Silchester Revealed Silchester Revealed

Silchester Revealed

The Iron Age and Roman Town of Calleva

    • $15.99
    • $15.99

Publisher Description

With its apparently complete town plan, revealed by the Society of Antiquaries of London’s great excavation project, 1890-1909, Silchester is one of the best known towns in Roman Britain and the Roman world more widely. Since the 1970s excavations by the author and the University of Reading on several sites including the amphitheater, the defenses, the forum basilica, the public baths, a temple, and an extensive area of an entire insula, as well as surveys of the suburbs and immediate hinterland, have radically increased our knowledge of the town and its development over time from its origins to its abandonment. This research has discovered the late Iron Age oppidum and allowed us to characterize the nature of the settlement with its strong Gallic connections and widespread political and trading links across southern Britain, to Gaul and to southern Europe and the Mediterranean.

Following a review of the evidence for the impact of the Roman conquest of A.D. 43/44, the settlement’s transformation into a planned Roman city is traced, and its association with the Emperor Nero is explored. With the re-building in masonry of the great forum basilica in the early second century, the city reached the peak of its physical development. Defense building, first in earthwork, then in stone in the later third century are major landmarks of the third century, but the town can be shown to have continued to flourish, certainly up to the early fifth century and the end of the Roman administration of Britain. The enigma of the Silchester ogham stone is explored and the story of the town and its transformation to village is taken up to the fourteenth century.

Modern archaeological methods have allowed us to explore a number of themes demonstrating change over time, notably the built and natural environments of the town, the diet, dress, health, leisure activities, living conditions, occupations, and ritual behavior of the inhabitants, and the role of the town as communications center, economic hub and administrative center of the tribal ‘county’ of the Atrebates.

GENRE
Non-Fiction
RELEASED
2021
31 May
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
240
Pages
PUBLISHER
Oxbow Books
SELLER
Casemate Publishers and Book Distributors, LLC
SIZE
43.9
MB

More Books Like This

The Towns of Roman Britain The Towns of Roman Britain
2017
Archaeology in British Towns Archaeology in British Towns
2005
Colchester, Fortress of the War God Colchester, Fortress of the War God
2013
Winchester: Swithun’s ‘City of Happiness and Good Fortune’ Winchester: Swithun’s ‘City of Happiness and Good Fortune’
2017
Roman London Roman London
2002
Transforming Townscapes Transforming Townscapes
2017