Roman Sites in The United Kingdom - England

England

  • Ambleside Roman Fort (Galava), Cumbria
  • Aesica, Roman fort, north of Haltwhistle, Northumberland
  • Agricola's Ditch, The Vallum on Hadrian's Wall was mistakenly attributed to Agricola before the late 19th century
  • Arbeia Roman Fort, South Shields
  • Ardotalia (Melandra Castle), Derbyshire
  • Aquae Sulis (Roman Bath, Somerset)
  • Bancroft Park, Milton Keynes. Romano-British villa
  • Bignor Roman Villa, Pulborough, Sussex
  • Birdoswald Roman Fort (Banna), Cumbria. Part of Hadrian's Wall
  • Binchester Roman Fort, (called Vinovia by the Romans), Roman fort north of Bishop Auckland, County Durham
  • Borough Hill Roman villa, Daventry, Northamptonshire
  • Bourne-Morton Canal (visible only as alignment and crop marks)
  • Brading Roman Villa, Brading, Isle of Wight
  • Bremenium, High Rochester, Northumberland
  • Brough-on-Noe, Derbyshire
  • Burgh Castle, Suffolk
  • Burrington, Somerset
  • Caister-on-Sea, Norfolk
  • Caistor St. Edmund, Norfolk
  • Calleva Atrebatum, Hampshire
  • Camulodunum (Roman Colchester). Oldest Roman wall in Britain, best-preserved Roman gateway in Britain, remains of two Roman theatres, oldest Roman church in UK and Castle museum
  • Carlisle Roman Dig, Carlisle Castle, Cumbria
  • Carrawburgh, Mithraeum temple by Hadrian's Wall, Northumberland
  • Charterhouse Roman Town and Mining Settlement, Somerset
  • Chedworth Roman Villa, near Cheltenham, Gloucestershire
  • Chester Roman Amphitheatre, Cheshire
  • Chesters Bridge, Roman bridge by Chesters Roman Fort (Cilurnum), Northumberland
  • Chew Green, Roman Camps, Northumberland
  • Cilurnum, Northumberland
  • Concangis, Chester-Le-Street, County Durham
  • Coria, Corbridge, Northumberland. Roman site and museum
  • Corinium Dobunnorum, Cirencester, Gloucestershire
  • Crofton Roman Villa, Orpington, Kent
  • Cunetio, Mildenhall, Wiltshire, Wiltshire
  • Dere Street, Roman road
  • Devil's Causeway, Roman road in Northumberland
  • Dolebury Warren, Somerset
  • Dubris (Roman Dover), Kent
  • Durnovaria, Dorchester, Dorset
  • Epiacum, Roman Fort at Whitley Castle, Alston, Cumbria
  • Ermine Street, Roman road
  • Fishbourne Roman Palace, Fishbourne, West Sussex
  • Fosse Way, Roman road
  • Gadebridge Park Roman Villa, Hertfordshire
  • Gariannonum, Norfolk
  • Great Witcombe Roman Villa, Gloucestershire
  • Glevum (Roman Gloucester). Colonia Nervia Glevensium, Roman walls
  • Habitancum, Roman fort at Risingham, Northumberland
  • Hadrian's Wall, Northumberland and Cumbria
  • Ham Hill, Somerset
  • Hardknott Roman Fort (Mediobogdum), Eskdale, Cumbria
  • High Cross, Leicestershire, meeting point of Roman roads
  • Housesteads (Vercovicium), Northumberland
  • Hunnum, (also known as Onnum, and with the modern name of Haltonchesters), Roman fort north of Halton, Northumberland
  • Isca Dumnoniorum (Roman Exeter), Devon. Parts of city wall (overlaid with medieval construction)
  • Jewry Wall, Leicester
  • Lactodurum, Towcester, Northamptonshire
  • Lagentium, Castleford, West Yorkshire
  • Letocetum, near Lichfield, Staffordshire
  • Lindinis (Roman Ilchester), Somerset
  • Littlecote Roman Villa, Wiltshire
  • London Wall, London
  • Longovicium, Lanchester, County Durham, Roman fort with reservoirs, dams and aqueducts
  • Low Ham Roman Villa, Somerset
  • Lullingstone Roman Villa, Kent
  • Lunt Fort, near Coventry, Warwickshire
  • Lydney Park, Gloucestershire. Roman temples
  • Melandra Castle, Derbyshire
  • Magiovinium, Fenny Stratford, Milton Keynes
  • Magnis (Carvoran Roman Fort), Northumberland
  • Moridunum, Axminster, Devon
  • Newcastle Museum of Antiquities, Newcastle upon Tyne
  • Newport Arch, Lincoln
  • Noviomagus Reginorum (Roman Chichester), West Sussex
  • Pevensey Roman Fort (Anderitum), Pevensey, East Sussex
  • Piddington Roman Villa, Northamptonshire
  • Piercebridge Roman Bridge, next to Piercebridge Roman Fort, Piercebridge, County Durham
  • Piercebridge Roman Fort, Piercebridge, County Durham
  • Pomeroy Wood, Devon
  • Portchester Roman Fort (Portus Adurni), Portchester, Hampshire
  • Reculver Roman Fort, Reculver, Kent
  • Bremetennacum, Ribchester, Lancashire
  • Rockbourne Roman Villa, Fordingbridge, Hampshire
  • Roman Army Museum, Haltwhistle, Northumberland
  • Roman Baths, Bath, Somerset
  • RutupiƦ (Roman Richborough), Kent
  • Segedunum Roman Fort, Wallsend, North Tyneside
  • Stanegate, Roman road
  • Temple of Mithras, London
  • Templeborough, South Yorkshire
  • Tripontium, near Rugby, Warwickshire
  • Uley, Gloucestershire
  • Venta Belgarum Winchester, Hampshire
  • Vercovicium, (or Housesteads Roman Fort) was an auxiliary fort on Hadrian's Wall, Northumberland
  • Verulamium, near St Albans, Hertfordshire
  • Vindolanda, Northumberland
  • Vinovia, (Binchester Roman Fort), Roman fort north of Bishop Auckland, County Durham
  • Vindobala, Roman fort at Rudchester, Northumberland
  • Vindomora, Roman fort at Ebchester, County Durham
  • Viroconium Cornoviorum, Wroxeter, Shropshire
  • Walls Castle (Roman Bath House), Ravenglass, Cumbria
  • Waddon Hill, near Beaminster, Dorset
  • Watling Street, Roman road
  • Welwyn Roman baths (part of Dicket Mead Villa), Hertfordshire
  • Whitehall Farm Roman villa, Northamptonshire
  • Woodbury Farm Roman Fort, near Axminster, Devon
  • Woodchester Roman Villa, Woodchester, near Stroud, Gloucestershire

Read more about this topic:  Roman Sites In The United Kingdom

Famous quotes containing the word england:

    In England there are sixty different religions, and only one sauce.
    Francesco Caracciolo (1752–1799)

    In England if something goes wrong—say, if one finds a skunk in the garden—he writes to the family solicitor, who proceeds to take the proper measures; whereas in America, you telephone the fire department. Each satisfies a characteristic need; in the English, love of order and legalistic procedure; and here in America, what you like is something vivid, and red, and swift.
    Alfred North Whitehead (1861–1947)

    The next Augustan age will dawn on the other side of the Atlantic. There will, perhaps, be a Thucydides at Boston, a Xenophon at New York, and, in time, a Virgil at Mexico, and a Newton at Peru. At last, some curious traveller from Lima will visit England and give a description of the ruins of St. Paul’s, like the editions of Balbec and Palmyra.
    Horace Walpole (1717–1797)