Roman column, York
Coordinates | 53°57′42″N 1°04′54″W / 53.96165°N 1.08180°WCoordinates: 53°57′42″N 1°04′54″W / 53.96165°N 1.08180°W |
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Location | Minster Yard, York, England |
Type | Column |
Material | Magnesian Limestone and millstone grit |
Height | 7.6 metres (25 ft) |
Completion date | c. 100 |
A Roman column stands in Minster Yard in the English city of York. Originally built around the first century, by the soldiers of Legio IX Hispana, it was reused by Legion VI in the 4th century. It is believed to have been part of a group of sixteen freestanding columns (eight on each side of the nave), supporting the walls of an earlier church on the site.
The column was discovered beneath York Minster during a 1969 excavation, and was given to the City of York three years later to mark the 1900th anniversary of the city's founding.[1]
The column is 7.6 metres (25 ft) tall and constructed of Magnesian Limestone and millstone grit.[2] It now stands in front of the Minster School, in Minster Yard, on the southern side of York Minster.[2]
References[]
Categories:
- Minster Yard
- Buildings and structures completed in the 1st century
- Buildings and structures in York
- Limestone buildings in the United Kingdom
- Roman sites in North Yorkshire
- Yorkshire building and structure stubs