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This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
Title: Early Britain--Roman Britain
Author: Edward Conybeare
Release Date: July 14, 2004 [eBook #12910]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EARLY BRITAIN--ROMAN BRITAIN***

A MAP OF
BRITAIN to illustrate THE ROMAN OCCUPATION.
London: Published by the Society for Promoting
Christian Knowledge.
| p. | vii. | for | Caesar 55 A.D. | read | Caesar 55 B.C. |
| " | 56 | " | 11th century | " | 12th century. |
| " | 58 | " | Damnonian Name | " | Damnonian name. |
| " | 66 | " | ἠδικὴν [êdikên] | " | ἠθικὴν [aethikaen] |
| " | 108 | " | sunrise | " | sunset. |
| " | 133 | " | some lost authority | " | Suetonius. |
| " | 141 | " | DONATE | " | DONANTE. |
| " | 150 | " | Venta Silurum | " | Isca Silurum. |
| " | 185 | " | is flanked | " | was flanked. |
| " | 209 | " | iambic | " | trochaic. |
| " | " | " | Exquis | " | Ex quis. |
| " | 213 | " | one priceless | " | once priceless. |
| " | 232 | " | in pieces | " | to pieces. |
| " | 238 | " | constrigit | " | constringit. |
| " | " | " | Sparas | " | Sparsas. |
A little book on a great subject, especially when that book is one of a "series," is notoriously an object of literary distrust. For the limitations thus imposed upon the writer are such as few men can satisfactorily cope with, and he must needs ask the indulgence of his readers for his painfully-felt shortcomings in dealing with the mass of material which he has to manipulate. And more especially is this the case when the volume which immediately precedes his in the series is such a mine of erudition as the 'Celtic Britain' of Professor Rhys.
In the present work my object has been to give a readable sketch of the historical growth and decay of Roman influence in Britain, illustrated by the archaeology of the period, rather than a mainly archaeological treatise with a bare outline of the history. The chief authorities of which I have made use are thus those original classical sources for the early history of our island, so carefully and ably collected in the 'Monumenta Historica Britannica';[1] which, along with Huebner's 'Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum[2],' must always be the foundation of every work on Roman Britain. Amongst the many other authorities consulted I must acknowledge my special debt to Mr. Elton's 'Origins of English History'; and yet more to Mr. Haverfield's invaluable publications in the 'Antiquary' and elsewhere, without which to keep abreast of the incessant development of my subject by the antiquarian spade-work now going on all over the land would be an almost hopeless task.
EDWARD CONYBEARE.
A complete Bibliography of Roman Britain would be wholly beyond the scope of the present work. Much of the most valuable material, indeed, has never been published in book form, and must be sought out in the articles of the 'Antiquary,' 'Hermes,' etc., and the reports of the many local Archaeological Societies. All that is here attempted is to indicate some of the more valuable of the many scores of sources to which my pages are indebted.
To begin with the ancient authorities. These range through upwards of a thousand years; from Herodotus in the 5th century before Christ, to Gildas in the 6th century after. From about 100 A.D. onwards we find that almost every known classical authority makes more or less mention of Britain. A list of over a hundred such authors is given in the 'Monumenta Historica Britannica'; and upwards of fifty are quoted in this present work. Historians, poets, geographers, naturalists, statesmen, ecclesiastics, all give touches which help out our delineation of Roman Britain.
Amongst the historians the most important are—Caesar, who tells his own tale; Tacitus, to whom we owe our main knowledge of the Conquest, with the later stages of which he was contemporary; Dion Cassius, who wrote his history in the next century, the 2nd A.D.;[3] the various Imperial biographers of the 3rd century; the Imperial panegyrists of the 4th, along with Ammianus Marcellinus, who towards the close of that century connects and supplements their stories; Claudian, the poet-historian of the 5th century, whose verses throw a lurid gleam on his own disastrous age, when Roman authority in Britain was at its last gasp; and finally the British writers, Nennius and Gildas, whose "monotonous plaint" shows that authority dead and gone, with the first stirring of our new national life already quickening amid the decay.
Of geographical and general information we gain most from Strabo, in the Augustan age, who tells what earlier and greater geographers than himself had already discovered about our island; Pliny the Elder, who, in the next century, found the ethnology and botany of Britain so valuable for his 'Natural History'; Ptolemy, a generation later yet, who includes an elaborate survey of our island in his stupendous Atlas (as it would now be called) of the world;[4] and the unknown compilers of the 'Itinerary,' the 'Notitia,' and the 'Ravenna Geography.' To these must be added the epigrammatist Martial, who lived at the time of the Conquest, and whose references to British matters throw a precious light on the social connection between Britain and Rome which aids us to trace something of the earliest dawn of Christianity in our land.[5]
| NAME. | REFERENCE. | APPROXIMATE DATE, ETC. |
| Aelian | III. A. 6 | A.D. 220. Naturalist. |
| Appian | IV. D. 1 | A.D. 140. Historian. |
| Aristides | V.E. 4 | A.D. 160. Orator. |
| Aristotle | I.C. 1 | B.C. 333. Philosopher. |
| St. Athanasius | V.B. 1, etc. | A.D. 333. Theologian. |
| Ausonius | V.B. 7 | A.D. 380. Poet. |
| Caesar | V. etc. | B.C. 55. Historian. |
| Capitolinus | IV. E. 3 | A.D. 290. Imperial Biographer. |
| Catullus | V.E. 4 | B.C. 33. Poet. |
| St. Chrysostom | V.E. 15, etc. | A.D. 380. Theologian. |
| Cicero | I.D. 3, etc. | B.C. 55. Orator, etc. |
| Claudian | vi. etc. | A.D. 400. Poet-Historian. |
| St. Clement | V.E. 4 | A.D. 80. Theologian. |
| Constantius | V.F. 4 | A.D. 480. Ecclesiastical Biographer. |
| Diodorus Siculus | I.E. 11, etc. | B.C. 44. Geographer. |
| Dion Cassius | v. etc. | A.D. 150. Historian. |
| Dioscorides | I.E. 4 | A.D. 80. Physician. |
| Eumenius | V.A. 1 | A.D. 310. Imperial Panegyrist. |
| Eutropius | V.A. 1 | A.D. 300. Imperial Panegyrist. |
| Firmicus | V.B. 2 | A.D. 350. Controversialist. |
| Frontinus | III. A. 1 | A.D. 80. Wrote on Tactics. |
| Fronto | IV. D. 2 | A.D. 100. Historian. |
| Gildas | vi. etc. | A.D. 500. Theologian. |
| Hegesippus | II. F. 3 | A.D. 150. Historian. |
| Herodian | IV. E. 3 | A.D. 220. Historian. |
| Herodotus | I.C. 3 | B.C. 444. Historian, etc. |
| St. Hilary | V.B. 3 | A.D. 350. Theologian. |
| Horace | III. A. 7 | B.C. 25. Poet. |
| Itinerary | IV. A. 7 | A.D. 200. |
| St. Jerome | V.C. 12 | A.D. 400. Theologian. |
| Josephus | III. F. 1 | A.D. 70. Historian. |
| Juvenal | III. F. 5 | A.D. 75. Satirist. |
| Lampridius | IV. E. 1 | A.D. 290. Imperial Biographer. |
| Lucan | II. E. 1 | A.D. 60. Historical Poet. |
| Mamertinus | V.A. 5 | A.D. 280. Panegyrist. |
| Marcellinus | vi. etc. | A.D. 380. Historian. |
| Martial | vi. etc. | A.D. 70. Epigrammatist. |
| Maximus | II. C. 13 | A.D. 30. Wrote Memorabilia. |
| Mela | I.H. 7 | A.D. 50. Geographer, etc. |
| Menologia Graeca | V.E. 5 | A.D. 550. |
| Minucius Felix | I.E. 2 | A.D. 210. Geographer. |
| Nemesianus | IV. C. 15 | A.D. 280. Wrote on Hunting. |
| Nennius | vi. etc. | A.D. 500. Historian. |
| Notitia | vi. etc. | A.D. 406. |
| Olympiodorus | V.C. 10 | A.D. 425. Historian. |
| Onomacritus | I.C. 1 | B.C. 333. Poet. |
| Oppian | IV. C. 15 | A.D. 140. Wrote on Hunting |
| Origen | V.E. 13 | A.D. 220. Theologian. |
| Pliny | vi. etc. | A.D. 70. Naturalist. |
| Plutarch | I.C. 1 | A.D. 80. Historian, etc. |
| Polyaenus | II. E. 8 | A.D. 180. Wrote on Tactics. |
| Procopius | V.D. 5 | A.D. 555. Wrote on Geography, etc. |
| Propertius | III. 1. 7 | B.C. 10. Poet. |
| Prosper | V.F. 4 | A.D. 450. Ecclesiastical Historian. |
| Prudentius | IV. C. 15 | A.D. 370. Ecclesiastical Poet. |
| Ptolemy | v. etc. | A.D. 120. Geographer. |
| Ravenna Geography | vi. etc. | A.D. 450. |
| Seneca | III. C. 7 | A.D. 60. Philosopher. |
| Sidonius Apollinaris | V.F. 3 | A.D. 475. Letters. |
| Solinus | I.E. 4, etc. | A.D. 80. Geographer. |
| Spartianus | IV. D. 2 | A.D. 303. Historian. |
| Strabo | vi. etc. | B.C. 20. Geographer. |
