Calleva Atrebatum

Coordinates: 51°21′26″N 1°4′57″W / 51.35722°N 1.08250°W / 51.35722; -1.08250
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Calleva Atrebatum
The near-true on north-south, grid pattern enclosed by walls of the city, showing a central forum next to baths and an external building: the amphitheatre and even a possible inn.
Site plan of Calleva Atrebatum, drawn before 1911
Position, almost against the southern border of Berkshire, in Hampshire, England.
Position, almost against the southern border of Berkshire, in Hampshire, England.
Shown within Hampshire
Alternative nameSilchester Roman Town
LocationSilchester, Hampshire, England
RegionBritannia
Coordinates51°21′26″N 1°4′57″W / 51.35722°N 1.08250°W / 51.35722; -1.08250
TypeSettlement
Part ofBritannia, Britannia Superior, then Britannia Prima
AreaApproximately 40 ha (99 acres)
History
BuilderAtrebates tribe
FoundedLate 1st century BC
Abandoned5th to 7th century AD
PeriodsIron Age to Roman Empire
Site notes
ArchaeologistsUniversity of Reading[1] and others
ManagementEnglish Heritage
WebsiteSilchester Roman City Walls and Amphitheatre
OS grid reference: SU639624

Calleva Atrebatum ("Calleva of the Atrebates") was an Iron Age oppidum, the capital of the Atrebates tribe. It then became a walled town in the Roman province of Britannia, at a major crossroads of the roads of southern Britain.

The modern village of Silchester in Hampshire, England, is about a mile (1.6 km) to the west of the site. The village's parish church of St Mary the Virgin is just within the ancient walls. Most of the site lies within the modern civil parish of Silchester, although the amphitheatre is in the adjoining civil parish of Mortimer West End. The whole of the site is within the local authority district of Basingstoke and Deane and the county of Hampshire.[2]

History

Roman roads, showing the importance of Calleva as a crossroads and also point of trifurcation of the routes leading to Glevum (Gloucester), South Wales and the South West Peninsula from Londinium
(London)

Unusually for an Iron Age tribal town in Britain, its exact site was reused for the Roman town.[1] The Romans changed the layout and defences.[1]

Calleva Atrebatum ("Calleva of the Atrebates") was an Iron Age settlement, as capital of the Atrebates tribe. It became a walled town in the Roman province of Britannia.[1]

Celtic beginnings

The Romanised Celtic "Calleva" can be translated to 'woods' or 'woody place'. The settlement was surrounded by dense woodlands that were used for fuel and to build structures. Given its access to east, west and northern domestic markets it was a centre of trade within Britain and with civilisations across the Channel and as far away as the Mediterranean.[3]

Iron Age

The Late Iron Age settlement at Silchester has been shown by archaeology and coins of the British Q series[clarification needed] to link Silchester with the seat of power of the Atrebates. Coins found stamped with "COMMIOS" show that Commius, king of the Atrebates, established his territory and mint here after moving from Gaul.[4][5] The inner earthwork, constructed c. 1 AD, enclosed 32 hectares (79 acres) and at a similar time others were built in the surrounds.

Small areas of Late Iron Age occupation were first uncovered on the south side of the inner earthwork

amphorae and iron and copper-alloy brooches show that the settlement was high status. Distinctive food was identified, including oyster shell, a large briquetage assemblage and sherds from various amphorae for olive oil, fish sauce and wine.[8]

Further such material was uncovered by the Insula IX 'Town Life' project, including a great boundary ditch likely made about 40 to 20 BC, a large rectangular hall which could have been built any time between 25 BC to AD 10, and the laying out of lanes and new property divisions from about AD 10 to AD 40 or 50.[9] Archaeobotanical studies have demonstrated the import and consumption of celery, coriander and olives in Insula IX before the Claudian Conquest.[10]

Roman

After the Roman conquest of Britain in 43 AD the settlement developed into the Roman town of Calleva Atrebatum.

Mosaic from Calleva Atrebatum

It was slightly larger, covering about 40 hectares (99 acres), and was laid out to a clear, new street grid. The town had several public buildings and flourished until the early

Anglo-Saxon period
.

A large mansio was in Insula VIII, near the South Gate, consisting of three wings arranged around a courtyard.[11] A possible nymphaeum was near to the amphitheatre to the north of the walled city.[12]

Calleva was a major

Sorviodunum (Old Sarum near modern Salisbury
).

The earthworks and, for much of the circumference, the ruined walls are still visible. The remains of the

Anglo-Saxons continued to use the amphitheatre.[13][14][15]

In the southeast of the city were the thermal baths. They belong to the earliest stone buildings of the city, which were perhaps built around 50 AD. The baths are not aligned with the later city grid, and the entrance area was rebuilt to fit into the new road network. Several construction phases can be distinguished. At first they consisted of a portico, a palaestra and the bath rooms behind. The portico was later removed and the bathrooms divided in half, presumably so that men and women could bathe separately.

