Technical

Abbey refurb reveals Bath’s hidden history

The Bath Abbey renovation works have revealed Roman and Norman archaeological finds, while an ingenious new heating system will make use of the city’s famous hot springs. Rod Sweet reports.

When the city of Bath took on its current form – from the mid-18th to the early 19th centuries – it was rather like a Georgian-era Dubai, with ambitious promoters and developer-architects eager to stamp their novel vision onto this modest town, to capitalise on a new craze for Bath’s hot springs.

As a result, Bath burst out of its ancient walls and acquired the grand character it has today, typified by neo-classical Palladian crescents, circuses, terraces and wide, sedate boulevards. But, nice as it is, this building boom obliterated many physical traces of Bath’s Roman, Saxon, Norman, Medieval and Tudor periods.

Now, an overdue refurbishment of Bath Abbey has prised open a new window onto that history, thanks to the archaeological digs that accompanied it.

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