| Suetonius | I.H. 10 | A.D. 110. Imperial Biographer. |
| Symmachus | IV. C. 15 | A.D. 390. Statesman, etc. |
| Tacitus | v. etc. | A.D. 80. Historian. |
| Tertullian | V.E. 11 | A.D. 180. Theologian. |
| Theodoret | V.E. 4 | A.D. 420. Wrote Commentaries. |
| Tibullus | III. A. 7 | B.C. 20. Poet. |
| Timaeus | I.D. 2 | B.C. 300. Geographer. |
| Vegetius | V.B. 5 | A.D. 380. Historian. |
| Venantius | V.E. 4 | A.D. 580. Wrote Ecclesiastical Poems. |
| Victor | V.A. 9 | A.D. 380. Historian. |
| Virgil | III. 1. 7 | B.C. 30. Poet. |
| Vitruvius | I.G. 5 | A.D. Wrote on Geography, etc. |
| Vobiscus | IV. C. 17 | A.D. 290. Historian. |
| Xiphilinus | vi. etc. | A.D. 1200. Abridged Dio Cassius. |
| Zosimus | V.C. 11 | A.D. 400. Historian. |
The constant accession of new material, especially from the unceasing spade-work always going on in every quarter of the island, makes modern books on Roman Britain tend to become obsolete, sometimes with startling rapidity. But even when not quite up to date, a well-written book is almost always very far from worthless, and much may be learnt from any in the following list:—
| BABCOCK | 'The Two Last Centuries of Roman Britain' (1891). |
| BARNES | 'Ancient Britain' (1858). |
| BROWNE, BISHOP | 'The Church before Augustine' (1895). |
| BRUCE | 'Handbook to the Roman Wall' (1895). |
| CAMDEN | 'Britannia' (1587). |
| COOTE | 'Romans in Britain' (1878). |
| DAWKINS | 'Early Man in Britain' (1880). |
| 'The Place of the Welsh in English History' (1889). | |
| DILL | 'Roman Society' (1899). |
| ELTON | 'Origins of English History' (1890). |
| EVANS, SIR J. | 'British Coins' (1869). |
| 'Bronze Implements' (1881). | |
| 'Stone Implements' (1897). | |
| FREEMAN | 'Historical Essays' (1879). |
| 'English Towns' (1883). | |
| 'Tyrants of Britain' (1886). | |
| FROUDE | 'Julius Caesar' (1879). |
| GUEST | 'Origines Celticae' (1883). |
| HADDAN AND STUBBS | 'Concilia' (1869). |
| 'Remains' (1876). | |
| HARDY | 'Monumenta Historica Britannica' (1848). |
| HAVERFIELD | 'Roman World' (1899), etc. |
| HODGKIN | 'Italy and her Invaders' (1892), etc. |
| HOGARTH (ed.) | 'Authority and Archaeology' (1899). |
| HORSLEY | 'Britannia Romana' (1732). |
| HUEBNER | 'Inscriptiones Britannicae Romanae' (1873). |
| 'Inscriptiones Britannicae' | |
| 'Christianae' (1876), etc. | |
| KEMBLE | 'Saxons in England' (1876). |
| KENRICK | 'Phoenicia' (1855). |
| 'Papers on History' (1864). | |
| LEWIN | 'Invasion of Britain' (1862). |
| LUBBOCK, SIR J. | 'Origin of Civilization' (1889). |
| LYALL | 'Natural Religion' (1891). |
| LYELL | 'Antiquity of Man' (1873). |
| MAINE, SIR H. | 'Early History of Institutions' (1876). |
| MAITLAND | 'Domesday Studies' (1897). |
| MARQUARDT | 'Römische Staatsverwaltung' (1873). |
| MOMMSEN | 'Provinces of the Roman Empire' (1865). |
| NEILSON | 'Per Lineam Valli' (1892). |
| PEARSON | 'Historical Atlas of Britain' (1870). |
| RHYS | 'Celtic Britain' (1882). |
| 'Celtic Heathendom' (1888). | |
| 'Welsh People' (1900). | |
| ROLLESTON | 'British Barrows' (1877). |
| 'Prehistoric Fauna' (1880). | |
| SCARTH | 'Roman Britain' (1885). |
| SMITH, C.R. | 'Collectanea' (1848), etc. |
| TOZER | 'History of Ancient Geography' (1897). |
| TRAILL AND MANN | 'Social England' (1901). |
| USHER, BP. | 'British Ecclesiastical Antiquity' (1639). |
| VINE | 'Caesar in Kent' (1899). |
| WRIGHT | 'Celt, Roman and Saxon' (1875). |
| DATE | EVENTS. | EMPEROR. |
| B.C. | ||
| 350 (?) | Pytheas discovers Britain [I.D. 1] | |
| 100 (?) | Divitiacus Overlord of Britain (?) | |
| [II. B. 4] | ||
| Gauls settle on Thames and Humber | ||
| (?) [I.F. 4] | ||
| Posidonius visits Britain [I.D. 3] | ||
| Birth of Julius Caesar [II. A. 6] | ||
| 58 | Caesar conquers Gaul [II. A. 9] | |
| 56 | Sea-fight with Veneti and Britons | |
| [II. B. 3] | ||
| 55 | First invasion of Britain | |
| [II. C., D.] | ||
| Cassivellaunus Overlord of Britain | ||
| (?) [II. F. 3] | ||
| Mandubratius, exiled Prince of | ||
| Trinobantes, appeals to Caesar (?) | ||
| [II. E. 10] | ||
| 54 | Second Invasion of Britain | |
| [II. E., F., G.] | ||
| 52 | Revolt of Gaul. Commius, Prince | |
| of Arras, flies to Britain and | ||
| reigns in South-east [III. A. 1] | ||
| 44 | Caesar slain [II. G. 9] | |
| 32 | Battle of Actium [III. A. 6] | Augustus. |
| About this time the sons of Commius | ||
| reign in Kent, etc., Addeomarus | ||
| over Iceni, and Tasciovan | ||
| at Verulam [III. A. 1] | ||
| A.D. | About this time the Commian | |
| princes are overthrown | ||
| [III. A. 2] | ||
| Cymbeline, son of Tasciovan, becomes | ||
| Overlord of Britain | ||
| [III. A. 4]. Commians appeal to | ||
| Augustus [III. A. 5] | ||
| 14 | Death of Augustus | Tiberius. |
| 29 | Consulship of the Gemini. The | |
| Crucifixion (?) | ||
| 37 | Death of Tiberius | Caligula. |
| 40 (?) | Cymbeline banishes Adminius, | |
| who appeals to Rome [III. A. 5] | ||
| Caligula threatens invasion | ||
| [III. A. 6] | ||
| 41 | Caligula poisoned [III. A. 9] | Claudius. |
| Death of Cymbeline (?). His son | ||
| Caradoc succeeds | ||
| 43 | Antedrigus and Vericus contend | |
| for Icenian throne: Vericus appeals | ||
| to Rome [III. A. 9] | ||
| 44 | Claudius subdues Britain [III. B.] | |
| Cogidubnus, King in South-east, | ||
| made Roman Legate [III. C. 8] | ||
| 45 | Triumph of Claudius | |
| [III. C. 1, 2] | ||
| 47 | Ovation of Aulus Plautius, conqueror | |
| of Britain. [III. C. 2] | ||
| 48 | Vespasian and Titus crush British | |
| guerrillas [III. C. 3] | ||
| 50 | Britain made "Imperial" Province. | |
| Ostorius Pro-praetor | ||
| [III. C. 9] | ||
| Icenian revolt crushed [III. D. | ||
| 1-6]. | ||
| Camelodune a colony [III. D. 8] | ||
| 51 | Silurian revolt under Caradoc | |
| [III. D. 7, 8] | ||
| 52 | Caradoc captive [III. D. 9] | |
| 53 | Uriconium and Caerleon founded | |
| [III. D. 12] | ||
| 54 | Death of Ostorius [III. D. 11] | |
| 55 | Didius Gallus Pro-praetor. Last | |
| Silurian effort [III. D. 13] | ||
| Death of Claudius [III. D. 13] | Nero. | |
| 56 (?) | Aulus Plautius marries Pomponia | |
| Graecina [V.E. 10] | ||
| 61 | Suetonius Paulinus Pro-praetor | |
| [III. E. 7] | ||
| Massacre of Druids in Mona | ||
| [III. E. 8, 9] | ||
| Boadicean revolt [III. E. 2-13]. | ||
| St. Peter in Britain (?) [V.E. 5] | ||
| 62 | Turpiliannus Pro-praetor. "Peace" | |
| in Britain [III. E. 13] | ||
| 63 (?) | Claudia Rufina Marries Pudens | |
| [V.E. 9] | ||
| 64 | Burning of Rome. First Persecution. | |
| St. Paul in Britain (?) | ||
| [V.E. 4] | ||
| 65 | Aristobulus Bishop in Britain (?) | |
| [V.E. 5] | ||
| 68 | Death of Nero (June 10) | Galba. |
| Galba slain (Dec. 16) | Civil War between | |
| 69 | Otho slain (April 20) | Otho and Vitellius. |
| Vitellius slain (Dec. 20) | ||
| British army under Agricola | Vespasian. | |
| pronounces for Vespasian | ||
| [III. F. 1] | ||
| 70 | Cerealis Pro-praetor. Brigantes | |
| subdued by Agricola [III. F. 1] | ||
| Destruction of Jerusalem | ||
| [IV. C. 5] | ||
| 75 | Frontinus Pro-praetor. Silurians | |
| subdued by Agricola [III. F. 2] | ||
| 78 | Agricola Pro-praetor. Ordovices | |
| and Mona subdued [III. F. 3] | ||
| 79 | Agricola Latinizes Britain [III. | Titus. |
| F. 4]. Vespasian dies | ||
| 80 | Agricola's first Caledonian campaign | |
| [III. F. 5]. | ||
| 81 | Agricola's rampart from Forth to | Domitian. |
| Clyde [III. F. 7]. Titus dies | ||
| 82 | Agricola invades Ireland (?) [III. | |
| F. 5] | ||
| 83 | Agricola advances into Northern | |
| Caledonia [III. F. 5] | ||
| First circumnavigation of Britain | ||
| [III. F. 7] | ||
| 84 | Agricola defeats Galgacus [III. | |
| F. 6], resigns and dies [III. F. 7] | ||
| 95 | Second persecution. Flavia Domitilla | |
| [V.E. 11] | ||
| 96 | Domitian slain | Nerva. |
| 98 | Nerva dies | Trajan. |
| 117 | Trajan dies | Hadrian. |
| 120 | Hadrian visits Britain and builds Wall | |
| [IV. D. 1] | ||
| Britain divided into "Upper" and | ||
| "Lower" [IV. D. 3] | ||
| First "Britannia" coinage [IV. D. 4] | ||
| 138 | Hadrian dies | Antoninus Pius. |
| 139 | Lollius Urbicus, Legate in Britain, | |
| replaces Agricola's rampart by turf | ||
| wall from Forth to Clyde [IV. D. 5] | ||
| 140 | Britain made Pro-consular [IV. E. 5] | |
| 161 | Antoninus dies | Marcus Aurelius. |
| 180 | British Church organized by Pope | |
| Eleutherius (?) [V.E. 12] | ||
| Marcus Aurelius dies | Commodus. | |
| 181 | Caledonian invasion driven back by | |
