EXETER, ENGLAND—Devon Live reports that excavations in southwestern England have uncovered traces of the sixteenth-century Columbjohn mansion on the grounds of the Killerton estate, which once belonged to the Acland family. Unused musket balls found at the site may have belonged to the troops loyal to King Charles I who were garrisoned there during the English Civil Wars. The mansion was later taken over by Parliamentarians, who used it as a headquarters during the siege of the city of Exeter between December 1642 and January 1643. Oliver Cromwell is thought to have stayed in Columbjohn in October 1645. After 1680, the Acland family moved from Columbjohn to nearby Killerton, which became the main house on the estate, and was renovated in the Georgian style in the eighteenth century. Columbjohn was demolished in the 1840s. For more on the English Civil Wars, go to "After the Battle."
Excavation Unearths Traces of 16th-Century Mansion in England
News June 10, 2024
Recommended Articles
Features July/August 2026
Egypt's First Queen
How a trailblazing ruler pulled her realm back from the brink
Features July/August 2026
Secrets of the Serpent
Is a Native American origin story embedded in Ohio’s colossal earthwork?
Features July/August 2026
Slinging Insults
Greek and Roman soldiers fired pointed barbs at their enemies
Features July/August 2026
Inside Africa’s Houses of Stone
Archaeologists are rethinking how kings shared power beyond the great capitals of medieval Zimbabwe
-
Features July/August 2024
The Assyrian Renaissance
Archaeologists return to Nineveh in northern Iraq, one of the ancient world’s grandest imperial capitals
(Land of Nineveh Archaeological Project) -
Features July/August 2024
A Dynasty Born in Fire
How an upstart Maya king forged a new social order amid chaos
(Courtesy Proyecto Arqueológico Ucanal) -
Features July/August 2024
Making a Roman Emperor
A newly discovered monumental arch in Serbia reveals a family’s rise to power in the late second century a.d.
(Serbia’s Institute of Archaeology) -
Features July/August 2024
Rise and Fall of Tiwanaku
New dating techniques are unraveling the mystery of a sacred Andean city