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Part of a minor Romano-British villa at Long Cross is a scheduled ancient monument located in Gloucestershire. The site represents the remains of a modest villa complex dating to the Roman period of Britain, when such agricultural estates formed the backbone of rural settlement and land management across the province. The visible archaeological evidence indicates domestic and possibly ancillary structures characteristic of Romano-British villa architecture, though the site now survives only in fragmentary form. Like many villas of its class, it reflects the integration of Romano-British landholding patterns into the broader economic and social structures of Roman Britain during the first to fourth centuries AD.
Part of a minor Romano-British villa at Long Cross is a scheduled monument protected by Historic England under reference 1006999. View the official record →
Part of a minor Romano-British villa at Long Cross is a scheduled ancient monument located in Gloucestershire. It is designated a Scheduled Ancient Monument by Historic England (NHLE) under reference 1006999.
Part of a minor Romano-British villa at Long Cross is a Scheduled Ancient Monument, legally protected by Historic England (NHLE) — the body responsible for designating and safeguarding heritage sites in England. The official designation reference is 1006999.
Several scheduled monuments lie within 10 km, including Iron Age defended settlement 400m south of Manor Farm (5.8 km), Underfall Yard, Bristol Docks (6.6 km), Deserted medieval farmstead and part of a Romano-British field system 400m north of Fenswood Farm (7 km).
Aubrey generates in-depth historical research for any address in Britain — drawing on scheduled monument data, Domesday records, Roman heritage, PAS finds and medieval history to reveal the complete story of a landscape.
Research the area around Part of a minor Romano-British villa at Long Cross