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Scotland during the Roman Empire

Scotland during the Roman Empire refers to the protohistorical period during which the Roman Empire interacted within the area of modern Scotland. Despite sporadic attempts at conquest and government between the 1st and 4th centuries AD, most of modern Scotland, inhabited by the Caledonians and the Maeatae, was not incorporated into the Roman Empire.

Roman cavalryman trampling conquered Picts, on the Bridgeness Slab, a tablet found at Bo'ness on the Antonine Wall, dated to around AD 142 and now in the National Museum of Scotland
The Stirling torcs: a hoard of gold Celtic torcs

In the Roman imperial period, the island of Great Britain north of the River Forth was known as Caledonia, while the island itself was known as Britannia, the name also given to the Roman province roughly consisting of modern England and Wales and which replaced the earlier Ancient Greek designation as Albion. Roman legions arrived in the territory of modern Scotland around AD 71, having conquered the Celtic Britons of southern Great Britain over the preceding three decades. Aiming to complete the Roman conquest of Britain, the Roman armies under Q. Petilius Cerialis and Gn. Julius Agricola campaigned against the Caledonians in the 70s and 80s. The Agricola, a biography of the Roman governor of Britain by his son-in-law Tacitus mentions a Roman victory at "Mons Graupius" which became the namesake of the Grampian Mountains but whose identity has been questioned by modern scholarship.

Agricola then seems to have repeated an earlier Greek circumnavigation of the island by Pytheas and received submission from local tribes, establishing the Roman limes of actual control first along the Gask Ridge, and then withdrawing south of a line from the Solway Firth to the River Tyne, i.e. along the Stanegate. This border was later fortified as Hadrian's Wall. Several Roman commanders attempted to fully conquer lands north of this line, including a 2nd-century expansion that was fortified as the Antonine Wall.

The history of the period is complex and not well-documented. The province of Valentia, for instance, may have been the lands between the two Roman walls, or the territory around and south of Hadrian's Wall, or Roman Wales. Romans held most of their Caledonian territory only a little over 40 years; they probably only held Scottish land for about 80 years. Some Scottish historians such as Alistair Moffat maintain Roman influence was inconsequential.[2][unreliable source?] Despite grandiose claims made by an 18th-century forged manuscript, it is now believed that the Romans at no point controlled even half of present-day Scotland and that Roman legions ceased to affect the area after around 211.

"Scots" and "Scotland" proper would not emerge as unified ideas until centuries later. In fact, the Roman Empire influenced every part of Scotland during the period: by the time of the End of Roman rule in Britain around 410, the various Iron Age tribes native to the area had united as, or fallen under the control of, the Picts, while the southern half of the country was overrun by tribes of Romanized Britons. The Scoti (Gaelic Irish raiders) who would give Scotland its English name, had begun to settle along the west coast. All three groups may have been involved in the Great Conspiracy that overran Roman Britain in 367. The era saw the emergence of the earliest historical accounts of the natives. The most enduring legacies of Rome, however, were Christianity and literacy, both of which arrived indirectly via Irish missionaries.

The Broch of Gurness in Orkney

Iron Age culture in Scotland

Ptolemy's tribes located north of the Forth-Clyde isthmus include the Cornovii in Caithness, the Caereni, Smertae, Carnonacae, Decantae, Lugi, and Creones also north of the Great Glen, the Taexali in the north-east, the Epidii in Argyll, the Venicones in Fife, the Caledonians in the central Highlands and the Vacomagi centred near Strathmore. It is likely that all of these cultures spoke a form of Celtic language known as Common Brittonic. The occupants of southern Scotland were the Damnonii in the Clyde valley, the Novantae in Galloway, the Selgovae on the south coast and the Votadini to the east.[3] These peoples may have spoken a form of Brittonic language.