There is a

spring that emanates from inside the walls, near the original baths, and flows south-eastwards where it joins Silchester Brook. The Roman Calleva flourished (to nearly 10,000 inhabitants in the third/fourth century) around these springs that served the Roman baths excavated in summer 2019.[16]

Sub-Roman and medieval

After the Roman withdrawal from Britain, Calleva Atrebatum remained inhabited, but its fortunes began to falter. Major buildings at the site were used c. 400–430, but evidence of occupation begins to decline sharply after AD 450. According to Daniel G. Russo the hypothesis that the city remained in use during the sixth century, thanks to its sturdy walls, is "attractive," but based largely on guesswork, as "there is no firm written or archaeological evidence that organised Romano-British urban life existed at Calleva beyond c. 450 at the latest."[17] This is in contrast to most other Roman towns in Britain, which continued to exist after the end of the Roman era; Calleva is one of the six that did not survive the sub-Roman era, and disappeared in the Middle Ages.[18] (That said, the historian David Nash Ford identifies the site with the Cair Celemion of Nennius's list of the 28 cities of Sub-Roman Britain, which, if true, would mean that the site was at least partially extant during the Early Middle Ages.)[19]

A hypothesis has emerged that the Saxons deliberately avoided Calleva after it was abandoned, preferring to maintain their existing centres at

Dorchester.[20] There was a gap of perhaps a century before the twin Saxon towns of Basing and Reading were founded on rivers either side of Calleva. As a consequence, Calleva has been subject to relatively benign neglect for most of the last two millennia.[21]

Culture

Agriculture

The study of waterlogged macrofossils through a series of wells throughout the abandoned civilisation resulted in key evidence of animal stabling, hay meadows management, and the use of heath resources (such as heathers, gorse, and heathland grasses). The most abundant crops that were found in the area are Capsella bursa pastoris, Chenopodium album, Polygonum aviculare, Stellaria media and Urtica urens, Fallopia convolvulus and Sisymbrium. The use of new oil crops and grassland management is evident that the agricultural upheaval changes were related to those that provide food to livestock rather than providing food to the population of the civilisation. The development of the land represents a major change in the social organisation and settlement form. This is evident in the ample earthwork or large artificial banks of soil. Between the Hampshire chalk downs and alluvium-rich flood plains of the Thames valley, the civilisation is on a gravel terrace of the River Kennet, a major tributary of the Thames. This has left beneath its thin much later organic topsoil, feet of tertiary clay and sand. If ploughed the result is a "well-drained brown-earth soil" which, unirrigated, and without high fertilisation, yields low cereal returns. It is traditionally often cleared as pasture, orchards or kept as bramble-rich woodland for hogs and game. Palaeoenvironmental studies of the Early Iron Age at this site expose largely cleared land. Development of the heath from this time is evidenced by pollen analysis.[22]

Diet

The study of plant remains from the across the city and especially Insula IX have shown that spelt, wheat and barley were the most common cereals consumed. A wide range of fruits (apple, fig, grape), flavourings (celery, coriander, dill), and pulses (celtic bean, pea) were consumed.[23][22] Many houses had their own rotary querns for grinding flour.[24] Cattle, sheep/goat and pig were the major sources of meat.[25]

Religion

There is a range of evidence for religious practices in the town. A possible church was to the south-east of the Forum in Insula IV. The apse-ended basilica building has a layout comparable to early churches in the western Roman empire, but the date is likely to be pre-Constantinian.[26][27] A Romano-Celtic temple was in Insula XXXV, where an inscription shows a dedication by the guild of peregrini.[28] Three Romano-Celtic temples were in Insula XXX, just inside the east gate. These temples were constructed in the mid first century AD and went out of use after c. AD 200.[29] A limestone head of Serapis was discovered in 1899 at Silchester Common.[30]

Death and burial

Late Iron Age cremation burials have been excavated at Latchmere Green[31] and Windabout Copse.[32] The Roman cemeteries are thought to have been to the north and west of the Outer Earthwork, and have not been investigated.[33] A tombstone recovered in 1577 reads "To the memory of Flavia Victorina Titus Tammonius, Her husband set this up".[34]

Defence

Built in two phases, the defence system of Calleva Atrebatum is evident in the remains of the North Gate. Construction of the wall surrounding the area first began around 200 AD. Parts of this rampart still remain in stone and tile remnants. In 270 AD, the defences were strengthened with an even larger stone wall. Most likely defences were increased due to the increasing amount of Saxon raids in the area. The defence systems worked to protect from local uprisings, pillaging, and invaders from abroad. They also allowed for traffic to be monitored both in and out of the city.[35]

