Landscapes of Roman Britain

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 5 ต.ค. 2024
  • We used to think Roman Britain was a largely untamed natural landscape of woodland with occasional opulent villas representing the houses of an alien elite, set side by side with scattered peasant settlements. Archaeological work since the 1940s has radically altered this understanding through a combination of large-scale excavation and a revolution in remote sensing techniques, revealing a more varied picture of housing, farming, settlement and industry.
    This lecture will explore our current knowledge of the nature of Roman imperialism and the history of Britain.
    A lecture by Martin Millett recorded on 15 March 2023 at Barnard's Inn Hall, London
    The transcript and downloadable versions of the lecture are available from the Gresham College website:
    www.gresham.ac...
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ความคิดเห็น • 50

  • @elas1234
    @elas1234 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    very interesting lecture!

  • @frankwolstencroft8731
    @frankwolstencroft8731 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    When I visited Sweden some years ago I stayed at a small one story wooden weekend cottage on an island in the middle of a lake near Karlskoga and helped the owner build a wooden extension next to his sauna.
    He placed some Swedish coins inside the wooden beams as mementos, and just for fun I added some of my English two shilling and one shilling pieces to confound future archeologists.

    • @Vivisectus
      @Vivisectus 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      "probably something cultic" in the making there

  • @rjmun580
    @rjmun580 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    More than sixty years ago I had an annoying wart on my finger. A relative said that if I gave him a shilling then he would bury it in the garden. By `it` I took him to mean both the shilling and the wart. Some weeks later I realised that the wart had gone and it has never returned. In todays terms a shilling would only be worth around £2 but the coin had previously had a high silver content. Perhaps an archaeologist will find my shilling and wonder why it was buried in the garden.

    • @barbararice6650
      @barbararice6650 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Said he would bury it... I've got news for you, he didn't bury it 😁

    • @curtiswfranks
      @curtiswfranks ปีที่แล้ว +2

      But, uh, how was the wart removed?

    • @curtiswfranks
      @curtiswfranks ปีที่แล้ว +2

      ​@@barbararice6650: Ha, probably. But we all can bury some coins for the fun of it.

    • @barbararice6650
      @barbararice6650 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@curtiswfranks
      No one buries spending money for the fun of it unless they're some kind of deviant 😑

    • @curtiswfranks
      @curtiswfranks ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@barbararice6650: Hahaha! Maybe I am a deviant then. But I think that burying a few nickles is perfectly painless. :P

  • @peterfrankiewicz9379
    @peterfrankiewicz9379 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thank you for the free english lesson.

  • @frankcorr6566
    @frankcorr6566 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Extremely interesting and stimulating talk.

  • @mdog111
    @mdog111 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Thank you for this fascinating lecture.

  • @thegheymerz6353
    @thegheymerz6353 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I love your videos. You should remind your viewers somehow to like the videos so the algorithm favors their visibility.

  • @waynemcauliffe2362
    @waynemcauliffe2362 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thanks mate very informative

  • @kskssxoxskskss2189
    @kskssxoxskskss2189 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Given the pattern of settlement, I speculate that there must have been significant intermarriage. Romans sent over men, and even with families and camp followers, there would have been a need for more women. Contrary to widespread comment, large numbers of men wish to spend their one life producing, loving, and raising a family, as well as leaving that family something to live on with. Hence, intermarriage. Other lectures I've seen on post-Roman Britain have characterized the remnants of the Roman presence as mixed Brithonic-Roman families, which is what got me thinking about this.

    • @frankwolstencroft8731
      @frankwolstencroft8731 ปีที่แล้ว

      The lecturer who gave this talk about Roman Britain looks as if he is descended from Viking stock. I look very similar to him, especially the white hair. My ancestors came from the area around Yorvic, previously named Eboracum by the Romans

  • @MatthewMcVeagh
    @MatthewMcVeagh ปีที่แล้ว

    On the third attempt I finally managed to sit through this without falling asleep.

  • @peterfreeman6677
    @peterfreeman6677 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Nice to see the excavations at Hayton and Shiptonthorpe get a mention here. One thing I always wondered about the Romano-British settlement at Hayton was, how many veterans from the auxiliary unit stationed in the fort chose to remain close to the fort - and hence probably in the settlement - when they completed their term of service? If the fort was there for 25 to 30 years, and the auxiliaries signed on for 25 years, then the unit would have been there long enough to discharge up to 500 men, perhaps more. What effect on the immediate area would that have had? Some might have gone back to the places from which they were recruited, but others would have stayed; and you would expect then a sort of Romanisation to influence the local area.

