Walk around the remains of the villa and visit the site museum which displays many of the fascinating objects found on the site and shows what life was like for the Roman Britons who lived here over 1600 years ago.
Parking
On site parkingParking (free)
Price Details
Child ticket
(Child)
Price: £1.50
Concession ticket
(Concession)
Price: £1.50
Family 2+2
(Family)
Price: £7.00
Adult ticket
(Adult)
Price: £2.50
Opening
21 Mar 2010 to 30 Sep 2010
Monday 10:30-18:00
Tuesday 10:30-18:00
Wednesday 10:30-18:00
Thursday 10:30-18:00
Friday 10:30-18:00
Saturday 10:30-18:00
Sunday 10:30-18:00
Visit Details
Toilets
Groups accepted
Min group size
Max group size
Approx length of visit
Pets accepted (other than service dogs)
Special group rates
TIC staff admitted free
Rockbourne is near Fordingbridge in a picturesque and peaceful part of Hampshire close to the New Forest. The Roman villa once stood in the centre of a large farming estate, and is the largest known villa in the area. Its history spans the period from the Iron Age to the 5th century AD.
Today you can walk around the remains of the villa and visit the site museum which displays many of the fascinating objects found on the site and shows what life was like for the Roman Britons who lived here over 1600 years ago.
The villa site includes bath houses, living quarters, farm buildings and workshops. Visitors can see the best mosaics, part of the underfloor heating system and the outline of the villa's forty rooms.
On the site of the villa the best preserved foundations have been left visible, together with two mosaic floors and a hypocaust (heating system). The rest of the site is grassed over, with gravel pathways making the position of walls and showing the outline of buildings.
Rockbourne Roman Villa was discovered in 1942 by a farmer digging out a ferret who found oyster shells and tiles. Local antiquarian, the local amateur archaeologist AT Morley Hewitt recognised its significance and devoted the next 30 years to unearthing the villa.
In 1972 a purpose-built site museum was created to display the important collection of artefacts found during the excavations. In 1979 the site was taken over by Hampshire County Council Museums Service. and modern displays created.
Location
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