Economy

Craft production

Various craft activities have been evidenced through excavations in Insula IX, including bone- and antler- working,[36] the working of copper-alloys,[37] and leather-working.[38] Imported whetstones were recycled into whetstones.[39]

Building material

Production taking place in the area around Silchester includes a complex of tile kilns at Little London, including two tiles stamped with the title of the Emperor Nero.[40] Because of the abundance of woods in the area, most of the structures were built out of timber.[41]

Trade

A wide range of objects were imported to Silchester from the Roman Empire, including an ivory razor handle, a handle from a Fusshenkelkruge and a Harpocrates figure from a Campanian brazier.[38][42] Imported ceramics include Central Gaulish samian produced in Lezoux, Dressel 2-4 and 14 amphora, Rhineland white ware mortaria, Moselkeramik black slipped ware and Cologne colour coated ware.[38]

Archaeology

Part of the city walls (2004)
Silchester eagle
Excavations at Calleva (Insula IX)

Calleva Atrebatum was first excavated by the

Jupiter
statue in the forum.

Although it had long been known that there was an abandoned Roman civilisation, excavations ordered by the landowner, the Duke of Wellington, only began in the late nineteenth century. Joyce was the designated observer and recorder of all archaeological records. His overall goal was to reveal the complete plan of the Roman town. Little further investigation occurred until the 1961 re-excavation of the early Christian Church where the researchers found that eighty to ninety percent of the excavation had been completed. Within those limited excavations, the foundation and the plans of the masonry buildings were exposed. They were discovered by digging trenches through the area. The architecture and archaeology of the timber buildings of the ancient Roman town were misunderstood at the time of the excavation, timber was the most notable material.[43]

Molly Cotton carried out excavations on the defences in 1938–39.[44] Since the 1970s Michael Fulford and the University of Reading have undertaken several excavations on the town walls (1974–80),[45] amphitheatre (1979–85)[46] and the forum basilica (1977, 1980–86),[47] which have revealed remarkably good preservation of items from both the Iron Age and early Roman occupations.

From 1997 to 2014[48][49] Reading University carried out sustained and concentrated excavations in Insula IX. Results of the Late Roman,[50] Mid Roman[51] and Late Iron Age phases have been published.[52] In 2013, excavations began in Insula III, investigating a structure identified by the Victorian excavations as a bathhouse.[53] From 2018, the University of Reading has re-explored the previously excavated ruins of the public bathhouse looking at what earlier excavators may have missed.[54]

Silchester Amphitheatre Panorama 360 degrees
Silchester Amphitheatre Panorama 360 degrees (2016)

Access

Now primarily owned by Hampshire County Council and managed by English Heritage, the site of Calleva is open to the public during daylight hours, seven days a week and without charge.[55] The full circumference of the walls is accessible, as is the amphitheatre. The interior is farmed and, with the exception of the church and a single track that bisects the interior, inaccessible.[14]

