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Blackfriars Roman pavement

Blackfriars Roman pavement

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L3120. Scale drawing of the Blackfriars tessellated Roman pavement. Thought to have been laid between 70 and 85 AD during the rule of Governor Julius Agricola, the mosaic was discovered in 1832 whilst foundations were being dug for a house at 53 Jewry Wall Street. The house was subsequently demolished during the construction of the Last Main Line in the 1890s, and the railway built a tiled mosaic chamber, located beneath the platforms at Leicester Central, in which to preserve this remarkable relic of antiquity. As this plan demonstrates however, large sections of the floor did not survive into the nineteenth century. The pavement was removed to the city's Jewry Wall Museum in the mid 1970s.
Publisher
ContributorLeicester City Council
Creatorattribution - Unknown
Datecreation - Unknown
TypePlans - Floor plans
Formatdimension.H - 274mm
dimension.W - 203mm
Identifier736 ' 1977
SourceThe Jewry Wall Museum, Leicester
LanguageEN
Relationpart of - Museum History File - 736 ' 1977
CoverageLocation.Current Repository - The Jewry Wall Museum, Leicester
period - Unknown
RightsLeicester City Council
OS