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Politically, the Roman era in Britain began with the Claudian Conquest in A.D. 43,
and ended with the isolation of the country from the rest of the
decaying empire consequent upon the passing of northern Gaul into the
hands of the Trans-Rhenish barbarians in A.D. 406-410.
But Roman influence through intercourse with the Continent preceded the
former event, and Britain continued to be Roman after the latter event,
remaining so, harassed by foes from without and probably by dissensions
within, until the English conquest. Broadly speaking, the Roman era
lasted 450 years.
To gauge what four-and-a-half centuries may mean in the history of a
country, let the reader contrast the times of Henry the Sixth with our
own.
England was then without the printing-press, the newspaper, and a cheap
literature; without steam-power and almost without machinery; without a
postal system, railways, steamships, telephones, and gas and electric
lighting; without cotton, porcelain, vulcanite, and a host of other
familiar inventions. It helps one to realize what four-and-a-half
centuries mean, when one recalls the fact that since that time
twenty-three sovereigns have sat on the throne of England; and that
during the interval the population has increased well-nigh tenfold,
America has been discovered, our political system has been evolved, and
a vast colonial empire founded. We cannot doubt that under the Romans,
the greatest organizers of the ancient world, enormous changes were
also wrought in this country, and this is confirmed by the verdict of
both history and archaeology.
The more we contemplate the remains of Roman Britain, the more we are
impressed with the high culture they betoken. But at the outset, let
the reader who confines his attention to this local phase of Roman
archaeology, guard himself against a mischievous bias in favour of his
own country. Britain was but a small province on the fringe of a great
empire, and before its conquest was probably as little known to Italy
as central Africa was to us a quarter of a century ago. To the average
Roman, his empire was his world, and if he troubled to think of Britain
at all, he thought of it as an unexplored land on the confines of
creation, wrapped in the mists of the earth-engirdling ocean, and only
known through the reports of traders. From no ordinary campaign, in the
estimation of his countrymen, did Claudius return in A.D. 43,
to be acclaimed the Conqueror of the Ocean. "His father, Drusus
Germanicus, had sailed past Friesland to visit the Baltic and to search
for 'fresh Pillars of Hercules': 'our Drusus,' said the Romans 'was
bold enough, but Ocean kept the secret of her and his own.' But now it
was feigned that the farthest seas had been brought within the circuit
of the Empire. 'The last bars have fallen,' sang the poets, 'and earth
is girdled by a Roman Ocean.' 'The world's end is no longer the end of
the Empire, and Oceanus turns himself to look on the altars of
Claudius.' "1
As a province, Britain was never as thoroughly Romanized as Gaul. It
never attained the wealth and refinement of Italy. Its architecture was
crude compared with that of Rome. Its mosaic floors and
wall-decorations lacked the elegance and delicacy of those of Pompeii.
It had not the background of eventful history and high culture of many
of the eastern provinces: it was a land wrested from nations whom the
Romans were pleased to regard as barbarian. In a word, our country
contrasted with the heart of the empire, much as some of our
less-developed colonies contrast with England and London to-day.
As a study, the Roman era has a peculiarity which distinguishes it from
other eras through which our country has passed. Our knowledge of
pre-Roman Britain depends almost wholly upon the researches of the
archaeologist — he is there supreme.
On the other hand, the part played by him in the
elucidation of medieval times is subsidiary to that played by the
historian: he illustrates the statements of history, much as the plates
of a book illustrate the text. But the Roman era differs from both. The
literary remains relating to Britain are too few and, as a rule, too
incidental and ambiguous, for the historian to weave them into a
continuous narrative; whereas the archaeologist has a growing wealth of
material to work upon. It is a domain in which neither can dispense
with the other; and in one highly important branch of the study — the
inscriptions of tablets, altars, and tombstones — their provinces
overlap. Broadly speaking, what we know of Roman Britain is the outcome
of the joint labours of the two, and the student who approaches the
subject in the capacity of the one will soon find himself compelled by
force of circumstances to supplement his conclusions with those of the
other.