| Ulpius Marcellus [IV. E. 1] | ||
| 184 | Commodus "Britannicus" [IV. E. 1] | |
| 185 | British army mutinies against reforms | |
| of Perennis [IV. E. 1] | ||
| 187 | Pertinax quells mutineers [IV. E. 3] | |
| 192 | Pertinax superseded by Junius Severus | |
| [IV. E. 3] | ||
| Death of Commodus | Interregnum. | |
| 193 | Pertinax slain by Julianus and Albinus. | Pertinax; Julianus; |
| Julianus slain | Albinus; Severus. | |
| Severus proclaimed. Albinus Emperor in | ||
| Britain [IV. E. 3] | ||
| 197 | British army defeated at Lyons. | Severus. |
| Albinus slain [IV. E. 3] | ||
| 201 | Vinius Lupus, Pro-praetor, buys off | |
| Caledonians [IV. E. 4] | ||
| 208 | Caledonian invasion. Severus comes to | |
| Britain [IV. E. 5] | ||
| 209 | Severus overruns Caledonia | |
| [IV. E. 5] | ||
| 210 | Severus completes Hadrian's Wall | |
| [IV. E. 6] | ||
| 211 | Severus dies at York [IV. G. 2] | Caracalla. |
| Geta. | ||
| 212 | Geta murdered [IV. G. 2] | Caracalla. |
| 215 (?) | Roman citizenship extended to | |
| British provincials [IV. G. 2] | ||
| (?) | Itinerary of Antonius [IV. A. 7] | |
| 217 | Caracalla slain | Macrinus. |
| 218 | Macrinus slain | Helagabalus. |
| 222 | Helagabalus slain | Alexander Severus. |
| 235 | Alexander Severus slain | Maximin. |
| 238 | Maximin slain | Gordian. |
| 244 | Gordian slain | Philip. |
| 249 | Philip slain | Decius. |
| 251 | Decius slain | Gallus. |
| 254 | Gallus slain | Valerian. |
| {Gallienus. | ||
| 258 | Postumus proclaimed Emperor in | |
| Britain [V.A. 1] | ||
| 260 | Valerian slain | Gallienus. |
| 265 | Victorinus associated with | |
| Postumus [V.A. 1] | ||
| 268 | Gallienus slain | Tetricus. |
| 269 | Tetricus slain | Claudius Gothicus. |
| 270 | Claudius Gothicus dies | Aurelian. |
| 273 (?) | Constantius Chlorus marries | |
| Helen, a British lady [V.A. 6] | ||
| 274 | Constantine the Great born at | |
| York [V.A. 6] | ||
| 275 | Aurelian slain | Tacitus. |
| 276 | Tacitus slain | Florianus. |
| Florianus slain | Probus. | |
| 277 | Vandal prisoners deported to | |
| Britain [V.A. 1] | ||
| 282 | Probus slain | Carus. |
| 283 | Carus dies | Numerian. |
| 284 | Numerian dies | Carinus. |
| 285 | Carinus dies | Diocletian. |
| Maximian. | ||
| 286 | Carausius, first "Count of the | |
| Saxon Shore," becomes Emperor | ||
| in Britain [V.A. 3] | ||
| 292 | Constantine and Galerius "Caesars" | |
| [V.A. 5] | ||
| 294 | Carausius murdered by Allectus | |
| [V.A. 4] | ||
| 296 | Constantius slays Allectus and | |
| recovers Britain [V.A. 7, 8] | ||
| Britain divided into four "Diocletian" | ||
| Provinces [V.A. 9] | ||
| 303 | Tenth Persecution. Martyrdom | |
| of St. Alban [V.A. 11] | ||
| 305 | Diocletian and Maximian abdicate | Constantius. |
| [V.A. 12] | Galerius. | |
| 306 | Constantius dies at York [V.A. | |
| 13]. Constantine, Galerius, | ||
| Maxentius, Licinius, etc., contend | Interregnum. | |
| for Empire [V.A. 14] | ||
| 312 | Constantine with British Army | |
| wins at Milvian Bridge, and | ||
| embraces Christianity [V.A. 14] | Constantine. | |
| 314 | Council of Arles [V.E. 14] | |
| 325 | Council of Nicaea [V.B. 1] | |
| Constantine II. | ||
| 337 | Constantine dies | Constantius II. |
| Constans. | ||
| 340 | Constantine II. dies | |
| 343 | Constans and Constantius II. visit | |
| Britain [V.B. 1] | ||
| 350 | Constans slain. Usurpation of | Constantius II. |
| Magnentius in Britain [V.B. 3] | ||
| 353 | Magnentius dies [V.B. 3] | |
| 358 | Britain under Julian. Exportation | |
| of corn [V.B. 4] | ||
| 360 | Council of Ariminum [V.E. 14] | |
| 361 | Death of Constantius [V.B. 6] | Julian. |
| 362 | Lupicinus, Legate in Britain, repels | |
| first attacks of Picts | ||
| and Scots [V.B. 5] | ||
| 363 | Julian dies | Valentinian. |
| Valens. | ||
| 365 | Saxons, Picts, and Scots ravage | |
| shores of Britain [V.B. 7] | ||
| Valentinian. | ||
| 366 | Gratian associated in Empire | Valens. |
| Gratian. | ||
| 367 | Great barbarian raid on Britain | |
| Roman commanders slain | ||
| [V.B. 7] | ||
| 368 | Theodosius, Governor of Britain, | |
| expels Picts and Scots | ||
| [V.B. 7] | ||
| 369 | Theodosius recovers Valentia | |
| [V.B. 7] | ||
| 374 | Saxons invade Britain [V.B. 8] | |
| Valens. | ||
| 375 | Valentinian dies | Gratian. |
| {Valentinian II. | ||
| Gratian. | ||
| 378 | Valens slain. Theodosius associated | Valentinian II. |
| in Empire | Theodosius. | |
| 383 | Gratian slain. British Army proclaims | Valentinian II. |
| Maximus and conquer | Theodosius. | |
| Gaul [V.C. 1] | ||
| 387 | British Army under Maximus take | |
| Rome [V.C. 1] | ||
| 388 | Maximus slain. First British | |
| settlement in Armorica (?) [V. | ||
| C. 1] | ||
| 392 | Valentinian II. slain. Penal laws | Theodosius. |
| against Heathenism | ||
| 394 | Ninias made Bishop of Picts by | |
| Pope Siricius (?) [V.F. 1] | ||
| 395 | Death of Theodosius | Arcadius. |
| Honorius. | ||
| 396 | Stilicho sends a Legion to protect | |
| Britain (?) [V.C. 1] | ||
| Arcadius. | ||
| 402 | Theodosius II. associated in Empire | Honorius. |
| Theodosius II. | ||
| 406 | Stilicho recalls Legion to meet | |
| Radagaisus [V.C. 2] | ||
| 'Notitia' composed (?) [V.C. 3-9] | ||
| German tribes flood Gaul [V.C. 2] | ||
| 407 | British Army proclaim Constantine | |
| III. and reconquer Gaul [V.C. | ||
| 10] | ||
| 408 | Arcadius dies. Constantine III. | Honorius. |
| recognized as "Augustus" | Theodosius II. | |
| Constantine III. | ||
| 410 | Visigoths under Alaric take Rome | |
| [V.C. 11] | ||
| 411 | Constantine III. slain | Honorius. |
| Theodosius II. | ||
| 413 (?) | Pelagian heresy arises in Britain | |
| [V.F. 3] | ||
| 415 (?) | Rescript of Honorius to the Cities | |
| of Britain [V.C. 11] | ||
| 423 | Death of Honorius | Theodosius II. |
| 425 | Valentinian III., son of Galla | Theodosius II. |
| Placidia, Emperor of West [V.D. 3] | Valentinian III. | |
| 429 (?) | SS. Germanus and Lupus sent to | |
| Britain by Pope Celestine (?) | ||
| [V.F. 4] | ||
| 432 (?) | St. Patrick sent to Ireland by | |
| Pope Celestine [V.F. 2] | ||
| 435 (?) | Roman Legion sent to aid Britons (?) | |
| 436 (?) | Roman forces finally withdrawn (?) | |
| 446 | Vain appeal of Britons to Actius (?) | |
| [V.D. 2] | ||
| 447 (?) | The Alleluia Battle [V.F. 4] | |
| 449 (?) | Hengist and Horsa settle in | |
| Thanet (?) [V.D. 3] | ||
| 450 (?) | English defeat Picts at Stamford(?) | |
| [V.B. 2] | ||
| Theodosius II. dies | Valentinian III. | |
| 455 (?) | Battle of Aylesford begins English | |
| conquest of Britain (?) [V.D. 2] |
§ A.—Palaeolithic Age—Extinct fauna—River-bed men—Flint implements—Burnt stones—Worked bones—Glacial climate
§ B.—Neolithic Age—"Ugrians"—Polished flints—Jadite—Gold ornaments—Cromlechs
—Forts—Bronze Age—Copper and tin—Stonehenge
§ C.—Aryan immigrants—Gael and Briton—Earliest classical nomenclature—British Isles
—Albion—Ierne—Cassiterides—Phoenician tin trade viâ Cadiz
§ D.—Discoveries of Pytheas—Greek tin trade viâ Marseilles—Trade routes—Ingots—Coracles
—Earliest British coins—Lead-mining
§ E.—Pytheas trustworthy—His notes on Britain—Agricultural tribes—Barns—Manures—Dene
Holes—Mead—Beer—Parched corn—Pottery—Mill-stones—Villages—Cattle—Pastoral
tribes—Savage tribes—Cannibalism—Polyandry—Beasts of chase—Forest trees—British
clothing and arms—Sussex iron
§ F.—Celtic types—"Roy" and "Dhu"—Gael—Silurians—Loegrians—Basque peoples—Shifting
of clans—Constitutional disturbances—Monarchy—Oligarchy—Demagogues—First inscribed
coins
§ G.—Clans at Julian invasion—Permanent natural boundaries—Population Celtic settlements
—"Duns"—Maiden Castle
§ H.—Religious state of Britain—Illustrated by
Hindooism—Totemists—Polytheists—Druids
—Bards—Seers—Druidic Deities—Mistletoe—Sacred herbs—"Ovum Anguinum"—Suppression
of Druidism—Druidism and Christianity
§ A.—Caesar and Britain—Breakdown of Roman Republican institutions—Corruption
abroad
and at home—Rise of Caesar Conquest of Gaul
§ B.—Sea-fight with Veneti and Britons—Pretexts for invading Britain—British dominion of
Divitiacus—Gallic tribes in Britain—Atrebates—Commius
§ C.—Defeat of Germans—Bridge over Rhine—Caesar's army—Dread of ocean—Fleet at
Boulogne—Commius sent to Britain—Channel crossed—Attempt on Dover—Landing
at Deal—Legionary sentiment—British army dispersed
§ D.—Wreck of fleet—Fresh British levy—Fight in corn-field—British chariots—Attack on
camp—Romans driven into sea
§ E.—Caesar worsted—New fleet built—Caesar at Rome—Cicero—Expedition of 54 B.C.
