unexcavated, in Fawkham parish which is thought also to
be that of an Iron Age farm. The Ash farm may or may not have been already
in existence when Julius Caesar made his forays against Britain.
It has long been known that the valleys of the Darent and the
Medway were colonised in Roman times and, as the years go by, increasing
evidence is found of Roman or Romano-British occupation of the uplands
between those valleys. In Ash the most important discovery from that era
was made in 1914, when a Roman villa was found on land then farmed by Mr
Gorge Day and now within the confines of New Ash Green. The villa was
excavated at the time and again after the commencement of the New Ash
Green development. From subsequent discoveries made in its vicinity, there
appears to have been a more extensive occupation than was at first
thought.
Whether or not a Romano-British presence continued after, or
even until, the withdrawal of the Roman legions, it is with the Saxon
settlement that the history of Ash, as such, begins. Allegedly the
Saxons |
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eschewed buildings, or ruins of buildings, left by
their predecessors. Whether or not such was the case, it seems likely that
in Ash the settlers built their homes on virgin land some short distance
from whatever Roman ruins then remained. Presumably, the feature of their
new habitat which most impressed them was a prominent ash tree or,
possibly, a prevalence of trees of that kind.
The Saxons seem to have made their first serious inroads into
this country about the middle of the fifth century, but there is no
knowing how soon, or how long, after that they arrived in Ash, or whether
as pagans or Christians. Christianity came early to West Kent, the diocese
of Rochester being founded in the year 604. A Saxon church was almost
certainly built at some time in Ash, probably on the site where the
present church stands. The church is not mentioned in Domesday, but in the
Textus Roffensis, the ancient charter book of the mother church of
Rochester, Ash (Aeiace) is |