Dorchester Dorset.com Blog

Posts Tagged ‘durnovia’

The History of Roman Dorchester

Friday, July 29th, 2011
Tags: , , , , , , ,
Roman Dorchester

Roman Dorchester

“Really, what have the Romans ever done for us?” asks one of the characters in a famous scene from Monty Python’s The Life of Brian. It only takes a short walk around Dorchester to realise the answer is really quite a lot, actually!

It’s been almost 2000 years since the Romans first came to Dorchester, and the signs of their passing are still evident today. The town has long fascinated historians with its wonderful ruins, which are considered among of the best preserved Roman remains in the entire UK.

This week on the blog we’ll be explaining why Dorchester is such a great place to come and learn about Britain’s rich and enchanting ancient past.

Maiden Castle

Maiden Castle

Maiden Castle

The Romans first arrived in the Dorchester area in 43AD, encountering the local Celtic tribe called the Durotriges who has built a giant hill fort at Maiden Castle.

The site had been home to tribal peoples from around 3500BC, but it didn’t last long once the Romans were on the scene. As anyone who has seen Gladiator will know, the Romans weren’t squeamish when it came to combat, and the stones and slings used by the tribes were no match for the brutal Roman weaponry and tactics.

When archaeologists excavated the area in 1934, they found a Celtic skeleton with a Roman catapult bolt embedded in his spine. What a way to go!

Maiden Castle is open to the public all year round and entry is free. As well as offering great views of Dorchester and the surrounding countryside, making your way up to the summit of the hill-fort gives you a real sense of stepping back in time thousands of years into Dorset’s ancient past.

Dorchester Roman Town House

Dorchester Roman Town House

Dorchester Roman Town House

A wonderful insight into urban life in Roman Britain came in 1937 when archaeologists stumbled upon the remains of a 4th century Roman town house at Colliton Park in Dorchester. They were able to uncover the full layout of the house, plus outbuildings and other features such as the well.

To date, this is the only fully exposed Roman house in the UK, and it gives us valuable information on how the Romans lived their lives. The house is thought to have belonged to a wealthy family involved in the governing council of Durnovia (present day Dorchester).

There was one thing in particular found at the site that really stunned the archaeologists, and that was the house’s beautifully preserved mosaic. This decorative feature contains hundreds of tiny colourful tiles arranged artfully to create a gorgeous, intricate overall picture.

Like Maiden Castle, the Dorchester Roman Town House is completely free and open to the public all year round. To help you get a better understanding of the house there will be a number of open days taking place this summer, with experts on hand to explain what life was like for the inhabitants during the Roman era. The open days take place every Wednesday afternoon from 3rd August until 14th September.

Maumbury Rings

Maumbury Rings

Maumbury Rings

When they weren’t off conquering or building roads, the Romans were big fans of the theatre. The Maumbury Rings site was originally a pagan burial site, but in the Roman period it became an arena for plays and other entertainments, with room for up to 10,000 spectators.

While its size and shape has altered considerably, the purpose of the Maumbury Rings hasn’t changed much at all in the centuries since the Romans, and it is still regularly used for open air concerts, theatre performances and festivals. In recent years there have even been historical re-enactments on the site featuring fully armour-clad Roman legionaries!

Dorset County Museum

Dorset County Museum Roman Mosaic

Dorset County Museum Roman Mosaic

To get the background on Roman Dorchester and to see artefacts retrieved from all the sites mentioned above, make sure you stop in at the Dorset County Museum on High East Street. It’s a goldmine of information on Dorchester history, and contains an enormous wealth of Roman material including glassware, pottery, beads, and mosaics.

Dorchester History Walks

Don’t forget our free guided Dorchester history walks, taking place every Wednesday for the next 8 weeks with town crier Alistair Chisolm. He’ll be taking you round some of the town’s main points of historical interest, covering everything from the Roman period right through to Thomas Hardy’s 19th century Dorchester.

Social Bookmarks
[del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Google] [LinkedIn] [Technorati] [Twitter]

Dorchester Roman Festival Photos

Monday, May 24th, 2010
Tags: , , ,
View around Maumbury Rings

View around Maumbury Rings

The gods were smiling on the Roman Festival in Dorchester this weekend with glorious Summer weather and lots of visitors taking part.