The researches of the geologist and the statements of early explorers
and Roman and later writers converge to indicate how wild a country was
Britain at the period of the conquest. The regions under cultivation
were but a fraction of the whole, and they lay mostly towards the
Continent. Dense forests in which roamed wolves, bears, wild boars, and
wild cats and other animals that still survive, alternated with bleak
moors and swamps. The atmosphere was more humid and the rainfall
heavier, than at present. "The fallen timber obstructed the streams,
the rivers were squandered in the reedy morasses, and only the downs
and hilltops arose above the perpetual tracts of wood" (Elton). The
Domesday Book bears witness to the extensive wastes in its day; and as
recently as the reign of Elizabeth about one-third of England was still
in the primeval state of nature. In medieval times the Andreas Wold of
the Weald still stretched with few breaks from Kent to Hampshire, and
the New Forest may be regarded as its western outlier. To north of the
latter lay the forests of Speen, Savernack, and Selwood; westward were
the marshes of Sedgemoor; and farther to the north-west, between the
Severn and the Wye, was the forest of Dean, "great and terrible." In
Warwickshire was the forest of Arden, of which it has been said, that
"even in modern times a squirrel
might leap from tree to tree for nearly the whole
length of the county." In Worcestershire was Wyrewood, and stretching
from Flintshire to Snowdonia were the forests of Denbigh. The wastes of
Peakland, the forests of Sherwood and Elmet, and the marshes of the
Humberhead Level, well-nigh shut off Northumbria from the south; while
East Anglia was similarly isolated by the Fens, then vastly larger than
at present, and by a belt of forests through Cambridgeshire and
Hertfordshire. So dense were the forests in earlier times that they,
more than other natural features, isolated the British tribes, and even
the Roman engineers sometimes found it necessary to swing their roads
out of their direct courses to avoid them.
Perhaps even more remarkable are the changes which have affected the
configuration of the island since the Roman era. Here, the shore has
receded in consequence of the erosive action of the waves, or the
depression of the land. There, where the land has risen, or low-lying
stretches of silt have been deposited, it has advanced beyond the Roman
line. What was a Roman port may have long since succumbed to the
encroachment of the sea; or it may now be miles inland. The rivers,
too, in their meanderings through alluvial tracts, have wandered from
their old courses, and the declinng rainfall has reduced their volume.
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Fig. 1. — Physical Map of Roman Britain, showing the Forests, Marshes, And Elevations exceeding 500 ft.
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The map (Fig. 1)
presents the physical features of the era; and how these determined the
distribution of the civilian population is indicated on the second map
(Fig. 2). Here the shading represents the regions of densest
population — the regions where towns, villages, and houses abounded —
and it roughly coincides with the lowlands except where occupied by
forests and marshes. The population and wealth of the country were thus
chiefly concentrated in the southern counties from Kent to Devonshire,
in the Thames basin, in Essex and the country of the Ouse and Nene, in
Somerset and Gloucestershire, and about the lower Severn. This
distribution differed remarkably from that of the present, as indicated
in our third map (Fig. 3). Now
the most populated regions are the Metropolitan area; Lancashire and
Yorkshire as far east as the Don, with its constellation of large
manufacturing towns, Liverpool, Manchester, Preston, Oldham,
Leeds, Bradford, and Sheffield; the southern
prolongation of this region from Sheffield to Derby and Nottingham; the
Potteries; the Birmingham district; Glamorgan and East Monmouthshire;
the Bristol district; East Durham; and the belt of country between the
Clyde and the Forth, dominated by
Glasgow and Edinburgh. These regions, with the
exception of the Metropolitan, are where coal is found, and nearly all
these towns were little more than villages two centuries ago. This
shift of population is a modern phenomenon dating from the economic
revolution of the 18th century. We are pre-eminently
a manufacturing people to whom coal is of vital
importance. The Roman-Britons were essentially an agricultural people,
and the few manufactures they engaged in did not depend upon this fuel,
although its use was not unknown; hence to them the rugged coal-fields
were of little value.
