on the northern bank of the River Stour, two miles south-east of Haverhill, in 2005 its population was 140.[1] It consists largely of Victorian cottages along a narrow lane. There is a church of 12th-century origin, St Leonard's, much restored in the 1880s.[3] It was recorded in the Domesday Book,[4] at 600 acres one of the smallest parishes in the hundred of Risbridge. There are some 13 listed buildings, including a 19th-century bridge and a water mill.[5]

The Great Eastern Railway ran through the village, part of the Stour Valley line from 1865 until its closure in March 1967 under the Beeching 'axe'. The nearest stations were Sturmer to the west and Stoke-by-Clare to the east.[6] The track bed and embankments remain clearly visible.

The Roman town

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Roman remains have been frequently located in the vicinity, mostly on the Essex side of the Stour and a settlement has long been proposed.[7] In 1803 close to Watsoe Bridge TL 706 430, an earthwork enclosure was identified as a 'camp', along with two cemeteries.[8] In 1973 aerial photography showed many large pits, two streets and a building with flint foundations, close to the river.[9] Fieldwalking and metal detection over many years revealed multiple finds of coins and other artefacts: brooches, figurines, pottery. The location has been identified as one of eight small Roman towns in Suffolk, including Icklingham, Long Melford and Felixstowe, that of Wixoe being estimated to occupy 12 hectares.[10]

In 2011, on the Suffolk side of the Stour, archaeological digs and magnetic survey, as part of the Abberton pipeline installation, have revealed a small town occupied from 100-400 AD, occupying a position of some local strategic significance because of its road connections. The Via Devana from Chester to Colchester, a military track, passed through. Another road led east from Wixoe, on the north side of the Stour, passing through Long Melford, before heading north-east to Baylham and possibly to Dunwich. A third road led north, probably towards Icklingham and the Icknield Way. A fourth, close to the Ains Ford, is surmised towards the major Roman fort at Great Chesterford, on a more southerly section of the Icknield Way. No clear trace of these roads immediately outside Wixoe can now be seen: the agger in the form of valley side terraces has either been eroded by ploughing or incorporated into field boundaries, as is typical across East Anglia.[11] It is possible that the Stour was navigable as far as Wixoe by flat-bottomed boats; a wharf area may be surmised.

Other features and artefacts date from the 1st century, increasing in the 3rd century and declining in the early 4th century (when Rome withdrew from Britain): a range of domestic buildings and courtyards, boundary ditches, industrial ovens and hearths with evidence of copper, lead and iron workings, cobbled surfaces, pits for quarrying and storage, burials, streets.[12] The estimated size has now been raised to 24 hectares.[13] The town seems to be a rural commercial centre, with industrial production relying on local timber (charcoal) and imported metals. It fits into the pattern of small towns with a hinterland of 8–10 km in radius, representing a day's journey; five other Roman towns lie within 15–25 km.[14] Its size and commercial activity increased in the 3rd century as did many other towns; remains of a defensive ditch may also belong to that period.[15] As with other East Anglian sites, in the absence of building stone, it was timber built. It was a 'planned' settlement in the sense that, though there are limited prehistoric finds, it did not supplant an earlier settlement. Judging by the amount of material, particularly pottery and coins, it was probably built after the Boudiccan revolt and the sacking of Camulodunum (Colchester). This is the biggest Roman find in Suffolk for 25 years.[16] The final report of this excavation is expected in 2013.

References

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  1. ^ a b Estimates of Total Population of Areas in Suffolk Archived 19 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine Suffolk County Council: this page is no longer available - update from Census 2011 when available
  2. ^ "Civil Parish population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 30 August 2016.
  3. ^ Suffolk Churches website: Simon Knott
  4. ^ http://domesdaymap.co.uk/place/TL7142/wixoe/ Online copy
  5. ^ British Listed Buildings website
  6. ^ Any Wallis, Stour Valley Railway Part 2 Through Time Clare to Shelford and Audeley End, Amberley Publishing 2011 ISBN 978 1-4456-0473-2, pp 13-24
  7. ^ http://www.roman-britain.org/places/wixoe.htm Roman British Organisation
  8. ^ Walford T, An account of a Roman military way, in Essex, and of Roman antiquities found near it, Archaeologica 14, 1803, pp 141-176
  9. ^ St Joseph J K, Air reconnaissance in Roman Britain, 1973-76, Journal of Roman Studies, 1977, 67, 125-61
  10. ^ Jane Plouviez, ‘A hole in the distribution map: the characteristic of small towns in Suffolk’, in Brown, AE (ed), Roman Small Towns in Eastern England and beyond, Oxford: Oxbow Books 1995, pp69-80
  11. ^ Ivan Margary, Roman Roads in Britain, John Baker 1973, 3rd ed. ISBN 0-212-97001-1 pp 243-277
  12. ^ Oxford Archaeology Report No 1283: Excavations at Wixoe Roman Town (Wix 022), September 2012 update
  13. ^ Oxford Archaeology, op cit. p58
  14. ^ Oxford Archaeology, op cit p61
  15. ^ Burnham, Barry, 'Small Towns: the British perspective', in Brown, AE (ed), Roman Small Towns in Eastern England and beyond, Oxford: Oxbow Books 1995, pp 7-14
  16. ^ Oxford Archaeology, op cit, pp 57-73
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