Chedworth Roman Villa
Chedworth Roman Villa (near Cirencester) was discovered in 1864- and one of the charms of the site- with its mock-Tudor custodian's house and museum- is that it has been preserved very much as its finders left it. It is as much a monument to Victorian archaeology- on the cusp between gentlemanly antiquarianism and modern science- as it is to the Roman past.
It was raining heavily when we were there. Ailz chose to stay in the car, but I borrowed an umbrella from visitors' centre and sloshed my way round.

The Museum

The Nymphaeum

One of several mosaics (from the school of Corinium)

A huntsman god.
It was raining heavily when we were there. Ailz chose to stay in the car, but I borrowed an umbrella from visitors' centre and sloshed my way round.
The Museum
The Nymphaeum
One of several mosaics (from the school of Corinium)
A huntsman god.
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I so enjoy the photos you take on your travels around Britain!
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Not everyone (see above) enjoys the Victorian cottage, but I think it's rather sweet.
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Now that it's full of pondweed, the nymphaeum looks as though it might be inhabited.
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It's also lovely that they have left artifacts in a museum on site. At Italica, except for mosaic floors, they've moved all teh good sculptures and other things to the Achaeological Museum a good 15 km away in Seville.
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Love the mosaics. I keep living in hope that I can track down the Roman villa which has a locally made mosaic of a really goofy wolf. We're talking about something which looks like it's been done by a four-year, old, but it has a certain charm...
It might be Lullingstone...
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Spent five hours in the railway station there once and nearly lost the will to live...
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The mosaic is in situ and has had a shed built over it for protection. I had my back to it (roughly speaking) when I took the picture of the "Tudor" museum.
The carving is one of the museum's exhibits.
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