Abstract

During 1983, in advance of redevelopment, archaeologists from the Museum of London's Department of Greater London Archaeology investigated the site once occupied by the palace of the medieval Bishops of Winchester, 250 metres west of the southern end of London Bridge. The excavations revealed a series of Roman buildings dating from the first to the fourth centuries a.d. , one of which yielded the painted wall-plaster which forms the subject of the present article.

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