The name may mean 'Estate of the family/descendants of Sullonios', Sullonios being a personal name which is not known from any other source.[2] However, it could refer to a geographical feature.[1]
Location dispute
Research on Sulloniacis began in 1937. Since then, several small-scale excavations have found well-preserved remains of 14 kilns and workshops, clay extraction pits, puddling holes, wells, preparation floors and large accumulations of kiln waste. Evidence showed it had been occupied since AD 60 with production reaching a peak towards the end of the First Century AD. After pottery production ended around AD 160, it became a domestic settlement until the Fourth Century AD. This settlement being Sulloniacis mentioned in the Second Century AD Antonine Itinerary.[3]
However, senior British archaeologist Harvey Sheldon, a specialist on Roman London from the Museum of London, has challenged the claim that the site found at Brockley Hill is Sulloniacis. Aside from the evidence of pottery production and some domestic buildings, modern excavations have failed to find any remains of mutationes (stations for changing horses) or mansiones (accommodation for official travellers). Sheldon suggested several alternative locations, particularly one further south in the vicinity of Edgware Road in Burnt Oak Broadway, a location where the Hendon and District Archaeological Society has already found Roman remains nearby.[1][4]
However it is feasible that all these sites were within the boundaries of the estate named Sulloniacis, together with a possible Roman occupation site nearby on the hill at Hendon.[4]
123Sheldon, Harvey (1996). "In Search of Sulloniacis". In Bird, Joanna; Hassall, Mark; Sheldon; Harvey (eds.). Interpreting Roman London. Oxbow Books. pp.233–241. ISBN1 900188 02 3.
↑A.L.F. Rivet and Colin Smith (1981). The place-names of Roman Britain. Book Club Associates.
↑"SULLONIACAE". www.pastscape.org.uk. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
12Pamela Taylor, ed. (1989). A Place In Time – The London Borough of Barnet up to c. 1500. Hendon and District Archaeological Society. ISBN0950305065.
↑Hewlett, Jan; etal. (1997). Nature Conservation in Barnet. London Ecology Unit. p.67. ISBN1 871045 27 4.
Further reading
Applebaum, Shimon (1951). Sulloniacae, 1950: Excavations at Brockley Hill. Transactions of the London and Middlesex Archaeological Society. Bishopsgate Institute.