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Fig. 2. — Map showing the chief Roman Roads and Towns, and Regions of densest Romanized Population
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Fig. 3. — Map showing chief Railways, Towns, and Regions of densest Population at present
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The
Roman towns, as will be observed on our second map, were with few
exceptions confined to the more fertile lowlands and they still remain
towns, although, with the exception of London, their relative
importance has waned since the economic revolution. Beginning with Londinium (London), probably then, as now, the largest town and chief commercial centre, the following were of Roman importance: Durovernum (Canterbury), Verolamium (St. Albans), Camulodunum (Colchester), Venta Icinorum (Caister St. Edmunds or Norwich), Calleva (Silchester), Regnum (Chichester), Venta Belgarum (Winchester), Sorbiodunum (Old Sarum), Durnovaria (Dorchester), Isca Dumnuniorum (Exeter), Aquae Sulis (Bath), Durocornovium or Corinium (Cirencester), Clevum (Gloucester), Venta Silurum (Caerwent), Isca Augusta (Caerleon), Magnae (Kenchester), Viroconium or Vriconium (Wroxeter), Ratae (Leicester), Durobrivae (Castor), Lindum (Lincoln), Deva (Chester), Eburacum (York), Isurum (Aldborough), Luguvallium (Carlisle), and Corstopitum (Corbridge).
Most of these towns may be conveniently calssed as 'civil.' York,
Chester, and Caerleon were legionary stations, and probably Carlisle
and Corbridge from their vicinity to the Wall had a marked military
character. At an early period, Colchester, Lincoln, and probably
Gloucester were legionary stations, as probably also some of the
southern towns for a briefer interval, for each advance of the frontier
would necessitate an advance of the legions, the conquered territory
behind being left in charge of garrisons to maintain order. But,
whether civil or military, all the towns were planned more or less on
the military model.
The garrisons were stationed in forts or castella,
of which there were a large number. These in the earlier days of the
era were unevenly scattered throughout the province; but, as the
natives became Romanized, the garrisons were as a rule withdrawn to the
less Romanized and the frontier town regions, and the vacated castella
remained abandoned or continued as posting-stations and developed into
small towns. Some of our old towns, as Manchester and Newcastle, were
originally Roman castella. In later times
the garrisons were distributed chiefly in the north, especially along
and in the vicinity of the Wall of Hadrian, and on the eastern and
southern coasts, to protect the province
from external enemies; hence in these regions the military remains are conspicuous.
The
Roman hold upon the country once established, the great works which had
in view the development of its natural wealth were immediately put in
hand, and chief of these was a magnificent system of durable roads and
posting-stations. Under the security of the imperial rule the rural
population steadily increased, and the zenith of prosperity was reached
in the Constantine period. The houses of the country squires —
spacious, comfortable, and now and again on an almost palatial scale —
were a marked feature of the fertile lowlands, each with commodious
farm-buildings, and, like the medieval manor-house, the centre of
community of peasantry. Villages there were, and the sites of some have
been excavated. That wheat was grown in abundance is indicated by an
incident of the 4th century. Agriculture in the Rhenish countries
being interrupted by the barbarians, the Emperor Julian arranged for
the import of corn
from Britain, and no less than 600 vessels were employed for its
transit. The rearing of sheep and the manufacture of cloth from the
wool were important industries, and contributed to the export trade of
the country. British cloth was widely esteemed, and its importation
into the East is referred to in an edict of Diocletian.
The mineral resources were early exploited. In the quantity and quality
of its lead, Britain stood second to no other province. Its chief
mining centres were the Mendips in Somerset, the Peak of Derbyshire,
Shropshire, and the district of Holywell in Flintshire, in all of which
are extensive ancient workings. More definitely the inscribed pigs of
lead, which have been found in and around these regions, bear witness
to Roman enterprise. The earliest dated examples show that lead-working
was in full swing on the Mendips in A.D. 49,
and in Flintshire fifteen years later. The mines were the property of
the state and were at first worked by the officials, and subsequently —
sometime in the 2nd century — were leased to private individuals.
Curious circular pigs of copper with Roman inscriptions prove that this
metal was worked in North Wales and Anglesey, apparently at first under
the same conditions as lead. Gold was obtained from
the quartz rocks near Lampeter in West Wales.
Inscribed silver ingots found in London and Richborough, and the
remains of a silver-refinery at Silchester testify to the production of
that metal, which was probably obtained by the cupellation of copper
and lead. There is also evidence that tin was worked in the Roman era
in Cornwall, especially in the 3rd and 4th centuries. Iron was used in
abundance for a great variety of purposes, and its chief sources were
the Forest of Dean and Sussex, where immense deposits of slag bear
witness to an enormous output of the metal. Coal was also used, for it
has been frequently observed on Roman sites, and coal-pits apparently
of Roman age have been noticed at Werneth, Lancashire.