The

Museum of Reading in Reading Town Hall has a gallery devoted to Calleva, displaying many archaeological finds from the excavations.[56]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Silchester: http://www.reading.ac.uk/silchester/about-silchester/sil-about-silchester-calleva.aspx
  2. ^ Election Maps (Map). Ordnance Survey. Retrieved 6 October 2022.
  3. ^ Fulford, Michael. "City of the Dead: Calleva Atrebatum". BBC. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
  4. ^ G, Boon (1957). Roman Silchester. London: Max Parrish and Co.
  5. ^ Creighton, John (2006). Britannia: the Creation of a Roman Province. Cambridge: Cambridge. pp. 21–22.
  6. ^ Boon, G. 1969. Belgic and Roman Silchester: excavations of 1954-8 with an excursus on the early history of Calleva. Archaeologia 102: 1-81.
  7. ^ Fulford, M. 1984. Silchester: Excavations on the Defences 1974–80. London: Society for Antiquaries. Britannia Monograph Series No. 5
  8. ^ Fulford, M. and Timby, J. 2000. Late Iron Age and Roman Silchester: Excavations on the Site of the Forum Basilica, 1977, 1980-86. London: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies. Britannia monograph Series No. 15
  9. ^ Fulford, M; Clarke, A; Pankhurst, N; Lucas, S (2013). Silchester Insula IX: the 'Town Life' Project 2012. Reading: Department of Archaeology, University of Reading.
  10. S2CID 128753215
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  11. ^ Boon, George (1957). Roman Silchester: The Archaeology of a Romano-British Town. London: Max Parrish.
  12. S2CID 165431898
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  13. ^ Johnson, Ben. "Silchester Roman Town (Calleva Atrebatum)". Historic UK. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
  14. ^ a b "Calleva Atrebatum - Roman Silchester". Discover Hampshire. Hampshire County Council. 3 April 2006. Archived from the original on 30 September 2007. Retrieved 20 August 2009.
  15. ^ "Silchester Roman City Walls and Amphitheatre". English Heritage. Retrieved 22 September 2005.
  16. ^ Calleva-Silchester bathouse
  17. .
  18. ^ Archaeological Fieldwork and Opportunities Bulletin. Archaeological Institute of America. 2002. p. 63.
  19. ^ Ford, David Nash (2000). "The Archaeology of Nennius' 28 British Cities". Britannia. Archived from the original on 27 January 2001. Retrieved 28 February 2020.
  20. ^ Kennedy, Maev (9 April 1999). "Burials 'show Roman city was cursed'". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 December 2008.
  21. ^ "A Guide to Silchester". Silchester Insula IX. University of Reading. June 2009. Retrieved 22 September 2005.
  22. ^
    S2CID 62815053
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  23. .
  24. .
  25. ^ Ingrem, Claire (2012). "Animals in the economy and culture of Roman Britain: a case study from southern England". In Fulford, Michael (ed.). Silchester and the Study of Romano-British Urbanism. London: Journal of Roman Archaeology. pp. 184–212.
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  28. ^ "RIB 69. Fragmentary dedication | Roman Inscriptions of Britain". romaninscriptionsofbritain.org. Retrieved 28 March 2020.
  29. ^ Fulford, Michael. Silchester Insula XXX Temple Excavation 2017 (PDF). Reading: University of Reading.
  30. ^ "Reading Museum". collections.readingmuseum.org.uk. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
  31. S2CID 193125149
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  32. ^ "Silchester Environs Project". Silchester Archaeology. Retrieved 28 March 2020.
  33. ^ "Cemeteries and Suburbs".
  34. ^ "RIB 87. Funerary inscription for Flavia Victorina | Roman Inscriptions of Britain". romaninscriptionsofbritain.org. Retrieved 28 March 2020.
  35. ^ Johnson, Ben. "Silchester Roman Town (Calleva Atrebatum)". Historic UK. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
  36. S2CID 165111378
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  38. ^ a b c "Silchester Town Life Project - The City in Transition".
  39. S2CID 166846991
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  40. ^ Fulford, Michael; Pankhurst, Nicholas; Wheeler, Daniel; Machin, Sara (2017). The Silchester Environs Project. The Roman Tilery and Pottery Industry at Little London, Pamber 2017 (PDF). Reading: University of Reading.
  41. ^ Fulford, Michael. "City of the Dead: Calleva Atrebatum". BBC. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
  42. ISSN 0068-113X
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  43. ^ Fulford, Michael. "City of the Dead: Calleva Atrebatum". BBC. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
  44. ^ Cotton, M. A. 1947. Excavations at Silchester 1938-9. Archaeologia 92: 121-167.
  45. ^ Fulford, M (1984). Silchester: Excavations on the Defences 1974-80. London: Society for Antiquaries. Britannia Monograph Series No. 5.
  46. ^ Fulford, M (1989). The Silchester Amphitheatre: Excavations of 1979-85. London: Society for Antiquaries. Britannia Monograph Series No. 10.
  47. ^ Fulford, M; Timby, J (2000). Late Iron Age and Roman Silchester: Excavations on the Site of the Forum Basilica, 1977, 1980-86. London: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies. Britannia monograph Series No. 15.
  48. ^ "The Insula IX Excavation". Silchester Roman Town - The 'Town Life' Project 1997-2002. University of Reading. 2004. Retrieved 7 December 2008.
  49. ISSN 2515-2289
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  50. ^ Fulford, M; Clarke, A; Eckardt, H (2006). Life and Labour in Late Roman Silchester: Excavations in Insula IX since 1997. London: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies. Britannia Monograph Series No. 22.
  51. ^ Fulford, M; Clarke, A (2011). Silchester: City in Transition: the Mid-Roman Occupation of Insula IX c. A.D. 125-250/300: a Report on Excavations Undertaken Since 1997. London: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies. Britannia Monograph Series no. 25.
  52. OCLC 1105613800.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link
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  53. ^ Fulford, M; Clarke, A; Pankhurst, N; Lambert-Gates, S (2015). Silchester: The 'Town' Life Project 2014 (PDF). Reading: Department of Archaeology, University of Reading.
  54. ^ "The Silchester Baths 2018-21".
  55. ^ "PRICES AND OPENING TIMES FOR SILCHESTER ROMAN CITY WALLS AND AMPHITHEATRE". English Heritage.
  56. ^ "Silchester Gallery". Reading Museum. 3 April 2017. Retrieved 23 June 2018.

Further reading

External links