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When you
reach what remains of the London Gate and Roman Wall, you are standing
at what was the eastern end of the Roman City of Verulamium, one of the
most important cities in the Roman Empire and the third largest city in
Roman Britain with the biggest basilica this side of the Alps!
Where you
are standing was where the road from London, called Watling Street, entered
the city through an enormous triumphal arch.
The Roman
town was first laid out in AD 49 but the walls weren't built until between
AD260 and 265, hence Boudicca's army found it very easy to raze it to
the ground in AD61.
Here you
can see the remaining foundations for a very large gateway and also the
largest part of the old Roman Wall that remains. The gate would have consisted
of two very large drum towers, two archways for vehicles and troops and
then two smaller ones where people could walk through without being mown
down by a chariot! The wall would have been about 3m wide and 5m high.
There is
some controversy over the dating of the wall but you can see that it's
made up of layers of red Roman bricks with about a metre of flint between
these brick layers. The gate would have been made of the same and the
whole thing would have been plastered or rendered in some way.
Flint
Flint was an obvious choice for the Romans to build their wall with because
it just comes out of the ground in this area and it is extremely durable.
You can also see it in many other buildings in the city.
The flint
was formed around the same time as the chalk. As well as the chalk-forming
algae, there were also animals composed of silica living in the sea. After
they were buried in the chalk sediment, the silica was re-dissolved then
re-formed as flint.
Sadly, most
of the wall is now gone because the old Roman city has been plundered
over the centuries for building stone. A lot of churches and older houses
in the city have a facing of flint because it's hard and persistent and
resists weathering. This is also why it accumulated along this river valley.
It was able to resist the abrasion from the river while finer material
was washed away.
The Romans
probably didn't even need to quarry it as there would've been so much
lying around on the surface. But the bricks would have been made fairly
locally, somewhere like Hockliffe or Little Brickhill where there was
proper brick earth. Brickmaking was a very big industry in the Roman period.
So why
was Verulamium built here?
Well, the river is important, both as a resource and as a defence, but
if you look in front of you, although it's quite difficult to see because
of the trees, try to imagine the whole area stripped bare of vegetation.
The hill
goes up on the northern side of the valley, and from the top you can see
for miles. The city may be in a fairly flat valley but it's in a very
commanding position with a very good vantage point, particularly on that
northern side. If anyone was going to attack, the residents would have
had good warning.
As such,
the lay of this land has always helped to make it an important area for
human settlement and could have contributed to its original name.
Settlement
in the area really began to get going during the late Iron Age in the
first century BC. There were iron age settlements around what is now Verulamium
and there's also one at Prae Wood.
The major
settlement was known as Verlamion and was founded by a Belgic tribe called
Catuvellauni. It was their capital for some time before they moved to
Colchester. The area inhabited by this tribe was on raised ground to the
south west of the river where the King Harry Estate now stands.
This location
accounts for the name of the town which could mean 'Above the Pool'. The
River Ver was named later.
After southern
Britain had fallen to the Romans in AD 43, a fort was built near where
St Michael's Church now stands to the north east of the Verlamion. The
Roman style town of Verulamium wad laid out six years later.
In the trees
here you may well see a grey squirrel today, but you wouldn't have in
Roman times. You may possibly have had beavers, definitely wolves and
further north you could well have had European brown bears. It was a fairly
wild area.
A Roman
knows!
Behind the Gate you can see a ditch. This is not a natural part of the
landscape but a typical Roman defensive ditch. In the winter, when there
is less greenery, you can see it has an unusual profile. If you look at
an iron age ditch you can see it's like a sharp 'U' shape, but if you
look at a Roman ditch the sides aren't symmetrical.
The side
furthest away from the wall is steeper than the side coming up towards
the wall and it is thought that this is the Romans being rather clever.
Imagine if you're trying to attack the town. You can zoom down the steep
side into the ditch and then have what looks like an easy run up to the
walls!
But then
the Romans throw everything they've got at you and you find you can't
get up to them. So you then turn to run away and the slope is so steep
that it's difficult to get back up. They just pick you off as you try
to get away. In fact the area in front of the wall is a maximum firing
range from the top of the wall - it's all very cleverly worked out!
You can now
take the time to walk up along the length of this part of the wall, or
turn and walk back down towards the lake.
Walk
along the length of the wall >>
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