Excavation in the garden of Rapsley, Ewhurst, and in the adjacent field, revealed a small Romano-British villa occupied from the 2nd to 4th centuries AD. ...
Remains of a Roman Tripartite corridor villa 125ft by 60ft., found in 1847, excavated 1864-1893. Finds included patches of tessellated pavement, Samian, Castor and coarse pottery, glass, iron and bronze objects, and coins. Indications suggest the villa ...
Roman Villa discovered in 1915. In 1939-40, the building was excavated by S.S. Frere and A.W.G. Lowther. The site was occupied during the latter part of the Iron Age, with a tripartite corridor villa constructed at the site c.250 A.D.. Part of the bath ...
The site of a Roman villa was discovered in 1883 in a field near Chiddingfold. Extensive foundations of rough sandstone were seen, the position of the walls being clearly shown, though much had been taken away. The general plan seems to be very similar ...
Remains of buildings, possibly a Roman Villa, found on Earlswood Common near the spot where a Bronze Age axe was found (HER 884) during the construction of a turnpike road in 1817. The building which consisted of six apartments, with a paved Atrium at th ...
Roman Villa near Abinger. Four mosaic floored rooms, and the atrium and baths were excavated in 1877 and again in 1914. Eleven dateable coins were found, ranging from Hadrian to the late 4th Century AD. ...
Remains of Roman Villa. 2nd century to 4th century. Partly destroyed, built up walling of flint and cement marking the lines of the foundations of a double and parallel walled enclosure, 5 metres square. Double corridor type of villa with a set of bath ...
Scheduled Monument
Survives mainly in the form of buried foundations, the villa complex represents the domestic focus of the villa estate, and includes the remains of at least two buildings, north of Chelsham Court Farm, around 1km west of the Roman Lond ...
A double corridor type Roman villa, excavated by the Surrey Archaeological Society in 1914. It had a set of paths at the eastern end. Finds include 2nd - 4th century pottery and coins ranging from AD 313-78. Several finds from the site are on display i ...
A Roman villa on Walton Heath was first discovered circa 1772 and was subsequently excavated in 1856, 1882, and 1948. Tesselated pavements, remains of a hypocaust, and a probable corridor were found. The villa may have been enclosed by a ditch. Pottery ...
Roman Villa and Bathhouse (1st-2nd Century). In the north of Ashtead Common a number of earthworks and other features surround the site of a Roman villa. The villa is a rare type of corridor villa, with considerable evidence that it adjoined a large scale ...