The original Janus head bronze casting was found during emergency excavations at Bishop’s Court, Dorchester-on-Thames, undertaken by the Oxford University Archaeological Society in 1957-58.
Years later, when the Oxford Archaeological Unit (OAU) came into existence, David Brown, who was at the time one of the trustees and the curator of Roman antiquities at the Ashmolean Museum, suggested its adoption as the Unit’s logo. The Roman god Janus, who looks both to the past and to the future, seemed to represent OAU’s qualities and vision. Mr Brown later carved a stone replica of the Janus head that has adorned all of Oxford Archaeology offices in Oxford and to this day greets visitors to current office in Osney Mead. Huge thanks go to OA alumni George Lambrick, Paul Booth and Tom Hassall for sharing their memories of the very beginning of OA.