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gilius

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Small-Town is the widely accepted archaeological term for a village, i.e. a lesser settlement that wasn't a town.

 

How do we know if a settlement was a true town?

*It could have a tribal name indicating it was a civitas or could have something like "Colonia" before the name.

*A forum-basilica has been discovered or known to have existed for the settlement (or a mixture of public buildings such as bath-house(s) with temple(s) and a street grid).

 

:D

Edited by gilius
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Here's the route to get you started:

 

Londinium/Augusta

Noviomagus

Vagniacis

Durobrivae

Durovernum

Portus Dubris

Gesoriacum/Bononia

Tarvenna

Nemetacum

Augusta Viromanduorum

Chatillon-sur-Oise

Mesbrecourt-Richecourt

Durocortorum/Civitas Remorum

Durocatalaunum

Corobilium?

Brienne-la-Veille

Segessera

Andemantunnum

Segobodium

Vesontio

Arlorica

Irba

Lousonna

Vivisco/Viviscus

Penne Locos

Tarnaias?

Acammum

Octodurus/Forum Claudii Vallensium

Augusta Pretoria

Vitricium

Eporedia

Vercellae

Cuttiae

Laumellum

Durriae

Ticinum

Lambrum

Ad Rota(s)

Ad Padum

Placentia

Florenti(ol)a

Fidentia

Ad Tarum

Parma

Regium Lepidum

Pons Seciae

Mutina

Voctoriolae

Forum Gallorum (off road slightly)

Ad Medias

Felsina/Bononia

Ad Idicem

Claterna

Ad Silarum

Forum Cornelii

Ad Sinnium

Faventia

Forum Livii

Forum Popilii

Caesena

Compitum ad Confluentes

Ariminum

Pisaurum

Fanum Fortunae

Ad Octavum

Forum Sempronii

Intercisa/Petra Pertusa

Cales

Ad Aesim

Helvillum

Tadinae

Nuceria

Forum Flaminii

Fulginiae

Mevania

Carsulae

Nequinum/Narnia

Ocriculum

Aqua Viva

Rostrata Villa

Ad Vicesismum

Ad Gallinas Albas

Pons Mulvius

Roma

 

Most of the above are small towns or minor settlements, but can you identify the few true towns? That is really what the challenge is! ;)

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Here's the route to get you started:

 

Londinium/Augusta

<SNIP>Roma

 

Most of the above are small towns or minor settlements, but can you identify the few true towns? That is really what the challenge is! ;)

 

Well as you have now listed the towns/ settlements on what you seem to believe is the quickest route that's the

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I think that's the quickest route, but it doesn't really matter what route you take: besides listing random Roman settlements, actually identifying the important settlements, i.e. known Roman Towns--outside of Britannia--seems virtually impossible without going through hundreds of archaeological reports published in many different languages as well as consulting primary historical sources. This is only goes to show how exceptional Roman scholarship/publication is in Britain and how lousy Roman historians are in other European countries!

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...<snip>....

This is only goes to show how exceptional Roman scholarship/publication is in Britain and how lousy Roman historians are in other European countries!

 

Not necessarily; both France and Germany have a long and at least as illustrious pedigree for Roman studies as Britain while Spanish, Italian and Dutch archaeologists and historians also have had a strong presence at several specialist conferences I have attended in Britain with other European countries usually also represented.

 

The specialist Roman research libraries such as the Classics Library of the Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies, currently based at Senate House in London, usually carry numerous reference books which are not written in English. Every year the list of reviews of foreign Roman related books published in the Roman Societies annual Journal of Roman Studies runs to at least 50% of the 'English language' works listed and I'm sure that many more are not even reviewed.

 

It is probably a truer statement to say that most of this research has only a limited history of translation into English, making it generally unavailable to those of us who are not fluent in any other language.

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Well, I am a member of that Society based at Senate House, and I have looked through every one of their French and German books as well as the Galia journal, but haven't come across a single comprehensive map of any Gallic, Germanic, Spanish or North African province. You could even read a book like this and still have no clue as to what Roman towns were in Italy besides the obvious such as Rome, Pompeii and a few others they chose to write about...