Little is known about this alliance of Iron Age tribes. The exact location of "Caledonia" is unknown, and the boundaries are unlikely to have been fixed.[4] The name itself is a Roman one, as used by Tacitus, Ptolemy, Pliny the Elder and Lucan,[5][unreliable source?] but the name by which the Caledonians referred to themselves is unknown. It is likely that prior to the Roman invasions, political control in the region was highly decentralised and no evidence has emerged of any specific Caledonian military or political leadership.[6]

Despite the discovery of many hundreds of Iron Age sites in Scotland, there is still a great deal that remains to be explained about the nature of the Celtic life in the early Christian era.[7] Radiocarbon dating for this period is problematic and chronological sequences are poorly understood.[8] For a variety of reasons much of the archaeological work to date in Scotland has concentrated on the islands of the west and north and both excavations and analysis of societal structures on the mainland are more limited in scope.[9]

 
Dun Telve broch in Glenelg

The peoples of early Iron Age Scotland, particularly in the north and west, lived in substantial stone buildings called Atlantic roundhouses. The remains of hundreds of these houses exist throughout the country, some merely piles of rubble, others with impressive towers and outbuildings. They date from about 800 BC to AD 300 with the most imposing structures having been created around the 2nd century BC. The most massive constructions that date from this time are the circular brochs. On average, the ruins only survive up to a few metres above ground level, but there are five extant examples of towers whose walls still exceed 6.5 m (21 ft) in height.[10] There are at least 100 broch sites in Scotland.[11] Despite extensive research, their purpose and the nature of the societies that created them are still a matter of debate.[12]

In some parts of Iron Age Scotland, quite unlike almost all of recorded history right up to the present day, there does not seem to have been a hierarchical elite. Studies have shown that these stone roundhouses, with massively thick walls, must have contained virtually the entire population of islands such as Barra and North Uist. Iron Age settlement patterns in Scotland are not homogeneous, but in these places there is no sign of a privileged class living in large castles or forts, nor of an elite priestly caste or of peasants with no access to the kind of accommodation enjoyed by the middle classes.[13]

Over 400 souterrains have been discovered in Scotland, many of them in the south-east, and although few have been dated, those that have suggest a construction date in the 2nd or 3rd centuries. The purpose of these small underground structures is also obscure. They are usually found close to settlements (whose timber frames are much less well-preserved) and may have been for storing perishable agricultural products.[14]

Scotland also has numerous vitrified forts but again an accurate chronology has proven to be evasive. Extensive studies of such a fort at Finavon Hill near Forfar in Angus, using a variety of techniques, suggest dates for the destruction of the site in either the last two centuries BC or the mid-1st millennium.[15] The lack of Roman artefacts (common in local souterrain sites) suggests that many sites were abandoned before the arrival of the legions.[16]

Unlike the earlier Neolithic and Bronze Ages, which have provided massive monuments to the dead, Iron Age burial sites in Scotland are rare, and a 2008 find at Dunbar may provide further insight into the culture of this period. A similar site of a warrior's grave at Alloa has been provisionally dated to AD 90–130.[17][18][19]

Settlements and southern brochs

 
Edin's Hall Broch near Duns in the Scottish Borders, showing intramural chambers

Ptolemy's Geography identifies 19 "towns" from intelligence gathered during the Agricolan campaigns of the 1st century. No archaeological evidence of any truly urban places has been found from this time and the names may have indicated hill forts or temporary market and meeting places. Most of the names are obscure: Devana may be the modern Banchory; Alauna ("the rock") in the west is probably Dumbarton Rock and the place of the same name in the east Lowlands may be the site of Edinburgh Castle. Lindon may be Balloch on Loch Lomond side.[20][unreliable source?]

There are the remains of various broch towers in southern Scotland that appear to date from the period immediately prior to or following Agricola's invasion. They are about fifteen in number and are found in four locations: the Forth valley, close to the Firth of Tay, the far south-west and the eastern Borders. Their existence so far from the main centres of broch-building is something of a mystery. The destruction of the Leckie broch may have come at the hands of the Roman invaders, yet like the nearby site of Fairy Knowe at Buchlyvie a substantial amount of both Roman and native artefacts have been recovered there. Both structures were built in the late 1st century and were evidently high-status buildings. The inhabitants raised sheep, cattle and pigs, and benefited from a range of wild game including red deer and wild boar.

