A Roman mosaic discovered in Rutland, UK, depicts scenes from a forgotten Greek tragedy by Aeschylus rather than Homer's Iliad, highlighting cultural connections in ancient Britain. Unearthed during the 2020 lockdown, the artwork suggests Roman Britain was more integrated with Mediterranean traditions than previously thought. Researchers from the University of Leicester have detailed these findings in a new study.
The Ketton mosaic, found on a farm in Rutland, emerged in 2020 when local resident Jim Irvine noticed it during the COVID-19 lockdown. This led to excavations by the University of Leicester Archaeological Services (ULAS), supported by Historic England, in 2021 and 2022. The site, including the mosaic and surrounding Roman villa, received Scheduled Monument status due to its significance.
Initially thought to illustrate Homer's Iliad, the mosaic actually portrays moments from Aeschylus's lost tragedy Phrygians. It shows the duel between Achilles and Hector, Achilles dragging Hector's body, and King Priam ransoming his son's body with gold. The Trojan War story, as per myth, involved a ten-year conflict sparked by Helen of Sparta's abduction to Troy, ruled by Priam.
Dr. Jane Masséglia, Associate Professor in Ancient History at the University of Leicester and lead author of the study, explained the artwork's origins: "In the Ketton Mosaic, not only have we got scenes telling the Aeschylus version of the story, but the top panel is actually based on a design used on a Greek pot that dates from the time of Aeschylus, 800 years before the mosaic was laid. Once I'd noticed the use of standard patterns in one panel, I found other parts of the mosaic were based on designs that we can see in much older silverware, coins and pottery, from Greece, Turkey, and Gaul. Romano-British craftspeople weren't isolated from the rest of the ancient world, but were part of this wider network of trades passing their pattern catalogues down the generations. At Ketton, we've got Roman British craftsmanship but a Mediterranean heritage of design."
This choice of narrative would have marked the villa's owner as culturally sophisticated. Jim Irvine, the discoverer, noted: "Jane's detailed research into the Rutland mosaic imagery reveals a level of cultural integration across the Roman world that we're only just beginning to appreciate. It's a fascinating and important development that suggests Roman Britain may have been far more cosmopolitan than we often imagine."
Rachel Cubitt from Historic England added: "This fascinating new research offers a more nuanced picture of the interests and influences of those who may have lived there, and of people living across Roman Britain at this time."
Hella Eckhardt, Professor of Roman Archaeology at the University of Reading, commented: "This is an exciting piece of research, untangling the ways in which the stories of the Greek heroes Achilles and Hector were transmitted not just through texts but through a repertoire of images created by artists working in all sorts of materials, from pottery and silverware to paintings and mosaics."
The findings appear in Britannia (2025) under the title "Troy Story: The Ketton Mosaic, Aeschylus, and Greek Mythography in Late Roman Britain."