—Unopposed landing—Pro-Roman Britons—Trinobantes—Mandubratius—British army
surprised—"Old
England's Hole"
§ F.—Fleet again wrecked—Britons rally under Caswallon—Battle of Barham Down—Britons fly
to London—Origin of London—Patriot army dispersed
§ G.—Passage of Thames—Submission of clans—Storm of Verulam—Last patriot effort in
Kent—Submission of Caswallon—Romans leave Britain—"Caesar Divus"
§ A.—Britain after Julius Caesar—House of Commius—Inscribed coins—House of Cymbeline
—Tasciovan—Commians overthrown—Vain appeal to Augustus—Ancyran Tablet—Romano-British
trade—Lead-mining—British fashions in Rome—Adminius banished by Cymbeline—Appeal
to Caligula—Futile demonstration—Icenian civil war—Vericus banished—Appeal to
Claudius—Invasion prepared
§ B.—Aulus Plautius—Reluctance to embark—Narcissus—Passage of Channel—Landing at
Portchester—Strength of expedition—Vespasian's legion—British defeats—Line of Thames
held—Arrival of Claudius—Camelodune taken—General submission of island
§ C.—Claudius triumphs—Gladiatorial shows—Last stand of Britons—Gallantry of Titus—Ovation
of Plautius—Distinctions bestowed—Triumphal arch—Commemorative coinage—Conciliatory
policy—British worship of Claudius—Cogidubnus—Attitude of clans—Britain made Imperial
province
§ D.—Ostorius Pro-praetor—Pacification of Midlands—Icenian revolt—The Fleam Dyke—Iceni
crushed—Cangi—Brigantes—Silurian war—Storm of Caer Caradoc—Treachery of Cartismandua
—Caradoc at Rome—Death of Ostorius—Uriconium and Caerleon—Britain quieted—Death of
Claudius
§ E.—Neronian misgovernment—Seneca—Prasutagus—Boadicean revolt—Sack of Camelodune
—Suetonius in Mona—Druidesses—Sack of London and Verulam—Boadicea crushed at Battle
Bridge—Peace of Petronius
§ F.—Otho and Vitellius—Civil war—Army of Britain—Priscus—Agricola—Vespasian Emperor
—Cerealis—Brigantes put down—Silurians put down—Agricola Pro-praetor—Ordovices
put down—Frontinus—Pacification of South Britain—Roman civilization introduced—Caledonian
campaign—Galgacus—Agricola's rampart—Domitian—Resignation and death of Agricola
§ A.—Pacification of Britain—Roman roads—London their centre—Authority for names—Watling
Street—Ermine Street—Icknield Way
§ B.—Romano-British towns—Ancient lists—Method of identification—Dense rural population
—Remains in Cam valley—Coins—Thimbles—Horseshoes
§ C.—Fortification of towns late—Chief Roman centres—London—York—Chester—Bath
—Silchester—Remains there found—Romano-British handicrafts—Pottery—Basket-work
—Mining—Rural life—Villas—Forests—Hunting-dogs—Husbandry—Britain under Pax Romana
§ D.—The unconquered North—Hadrian's Wall—Upper and Lower Britain—Romano-British
coinage—Wall of Antoninus—Britain Pro-consular
§ E.—Commodus Britannicus—Ulpius Marcellus—Murder of Perennis—Era of military turbulence
—Pertinax—Albinus—British army defeated at Lyons—Severus Emperor—Caledonian war
—Severus overruns Highlands
§ F.—Severus completes Hadrian's Wall—"Mile Castles"—"Stations"—Garrison
—The Vallum—Rival theories—Evidence—Remains—Coins—Altars—Mithraism—Inscription
to Julia Domna—"Written Rock" on Gelt—Cilurnum
aqueduct
§ G.—Death of Severus—Caracalla and Geta—Roman citizenship—Extension to veterans
—Tabulae honestae missionis—Bestowed on all British provincials
§ A.—Era of Pretenders—Probus—Vandlebury—First notice of Saxons—Origin of name—Count
of the Saxon Shore—Carausius—Allectus—Last Romano-British coinage—Britain Mistress of
the Sea—Reforms of Diocletian—Constantius Chlorus—Re-conquest of Britain—Diocletian
provinces—Diocletian persecution—The last "Divus"—General scramble for Empire—British
army wins for Constantine—Christianity established
§ B.—Spread of Gospel—Arianism—Britain orthodox—Last Imperial visit—Heathen temples
stripped—British Emperors—Magnentius—Gratian—Julian—British corn-trade—First inroad of
Picts and Scots—Valentinian—Saxon raids—Campaign of Theodosius—Re-conquest of
Valentia—Wall
restored and cities fortified
§ C.—Roman evacuation of Britain begun—Maximus—Settlement of Brittany—Radagaisus
invades Italy—Twentieth Legion leaves Britain—Britain in the 'Notitia'—Final effort of
British army—The last Constantine—Last Imperial Rescript to Britain—Sack of Rome by
Alaric—Final collapse of Roman rule in Britain
§ D.—Beginning of English Conquest—Vortigern—Jutes in Thanet—Battle of Stamford
—Massacre of Britons—Valentinian III.—Latest Roman coin found in Britain—Progress
of Conquest—The Cymry—Survival of Romano-British titles—Arturian Romances—Procopius
—Belisarius—Roman claims revived by Charlemagne—The British Empire
§ E.—Survivals of Romano-British civilization—Romano-British Church—Legends of its origin
—St. Paul—St. Peter—Joseph of Arimathaea—Glastonbury—Historical notices—Claudia and
Pudens—Pomponia—Church of St. Pudentiana—Patristic references to Britain—Tertullian
—Origen—Legend of Lucius—Native Christianity—British Bishops at Councils—Testimony
of Chrysostom and Jerome
§ F.—British missionaries—Ninias—Patrick—Beatus—British heresiarchs—Pelagius—Fastidius
—Pelagianism stamped out by Germanus—The Alleluia Battle—Romano-British churches—Why
so seldom found—Conclusion
Palaeolithic Age—Extinct fauna—River-bed men—Flint implements—Burnt stones—Worked
bones—Glacial climate.
A. 1.—All history, as Professor Freeman so well points out, centres round the great name of Rome. For, of all the great divisions of the human race, it is the Aryan family which has come to the front. Assimilating, developing, and giving vastly wider scope to the highest forms of thought and religion originated by other families, notably the Semitic, the various Aryan nationalities form, and have formed for ages, the vanguard of civilization. These nationalities are now practically co-extensive with Christendom; and on them has been laid by Divine Providence "the white man's burden"—the task of raising the rest of mankind along with themselves to an ever higher level—social, material, intellectual, and spiritual.
