Faversham Stone Chapel, Faversham, Kent

This is a medieval chapel built on top of a Roman mausoleum – a very rare occurrence. The Roman building was excavated during the 19th century and again in the 1960s and 1970s. This building has been interpreted as a Romano-British mausoleum, a tomb standing above ground. Mausolea were built to contain and mark high-status burials. They often served as family tombs. Overlying this Roman building, but making use of its surviving walls, are the ruins of a mainly flint-built medieval church. The medieval builders used the Roman building as the chancel of the church, while a new nave was built to the west. There may even have been an earlier timber-built Saxon church on the site. The church was abandoned by the 1530s. This site is now in the care of English Heritage (2011). Read more.

Location

Kent Faversham

Period

Medieval (Middle Ages) (1066 - 1484)

Tags

english heritage chapel church religion faith roman