Edmund Tyrell Artis - St Kyneburgha - Castor, Cambridgeshire
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member SMacB
N 52° 34.371 W 000° 20.516
30U E 680122 N 5828074
Information board on the grounds of St Kyneburgha church relating the work of Edmund Tyrell Artis who devoted much of his life to local Roman archaeology.
Waymark Code: WMVMZ5
Location: Eastern England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 05/06/2017
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member MeerRescue
Views: 3

Information board on the grounds of St Kyneburgha church relating the work of Edmund Tyrell Artis who devoted much of his life to local Roman archaeology.

The info board reads:

'Where you are standing was once the site of a huge Roman palace nearly 2,000 years ago. The second largest building excavated from Roman Britain, Castor Palace was built to impress. Perhaps the owner was a Roman governor, in charge of the state controlled Fens and trading activities at Durobrivae. The remains of this palace were found by Edmund Artis, who devoted much of his life to local Roman archaeology, eventually being buried here near the south porch of Castor Church.
Artis was the founding father of serious archaeological work in the Peterborough area. During the 1820s and beyond he made many discoveries, uncovering evidence of Roman settlement in the area. He revealed one of Roman Britain's most important pottery industries, identifying workshops and kilns at various sites. He also excavated remains of the Castor Palace, several villas and the Roman town of Durobrivae.
Artis was a man of many skills; a chef, a natural historian, an artist, a draftsman, an entrepreneur and an antiquarian. Born in Suffolk, he was sixteen when he went to London to learn how to be a confectioner and by 1816 he was House Steward for the Fitzwilliam family. Based at Milton Hall near Peterborough, Artis was given the opportunity to carry out archaeological digs using the workforce from the estate each year. He was also a friend of the local poet John Clare, who wrote fondly of Artis and his fascinating excavations.
Artis was able to illustrate his discoveries with beautiful sketches of artefacts, excavations and plans of buildings, which were published in '1828 as a book 'The Durobrivae of Antoninus'. This is a unique
record of some places that have not been excavated since his time, and is still an important reference book for archaeologists today. Artis also intended to publish a second book on his work from 1828 onwards - but this never was finished.
Edmund Artis spent the last years of his life working, researching and exploring the Roman archaeology of the area whilst living at Castor.'



"Edmund Tyrrell Artis was born at Swefling (near Saxmundham, Suffolk), the son of James and Mary Artis (nee Watling). His father was a carpenter or cabinet maker, and although Edmund was later described as being born in “easy circumstances”, his mother was illiterate, and both parents died poor.

In 1805, Edmund came to London to work for an uncle in the wine trade, but by 1811 he had opened his own shop in Dorset Street, W.1, as a confectioner. In the same year he married Elizabeth Poole at St. James, Piccadilly. She came from the Bristol area, and a year later  they had daughter, also named Elizabeth, but known as Betsy.

In 1813 it would appear that one of Edmund’s iced cakes, in the shape of a fantastic castle attracted the attention of the 4th Earl Fitzwilliam, who took him into his household, and by 1816 he had risen to the position of House Steward of the Earl’s seat at Milton  then in Northamptonshire. Artis was clearly a man of multiple talents, for in 1816 he painted  a portrait of the Earl in oils, and he made the acquaintance of John Clare the poet in 1820, who freely acknowledged the debt he owed to Artis on matters of Natural History. This interest must have been the stimulus for Artis to start collecting fossils, first from the gravels of thee river Nene terraces, and soon after from the Carboniferous deposits found in the Fitzilliam’s coal mines, principally those of  Elsecar in South Yorkshire. This led to his election as a member of the Geological Society in 1824.

Concurrently, he discovered a mosaic pavement in the churchyard at Castor, near Milton, and from then on he began a long investigation of the Roman remains of the area, and from 1823-5 published the first four parts of the current volume by subscription, and  was rewarded by being elected to the Society of Antiquaries of London.

In 1826 he published Antediluvian Phytolology, which contained illustrations of his collection of Carboniferous fossils, and in that year, he left Milton, apparently in minor disgrace over a sexual indiscretion (which was probably his second offence, a record existing of an earlier illegitimate child, known as Edmund Hales).  In October of that year, he held an auction of his Castor household effects, including a Clementi piano, and a Poussin painting, which he appears to have inherited from a relative.

His relationship with the Earl Fitzwilliam could not have been irretrievably damaged, since in that year, he both designed a commemorative medal of the Earl, and on quitting Milton, he bought the Doncaster Race-Club House, which was a lodging place for the ‘great and the good’ during the St. Leger race meeting each September, which was under Fitzwilliam patronage. He also became Secretary of the Race Club, which organized events. He sold his fossil collection, some of which remains today in the Natural History Museum. The remaining parts of ‘The Durobrivae’ were published in 1827 and 1828.

From then on, he acted as mâitre d’hotel in the grand manner, his crowning glory being the provision of a celebratory dinner for the Duke of Wellington in 1829. Advertisements in the Doncaster Gazette speak of his ability to deliver ‘live turtles of over 100 lbs, and ice’ during Race Week. At first the business prospered, and Artis enjoyed some considerable wealth, buying two houses in Castor, and maintaining a carriage. However, it then ran into a series of difficulties due to an over-optimistic extension of the premises, which came just as a scandal enveloped Yorkshire racing and led to the 5th. Earl Fitzwilliam withdrawing from the sport. The succession of Queen Victoria to the throne in 1837, could not have helped, for she was not an enthusiast of horse-racing, and this must have affected the whole social fabric of the races.

Apart from the marriage of Betsy in 1836, little is known of Artis in these years, but in 1838 he met with the noted London antiquary Charles Roach Smith, and they clearly became firm friends. It led to a new burst of archaeological activity, and Artis was associated with finds of Roman statuary near Kingscliffe, attended the opening of a Roman gypsum burial at York, recorded wall paintings in churches around the Castor area, and produced a number of papers discussing pottery kilns for the recently formed British Archaeological Association. It may be significant that he was then working on land owned by the Duke of Bedford, and not that of the Fitzwilliams.

In 1846 a subscription announced the impending publication of a text to ‘The Durobrivae’, but in 1847 he continued to excavate in appalling conditions at Kingscliffe, so cold that his labourers deserted him, and it would appear that he succumbed to an illness. On December 24th., 1847 he died, and he was buried just outside the porch of Castor church. His friends were unable to find sufficient notes to complete his project.

That Artis was a great man of his times is indisputable. The Phytology remained a work quoted by geologists for nearly a century after its publication, and the illustrations in the Durobrivae show that he understood stratigraphy completely. His accounts of the workings of Roman pottery kilns were unsurpassed until very recent times. He was a man of an insatiable curiosity, with acute powers of observation and deduction, blessed with great skill as an artist. As his widow wrote of him ‘everything but a poet’."

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Type of Historic Marker: Information board

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