Pottery was manufactured on an extensive scale in the Nen Valley in
Northamptonshire, along the south side of the Medway between Sheerness
and Chatham, and in and about the New Forest; and in many other parts
of the country have been found the remains of kilns and other evidences
of pot-works. Whether the fine wares of the Nen and Medway potteries
were exported is uncertain; but there was a considerable importation of
pottery from Gaul and the Rhine, and this included the well-known
red-glaze or 'Samian' ware, which is found on almost every Roman site.
Traces of glass-works have been noticed at Wilderspool near Warrington.
In the production of bronze and silver brooches and other small
objects, and in the art of enamelling, the British worker probably
excelled his Continental brother; and in the 4th century, British
artisans were engaged upon public works in Gaul on account of their
superior skill.
Most of the towns were British oppida,
remodelled on Roman lines. At Colchester, St. Albans, and
Silchester may still be traced the British defences enclosing larger
areas than the Roman towns which succeeded them, and we know that these
oppida were respectively the 'caputs' of the
Trinobantes, Catuvelauni, and Atrebates. The Roman names of some other
towns, as Venta Belgarum, Isca Dumnuniorum, Venta Icinorum, Venta
Silurum, and Isubrigantum (a variant of Isurium), indicate that
they were respectively the chief towns of the Belgae, Dumnonii, Iceni,
Silures, and Brigantes.2 The British oppidum was
not a town as we understand the term. It was a
fortified tribal camp, but it probably contained a small settled
population whose huts tended to cluster round the house of the chief or
regulus. The Romans adopted the tribal
territory as the unit of administration, and with it the tribal
capital. Thus was kept up a link with the past, and to this was due in
great measure the rapid acquiescence of the natives in the rule of
their conquerors. How far the old machinery of administration was
modified is uncertain, but undoubtedly it received a Roman form.
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Fig. 4. — Plan of Calleva Atrebatum, Silchester
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The
systematic excavations at Silchester, during last twenty years or more,
have afforded an insight into a Romano-British town. Calleva was
surrounded with a strong wall, in which were four principal gates and
several posterns. Its streets were in two sets cutting one another at
right angles, as in many a modern American town. In the centre was a
magnificent forum and basilica; elsewhere, four temples, public baths,
a large hospitium,
and a small church. Unlike a modern town, as also Pompeii and ancient
Rome, its houses were not packed closely together, but were, as a rule,
separated by yards and gardens; and they were of rural type and mostly
of a goodly sort. The population probably never reached 3000. Although
planned early in the era, there still remained considerable spaces
unbuilt upon at its close, and there is no evidence of extramural
suburbs. A few trades, and notably that of the dyer, were carried
on within the walls, and there were shops for the sale of commodities
around the forum, which with little doubt presented an animated scene
on market days. Calleva, however, can hardly be called a commercial
centre: it rather appeals to one as a residential town. The basilica
with its courts and offices was altogether on too large a scale for the
municipal needs of so small a place, but probably large enough to have
included the administration of the territory — the Civitas Atrebatum — of which Calleva was the capital.
Venta Silurum (Caerwent) was a smaller walled town, with two great and
two lesser gates, one main street, and many lanes which divided the
area into rectangular insulae,
a central forum and basilica, and a temple. Houses and shops crowded
the sides of the main street, many of them with verandas or porticoes
that covered the side walks, and behind these were houses, several of a
size and sumptuousness such as would befit the officials of the local
government and other substantial folk attracted by the social
conditions of the local capital. Here an imperfect monument has been
unearthed, which was erected ex decreto ordinis reipublicae civitatis Silurum
— by order of the senate of the state or canton of the Silures — to an
Imperial legate. The forum, basilica, and public baths — an extensive
group of buildings — have been opened out on the site of Viroconium
(Wroxeter); and the exploration of Corstopitum (Corbridge)
is bringing to light public and other buildings of unusually strong and good construction.
