THE immediate neighbourhood of Allington Castle appears to have been a
very ancient site of human habitation. It lies close to what must have
been an important ford over the Medway, at a point which was approximately
the head of low-tide navigation. The road from the east, which debouches
on the right bank of the river close beside the present Malta Inn, led
straight to the ford, and its continuation on the other bank can be traced
as a deep furrow through the Lock Wood, and almost as far as the church,
though in part it has recently been obliterated by the dejection of quarry
debris. This ancient road may be traced up to the Pilgrims’ Way, from
which it branched off. In the neighbourhood of the castle, at points not
exactly recorded, late Celtic burials have been discovered containing
remains of the Aylesford type. Where there were burials there was no doubt
a settlement.
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In Roman days the site was likewise well occupied, and the
buried ruins of a Roman villa are marked on the ordnance map in the field
west of the castle. The site seems to be indicated by a level place on the
sloping hill, and when the land in question falls into my hands I propose
to make the researches necessary to reveal the situation and character of
the villa. Roman interments have also been discovered by the quarrymen at
points both north-west and south of the supposed villa site, so that
probably the neighbourhood was settled in Roman days. There can hardly be
any doubt of the object of the settlement. It was probably a village of
quarrymen, and the villa was the residence of the overseer or owner of the
quarry.
It will be remembered that the Roman wall of London
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