The Mint Wall.
The Mint Wall is an extremely rare survival in Britain of a non-defensive
Roman wall still standing to an impressive height above ground.
The mint wall was part of the outer wall of the basilica,or hall,which in
turn formed the northern range of the forum complex.The wall lies in
line with the most northerly column of the colonnade.Which fronted the
east side of the forum.
Dating from around the late 2nd to early 3rd century,the fragment is
aprox 23m in length and 7m high,with another 2m below ground.
At vertical intervals,there are decorative tile courses,which also
served to reinforce the wall.Put-log holes can be seen,which supported
the scaffolding while the wall was under construction.The pantile
coping was added in 1992.
A tessellated pavement was found immediately south of the wall in
the 1850`s.It is now believed to have been part of the internal floor of
the basilica.
William Stukeley.an 18th- Century antiquarian from Lincolnshire,
believed a mint had excisted and named this the mint wall on his
1720`s maps of Lincoln.The name stuck,even though it has been
proved to be erroneous.
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