A. 2.—Aryan history is thus, for all practical purposes, the history of mankind. And a mere glance at [26] Aryan history shows how entirely its great central feature is the period during which all the leading forces of Aryanism were grouped and fused together under the world-wide Empire of Rome. In that Empire all the streams of our Ancient History find their end, and from that Empire all those of Modern History take their beginning. "All roads," says the proverb, "lead to Rome;" and this is emphatically true of the lines of historical research; for as we tread them we are conscious at every step of the Romani Nominis umbra, the all-pervading influence of "the mighty name of Rome."
A. 3.—And above all is this true of the history of Western Europe in general and of our own island in particular. For Britain, History (meaning thereby the more or less trustworthy record of political and social development) does not even begin till its destinies were drawn within the sphere of Roman influence. It is with Julius Caesar, that great writer (and yet greater maker) of History, that, for us, this record commences.
A. 4.—But before dealing with "Britain's tale" as connected with "Caesar's fate," it will be well to note briefly what earlier information ancient documents and remains can afford us with regard to our island and its inhabitants. With the earliest dwellers upon its soil of whom traces remain we are, indeed, scarcely concerned. For in the far-off days of the "River-bed" men (five thousand or five hundred thousand years ago, according as we accept the physicist's or the geologist's estimate of the age of our planet) Britain was not yet an island. Neither the Channel nor the North Sea as yet cut it off from the Continent when those primaeval savages herded beside the banks of its streams, along with elephant and hippopotamus, bison and elk, bear and hyaena; amid whose remains we find their roughly-chipped flint axes and arrow-heads, the fire-marked stones which they used in boiling their water, and the sawn or broken bases of the antlers which for some unknown purpose[6] they were in the habit of cutting up—perhaps, like the Lapps of to-day, to anchor their sledges withal in the snow. For the great Glacial Epoch, which had covered half the Northern Hemisphere with its mighty ice-sheet, was still, in their day, lingering on, and their environment was probably that of Northern Siberia to-day. Some archaeologists, indeed, hold that they are to this day represented by the Esquimaux races; but this theory cannot be considered in any way proved.
A. 5.—Whether, indeed, they were "men" at all, in any real sense of the word, may well be questioned. For of the many attempts which philosophers in all ages have made to define the word "man," the only one which is truly defensible is that which differentiates him from other animals, not by his physical or intellectual, but by his spiritual superiority. Many other creatures are as well adapted in bodily conformation for their environment, and the lowest savages are intellectually at a far lower level of development than the highest insects; but none stand in the same [27] relation to the Unseen. "Man," as has been well said, "is the one animal that can pray." And there is nothing amongst the remains of these "river-bed men" to show us that they either did pray, or could. Intelligence, such as is now found only in human beings, they undoubtedly had. But whether they had the capacity for Religion must be left an unsolved problem. In this connection, however, it may be noted that Tacitus, in describing the lowest savages of his Germania [c. 46], "with no horses, no homes, no weapons, skin-clad, nesting on the bare ground, men and women alike, barely kept alive by herbs and such flesh as their bone-tipped arrows can win them," makes it his climax that they are "beneath the need of prayer;"—adding that this spiritual condition is, "beyond all others, that least attainable by man."
Neolithic Age—"Ugrians"—Polished flints—Jadite—Gold ornaments—Cromlechs—Forts—Bronze
Age—Copper and tin—Stonehenge.
B. 1.—Whatever they were, they vanish from our ken utterly, these Palaeolithic savages, and are followed, after what lapse of time we know not, by the users of polished flint weapons, the tribes of the Neolithic period. And with them we find ourselves in touch with the existing development of our island. For an island it already was, and with substantially the same area and shores and physical features as we have them still. Our rivers ran in the same valleys, our hills rose [28] with the same contour, in those far-off days as now. And while the place of flint in the armoury of Britain was taken first by bronze and then by iron, these changes were made by no sudden breaks, but so gradually that it is impossible to say when one period ended and the next began.
B.2.—It is almost certain, however, that the Neolithic men were not of Aryan blood. They are commonly spoken of by the name of Ugrians,[7] the "ogres"[8] of our folk-lore; which has also handed down, in the spiteful Brownie of the wood and the crafty Pixie of the cavern, dimly-remembered traditions of their physical and mental characteristics. Indeed it is not impossible that their blood may still be found in the remoter corners of our land, whither they were pushed back by the higher civilization of the Aryan invaders, before whom they disappeared by a process in which "miscegenation" may well have played no small part. But disappear they did, leaving behind them no more traces than their flint arrow-heads and axes (a few of these being of jadite, which must have come from China or thereabouts), together with their oblong sepulchral barrows, from some of which the earth has weathered away, so that the massive stones imbedded in it as the last home of the deceased stand exposed as a "dolmen" or "cromlech." But an appreciable number of the earthworks which stud our [29] hill-tops, and are popularly called "Roman" or "British" camps, really belong to this older race. Such are "Cony Castle" in Dorset, and the fortifications along the Axe in Devon.
B. 3.—During the neolithic stage of their development the Ugrians were acquainted with but one metal, gold, and some of their stone weapons and implements are thus ornamented. For gold, being at once the most beautiful, the most incorruptible, the most easily recognizable, and the most easily worked of metals, is everywhere found as used by man long before any other. But before the Ugrian races vanish they had learnt to use bronze, which shows them to have discovered the properties not only of gold, but of both tin and copper. All three metals were doubtless obtained from the streams of the West. They had also become proficients, as their sepulchral urns show, in the manufacture of pottery. They could weave, moreover, both linen and woollen being known, and had passed far beyond the mere savage.
B. 4.—The race, indeed, which could erect Avebury and Stonehenge, as we may safely say was done by this people,[9] must have possessed engineering skill of [30] a very high order, and no little accuracy of astronomical observation. For the mighty "Sarsen" stones have all been brought from a distance,[10] and the whole vast circles are built on a definite astronomical plan; while so careful is the orientation that, at the summer solstice, the disc of the rising sun, as seen from the "altar" of Stonehenge, appears to be poised exactly on the summit of one of the chief megaliths (now known as "The Friar's Heel"). From this it would seem that the builders were Sun-worshippers; and amongst the earliest reports of Britain current in the Greek world we find the fame of the "great round temple" dedicated to Apollo. But no Latin author mentions it; so that it is doubtful whether it was ever used by the Aryan, or at least by the Brythonic, immigrants. These brought their own worship and their own civilization with them, and all that was highest in Ugrian civilization and worship faded before them, such Ugrians as remained having degenerated to a far lower level when first we meet with them in history.
Aryan immigrants—Gael and Briton—Earliest classical nomenclature—British Isles—Albion—Ierne
—Cassiterides—Phoenician tin trade viâ Cadiz.
C. 1.—How or when the first swarms of the Aryan migration reached Britain is quite unknown.[11] But they undoubtedly belonged to the Celtic branch of that family, and to the Gaelic (Gadhelic or Goidelic) section of the branch, which still holds the Highlands of Scotland and forms the bulk of the population of Ireland. By the 4th century B.C. this section was already beginning to be pressed northwards and westwards by the kindred Britons (or Brythons) who followed on their heels; for Aristotle (or a disciple of his) knows our islands as "the Britannic[12] Isles." That the Britons were in his day but new comers may be argued from the fact that he speaks of Great Britain by the name of Albion, a Gaelic designation subsequently driven northwards along with those who used it. In its later form Albyn it long remained as loosely equivalent to North Britain, and as Albany it still survives in a like connection. Ireland Aristotle calls Ierne, the later Ivernia or Hibernia; a word also found in the Argonautic poems ascribed to the mythical Orpheus, and composed probably by Onomacritus about 350 B.C., wherein the Argo is warned against approaching "the Iernian islands, the home of dark and noisome mischief." This is the passage familiar to the readers of Kingsley's 'Heroes.'[13]
[32]C. 2.—Aristotle's work does no more than mention our islands, as being, like Ceylon, not pelagic, but oceanic. To early classical antiquity, it must be remembered, the Ocean was no mere sea, but a vast and mysterious river encircling the whole land surface of the earth. Its mighty waves, its tides, its furious currents, all made it an object of superstitious horror. To embark upon it was the height of presumption; and even so late as the time of Claudius we shall find the Roman soldiers feeling that to do so, even for the passage of the Channel, was "to leave the habitable world."
C. 3.—But while the ancients dreaded the Ocean, they knew also that its islands alone were the source of one of the most precious and rarest of their metals. Before iron came into general use (and the difficulty of smelting it has everywhere made it the last metal to do so), tin had a value all its own. It was the only known substance capable of making, along with copper, an alloy hard enough for cutting purposes—the "bronze" which has given its name to one entire Age of human development. It was thus all but a necessary of life, and was eagerly sought for as amongst the choicest objects of traffic.
C. 4.—The Phoenicians, the merchant princes of the dawn of history, succeeded, with true mercantile instinct, in securing a monopoly of this trade, by being the first to make their way to the only spots in the world where tin is found native, the Malay region in the East, Northern Spain and Cornwall in the West. That tin was known amongst the Greeks by its Sanscrit [33] name Kastira[14] κασσιτερός [kassiteros], shows that the Eastern source was the earliest to be tapped. But the Western was that whence the supply flowed throughout the whole of the classical ages; and, as the stream-tin of the Asturian mountains seems to have been early exhausted, the name Cassiterides, the Tin Lands, came to signify exclusively the western peninsula of Britain. Herodotus, in the 5th century B.C., knew this name, but, as he frankly confesses, nothing but the name.[15] For the whereabouts of this El Dorado, and the way to it, was a trade secret most carefully kept by the Phoenician merchants of Cadiz, who alone held the clue. So jealous were they of it that long afterwards, when the alternative route through Gaul had already drawn away much of its profitableness, we read of a Phoenician captain purposely wrecking his ship lest a Roman vessel in sight should follow to the port, and being indemnified by the state for his loss.
