The area around the village is of significant archaeological importance, as the find-spot of the
Hoxne Hoard of Roman treasure, very early finds of handaxes and as the type site for the
Hoxnian Stage ("Hoxnian Interglacial"). In 1797,
John Frere (1740-1807) found flint hand tools twelve feet deep in
Hoxne Brick Pit, and he was the first person to recognise ancient tools as being man-made. One of his
hand axes is in the
British Museum. His letter to the
Society of Antiquaries, read on 22 June 1797 and published in the Society's journal
Archaeologia in 1800, argued for the antiquity of these
handaxes as "even beyond the present world," in a period now recognised as belonging to the Lower
Paleolithic Age. Frere argued that these "weapons" were coincident with nearby extinct elephant fossils, in strata at the site of what is now known to be a
Middle Pleistocene lake formed during the
Great Interglacial geological warming period in Europe. Accordingly, in Britain that entire period is called "Hoxnian," signifying its identification there, based on evidence from undisturbed layers of pollens from plants and trees found at Frere's site in the 1950s (notably by
Richard Gilbert West), which established the cycle of warming and cooling and defined the stages of the Great Interglacial. Teams headed by the
University of Chicago made extensive excavations at Frere's site for five years between 1971 and 1978. They confirmed the date of the handaxes as ca 400,000 years BP, coincident with the
Swanscombe finds, which, unlike the Hoxne, include human remains. Subsequent research by the
Ancient Human Occupation of Britain team has confirmed the presence of these ancestors of the Neanderthals as occurring towards the terminal, cooling phase of the Interglacial period, which, according to
Chris Stringer, "came to an end,...taking with it the lush river valleys, forests and grasslands on which the herds of horses and deer, and their hunters, relied. Ice sheets returned...to the north-west of Europe...and a new pattern of episodic occupation was set in motion," lasting over three hundred thousand years. Hoxne Brick Pit is a geological
Site of Special Scientific Interest, but it has been filled in and a house been built on part of it. ==Hoxne Hoard==