Edin's Hall Broch in Berwickshire is the best-preserved southern broch and although the ruins are superficially similar to some of the larger Orcadian broch villages it is unlikely that the tower was ever more than a single-storey high. There is an absence of Roman artefacts at this site. Various theories for the existence of these structures have been proposed, including their construction by northern invaders following the withdrawal of Roman troops after the Agricolan advance, or by allies of Rome encouraged to emulate the impressive northern style in order to suppress native resistance, perhaps even the Orcadian chiefs whose positive relationship with Rome may have continued from the beginnings of Romano-British relations.[21] It is also possible that their construction had little to do with Roman frontier policy and was simply the importation of a new style by southern elites or it may have been a response by such elites to the growing threat of Rome prior to the invasion and an attempt to ally themselves, actually or symbolically, with the north that was largely free of Roman hegemony.[22]

 
Map drawn from Claudius Ptolemy's cartographic works, showing his rotation of Caledonia to the east. From Edward Bunbury's A History of Ancient Geography Among the Greeks and Romans (1879)
 
An early Greek map (c. 1300) from Ptolemy's description of the British Isles

Roman geography

Scotland had been inhabited for thousands of years before the Romans arrived. However, it is only during the Greco-Roman period that Scotland is recorded in writing.

The work On the Cosmos by Aristotle or Pseudo-Aristotle mentions two "very large" islands called Albion (Great Britain) and Ierne (Ireland).[24][25] The Greek explorer and geographer Pytheas visited Britain sometime between 322 and 285 BC and may have circumnavigated the mainland, which he describes as being triangular in shape. In his work On the Ocean, he refers to the most northerly point as Orcas (Orkney).[3]

Originals of On the Ocean do not survive, but copies are known to have existed in the 1st century so at the least a rudimentary knowledge of the geography of north Britain would have been available to Roman military intelligence.[26][unreliable source?][27] Pomponius Mela, the Roman geographer, recorded in his De Chorographia, written around AD 43, that there were 30 Orkney islands and seven Haemodae (possibly Shetland).[28] There is certainly evidence of an Orcadian connection with Rome prior to AD 60 from pottery found at the Broch of Gurness.[29][unreliable source?] By the time of Pliny the Elder (d. AD 79), Roman knowledge of the geography of Scotland had extended to the Hebudes (The Hebrides), Dumna (probably the Outer Hebrides), the Caledonian Forest, and the Caledonians.[28] A traveller called Demetrius of Tarsus related to Plutarch the tale of an expedition to the west coast in or shortly before AD 83. He stated that it was "a gloomy journey amongst uninhabited islands" but that he had visited one which was the retreat of holy men. He mentioned neither the druids nor the name of the island.[30][unreliable source?]

 
"A gloomy journey amongst uninhabited islands" – Demtrius of Tarsus

Ptolemy, possibly drawing on earlier sources of information as well as more contemporary accounts from the Agricolan invasion, identified 18 tribes in Scotland in his Geography, but many of the names are obscure. His information becomes much less reliable in the north and west, suggesting early Roman knowledge of these areas were confined to observations from the sea.[28][31][unreliable source?] Famously, his coördinates place most of Scotland north of Hadrian's Wall bent at a right angle, stretching due eastward from the rest of Britain.

Ptolemy's catalogue of tribes living north of the Forth-Clyde isthmus include the Caereni, Smertae, Carnonacae, Decantae, Lugi, and Creones all to the north of the Great Glen, the Cornovii in Caithness, the Taexali in the north-east, the Epidii in Argyll, the Venicones in Fife, the Vacomagi centred near Strathmore, the Caledonians in the central Highlands.[3]

Flavian period (69–96 AD)

The earliest written record of a formal connection between Rome and Scotland is the attendance of the "King of Orkney" who was one of 11 British kings who submitted to the emperor Claudius at Colchester in AD 43 following the invasion of southern Britain three months earlier.[32][unreliable source?][33] The long distances and short period of time involved strongly suggest a prior connection between Rome and Orkney, although no evidence of this has been found and the contrast with later Caledonian resistance is striking.[34][unreliable source?] The apparently cordial beginnings recorded in Colchester did not last. We know nothing of the foreign policies of the senior leaders in mainland Scotland in the 1st century, but by AD 71 the Roman governor Quintus Petillius Cerialis had launched an invasion.[35]

 
Campaigns in Scotland in the early 80s

The Votadini, who occupied the south-east of Scotland, came under Roman sway at an early stage and Cerialis sent one division north through their territory to the shores of the Firth of Forth. The Legio XX Valeria Victrix took a western route through Annandale in an attempt to encircle and isolate the Selgovae who occupied the central Southern Uplands.[36][37][unreliable source?] Early success tempted Cerialis further north and he began constructing a line of Glenblocker forts to the north and west of the Gask Ridge which marked a frontier between the Venicones to the south and the Caledonians to the north.[38][unreliable source?]