Discoveries of Pytheas—Greek tin trade viâ Marseilles—Trade routes—Ingots—Coracles
—Earliest British coins—Lead-mining.
D. 1.—But contemporary with Aristotle lived the great geographer Pytheas; whose works, unfortunately, we know only by the fragmentary references to them [34] in later, and frequently hostile, authors, such as Strabo, who dwell largely on his mistakes, and charge him with misrepresentation. In fact, however, he seems to have been both an accurate and truthful observer, and a discoverer of the very first order. Starting from his native city Massilia (Marseilles), he passed through the Straits of Gibraltar and traced the coast-line of Europe to Denmark (visiting Britain on his way), and perhaps even on into the Baltic.[16] The shore of Norway (which he called, as the natives still call it, Norgé) he followed till within the Arctic Circle, as his mention of the midnight sun shows, and then struck across to Scotland; returning, apparently by the Irish Sea, to Bordeaux and so home overland. This truly wonderful voyage he made at the public charge, with a view to opening new trade routes, and it seems to have thoroughly answered its purpose. Henceforward the Phoenician monopoly was broken, and a constant stream of traffic in the precious tin passed between Britain and Marseilles.[17]
D. 2.—The route was kept as secret as possible; Polybius tells us that the Massiliots, when interrogated by one of the Scipios, professed entire ignorance of Britain; but Pytheas (as quoted by his contemporary Timaeus, as well as by later writers) states that the metal was brought by coasters to a tidal island, Ictis, whence it was shipped for Gaul. This island was six days' sail from the tin diggings, and can scarcely be any but [35] Thanet. St. Michael's Mount, now the only tidal island on the south coast, was anciently part of the mainland; a fact testified to by the forest remains still seen around it. Nor could it be six days' sail from the tin mines. The Isle of Wight, again, to which the name Ictis or Vectis would seem to point, can never have been tidal at this date. But Thanet undoubtedly was so in mediaeval times, and may well have been so for ages, while its nearness to the Continent would recommend it to the Gallic merchants. Indeed Pytheas himself probably selected it on this account for his new emporium.
D. 3.—In his day, as we have seen, the tin reached this destination by sea; but in the time of the later traveller Posidonius[18] it came in wagons, probably by that track along the North Downs now known as the "Pilgrims' Way." The chalk furnished a dry and open road, much easier than the swamps and forests of the lower ground. Further west the route seems to have been viâ Launceston, Exeter, Honiton, Ilchester, Salisbury, Winchester, and Alton; an ancient track often traceable, and to be seen almost in its original condition near "Alfred's Tower," in Somerset, where it is known as "The Hardway." And this long land transit argues a considerable degree of political solidarity throughout the south of the island. The tale of Posidonius is confirmed by Caesar's statement [36] that tin reached Kent "from the interior," i.e. by land. It was obtained at first from the streams of Dartmoor and Cornwall, where abundant traces of ancient washings are visible, and afterwards by mining, as now. And when smelted it was made up into those peculiar ingots which still meet the eye in Cornwall, and whose shape seems never to have varied from the earliest times. Posidonius, who visited Cornwall, compares them to knuckle-bones[19] αστρηαγαλοι [astrhagaloi]
D. 4.—The vessels which thus coasted from the Land's End to the South Foreland are described as on the pattern of coracles, a very light frame-work covered with hides. It seems almost incredible that sea-going craft could have been thus constructed; yet not only is there overwhelming testimony to the fact throughout the whole history of Roman Britain, but such boats are still in use on the wild rollers which beat upon the west coast of Ireland, and are found able to live in seas which would be fatal to anything more rigidly built. For the surf boats in use at Madras a similar principle is adopted, not a nail entering into their construction. They can thus face breakers which would crush an ordinary boat to pieces. This method of ship-building was common all along the northern coast of Europe for ages.[20] Nor were these [37] coracles only used for coasting. As time went on, the Britons boldly struck straight across from Cornwall to the Continent, and both the Seine and the Loire became inlets for tin into Gaul, thus lessening the long land journey—not less than thirty days—which was required, as Polybius tells us, to convey it from the Straits of Dover to the Rhone. (This journey, it may be noted, was made not in wagons, as through Britain, but on pack-horses.)
D. 5.—Thus it reached Marseilles; and that the trade was founded by the Massiliot Pytheas is borne testimony to by the early British coins, which are all modelled on the classical currency of his age. The medium in universal circulation then, current everywhere, like the English sovereign now, was the Macedonian stater, newly introduced by Philip, a gold coin weighing 133 grains, bearing on the one side the laureated head of Apollo, on the other a figure of Victory in a chariot. Of this all known Gallic and British coins (before the Roman era) are more or less accurate copies. The earliest as yet found in Britain do not date, according to Sir John Evans, our great authority on this subject,[21] from before the 2nd century B.C. They are all dished coins, rudely struck, and rapidly growing ruder as time goes on. The head early becomes a mere congeries of dots and lines, but one horse of the chariot team remains recognizable to quite the end of the series.
D. 6.—These coins have been found in very large [38] numbers, and of various types, according to the locality in which they were struck. They occur as far north as Edinburgh; but all seem to have been issued by one or other of the tribes in the south and east of the island, who learnt the idea of minting from the Gauls. Whence the gold of which the coins are made came from is a question not yet wholly solved: surface gold was very probably still obtainable at that date from the streams of Wales and Cornwall. But it was long before any other metal was used in the British mints. Not till after the invasion of Julius Caesar do we find any coins of silver or bronze issued, though he testifies to their existence. The use of silver shows a marked advance in metallurgy, and is probably connected with the simultaneous development of the lead-mining in the Mendip Hills, of which about this time we first begin to find traces.
Pytheas trustworthy—His notes on Britain—Agricultural tribes—Barns—Manures—Dene
Holes—Mead—Beer—Parched corn—Pottery—Mill-stones—Villages—Cattle—Pastoral tribes
—Savage tribes—Cannibalism—Polyandry—Beasts of chase—Forest trees—British clothing
and arms—Sussex iron.
E. 1.—The trustworthiness of Pytheas is further confirmed by the astronomical observations which he records. He notices, for example, that the longest day in Britain contains "nineteen equinoctial hours." Amongst the ancients, it must be remembered, an "hour," in common parlance, signified merely the twelfth part, on any given day, of the time between [39] sunrise and sunset, and thus varied according to the season. But the standard hour for astronomical purposes was the twelfth part of the equinoctial day, when the sun rises 6 a.m. and sets 6 p.m., and therefore corresponded with our own. Now the longest day at Greenwich is actually not quite seventeen hours, but in the north of Britain it comes near enough to the assertion of Pytheas to bear out his tale. We are therefore justified in giving credence to his account of what he saw in our country, the earliest that we possess. He tells us that, in some parts at least, the inhabitants were far from being mere savages. They were corn-growers (wheat, barley, and millet being amongst their crops), and also cultivated "roots," fruit trees, and other vegetables. What specially struck him was that, "for lack of clear sunshine[22]," they threshed out their corn, not in open threshing-floors, as in Mediterranean lands, but in barns.
E. 2.—From other sources we know that these old British farmers were sufficiently scientific agriculturalists to have invented wheeled ploughs,[23] and to use a variety of manures; various kinds of mast, loam, and chalk in particular. This treatment of the soil was, according to Pliny, a British invention[24] (though the Greeks of Megara had also tried it), and he thinks it worth his while to give a long description of the [40] different clays in use and the methods of their application. That most generally employed was chalk dug out from pits some hundred feet in depth, narrow at the mouth, but widening towards the bottom. [Petitur ex alto, in centenos pedes actis plerumque puteis, ore angustatis; intus spatiante vena.]
E. 3.—Here we have an exact picture of those mysterious excavations some of which still survive to puzzle antiquaries under the name of Dene Holes. They are found in various localities; Kent, Surrey, and Essex being the richest. In Hangman's Wood, near Grays, in Essex, a small copse some four acres in extent, there are no fewer than seventy-two Dene Holes, as close together as possible, their entrance shafts being not above twenty yards apart. These shafts run vertically downwards, till the floor of the pit is from eighty to a hundred feet below the surface of the ground. At the bottom the shaft widens out into a vaulted chamber some thirty feet across, from which radiate four, five, or even six lateral crypts, whose dimensions are usually about thirty feet in length, by twelve in width and height. When the shafts are closely clustered, the lateral crypts of one will extend to within a few feet of those belonging to its neighbours, but in no case do they communicate with them (though the recent excavations of archaeologists have thus connected whole groups of Dene Holes). Many theories have been elaborated to account for their existence, but the data are conclusive against their having been either habitations, tombs, store-rooms, or hiding-places; and, in 1898, Mr. [41] Charles Dawson, F.S.A., pointed out that, in Sussex, chalk and limestone are still quarried by means of identically such pits. The chalk so procured is found a far more efficacious dressing for the soil than that which occurs on the surface, and moreover is more cheaply got than by carting from even a mile's distance. At the present day, as soon as a pit is exhausted (that is as soon as the diggers dare make their chambers no larger for fear of a downfall), another is sunk hard by, and the first filled up with the débris from the second. In the case of the Dene Holes, this débris must have been required for some other purpose; and to this fact alone we owe their preservation. It is probable that the celebrated cave at Royston in Hertfordshire was originally dug for this purpose, though afterwards used as a hermitage.
E. 4.—Pytheas is also our authority for saying that bee-keeping was known to the Britons of his day;[25] a drink made of wheat and honey being one of their intoxicants. This method of preparing mead (or metheglin) is current to this day among our peasantry. Another drink was made from barley, and this, he tells us, they called κονρμι [kourmi], the word still used in Erse for beer, under the form cuirm. Dioscorides the physician, who records this (and who may perhaps have tried our national beverage, as he lived shortly after the Claudian conquest of Britain), pronounces it [42] "head-achy, unwholesome, and injurious to the nerves": κεφαλαλγές ἐστι καὶ κακόχυμον, καὶ τοῦ νεύρου βλαπτικόν [kephalalges esti kai kakhochymon, kai tou neurou].