Britain
shared in the religious complexity of the Roman world at large. For
this side of our subject we have to rely chiefly upon the testimony of
the monuments — especially the inscriptions of altars and tablets — and
in less degree upon that of the better-known conditions on the
Continent. But as the monuments were mostly raised by the soldiers, who
at first were a foreign element in the population, worshipping under
the toleration of the empire the gods of their native lands, their
testimony is necessarily one-sided. With the conquest came the
invocation of the gods of the Graeco-Roman pantheon, but many altars
are inscribed to deities bearing Celtic and other barbaric names. We
know too little of the religions of pre-Roman Britain to estimate how
far the latter deities were indigenous and how far imported by the
military. As polytheism has unlimited elasticity, these barbaric
deities were identified with the Roman. The expansion of the empire
favoured syncretism. It brought the subject-peoples into closer touch
with one another, and with Roman civilization. The men who were levied
in every province officially recognized the Roman state gods and raised
altars to their own wherever their lot was cast, and thus the
surrounding provincials were familiarized with strange gods and cults,
and soon learned to recognize that the same god might be worshipped in
different lands under different names. "The altars and images were used
indifferently by worshippers under many creeds; the titles of Jupiter
covered gods as far apart as 'Tanarus,' the German thunder-god, and
Osiris,
'the nocturnal sun,' who ruled the world of the
dead. . . . Apollo represented all bright and healing
influences, and under the name of Mars, the soldiers from every
province could recognize their local war-god" (Elton). At Bath, Sulis,
the nymph-goddess of the hot-springs, was invoked as Sul-Minerva, and
in the north, the Celtic Belatucadrus, 'the brilliant-in-war,' as Mars
Belatucadrus.
The Roman state worship had little power to satisfy the intellect or to
inspire devotion, but it had less when laden with a multitude of new
gods and cults; and this paved the way for
the widespread acceptance of various cults of
eastern origin, which by their monotheistic strain, their underlying
mysticism, and their offer of divine illumination through penitence and
expiation, promised a satisfaction which the current paganism failed to
give. Chief among these was Mithraism, of which there are many traces
in Britain, and almost as popular was the worship of the Egyptian Isis
and of the Great Mother of Phrygia. These in their turn paved the way
for Christianity, itself an eastern religion, which undoubtedly had a
firm hold upon Britain before the close of the era, in spite of
conflicting evidence.
The map of Roman Britain is in the main the outcome of a comparison of
the evidence of the archaeologist with the statements of ancient
geographical writers whose works have come down to us. Five of these
works are of special value.
The Geography of Claudius Ptolemy,
who wrote about the middle of the 2nd century, is mainly a
catalogue of places with their latitudes and longitudes, and
considering that he had to rely upon the statements of travellers who
were not provided with the various instruments that are now considered
indispensable, his results remarkably approximate to the truth.
A map of Great Britain compiled from his data
is on the whole easily recognized; but Scotland is curiously turned to the east, and it has been suggested
that Ptolemy or a predecessor worked from sectional maps of the British
Islands, and inadvertently placed that peninsula the wrong way. In
comparing maps from his tables with the modern, it is necessary to
remember that his degrees of longitude are one-sixth less than ours;
also that the degrees are divided into twelfths. Some of the bays,
estuaries, promontories, and cities are easily identified; and the
latitudes and longitudes of others give their approximate positions;
but his blunders and the possibilities of textual corruption must be
constantly kept in mind. The
Peutinger Tablet is a 13th-century copy (now preserved at Vienna) of a Roman itinerarium pictum
or pictorial road-chart. It depicts in diagrammatical form the ancient
world, greatly elongated to suit a narrow roll of parchment and to
display the roads with panoramic effect, the distances being inserted
in numerals; but unfortunately only the south-east
portion of Britain is shown, the extreme left section of the roll being
lost. The Itinerary of the Provinces of Antoninus Augustus is a
list of roads, or more strictly routes, giving the names of places upon
them and their distances apart. In the Britain section, fifteen routes
are given,
most of which can be identified by existing remains. Its title connects
it with one of the four emperors who bore the name of Antoninus (A.D. 138-222). The
Notitia Dignitatum
is an official register or calendar of the civil and military
establishments of the empire, and is a document of high historical
value. Its topographical information is incidental, consisting mainly
of the names of the places where the garrisons were stationed,
forty-six of which are given in the portion relating to Britain. This
return appears to have been drawn up about the beginning of the
5th century. The Ravenna Chorography
was the production of an anonymous writer of the 7th century, who
described the world, which he regarded as extending from India to
Britain, with much rhapsody and appeal to Scripture. In the British
section he enumerates the various cities, rivers, islands, etc.,
probably taken from some Imperial road-chart like the Peutinger Tablet,
but he gives them in little apparent order, and his spelling is very
corrupt.
