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Hampton Court Palace Tiltyard and Bowling Alley (Time Team Palaces Special) Archaeological Evaluation Report

Ford, Ben and Sykes, Dan (2010) Hampton Court Palace Tiltyard and Bowling Alley (Time Team Palaces Special) Archaeological Evaluation Report. [Client Report] (Unpublished)

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Abstract

In March 2009,Oxford Archaeology (OA), in conjunction with Time Team, excavated a series of Archaeological Trenches within the grounds of Hampton Court Palace.
The work was commissioned by Videotext in advance of the production of a Time Team Special concerning Henry VIII's Palaces.
A total of eight trenches were excavated. These were located through a combination of documentary research and the results of geophysical survey. The first three
trenches were targeted on the assumed site of Henry VIII's northern bowling alley. The subsequent five trenches investigated the likely positions of four 'lost' towers
within the area of Henry's Tiltyard. The eastern foundation wall of Henry's bowling alley was revealed running through
Trenches 1, 2 and 3 with later, additional buttress foundations uncovered in both Trenches 1 and 3. In Trench 1 a possible western wall to the structure was also
identified beneath the existing garden wall. Evidence for the demolition and robbing of material from the bowling alley structure prior to re-landscaping of the area was
found throughout the three trenches.
In the Tiltyard area, the remains of two of the historic Tiltyard Towers were identified. In Trench 4, A north-south aligned foundation wall was recorded on the
postulated site of the North-East Tower, the twin to the sole surviving South-East Tower. The foundation had been re-used for the extant garden wall. Trench 6
yielded the north-south alignment of a further Tower foundation, possibly that of the South-West Tower. The facing of this foundation had been removed in a robbing
episode and the area re-landscaped.
Trenches 2 and 6 revealed evidence of later, possibly 17th-18th-century garden features in addition to Tudor structural features. Trenches 7 and 8 revealed only
evidence of probable 17th-18th-century garden features in the form of planting beds. Trench 5 contained no significant archaeological features or deposits

Item Type: Client Report
Subjects: Geographical Areas > English Counties > Surrey
Period > UK Periods > Post Medieval 1540 - 1901 AD
Divisions: Oxford Archaeology South > Fieldwork
Depositing User: Scott
Date Deposited: 06 Jan 2011 11:28
Last Modified: 25 May 2023 13:23
URI: http://eprints.oxfordarchaeology.com/id/eprint/440

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