E. 5.—Not all the tribes of Britain, however, were at this level of civilization. Threshing in barns was only practised by those highest in development, the true Britons of the south and east. The Gaelic tribes beyond them, so far as they were agricultural at all, stored the newly-plucked ears of corn in their underground dwellings, day by day taking out and dressing κατεργαζομένους [katergazomenous] what was needed for each meal. The method here referred to is doubtless that described as still in use at the end of the 17th century in the Hebrides.[26] "A woman, sitting down, takes a handful of corn, holding it by the stalks in her left hand, and then sets fire to the ears, which are presently in a flame. She has a stick in her right hand, which she manages very dexterously, beating off the grains at the very instant when the husk is quite burnt.... The corn may be thus dressed, winnowed, ground, and baked, within an hour of reaping."
When kept, it may usually have been stored, like that of Robinson Crusoe, in baskets;[27] for basket-making was a peculiarly British industry, and Posidonius found "British baskets" in use on the [43] Continent. But probably it was also hoarded—again in Crusoe fashion—in the large jars of coarse pottery which are occasionally found on British sites. These, and the smaller British vessels, are sometimes elaborately ornamented with devices of no small artistic merit. But all are hand-made, the potter's wheel being unknown in pre-Roman days.
E. 6.—Nor does the grinding of corn, even in hand-mills, seem to have been universal till the Roman era, the earlier British method being to bruise the grain in a mortar.[28] Without the resources of civilization it is not easy to deal with stones hard enough for satisfactory millstones. We find that the Romans, when they came, mostly selected for this use the Hertfordshire "pudding-stone," a conglomerate of the Eocene period crammed with rolled flint pebbles, sometimes also bringing over Niederendig lava from the Rhine valley, and burr-stone from the Paris basin for their querns.
E. 7.—These tribes are described as living in cheap εὐτελεῖς [euteleis], dwellings, constructed of reeds or logs, yet spoken of as subterranean.[29] Light has been thrown on this apparent contradiction by the excavation in 1889 of the site of a British village at Barrington in Cambridgeshire. Within a space of about sixty yards each way, bounded by a fosse some six feet wide and four deep, were a collection of roughly circular pits, distributed in no recognizable system, from twelve to [44] twenty feet in diameter and from two to four in depth. They were excavated in the chalky soil, and from each a small drainage channel ran for a yard or two down the gentle slope on which the settlement stood. Obviously a superstructure of thatch and wattle would convert these pits into quite passable wigwams, corresponding to the description of Pytheas. This whole village was covered by several feet of top-soil in which were found numerous interments of Anglo-Saxon date. It had seemingly perished by fire, a layer of incinerated matter lying at the bottom of each pit.
E. 8.—The domestic cattle of the Britons were a diminutive breed, smaller than the existing Alderney, with abnormally developed foreheads (whence their scientific name Bos Longifrons). Their remains, the skulls especially, are found in every part of the land, with no trace, in pre-Roman times, of any other breed. The gigantic wild ox of the British forests (Bos Primigenius) seems never to have been tamed by the Celtic tribes, who, very possibly, like the Romans after them, may have brought their own cattle with them into the island. According to Professor Rolleston the small size of the breed is due to the large consumption of milk by the breeders. (He notes that the cattle of Burmah and Hindostan are identically the same stock, and that in Burmah, where comparatively little milk is used, they are of large size. In Hindostan, on the contrary, where milk forms the staple food of the population, the whole breed is stunted, no calf having, for ages, been allowed its due supply of nutriment.) The Professor also holds that [45] these small oxen, together with the goat, sheep, horse, dog, and swine (of the Asiatic breed), were introduced into Britain by the Ugrian races in the Neolithic Age; and that the pre-Roman Britons had no domestic fowls except geese.[30]
E. 9.—If these considerations are of weight they would point to an excessive dependence on milk even amongst the agricultural tribes of Britain. And there were others, as we know, who had not got beyond the pastoral stage of human development. These, as Strabo declares, had no idea of husbandry, "nor even sense enough to make cheese, though milk they have in plenty."[31] And some of the non-Aryan hordes seem to have been mere brutal savages, practising cannibalism and having wives in common. Both practices are mentioned by the latest as well as the earliest of our classical authorities. Jerome says that in Gaul he himself saw Attacotti (the primitive inhabitants of Galloway) devouring human flesh, and refers to their sexual relations, which more probably imply some system of polyandry, such as still prevails in Thibet, than mere promiscuous intercourse. Traces of this system long remained in the rule of "Mutter-recht," which amongst several of the more remote septs traced inheritance invariably through the mother and not the father.
E. 10.—These savages knew neither corn nor cattle. Like the "Children of the Mist" in the pages of Walter Scott,[32] their boast was "to own no lord, receive [46] no land, take no hire, give no stipend, build no hut, enclose no pasture, sow no grain; to take the deer of the forest for their flocks and herds," and to eke out this source of supply by preying upon their less barbarous neighbours "who value flocks and herds above honour and freedom." Lack of game, however, can seldom have driven them to this; for the forests of ancient Britain seem to have swarmed with animal life. Red deer, roebuck, wild oxen, and wild swine were in every brake, beaver and waterfowl in every stream; while wolf, bear, and wild-cat shared with man in taking toll of their lives. The trees of these forests, it may be mentioned, were (as in some portions of Epping Forest now) almost wholly oak, ash, holly, and yew; the beech, chestnut, elm, and even the fir, being probably introduced in later ages.
E. 11.—Of the British tribes, however, almost none, even amongst these wild woodlanders, were the naked savages, clothed only in blue paint, that they are commonly imagined to have been. On the contrary, they could both weave and spin; and the tartan, with its variegated colours, is described by Caesar's contemporary, Diodorus Siculus, as their distinctive dress, just as one might speak of Highlanders at the present day.[33] Pliny mentions that all the colours used were [47] obtained from native herbs and lichens,[34] as is still the case in the Hebrides, where sea-weed dyes are mostly used. Woad was used for tattooing the flesh with blue patterns, and a decoction of beechen ashes for dyeing the hair red if necessary, whenever that colour was fashionable.[35] The upper classes wore collars and bracelets of gold, and necklaces of glass and amber beads.
E. 12.—This last item suggests an interesting question as to whence came the vast quantities of amber thus used. None is now found upon our shores, except a very occasional fragment on the East Anglian beaches. But the British barrows bear abundant testimony to its having been in prehistoric times the commonest of all materials for ornamental purposes—far commoner than in any other country. Beads are found by the myriad—a single Wiltshire grave furnished a thousand—mostly of a discoid shape, and about an inch in diameter. Larger plates occasionally appear, and in one case (in Sussex) a cup formed from a solid block of exceptional size. If all this came from the Baltic, the main existing source of our amber,[36] it argues a considerable trade, of which [48] we find no mention in any extant authority. Pytheas witnesses to the amber of the Baltic, and says nothing, so far as we know, of British amber. But, according to Pliny,[37] his contemporary Solinus speaks of it as a British product; and at the Christian era it was apparently a British export.[38] The supply of amber as a jetsom is easily exhausted in any given district; miles of Baltic coast rich in it within mediaeval times are now quite barren; and the same thing has probably taken place in Britain. The rapid wearing away of our amber-bearing Norfolk shore is not unlikely to have been the cause of this change; the submarine fir-groves of the ancient littoral, with their resinous exudations, having become silted over far out at sea.[39] The old British amber sometimes contained flies. Dioscorides[40] applies to it the epithet πτερυγοφόρον [pterugophoron] ["fly-bearing"].
E. 13.—The chiefs were armed with large brightly-painted shields,[41] plumed (and sometimes crested) helmets, and cuirasses of leather, bronze, or chain-mail. The national weapons of offence were darts, pikes (sometimes with prongs—the origin of Britannia's trident), and broadswords; bows and arrows being more rarely used. Both Diodorus Siculus [v. 30] and Strabo [iv. 197] describe this equipment, and specimens of all the articles have, at one place or another, been found in British interments.[42] The arms are [49] often richly worked and ornamented, sometimes inlaid with enamel, sometimes decorated with studs of red coral from the Mediterranean.[43] The shields, being of wood, have perished, but their circular bosses of iron still remain. The chariots, which formed so special a feature of British militarism, were also of wood, painted, like the shields, and occasionally ironclad.[44] The iron may have been from the Sussex fields. We know that in Caesar's day rings of this metal were one of the forms of British currency, so that before his time the Britons must have attained to the smelting of this most intractable of metals.
Celtic types—"Roy" and "Dhu"—Gael—Silurians—Loegrians—Basque peoples—Shifting of
clans—Constitutional
disturbances—Monarchy—Oligarchy—Demagogues—First inscribed
coins.
F. 1.—Our earliest records point to the existence among the Celtic tribes in Britain of the two physical types still to be found amongst them; the tall, fair, red-haired, blue-eyed Gael, whom his clansmen denominate "Roy" (the Red), and the dark complexion, hair and eyes, usually associated with shorter stature, which go with the designation "Dhu" (the Black). Rob Roy and Roderick Dhu are familiar illustrations of this nomenclature. In classical times these types were much less intermingled than now, and were characteristic of separate races. The former prevailed [50] almost exclusively amongst the true Britons of the south and east, and the Gaelic septs of the north, while the latter was found throughout the west, in Devon, Cornwall, and Wales. The Silurians, of Glamorgan, are specially noted as examples of this "black" physique, and a connection has been imagined between them and the Basques of Iberia, an idea originating with Strabo.
