Record Details
| NHER Number: | 69158 |
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| Type of record: | Monument |
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| Name: | Medieval and post-medieval burials, churchyard of St Mary's Church |
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Summary
Churchyard of St Mary’s Church (NHER 1657). A watching brief maintained during the excavation of a soakaway and various water pipe trenches in 2021 recorded a number of articulated burials. In many cases only a broad medieval to post-medieval date could be suggested, although one probable shroud burial was most likely medieval and a number associated with coffins would have been post-medieval. Unstratified finds included disarticulated human remains, several prehistoric worked flints and a small number of Roman, Early Saxon and medieval pottery sherds.
Images - none
Location
| Grid Reference: | TF 7650 3697 |
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| Map Sheet: | TF73NE |
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| Parish: | DOCKING, WEST NORFOLK, NORFOLK |
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Full description
October 2021. Watching Brief.
Monitoring of drainage improvement works and installation of foul drain connection for new internal toilets.
These works demonstrated the presence of relatively deep cemetery soils and uncovered multiple burials of probable medieval to post-medieval date.
A total of 12 grave cuts were recorded within a soakaway trench dug to the north-west of the church, with articulated remains encountered at depths of c.0.85m to 1m below the modern ground surface. The earliest internment had probably been a shroud burial and was most likely medieval in date. The later burials included a number that were associated with evidence for coffins and therefore almost certainly post-medieval. These included adults, two adjacent child burials and two neonatal burials. Several dress pins were associated with these coffin burials and a copper nail found with a neonatal burial had possible been used as a textile pin.
The narrow service trench excavated between the north aisle of the church and Chequers Street encountered 18 articulated burials, the majority of which lay at depths of between c.0.75m and 1.2m – the one notable exception between an adult and an adjacent neonatal individual found at a depth of just 0.4m (potentially the interment of a mother and newborn). None of these burials were associated with evidence for coffins or other grave furniture, suggesting they were most likely of medieval to early post-medieval date. Approximately 250 disarticulated fragments of human bone were recovered during the excavation of this trench.
Service runs excavated to the north of the tower had a maximum depth of 0.75m and encountered no burials.
The excavated trenches exposed the stepped footings of the church's 19th-century north aisle in two locations. Connection holes on the inside of the church disturbed only modern brick rubble beneath the concrete flooring.
Unstratified finds recovered from the cemetery soils included prehistoric worked flints, a Roman pottery sherd, three Early Saxon pottery sherds, a small number of medieval pottery sherds, a piece of medieval painted window glass, a late post-medieval cufflink, a copper alloy droplet, pieces of lead waste and oyster shells.
All human remains collected during the works were retained on site and then reburied within three separate slots.
See report (S1) for further details.
An archive associated with this work has been deposited with Norwich Castle Museum (NWHCM : 2022.54).
P. Watkins (HES), 28 May 2025.
Monument Types
- FINDSPOT (Late Mesolithic to Early Neolithic - 7000 BC to 3001 BC)
- FINDSPOT (Early Neolithic to Late Bronze Age - 4000 BC to 701 BC)
- FINDSPOT (Roman - 43 AD to 409 AD)
- FINDSPOT (Early Saxon - 410 AD to 650 AD)
- EXTENDED INHUMATION (Medieval - 1066 AD to 1539 AD)
- EXTENDED INHUMATION (Medieval to 19th Century - 1066 AD to 1900 AD)
- FINDSPOT (Medieval - 1066 AD to 1539 AD)
- GRAVE (Medieval - 1066 AD to 1539 AD)
- GRAVE (Medieval to 19th Century - 1066 AD to 1900 AD)
- INHUMATION CEMETERY (Medieval to 19th Century - 1066 AD to 1900 AD)
- EXTENDED INHUMATION (Post Medieval - 1540 AD to 1900 AD)
- FINDSPOT (Post Medieval - 1540 AD to 1900 AD)
- GRAVE (Post Medieval - 1540 AD to 1900 AD)
Associated Finds
- METAL WORKING DEBRIS (Unknown date)
- OYSTER SHELL (Unknown date)
- DEBITAGE (Prehistoric - 1000000 BC? to 42 AD?)
- FLAKE (Late Mesolithic to Early Neolithic - 7000 BC to 3001 BC)
- FLAKE (Early Neolithic to Late Bronze Age - 4000 BC to 701 BC)
- POT (Roman - 43 AD to 409 AD)
- POT (Early Saxon - 410 AD to 650 AD)
- HUMAN REMAINS (Medieval to 19th Century - 1066 AD to 1900 AD)
- METAL WORKING DEBRIS (Medieval to 19th Century - 1066 AD? to 1900 AD?)
- POT (Medieval - 1066 AD to 1539 AD)
- WASTE (Medieval to 19th Century - 1066 AD? to 1900 AD?)
- WINDOW GLASS (Medieval - 1066 AD to 1539 AD)
- COFFIN FITTING (Post Medieval - 1540 AD to 1900 AD)
- CUFF LINK (Post Medieval - 1540 AD to 1900 AD)
- NAIL (Post Medieval - 1540 AD to 1900 AD)
- PIN (Post Medieval - 1540 AD to 1900 AD)
Protected Status - none
Sources and further reading
| --- | Secondary File: Secondary File. |
| <S1> | Unpublished Contractor Report: Emery, G. 2022. Archaeological Monitoring at St Mary’s Church in Docking, Norfolk. Norvic Archaeology. 155. |
Related records
| 1657 | Part of: St Mary's Church, Docking (Building) |