The centre piece of the two-day event was the Real Live Romans, Legio II Augusta re-enacting battle scenes. In authentic battle dress they brought the fantastic selection of buildings, military equipment and household artefacts to life.

The Marquee was also busy where local residents could try their hand at various activities, including pottery and mosaic making.

There were half hour storytelling sessions that were a great success with the children and novelist Ben Kane was also talking about his book – The Forgotten Legion and The Silver Eagle.

If you enjoyed the event too – let us have your comments and photos.

Dorchester Roman Festival Gallery

Social Bookmarks
[del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Google] [LinkedIn] [Technorati] [Twitter]

Dorchester a Brief History

Friday, October 16th, 2009
Tags: , , ,

Dorchester is a beautiful English market town with a rich and varied past- here’s a brief history of Dorchester as a taster of what you might find when visiting Dorchester.

The chalk hillside on which the county town of Dorchester now stands originally formed part of the complex prehistoric landscape. Impressive archaeological monuments in and around the town bear witness to some 6,000 years of human activity, the most famous being Maiden Castle, an Iron Age hillfort to the southwest.

Durnovia

Dorchester was first recongnizable as a town (”Durnovia”) in Roman times, mainly inhabited by Romanised members of the native “Durotriges” tribe. With its fine buildings, roads, town walls and a sophisticated piped water supply, Durnovia is though to have been the regional administtative centre.

Medieval Dorchester

Medieval Dorchester generally prospered, trade being stimulated by the presence of a castle, friary, churches and mills, with regular fairs and market days.

In the 18th century beer replaced woollen cloth as Dorchester’s main prioduct, and still holds that position. After numerous fires, most of the old timber and thatched buildings were rebuilt or refaced with local stone and the increasingly fashionable brick.

This gave Dorchester its mix of predominantly 18th and 19th centruy street fronts, so familiar to the famous Dorset Novelist Thomas Hardy who called the agricultural town “Catserbridge”. Today, Dorchester is an attractive tourist centre, with a population of around 15,000.

St Peter’s and Corn Exchange

Busy market stalls in front of the mainly 15th centruy church of St. Peter in High West Street formed the hub of medieval Dorchester. The clock turret was an 1864 addition to the Town Hall and the Corn Exchange was built during 1847-8.

Judge Jeffreys and No. 6 High West Street

Number 6 High West Street, built in the early 17th century, is on eof the few timber-framed buildings to survive Dorchester’s disastrous town fires. It is believed to have been the lodging of the notoriously has Lord Chief Justice Jeffrey, who tried 300 people at the “Bloody Assize” in Dorchester in 1685, after the Monmouth rebellion.

Borough Gardens

The Borough Gardens stand in the centre of the town. They were laid out in 1895 partly on the site of a large nursery. The cast iron clock tower, built in 1905 was donated by Charles Hansford, a magistrate and benefactor to the local hospital. The bandstand was erected in 1898 and is still used today.

River Walk

Minutes from High East Street, this peaceful river walk skirts the hill on which the castle once stood. The river, an offshoot of the River Frome and one-time millstream, has long been Dorchester’s north-eastern boundary. A full circuit can be completed along the tree line “Walks”, laid out in the 18th century on the line of the defensive Roman town walls and ditches.

St George’s, Fordington

St George’s 15th century tower dominates Fordington,, once a separate farming village south-east of Dorchester and the site of numerous Roman extra-mural burials. The church contains a Roman tombstone and has an unusual stone carving dating from c.1100 over the south door.

Napper’s Mite

Napper’s Mite in South Street, is a former almshouse founded by Sir Robert Napper in 1615. Built to house “ten aged men” after a town fire in which 300 houses were destroyed it now contains shops and a restaurant.

With its fascinating history and location in one of the finest parts of Dorset, Dorchester has a blend of modern and old, it’s well worth a visit.

Social Bookmarks
[del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Google] [LinkedIn] [Technorati] [Twitter]