Roman sites in Great Britain

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Main Roman cities and roads in Roman Britain, according to the "Antonine Itinerary"

There are many Roman sites in Great Britain that are open to the public. There are also many sites that do not require special access, including Roman roads, and sites that have not been uncovered.

England[]

Buckinghamshire[]

  • Bancroft Park, Milton Keynes. Romano-British villa
  • Magiovinium, Fenny Stratford, Milton Keynes

Cheshire[]

Cumbria[]

Derbyshire[]

Devon[]

Dorset[]

Durham[]

East Sussex[]

Essex[]

  • Belgic oppidum (Roman Braintree)
  • Caesaromagus (Roman Chelmsford). A Roman fort was built in AD 60, and a civilian town grew up around it. The town was given the name of Caesaromagus (the market place of Caesar), although the reason for it being given the great honour of bearing the Imperial prefix is now unclear – possibly as a failed 'planned town' provincial capital to replace Londinium or Camulodunum.
  • Camulodunum (Roman Colchester). Oldest Roman wall in Britain, best-preserved Roman gateway in Britain, remains of two Roman theatres, oldest Roman church in UK and Castle museum
  • Great Dunmow
  • Heybridge, Maldon (Anglo-Saxon: Tidwalditun)
  • Othona (Roman Bradwell-on-Sea)

Gloucestershire[]

Greater Manchester[]

  • Mamucium, Castlefield inner city conservation site, Manchester
  • Coccium, near Wigan

Hampshire[]

Herefordshire[]

  • Ariconium, Bury Hill, Weston under Penyard
  • Blackwardine
  • Bravonium, Leintwardine
  • Jay Lane, Leintwardine
  • Magnae Dobunnorum, Kenchester
  • The Weir Garden, River Wye

Hertfordshire[]

Isle of Wight[]

Kent[]

Leicestershire[]

Lancashire[]

Lincolnshire[]

  • Lincoln (Lindum Colonia), important Roman Colonia and capital of the province of Flavia Caesariensis
  • Bourne-Morton Canal (visible only as alignment and crop marks)
  • Caistor, Roman town and fort.
  • Car Dyke
  • Foss Dyke, Roman canal between Lincoln and the River Trent
  • Horncastle, Roman town and fort. Parts of the Roman walls remain.
  • Newport Arch, Lincoln
  • Sleaford, important Roman town.

London[]

Norfolk[]

Northamptonshire[]

Northumberland[]

  • Aesica, Roman fort, north of Haltwhistle
  • Bremenium, High Rochester
  • Carrawburgh, Mithraeum temple by Hadrian's Wall
  • Chesters Bridge, Roman bridge abutment by Chesters Roman Fort (Cilurnum), Northumberland
  • Chew Green, Roman Camps in the Cheviots
  • Cilurnum, Northumberland
  • Coria, Corbridge. Roman site and museum
  • Devil's Causeway, Roman road to Berwick upon Tweed
  • Habitancum, Roman fort at Risingham
  • Housesteads (Vercovicium)
  • Hunnum, (also known as Onnum, and with the modern name of Haltonchesters), Roman fort north of Halton
  • Magnis (Carvoran Roman Fort)
  • Roman Army Museum north of Haltwhistle at Carvoran
  • Vercovicium, (or Housesteads Roman Fort) was an auxiliary fort on Hadrian's Wall
  • Vindolanda, a fort on the Stanegate Roman road pre-dating Hadrian's Wall nearby, with exceptional Roman finds in its museum
  • Vindobala, Roman fort at Rudchester
  • Whitley Castle, also known as Epiacum, a Roman fort at the southern edge of Northumberland on the Maiden Way Roman road, with remarkable earthen ramparts

North Yorkshire[]

Nottinghamshire[]

Oxfordshire[]

Shropshire[]

Somerset[]

South Yorkshire[]

A reconstruction of Templeborough Roman Fort which covered an area of 2.2 hectares (5.5 acres) when it was rebuilt in stone in the 2nd century.[1]

Staffordshire[]

  • Letocetum, near Lichfield

Sussex[]

See East Sussex, West Sussex

Tyne and Wear[]

Warwickshire[]

West Midlands[]

West Sussex[]

West Yorkshire[]

Wiltshire[]

Worcestershire[]

Scotland[]

Inveresk Mithreum, by Musselburgh, near Edinburgh, link: https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/britannia/article/mithras-in-scotland-a-mithraeum-at-inveresk-east-lothian/544B6233F7F06415EE049C60A827C3C0

Wales[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Historic England. "Templeborough Roman Fort (316617)". Research records (formerly PastScape). Retrieved 20 June 2015.
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