In these works over five hundred names of towns, stations, bays,
promontories, and rivers are given; but probably not more than a
seventh or eighth have been located with any degree of certainty. This
is owing to three chief defects — the ambiguity of the writers, their
blunders, and the corruption of their text in its transmission to us.
Many of the names lack any hints as to their whereabouts; and the
whereabouts of others — and this represents the majority — are vague.
We can assign, for instance, a series of names to a certain region, but
beyond this we cannot go. The archaeologist may point out a number of
sites in that region, but we have no means of identifying the several
names with the several places. Textual corruption is responsible for
such vagaries in the spelling of the names that the collation of the
various lists presents insurmountable difficulties. Still, the data
supplied by these writers are of inestimable value.
The modern bibliography of Roman Britain
is very copious. From Camden downwards, the remains have engaged the
continuous attention of antiquaries, and never more critically than
during the last half-century. For reasons already given, it is hardly
possible to pursue the archaeological side of Roman Britain without
invading that of the historian, consequently the works that are wholly
confined to one or the other province are comparatively few.
A full list of the works that are specially useful to the
archaeologist would greatly exceed our space, but a short notice of
some of the more important will be helpful to the beginner. It is
almost unnecessary to say that some which will be referred to are both
costly and difficult to obtain. Still, most of them are to be found in
our chief provincial libraries, and if these fail, there remains that dernier ressort of the literary man, the British Museum Library.
The Archaeologia of the Society of Antiquaries, and the Journals
of the Archaeological Institute and of the British Archaeological
Association, are grand repositories of papers on Roman Britain; as also
are some of the publications of the provincial societies. The Index of Archaeological Papers
from 1665 to 1890, and its annual continuations from the latter date,
published under the direction of the Congress of Archaeological
Societies in union with the Society of Antiquaries, places the student en rapport with this valuable source of information. The late Charles Roach Smith's Collectanea Antiqua, 1848-80, contains many important articles on this subject.
The works that treat of Roman Britain in general are few. Foremost among them is Horsley's Britannia Romana, a valuable conspectus of knowledge at its date, 1732, and still a useful book of reference. The last edition of Wright's The Celt, the Roman, and the Saxon is useful, but is disappointing in some respects. Scarth's Roman Britain, 1885, is also disappointing; and its successor, Conybeare's Roman Britain, 1903, leans more to history. The Roman section of Traill's Social England, 1902-4, should be carefully studied. The following are useful works of reference — Stukeley's Itinerarium Curiosum, 1776; Gough's Camden's Britannia, 1789; King's Munimenta Antiqua, 1799-1806; the Gentleman's Magazine
Library (Romano-British Remains), 1887; and Clark's Military Architecture in England,
1884. Among the many works which treat wholly or partially on Roman
Britain, but less from an archaeological point of view, the following
may especially be mentioned — Elton's Origins of English History, 1889; Coote's Romans of Britain, 1878; Petrie, Sharpe, and Hardy's Historia Britannica, 1848; Mommsen's Provinces of the Empire, 1886; Babcock's Two Last Centuries of Roman Britain, 1891; Bury's Gibbon's Decline and Fall the Roman Empire, 1896; Rhys' Celtic Britain, 1904; Hogarth's Authority and Archaeology, 1899; Oman's England before the Conquest, 1910. The works that treat of some particular phase of Romano-British archaeology are more numerous. Hubner's Inscriptiones Britanniae Latinae,
which forms a volume of his great and costly work on the epigraphy of
the empire, is of such importance that no reference library can be said
to be complete without it. For inscriptions overlooked or discovered
since its date, 1873, recourse must be had chiefly to the papers of the
late Mr. Thompson Watkin and subsequently to those of
Dr. Haverfield, in the Archaeological Journal. McCaul's Notes on Roman Inscriptions, found in Britain, 1862, is useful, but scarce. Morgan's Romano-Britain Mosaic Pavements,
1886, the only manual on the subject, contains much information, but
fails to attain the promise of its opening paragraphs. Lyson's costly Reliquae Britannicae Romanae, 1813-15, and other works, including his Woodchester,
1797, are noteworthy for their sumptuous plates of mosaics; as also is
Fowler's scarce series of twenty-six plates. The roads are the subject
of
Codrington's Roman Roads of Britain, 1905, and of Forbes and Burmeister's Our Roman Highways, 1904, two useful and inexpensive books.