  • @davepx1
    @davepx1 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I've no quibble with lowland Roman Britain being peppered with abundant small farms alongside more headline-grabbing but inevitably unrepresentative villas: the scale of urban sites alone shows that cultivation had to be extensive given that the island was also shipping grain to Continental garrisons.
    But that "virtually everywhere that has been examined in recent years has very high densities of sites" reveals an overall (or average) pattern only to the extent that excavations have been conducted randomly, which is of course inconsistent with the resource limitations archaeologists inevitably face. So while we can move beyond once-fashionable "low counts" of as few as half a million inhabitants, we need to be very wary of haring off into estimates of five million or whatever else may be the fashion of the time (exceeding or barely short of old low estimates for the whole of Roman Gaul or even Italy itself). That current estimate of 2m looks about right to me.
    Development archaeology is a case in point: it's a wonderful addition to our knowledge, but you don't generally go developing areas that are so unattractive to settlement as never to have been occupied before. It tells us more about likely settlement hotspots, but less about the places no-one wants to live in. Aerial surveys vastly extend our range, but while Cambridge might seem a no-brainer, even the Vale of Pickering's a prime candidate for relatively dense settlement: "I could have told you that" frankly springs to mind, though the evidence for nucleation is less expected.
    The indication of commercial exchange without monetary evidence is still more surprising, and could suggest a more decentralised distribution of conventionally "urban" functions. But that seems at odds with Roman enthusiasm for the city, especially when England is hardly inhospitable to urban concentration, later outpacing the rest of the world in that respect. It's consistent though with evidence for survival of indigenous ways, though why one community might accumulate coin and another not is an oddity.
    A fascinating talk, adding a wealth of detail and nuance, and I'll definitely be watching it again for further insights I'd overlooked. But my reservation of "Why aren't there more townspeople?" still stands in the way of embracing a high population count.

  • @Patrick3183
    @Patrick3183 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Would’ve been many old oaks standing that would’ve sprouted in the BC era. Also many more elms.

  • @Ulyssestnt
    @Ulyssestnt ปีที่แล้ว

    You state :"we used to call it Romanization"..we still very much call it Romanization.. meaning the adoption of Greco-Roman culture, often in amalgamation of their own.
    It took many forms and it seems it seldom was imposed by force.
    You didn't even have to be inside what we today understand to be the borders of the Roman empire for this to take place.
    For example Germanic auxiliaries took Roman culture home with them and blended it with their own.
    We have very interesting burial site finds that points to this process in fascinating ways as far afield as Scandinavia for example.

  • @myparceltape1169
    @myparceltape1169 ปีที่แล้ว

    Land can be divided between the children of the family which is accepted to be the 'user'.
    Say a family had 3 sons. The daughters were married to local sons. That leaves one parcel of land and three workers :: apportion.

  • @myparceltape1169
    @myparceltape1169 ปีที่แล้ว

    Buried coins are a run on the banks or the servant burying the single talent his hard master gave him to invest while he was away.

  • @willbick7889
    @willbick7889 ปีที่แล้ว

    isn't most of this blindingly obvious to anyone with a bit of common sense? Does anyone seriously think Roman Britain was largely uninhabited woodland?!! Find it hard to believe historians ever thought that

    • @Mrch33ky
      @Mrch33ky ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Well done. You completely missed the point of the lecture.

    • @davepx1
      @davepx1 ปีที่แล้ว

      It evidently wasn't so obvious to past generations of historians who estimated Roman Britain's population to be as low as half a million - which isn't to say that later "high counts" of up to 5m are necessarily a great improvement.

  • @RonJohn63
    @RonJohn63 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    54:48 Didn't know how to relate to shiny, pretty, decorative broaches? That's patently absurd.

  • @elizabethford7263
    @elizabethford7263 ปีที่แล้ว

    I would love to have learned more about this topic, but by half way through I couldn't stand the "uh" and "um"s anymore. It usually doesn't get to me, but if he is a professor, he should have better speaking skills. Maybe I'll read a transcript for the second half.

    • @peterc2248
      @peterc2248 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Harsh but fair. I gave up on a post graduate course once because the lecturer was so bad at actually lecturing. He may have been a brilliant academic but he struggled to impart his knowledge (his books were pretty hard going too).

    • @rogerhulme9494
      @rogerhulme9494 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I agree. Jarring. Five minutes left me quite agitated.

    • @homerfj1100
      @homerfj1100 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Agreed.

  • @MZig-rw7su
    @MZig-rw7su 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Did he get dressed in the dark ?

  • @JJONNYREPP
    @JJONNYREPP ปีที่แล้ว

    Landscapes of Roman Britain 1603pm 17.3.23 redefining land borders and altering place names... gives the lie to a great many aspects of historical "fact"... Roman rural settlement of Britain? i doubt Britian would have been anything but.

  • @barbararice6650
    @barbararice6650 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Did the Romans have a planning permission and building regulations department or were they civilised 👈👀

    • @emdiar6588
      @emdiar6588 ปีที่แล้ว

      Did the council reject your plans for a firework factory in your back garden again? Pesky bureaucrats!!

    • @barbararice6650
      @barbararice6650 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@emdiar6588
      Nope an artillery revetment large enough to shell France from a safe distance, the swines refused me on the grounds that I hadn't planned for enough bat boxes 😑

    • @emdiar6588
      @emdiar6588 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@barbararice6650 XD

  • @emptybook1458
    @emptybook1458 ปีที่แล้ว

    Have any Englishmen heard of Keelady archeology site in Thamil nadu state in India? Why did British rulers hide it so long ? Why Archaeologist are partial in their interests?

  • @whitepanties2751
    @whitepanties2751 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    So they had enclosure of former common fields and annual sheep fairs in Roman Britain? Starts to sound almost like the early modern period.
    I would have liked more information as to how the evidence here of the landscape of rural Roman Britain is the same as or different from that of Gaul and other provinces at the same time.

  • @AudioPervert1
    @AudioPervert1 ปีที่แล้ว

    Massive yawn