Post-holes and building negatives attest to occupation during the La Tène period (50-30 BC). Given the current state of excavation, no plan can be proposed. At the end of the 1st century BC, building flashings, ranging in size from 56 to 150 m2, predate the extensive winery. With no occupancy soil or associated objects, it’s difficult to assign them a definitive function. However, rubbish dumps located on the outskirts of these buildings are suggestive of habitation (numerous fragments of dolia, amphorae and ceramics). The complex was probably surrounded by a ditch, perhaps with a palisade.
During the Augustan period (27 B.C.-14 A.D.), a small villa was built, consisting of a series of three rooms aligned east-west and opening onto a courtyard to the south. The façade is lined with sidewalks and galleries.
Radier of the hearth floor. Arthur Millet, Inrap The building fits like a "nesting doll" inside the courtyard of the large winery that will succeed it. One of the future winery’s basins encroaches on its easternmost room.
On the platform, dark spots mark the negatives of the binoculars (poles supporting the presses). Inrap -Les épaves racontent l’Histoire - Economic and cultural contacts between the Mediterranean and the Frankish world in the early Middle Ages (9th-10th c.)
Alignment of dolia negatives (footprints of disappeared dolia) ( dolia: large earthenware jars used for storage and holding liquids (wine, oils). Laure Cassagne, InrapView of the Laveyron excavation. christel Fraisse Inrap