But the largest, and on the whole the most important element in the
bibliography, is the topographical literature. The Wall and its
contiguous Roman remains have been and are still a fertile theme of
inquiry. Warburton's Vallum Romanum, 1753, was the first important monograph on the subject. Bruce's Roman Wall,
of which there have been several editions, the last and largest, that
of 1867, being one of the chief descriptive works on English
archaeology ever produced, but naturally
some of its conclusions are rendered untenable by recent researches. His Handbook to the Roman Wall,
the last edition of which was revised by Mr. Robert Blair, F.S.A.,
is essentially an abridgement. Maclauchlan's great works, The Roman Wall, with its Memoir, 1858, and his Eastern Branch of the Watling Street in Northumberland, 1864, are especially noteworthy for their engraved plans. Hodgson's History of Northumberland is a mine of valuable information, and the volume treating on the Roman remains was published separately under the title of The Roman Wall and South Tindale, 1841. Neilson's Per Lineam Valli is one of the best of the more recent works, 1891. Hutton's History of the Roman Wall, 1802, is worth mentioning for its quaint and gossipy reading. Dr. Haverfield's Reports on the Five Years' Excavations on the Roman Wall,
conducted by the Cumberland and Westmorland Archaeological Society,
1894-99, can be obtained as reprints with a summary, and are valuable
for the new light thrown on the history of the Wall. Dr. Budge's Roman Antiquities in the Chesters Museum, 1903, is more than a catalogue: it contains chapters on the whole subject of the Wall.
Scotland has given rise to several important works — Gordon's Itinerarium Septentrionale, 1726; Roy's Military Antiquities of the Romans in North Britain, 1793, which is particularly valuable for its large plans of camps; Stuart's Caledonia Romana, 1845; and the Antonine Wall Report, an account of the excavations made by the Glasgow Archaeological Society, 1899. The Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries, Scotland, contain reports on the exploration of Scottish Roman forts, and Curle's Roman Fort of Newstead, shortly to be published, promises to be a highly important work.
Lancashire and Cheshire are fortunate in the late Thompson Watkin's Roman Lancashire and Roman Cheshire, two thorough works on their Roman remains up to the years of their issues, 1883 and 1886. Whitaker's History of Manchester, 1773, devotes much space to these remains in the vicinity of that city. Roeder's Roman Manchester, 1900, and Bruton's Roman Fort at Manchester, 1909, bring Whitaker and Watkins up to their dates. Smith and Short's History of Ribchester gives much information of the Roman remains there. The excavations at Wilderspool are the subject of May's Warrington's Roman Remains, 1904. Roman York is treated on in Drake's Eboracum, 1785, and Wellbeloved's Roman York, 1812; and Aldborough in H. Ecroyd Smith's Remains of the Roman Isurium, 1852. Derbyshire has yielded Melandra Castle,
1906, edited by Prof. R. S. Conway. Lincoln, considering its
Roman importance, has not given rise to much literature. The Roman city
at Wroxeter, Shropshire, was the theme of several pens in the
'sixties,' and these were followed by Wright's Uriconium
in 1872. Gloucestershire and Somerset, from their richness in
remains of this age, have yielded a considerable output, as Lyson's Woodchester, already referred to; Bathurst and King's Roman Remains in Lydney Park, 1879; Buckman and Newmarch's Illustrations of Roman Art in Cirencester, 1850; Beecham's History of Cirencester and the Roman City of Corinium, 1886; and Witt's Map and Archaeological Handbook, 1880 (?). Bath is treated in Scarth's Aquae Solis, and Lyson's Two Temples and other Buildings discovered at Bath,
1802. Monmouthshire was the scene of much archaeological activity in
the middle decades of the last century, and this resulted in Lee's Delineations of Roman Antiquities found at Caerleon, 1845, and Isca Silurum, 1862, a well-illustrated catalogue of the museum there; and in Omerod's Memoir of British and Roman Remains illustrative of Communications with Venta Silurum, 1852, and Strigulensia, 1861. Ward's Roman Fort of Gellygaer,
1903, is an illustrated report on the exploration of that site in
Glamorgan. A. C. Smith's large and detailed map with its
accompanying Guide, 1884, presents the Britain and Roman remains of a
hundred square miles round Abury in North Wiltshire; and this county
was the scene of most of the excavations of General Pitt-Rivers, which
are described in his four profusely illustrated volumes.