F. 2.—That a good deal of non-Aryan blood was, and is, to be found in both regions is fairly certain; but any closer correlation must be held at any rate not proven. For though Strabo asserts that the Silurians differ not only in looks but in language from the Britons, while in both resembling the Iberians, it is probable that he derives his information from Pytheas four centuries earlier. At that date non-Aryan speech may very possibly still have lingered on in the West, but there is no trace whatever to be found of anything of the sort in the nomenclature of the district during or since the Roman occupation. All is unmitigated Celtic. We may, however, possibly find a confirmation of Strabo's view in the word Logris applied to Southern Britain by the Celtic bards of the Arturian cycle. The word is said to be akin to Liger (Loire), and tradition traced the origin of the Loegrians to the southern banks of that river, which were undoubtedly held by Iberian (Basque) peoples at least to the date when Pytheas visited those parts. The name, indeed, seems to be connected with that of the Ligurians, a kindred non-Aryan community, surviving, in historical times, only amongst the Maritime Alps.
[51]F. 3.—It is probable that the status of each clan was continually shifting; and what little we know of their names and locations, their rise and their fall, presents an even more kaleidoscopic phantasmagoria than the mediaeval history of the Scotch Highlands, or the principalities of Wales, or the ever-changing septs of ancient Ireland. Tribes absorbed or destroyed by conquering tribes, tribes confederating with others under a fresh name, this or that chief becoming a new eponymous hero,—such is the ceaseless spectacle of unrest of which the history of ancient Britain gives us glimpses.
F. 4.—By the time that these glimpses become anything like continuous, things were further complicated by two additional elements of disturbance. One of these was the continuous influx of new settlers from Gaul, which was going on throughout the 1st century B.C. Caesar tells us that the tribes of Kent, Sussex, and Essex were all of the Belgic stock, and we shall see that the higher politics of his day were much influenced by the fact that one and the same tribal chief claimed territorial rights in Gaul and Britain at once; just like so many of our mediaeval barons. The other was the coincidence that just at this period the British tribes began to be affected by the turbulent stage of constitutional development connected, in Greece and Rome, with the abolition of royalty.
F. 5.—The primitive Aryan community (so far, at least, as the western branch of the race is concerned) everywhere presents to us the threefold element of King, Lords, and Commons. The King is supreme, [52] he reigns by right of birth (though not according to strict primogeniture), and he not only reigns but governs. Theoretically he is absolute, but practically can do little without taking counsel with his Lords, the aristocracy of the tribe, originally an aristocracy of birth, but constantly tending to become one of wealth. The Commons gather to ratify the decrees of their betters, with a theoretical right to dissent (though not to discuss), a right which they seldom or never at once care and dare to exercise.
F. 6.—In course of time we see that everywhere the supremacy of the Kings became more and more distasteful to the Aristocracy, and was everywhere set aside, sometimes by a process of quiet depletion of the Royal prerogative, sometimes by a revolution; the change being, in the former case, often informal, with the name, and sometimes even the succession, of the eviscerated office still lingering on. The executive then passed to the Lords, and the state became an oligarchical Republic, such as we see in Rome after the expulsion of the Tarquins. Next came the rise of the Lower Orders, who insisted with ever-increasing urgency on claiming a share in the direction of politics, and in every case with ultimate success. Almost invariably the leaders who headed this uprising of the masses grasped for themselves in the end the supreme power, and as irresponsible "Dictators," "Tyrants," or "Emperors" took the place of the old constitutional Kings.
F. 7.—Such was the cycle of events both in Rome and in the Greek commonwealths; though in the [53] latter it ran its course within a few generations, whilst amongst the law-abiding Romans it was a matter of centuries. And the pages of Caesar bear abundant testimony to the fact that in his day the Gallic tribes were all in the state of turmoil which mostly attended the "Regifugium" period of development. Some were still under their old Kings; some, like the Nervii, had developed a Senatorial government; in some the Commons had set up "Tyrants" of their own. It was this general unrest which contributed in no small degree to the Roman conquest of Gaul. And the same state of things seems to have been begun in Britain also. The earliest inscribed British coins bear, some of them the names of Kings and Princes, others those of peoples, others again designations which seem to point to Tyrants. To the first class belong those of Commius, Tincommius, Tasciovan, Cunobelin, etc.; to the second those of the Iceni and the Cassi; to the last the northern mintage of Volisius, a potentate of the Parisii, who calls himself Domnoverus, which, according to Professor Rhys,[45] literally signifies "Demagogue."
Clans at Julian invasion—Permanent natural boundaries—Population—Celtic settlements—"Duns"
—Maiden Castle.
G. 1.—The earliest of these inscribed coins, however, take us no further back than the Julian invasion; [54] and it is to Caesar's Commentaries that we are indebted for the first recorded names of any British tribes. It is no part of his design to give any regular list of the clans or their territories; he merely makes incidental mention of such as he had to do with. Thus we learn of the four nameless clans who occupied Kent (a region which has kept its territorial name unchanged from the days of Pytheas), and also of the Atrebates, Cateuchlani, Trinobantes, Cenimagni, Segontiaci, Ancalites, Bibroci, and Cassi.
G. 2.—To the localities held by these tribes Caesar bears no direct evidence; but from his narrative, as well as from local remains and later references, we know that the Trinobantes possessed Essex, and the Cenimagni (i.e. "the Great Iceni" as they were still called,[46] though their power was on the wane), East Anglia; while the Cateuchlani, already beginning to be known as the Cassivellauni (or Cattivellauni), presumably from their heroic chieftain Caswallon (or Cadwallon),[47] corresponded roughly to the later South Mercians, between the Thames and the Nene. The Segontiaci, Ancalites, Bibroci, and Cassi were less considerable, and must evidently have been situated on the marches between their larger neighbours. The name of the Cassi may still, perhaps, cling to their [55] old home, in the Cashio Hundred and Cassiobury, near Watford; while conjecture finds traces of the Ancalites in Henley, and of the Bibroci in Bray, on either side of the Thames.
G. 3.—The Atrebates, who play a not unimportant part (as will be seen in the next chapter) in Caesar's connection with Britain, were apparently in possession of the whole southern bank of the Thames, from its source right down to London—the river then, as in Anglo-Saxon times, being a tribal boundary throughout its entire length. This would make the Bibroci a sub-tribe of the Atrebatian Name, and also the Segontiaci, if Henry of Huntingdon (writing in the 12th century with access to various sources of information now lost) is right in identifying Silchester, the Roman Calleva, with their local stronghold Caer Segent.
G. 4.—But the whole attempt to locate accurately any but the chiefest tribes found by the Romans in Britain is too conjectural to be worth the infinite labour that has been expended upon the subject by antiquaries. All we can say with certainty is that forest and fen must have cut up the land into a limited number of fairly recognizable districts, each so far naturally separated from the rest as to have been probably a separate or quasi-separate political entity also. Thus, not only was the Thames a line of demarcation, only passable at a few points, from its estuary nearly to the Severn Sea, but the southern regions cut off by it were parted by Nature into five main districts. Sussex was hemmed in by the great forest of Anderida, and that [56] of Selwood continued the line from Southampton to Bristol. Kent was isolated by the Romney marshes and the wild country about Tunbridge, while the western peninsula was a peninsula indeed when the sea ran up to beyond Glastonbury. In this region, then, the later Wessex, we find five main tribes; the men of Kent, the Regni south of the Weald, the Atrebates along the Thames, the Belgae on the Wiltshire Avon, and the Damnonii of Devon and Cornwall, with (perhaps) a sub-tribe of their Name, the Durotriges, in Dorsetshire.
G. 5.—Like the south, the eastern, western, and northern districts of England were cut off from the centre by natural barriers. The Fens of Cambridgeshire and the marshes of the Lea valley, together with the dense forest along the "East Anglian" range, enclosed the east in a ring fence; within which yet another belt of woodland divided the Trinobantes of Essex from the Iceni of Norfolk and Suffolk. The Severn and the Dee isolated what is now Wales, a region falling naturally into two sub-divisions; South Wales being held by the Silurians and their Demetian subjects, North Wales by the Ordovices. The lands north of the Humber, again, were barred off from the south by barriers stretching from sea to sea; the Humber itself on the one hand, the Mersey estuary on the other, thrusting up marshes to the very foot of the wild Pennine moorlands between. And the whole of this vast region seems to have been under the Brigantes, who held the great plain of York, and exercised more or less of a hegemony over the [57] Parisians of the East Riding, the Segontii of Lancashire, and the Otadini, Damnonii, and Selgovae between the Tyne and the Forth. Finally, the Midlands, parcelled up by the forests of Sherwood, Needwood, Charnwood, and Arden, into quarters, found space for the Dobuni in the Severn valley (to the west of the Cateuchlani), for the Coritani east of the Trent, and for their westward neighbours the Cornavii.[48]
G. 6.—All these tribes are given in Ptolemy's geography, but only a few, such as the Iceni, the Silurians, and the Brigantes, meet us in actual history; whilst, of them all, the Damnonian name alone reappears after the fall of the Roman dominion. Thus the accepted allotment of tribal territory is largely conjectural. North of the Forth all is conjecture pure and simple, so far as the location of the various Caledonian sub-clans is concerned. We only know that there were about a dozen of them; the Cornavii, Carini, Carnonacae, Cerones, Decantae, Epidii, Horestae, Lugi, Novantae, Smertae, Taexali, Vacomagi, and Vernicomes. Some of these may be alternative names.
G. 7.—The practical importance of the above-mentioned natural divisions of the island is testified to by the abiding character of the corresponding political divisions. The res