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The Antics Roadshow blog

~ Brief Descriptions of my Adventures, at Home and Abroad.

The Antics Roadshow blog

Tag Archives: Roman Britain

Roman Wall, Albert Road, Dorchester, 29/04/15.

07 Thursday May 2015

Posted by Mr. B Flaneur in Out and About.

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Albert Road Dorchester, Dorchester, Dorset, Highways & Byways in Dorset, Roman, Roman Britain, Roman occupation, Roman Wall Dorchester, Romano-British, Sir Fredrick Treves, Thomas Hardy

Dorchester.
“Very numerous indeed are the Roman remains which have been found in and about Dorchester. The town, as Thomas Hardy says, “announced old Rome in every street, alley, and precinct. It looked Roman, bespoke the art of Rome, concealed dead men of Rome. It was impossible to dig more than a foot or two deep about the town, fields and gardens without coming upon some tall soldier or other of the Empire, who had lain there in his silent, unobtrusive rest for a space of fifteen hundred years”. In the museum are piles of Roman relics. The town itself still conforms to the lines laid down by the builders from Rome – a town of four main streets, North, South, East, and West”. 

Sir Fredrick Treves, “Highways & Byways in Dorset“.

Photo Archive: Reconstruction of a Roman Gatehouse, Arbeia Roman Fort and Museum, South Shields, c.2007.

11 Saturday Apr 2015

Posted by Mr. B Flaneur in Photo Archive.

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Arbeia Roman Fort, First Astrurian Cavalry, Fort, Fortifications, gate, gatehouse, Gateway, Hadrian's Wall, Iraq, Museums, River Tyne, Roman, Roman auxiliaries, Roman Britain, Roman Fort, Roman occupation, Ruins, South Shields, Tigris, Tigris Bargemen

The Gatehouse.

Note the houses, on the aptly named Roman Road, visible through the gate.   

Situated a relatively short distance behind the Emperor Hadrian’s famous and the southern bank of the River Tyne, Arbeia was probably seen as one of the last stops before the Northern frontier of Roman Britain back in AD 122. I wonder if it was any comfort, to the garrison and those civilians who no doubt settled close by that the fort, that the fort is not only behind the artificial frontier represented by Hadrian’s Wall and the natural barrier of the Tyne? I remember reading a theory that the name Arbeia was coined by a company of Tigris Bargemen stationed at the fort around AD 300 and refers to the “Place of the Arabs” and was struck by how small the known world was at that point. To think that Roman auxiliaries, raised on the banks of the Tigris [in what is currently Iraq] ended up stationed in Roman Britain.

The ruins and the reconstructed barracks and Commanding Officer's quarter viewed from the gatehouse.

The ruins and the reconstructed barracks and Commanding Officer’s quarter viewed from the gatehouse.

The fort served as a logistics base or supply depot for the other frontier forts, such as Segedunum Roman Fort on the other side of the River Tyne at Wallsend, so I imagine there was a lot of tedious admin, combined with back breaking labour, taking place at Arbeia. Presumably the Roman auxiliaries, especially in the case of the Tigris Boatmen, would have also handled the probably quite tricky business of getting supplies from one side of the Tyne to the other. A squadron of the First Astrurian Cavalry, a unit originally raised in Spain, were stationed at the fort, so there would have been a certain amount of dashing around the surrounding area on horseback. The fort must have been a very different place during their tour of duty, with the sights, sounds and smells associated with the care and stabling of horses being ever present within the walls of Arbeia.

You can find out more about the fort here: http://www.visithadrianswall.co.uk/things-to-do/arbeia-roman-fort-and-museum-p715761

Photo Archive: The View From Hadrian’s Wall, Segedunum Roman Fort, Wallsend, May 2010.

20 Thursday Nov 2014

Posted by Mr. B Flaneur in Photo Archive.

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British History, Hadrian's Wall, Roman Britain, Roman Fort, Segedunum Roman Fort, views, Wallsend

Looking towards Caledonia.

Looking towards Caledonia.

Photo Archive: Reconstruction of a Roman Gateway, Manchester, c.2009.

20 Monday Oct 2014

Posted by Mr. B Flaneur in Photo Archive.

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Tags

Ancient Rome, British History, Fortifications, Gateway, Manchester, Roman Britain, Roman Fort, Romano-British

Manchester.
If memory serves me, this reconstruction of a Roman gateway is only a short walk from Manchester’s Museum of Science and Industry, on Liverpool Road. The gateway marks what would have been the North entrance to the fort at Mamucium, a garrison town on the road between the Romano-British centres of Chester and York. The reconstruction is definitely worth investigating, especially if you are visiting the MOS&I anyway.

Photo Archive: Romano-British hairdo, The Roman Baths, Bath, October 2006.

01 Thursday May 2014

Posted by Mr. B Flaneur in Photo Archive.

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bath, British History, Hair and Beauty, Museums, Roman Baths, Roman Britain, Roman occupation, Romano-British, The Roman Baths, The Roman Baths Bath

Image

This is probably my best and favourite photograph from my visit to The Roman Baths. To quote The Roman Baths on-line collection it shows a “Head of a woman, with curls at the front of her head and her hair twisted round in a tight bun at the back. This was a hairstyle very popular with ladies in Rome in Flavian times (69-96 A.D.) and shows that Roman fashionable styles came to Britain early in the Roman occupation” http://www.romanbaths.co.uk/explore/Object_Details.aspx?objectID=batrm_1986_5_14 (click on the link if you want the facts and figures). 

Image

The above photograph might give you a better idea of the size of the thing; it certainly looks larger than life compared to the head of the chap in the foreground!

Bath struck me as a very fashionable place at the time of my visit and it is interesting to think that, even as early as the Roman Occupation of Britain, the people of Bath have been keeping up with the latest trends. It’s been eight years since my visit; have these fancy hairdos come back into fashion, I wonder?

If you would like to know more about The Roman Baths click here:  http://www.romanbaths.co.uk/

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