Roman in common with other early remains in Dorset are described in Warne's Ancient Dorset,
1872; and the mosaic pavements at Frampton are the subject of one of
Lyson's monographs. The Isle of Wight has contributed Nicholson's Account of the Roman Villa near Brading, 1880, and Price's Description of Roman Buildings at Morton near Brading, 1881. The excavations at Silchester during the last twenty-one years have resulted in a series of important reports in Archaeologia, most of which may be obtained as reprints.
The Roman coast-forts of Kent and Sussex — Reculvers, Richborough,
Lympne, and Pevensey — were ably described by C. Roach Smith, both in
his Collectanea and in separate works, Excavations on the Site of the Roman Castrum of Lymne in 1850, Excavations at Pevensey in 1852, and Antiquities of Richborough, Reculver, and Lymne, 1859. From the same pen issued Illustrations of Roman London, 1859, with many plates. Roman London was also the theme of several well-illustrated monographs by J. E. Price — Description of the Roman Tesselated Pavement found in Bucklersbury, etc., 1870; Roman Antiquities discovered on the site of the National Safe Company's Premises, 1873; On a Bastion of London Wall,
1880. Various excavations at and in the vicinity of Chesterford and
Audley End in Essex about the middle of the last century were described
by the Hon. R. C. Neville, afterwards Lord Baybrook, in his Antiqua Explorata, etc., mostly privately printed, and scarce. Much about Roman Colchester is to be found in Strutt's History and Description of Colchester, and in Buckler's and in Jenkin's Colchester Castle, 1869 and 1877, respectively. The coast-fort of Burgh Castle is the subject of I've's Garianonum of the Romans, 1803; and Castor and its Roman potteries are illustrated in Artis's The Durobrivae of Antoninus, etc., 1828, now very scarce.
In the Victoria History of the Counties of England,
descriptive articles on the Roman remains of the following counties
have appeared — Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Derbyshire, Hampshire,
Herefordshire, Northamptonshire, Norfolk, Nottinghamshire, Somerset,
Staffordshire, Leicestershire, Warwickshire, Worcestershire, and
Shropshire. These are all, except one, from the pen of
Dr. Haverfield, and are of inestimable value to the student.
We turn now to another important source of information about Roman
Britain — museum collections. Most of our museum contain objects of
Roman age, and these, as a rule, have been found in the districts of
their present resting-places. As might be expected, the chief
collections are in or near the sites of the more important Roman towns
and populous regions, so that their distribution somewhat coincides with the
distribution of the civil and military population. The Romano-British
collections of the York Philosophical Society and of the Reading and
the Colchester museums are large and varied. That of Reading is mainly
derived from Silchester, and its value is enhanced by models of some of
the buildings of the ancient city. The exploration of Caerwent has
given rise to another important collection, most of which is stored in
a temporary museum on the site, the residue being in the Newport
Museum. The numerous objects found at Wroxeter are in the Shrewsbury
Museum, and those found at Bath, Caerleon, and Cirencester are in the
museums of these places, all being important collections. The British
Museum collection is not so large as would be expected, but it contains
many rare objects from various parts of the country. The Grosvenor
Museum, Chester, is notable for its tombstones and other lapidary
remains, and these are also a conspicuous feature in the Leicester
Museum. In the Wall country are three important collections, those of
Tullie House at Carlisle, of the Blackgate Museum at Newcastle-on-Tyne,
and of the Chesters Museum, the last being a model of good arrangement
and exhibition. The notable feature of the collection of the National
Museum of Antiquities at Edinburgh is the finds from the exploration of
Roman forts and other sites in Scotland.
Besides the museums just named, those of South Shields, Warrington,
Taunton Castle, Bristol, Maidstone, Devizes, Gloucester, Cardiff,
Canterbury, Dorchester, Chichester, St. Albans, Oxford, Sheffield,
Hull, Norwich, Durham, and some others contain Romano-British
collections of greater or less interest.
The Author's Notes:
1. Elton, Origins of English History, p307.
2. Not necessarily on the sites or within the lines of the British oppida.
3. Archaeologia, xlviii, p379.
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