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Cities-Roman-Italy-Classical-World/dp/1853997285

 

However, there are scores of books about Roman Britain that will provide town information at a simple glance.

 

Coloniae

Colchester (Camulodunum)

Gloucester (Glevem)

Lincoln (Lindum)

York (Eboracum)

 

Municipia

St Albans (Verulamium)

 

Civitates

Aldborough (Isurium Brigantium)

Brough (Petuaria)

Caerwent (Venta Silurum)

Caistor-by-Norwich (Venta Icenorum)

Canterbury (Durovernum Cantiacorum)

Carmarthen (Moridunum Demetarum)

Chelmsford (Trinovantum)

Chichester (Noviomagus Reginorum)

Cirencester (Corinium Dobunnorum)

Dorchester (Durnovaria)

Exeter (Isca Dumniorum)

Leicester (Ratae Corieltauvorum)

Silchester (Calleva Atrebatum)

Winchester (Venta Belgarum)

Wroxeter (Viroconium Cornoviorum)

 

Unknown Status

London (Londinium)

 

However, try and find out any Municipia of Gaul and Germany. After 3 years of research, I've only managed to find out 1 and 4 respectively, but certain authors/historians have hinted they know of many more, yet they don't bother mentioning or mapping them. Ok, here's another challenge... at least 10 Roman circuses are known in Gaul; simply list 5 of them!

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In which case you know that offering

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Yep! :) The information should be readily available, and I just don't understand why it's not...

 

I was recommended one book by the author of Romans, Celts and Germans that isn't at Senate House, and I had to go to the British Library to view it, but it only lists towns and small-towns that were known up until 1994 and fails to mention status/type:

dsc03124s.jpg

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The thing is that we do have a lot of holes in our records for those areas because we don't have sources on the topics or have huge difficulties understanding them when we get them. Even for Belgium, which I obviously know a bit better thanks to my studies, I know we have a lot of issues and can't say how many civitates were on the territories, and even less the amount of pagi, despite the fact that we now know most roads. Hell, for a long time we also dated as roman a wooden road which was finally shown in the 70's or 80's to be carolingian (we had no artifacts and it was finally C14 which settled the issue). We also have place where we have a small town around a little temple but no epigraphy outside of I.O.M. and other similary short dedictions... The U.K., with it's large military presence, is thus an unusal case when compared to many other places.

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I believe the information is available, but that French/German historians only provide/publish a sample of their data. For example, when I see maps inside books, no effort is ever made to comprehensively present what is known about towns. What Civitas/tribal area in Belgium is patchy or what specific town problems have you encountered with that small region due to lack of sources?

 

I am going to study some primary sources and see if I am able to come up with the 21 towns of Roman Britain without any help from secondary sources. If I can do it then, in theory, I should be able to apply that to any other Western province of the Roman Empire. In fact, I think the sources should be better for Gaul, Germany and especially Italy; for Britain, most of the Peutinger table is lost, yet all that is known about towns (and small-towns) is published and readily accessible: we have about 4-5 books specifically about "Towns Of Roman Britain" as well as 2-3 on the Small-towns. What's more, most general books on Roman Britain will show the 21 towns and state the ones that were Colonia and the one Municipium we know about and speculate about London; this is skeleton framework that every general book about Roman Britain worth it's salt is based on. Why don't the French or German historians attempt the same thing for their countries? All their efforts seem to have been put into the Limes.

Edited by gilius
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Agreed that there is quite a bit of information about the status of Roman towns in Britain - thanks in large part to the early eforts of Wacher and those who followed him.

 

However even in Britain there is still a lot of debate about precisely when certain towns status changed, as we know many did throughout the four centuries of Roman occupation, due to the very limited epigraphic records in most of the country. London as you have already indicated is the worst example of our limited knowledge of it's precise status at just about any point in time from when it was established until the Roman army left Britain.

 

If you try and extrapolate from Britain to Continental Europe I suspect you will find that the picture is similarly confused with many towns either not excavated or with no epigraphic evidence from the area's excavated to date. That may be the 'real' explanation for whny you have not had much luck in obtaining a 'simple' map giving the information you are seeking.

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