25 June 2018

Roman York



Medieval is nice. Vikings are nice. Gothic is cool. But I’ll take Romans over all of them any day of the week. I can’t tell you why Romans speak to me more than many other great civilizations and periods in history. Maybe it’s the togas. Maybe the Colosseum. Honestly, who wouldn’t love a culture that had invented indoor plumbing and bath houses when much of the world was still using the local streams?

Eboracum, as the Romans called York, was founded in 71 CE, on land situated between the Rivers Ouse and Foss. The Ninth Legion did the heavy lifting, and York eventually became the capital of Britannia Inferior of the Roman Empire. The boys ruled the land until around 400 CE.

Over the weekend, I was fortunate enough to go on a walking tour “Round the Roman Fortress”, with the renowned archeologist Professor Peter Addyman. He’s been digging things up here in York and writing about it since the early 70’s. The walk had been organized by the York Civic Trust. York Civic Trust (along with about twenty other different walks all lead by specialists.)


Our group was set to meet in St Samson’s Square. I had studied my York map for two whole days before the walk. Simple: enter the walled city of York through Monkgate Bar, walk a few blocks down Goodramgate, veer right at King’s Square onto Church Street, which leads you right to said square. Possibly a ten minute walk. It took me a bit longer, but at least I only had to ask for directions one time.

With our group of about fifteen interested folks, we gathered around Professor Addyman. He told us we were, at that very moment, standing on top of part of the Roman Bathhouse. He pointed off in the distance and asked us to imagine the size of a bathhouse that could serve 5000 men. It’s times like these that I long for x-ray vision. An entire Roman garrison that housed 5000 men, lay below our feet. It boggles the mind to think about the treasures and history right under your own two feet.

At one point I asked Professor Addyman if he had the desire to simply start digging down to all the Roman-ness that lay beneath. Of course he did. If I felt the frustration in not being able to look at it all, I can just imagine what someone whose life’s work had revolved around antiquity felt like.



We then took off and followed the Professor across the square, down tiny streets, and in and out of the increasing mass of visitors enjoying the sights. I thought of taking out my camera to document our footsteps, but I did not want all the people in the shots. The plan was to go back the following day, in the early morning, and take pictures. I did that, but was not quite able to find all the bits we saw.

What I did find, were the markings Professor Addyman had shown us on the street that indicated Roman walls. This was thanks to diligent archeologists who worked with the city to ensure everyone knew where the Fortress once stood. Actually, still stands. How did they figure it out? After all, after the Romans came the Anglo-Saxons, followed by the Vikings, then came Medieval times, and so on until we get to the present day tourist spot. That’s a whole lot of years of buildings, and garbage piled one on top of another. How they do find ancient things usually happens when the builders come in.

Everywhere you dig deep enough in York, you’re bound to find something other than dirt and rocks. And if you happen to be renovating a shop, or excavating for a parking lot and run into a mysterious whatever, the experts are called in. That’s one way they have found parts of Roman walls and buildings.

We stopped in front of shops where the professor had been called in during renovations. He showed us photos of what was found. In one café, they have installed a large section of thick Plexiglas on the floor so that you can sip coffee and gaze down onto remains of Roman structures.
Roman road

On another street, where all the buildings are connected to one another, he pointed out that one building was sinking slightly to it’s right, while the adjoining one sunk left. That is because it is directly on top of a Roman wall.

Several times her pointed out a slight slope in a street, that led to a flattened area. Roman walls again. Roman concrete does not sink.  

On either side Monkgate Bar, (one of the entrances to the walled city of York that still stands), one can climb up stone steps and walk the wall. Down at street level, there is a secret, locked plywood door next to the steps. The professor had the key and led us in to a narrow patch of overgrown thistles and grass. What we now stood in front of was the longest standing exposed Roman wall in the country. (if I make historical mistakes, it’s because I did not take notes….unlike a fellow adventurer who wrote down everything in a small notebook.) And down at the bottom of this wall was the actual stamp of the Roman journeyman who had help build it a few thousand years before.

The Minster, the massive Medieval cathedral, sits atop the Roman Legion’s headquarters. It was in the courtyard in front that Constantine was proclaimed emperor in 306 CE. It is marked by a rather dashing bronze sculpture of the emperor, for which the sculptor may have taken a bit of artistic license. Professor Addyman related the story of when he saw the artist’s model for the sculpture. He noted that the sword was incorrect; that Roman swords did not have the cross-piece guard on the hilt. He assured the artist that Roman swords only employed a round ball at the gripped end. All the same, it is quite lovely. 
Constantine the Great

It truly was a fabulous walk. And again I asked myself why I had not gone into archeology. I suppose I might never have been able to decide which culture I would want to explore every day for the rest of my life. Would it be the Romans? Or maybe the Egyptians? Very possibly the Mayans.