Net Deals Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Roman roads in Britannia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_roads_in_Britannia

    Roman Britain military infrastructure in 68 AD A Roman lighthouse at Dover Castle, 3rd century. Dubris was the starting point of Watling Street to London and Wroxeter. The earliest roads, built in the first phase of Roman occupation (the Julio-Claudian period, AD 43–68), connected London with the ports used in the invasion (Chichester and Richborough), and with the earlier legionary bases at ...

  3. Watling Street - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watling_Street

    Watling Street. Watling Street is a historic route in England that crosses the River Thames at London and which was used in Classical Antiquity, Late Antiquity, and throughout the Middle Ages. It was used by the ancient Britons and paved as one of the main Roman roads in Britannia (Roman-governed Great Britain during the Roman Empire ).

  4. Stane Street - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stane_Street

    Stane Street is the modern name of the 91 km-long (57 mi) Roman road in southern England that linked Londinium (London) to Noviomagus Reginorum ().The exact date of construction is uncertain; however, on the basis of archaeological artefacts discovered along the route, it was in use by 70 AD and may have been built in the first decade of the Roman occupation of Britain (as early as 43–53 AD).

  5. Ermine Street - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ermine_Street

    The Roman Newport Arch in Lincoln. Ermine Street is a major Roman road in England that ran from London to Lincoln (Lindum Colonia) and York ().The Old English name was Earninga Strǣt (1012), named after a tribe called the Earningas, who inhabited a district later known as Armingford Hundred, around Arrington, Cambridgeshire, and Royston, Hertfordshire. [1] "

  6. Margary numbers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margary_numbers

    Margary numbers. Margary numbers are the numbering scheme developed by the historian Ivan Margary to catalogue known and suspected Roman roads in Britain in his 1955 work The Roman Roads of Britain. [1] They remain the standard system used by archaeologists and historians to identify individual Roman roads within Britain. [1]

  7. Roman sites in Great Britain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_sites_in_Great_Britain

    Roman site and museum. Devil's Causeway, Roman road to Berwick upon Tweed. Featherwood Roman Camps, on Dere Street between Chew Green and Bremenium. Habitancum, Roman fort at Risingham. Housesteads (Vercovicium) Hunnum, (also known as Onnum, and with the modern name of Haltonchesters), Roman fort north of Halton.

  8. Roman roads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_roads

    The Appian Way, one of the oldest and most important Roman roads The Roman Empire in the time of Hadrian (r. 117–138), showing the network of main Roman roads. Roman roads (Latin: viae Romanae [ˈwiae̯ roːˈmaːnae̯]; singular: via Romana [ˈwia roːˈmaːna]; meaning "Roman way") were physical infrastructure vital to the maintenance and development of the Roman state, and were built from ...

  9. Fen Causeway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fen_Causeway

    Coordinates: 52°34′N 0°4′E. Fen Causeway or the Fen Road is the modern name for a Roman road of England that runs between Denver, Norfolk in the east and Peterborough in the west. [1] [2] Its path covers 24 miles (39 km), passing March and Eldernell (near Whittlesey) before joining the major Roman north–south route Ermine Street west of ...