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Roman Cardiff: Supplementary Notes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 January 2012

Extract

The Roman walls and bastions discovered in 1889 and subsequent years under the Norman or medieval earthworks of Cardiff Castle have been described by the late Mr. John Ward, F.S.A., in Archaeologia and Archaeologia Cambrensis. It may be recalled that the remains indicate a quadrangular enclosure some 8½ acres in extent, with central gateways in the north and south sides and with semi-octagonal bastions along the walls. The fort thus corresponds closely in size and general character (though not in detail) with that at Porchester, and clearly represents a westerly branch of the coastal defence system instituted, or at least extended, in the reigns of Diocletian and Constantine I. It stands in the middle of the Monmouthshire-Glamorganshire lowlands where, alone in Wales, Roman civil life developed on a scale sufficiently extensive to require special protection from Irish or Teutonic raiders.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1922

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References

page 361 note 1 LVII, pp. 335 ff.

page 361 note 2 1908, pp. 29ff; 1913, PP. 159 ff. Also, , Haverfield, Cymmrodorion Soc. Trans., 1908-1909.Google Scholar

page 367 note 1 A notable example on a large scale is afforded by the Antonine Vallum, which, as Dr. George Macdonald has recently shown, was built in regulated lengths by six separate legionary detachments.

page 368 note 1 The possibility that the footings, which are about 12 feet wide, may have formed the basis of an earthen or turf wall, like those of some of the Antonine forts in Scotland, is rendered improbable by the superimposed courses of masonry under the floor of the bastion, as mentioned above; unless these courses (which are not now visible) be regarded as part of an earlier gateway.

page 370 note 1 Cymmrodorion Soc. Trans., 19081909, p. 158; 1920–1, p. 93.Google Scholar