Yorkshire Post

WHERE IS CITY’S AMPHITHEAT­RE?

Hunt on for home of York’s gladiators ... in a car park, of course

- DAVID BEHRENS COUNTY CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: david.behrens@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

IT WOULD not be the first time a piece of England’s past had been swallowed whole by a car park.

After the discovery of the remains of the Yorkist king Richard III beneath the Tarmac of a parking lot in Leicester, experts will gather next month in his spiritual home to try to determine whether a similar site could hold the key to York’s most enduring Roman mystery.

Only about 30 vehicles can squeeze into the university-owned car park that sits behind King’s Manor, between the art gallery and the Yorkshire Museum, just inland from the River Ouse.

Yet the site could once have been the setting for gladiatori­al contests and even mock sea battles, an archaeolog­y expert said yesterday.

No-one knows for sure if there was an amphitheat­re in the city the Romans called Eboracum, but the evidence is overwhelmi­ng. Every other legionary fortress had one, and a large cemetery on the outskirts of York appears to have been the burial ground for dozens of gladiators.

But the amphitheat­re’s location has never been clear. The discovery of the remains of a similar structure in Chester has served only to deepen the mystery.

The latest search will begin on June 3, overseen by the archaeolog­ical investigat­or Professor Stewart Ainsworth from Chester University.

Tim Sutherland, a lecturer on battlefiel­ds and archeology at the University of York, led the researcher­s to the King’s Manor site, having become convinced that it could have been the

A city of York’s importance would have had an amphitheat­re. Professor Stewart Ainsworth from Chester University.

amphitheat­re’s location when he noticed that the surroundin­g buildings had over the years tilted in the direction of a depression.

“We need to know what the hollow is,” he said. “We are hoping to start something that could become very big news indeed.”

He and Prof Ainsworth, alongside council, university and heritage experts, will use traditiona­l methods and aerial photograph­s of the topography to build up a picture of what lies beneath the land, whose present Grade I listed buildings were constructe­d to house the abbots of St Mary’s.

Prof Ainsworth, who also appears on the TV series Time Team, said: “With the ruins of the abbey remaining relatively untouched in terms of modern developmen­t, the area is one of the few sites in York which has not been explored in recent times.”

He added: “A city of York’s importance during the Roman period would have had an amphitheat­re. As well as a venue for often violent entertainm­ent it was also a symbol of imperial power and would have probably been positioned near the river to show those arriving to the city its importance and strength.”

Prof Ainsworth said the discovery of Chester’s amphitheat­re, whose existence was unknown until 1929, could serve as a model for York. Excavation­s there in 2004 revealed two stone-built amphitheat­res with wooden seating, one similar to the structure at Pompeii, with stairs on the rear wall giving access to the upper tiers of seats.

Mr Sutherland and Prof Ainsworth will host a presentati­on on the Chester discovery at the Yorkshire Museum as part of the York Eboracum Roman Festival, which runs from June 1-4.

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 ??  ?? DIGGING FOR HISTORY: Clockwise from top, a skeleton, believed to be a gladiator in Roman York; Russell Crowe demonstrat­es the art of combat in the film Gladiator; an aerial view of the survey site: Chester’s amphitheat­re.
DIGGING FOR HISTORY: Clockwise from top, a skeleton, believed to be a gladiator in Roman York; Russell Crowe demonstrat­es the art of combat in the film Gladiator; an aerial view of the survey site: Chester’s amphitheat­re.

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