 
Arthur's O'on, a Roman monument at Stenhousemuir near Falkirk, from Alexander Gordon's 1726 work Itinerarium Septentrionale. It was demolished 17 years later in 1743.

In the summer of AD 78 Gnaeus Julius Agricola arrived in Britain to take up his appointment as the new governor. Two years later his legions constructed a substantial fort at Trimontium near Melrose. Excavations in the 20th century produced significant finds including the foundations of several successive structures, Roman coins and pottery. Remains from the Roman army were also found, including a collection of Roman armour (with ornate cavalry parade helmets), and horse fittings (with bronze saddleplates and studded leather chamfrons). Agricola is said to have pushed his armies to the estuary of the "River Taus" (usually assumed to be the River Tay) and established forts there, including a legionary fortress at Inchtuthil.[39]

In 2019, GUARD Archaeology team led by Iraia Arabaolaza uncovered a marching camp dating to the 1st century AD, used by Roman legions during the invasion of Roman General Agricola. According to Arabaolaza, the fire pits were split 30 metres apart into two parallel lines. The findings also included clay-domed ovens and 26 fire pits dated to between 77- 86 AD and 90 AD loaded with burn and charcoal contents. Archaeologists suggested that this site had been chosen as a strategic location for the Roman conquest of Ayrshire.[40][41]

Battle of Mons Graupius

In the summer of AD 84 the Romans faced the massed armies of the Caledonians at the Battle of Mons Graupius. Agricola, whose forces included a fleet, arrived at the site with light infantry bolstered with British auxiliaries. It is estimated that a total of 20,000 Romans faced 30,000 Caledonian warriors.[42][43]

Agricola put his auxiliaries in the front line, keeping the legions in reserve, and relied on close-quarters fighting to make the Caledonians' unpointed slashing swords useless. Even though the Caledonians were put to rout and therefore lost this battle, two-thirds of their army managed to escape and hide in the Scottish Highlands or the "trackless wilds" as Tacitus called them. Battle casualties were estimated by Tacitus to be about 10,000 on the Caledonian side and roughly 360 on the Roman side. A number of authors have reckoned the battle to have occurred in the Grampian Mounth within sight of the North Sea. In particular, Roy,[44] Surenne, Watt, Hogan and others have advanced notions that the site of the battle may have been Kempstone Hill, Megray Hill or other knolls near the Raedykes Roman camp. These points of high ground are proximate to the Elsick Mounth, an ancient trackway used by Romans and Caledonians for military manoeuvres.[45] Other suggestions include the hill of Bennachie in Aberdeenshire, the Gask Ridge not far from Perth[46] and Sutherland.[47] It has also been suggested that in the absence of any archaeological evidence and Tacitus' low estimates of Roman casualties, that the battle was simply fabricated.[48]

Calgacus

The first resident of Scotland to appear in history by name was Calgacus ("the Swordsman"), a leader of the Caledonians at Mons Graupius, who is referred to by Tacitus in the Agricola as "the most distinguished for birth and valour among the chieftains".[49] Tacitus even invented a speech for him in advance of the battle in which he describes the Romans as:

Robbers of the world, having by their universal plunder exhausted the land, they rifle the deep. If the enemy be rich, they are rapacious; if he be poor, they lust for dominion; neither the east nor the west has been able to satisfy them. Alone among men they covet with equal eagerness poverty and riches. To robbery, slaughter, plunder, they give the lying name of empire; they make a solitude and call it peace.[49]

Aftermath

 
The fort at Cawdor is located near Inverness.

Calgacus' fate is unknown but, according to Tacitus, after the battle Agricola ordered the prefect of the fleet to sail around the north of Scotland to confirm that Britain was an island and to receive the surrender of the Orcadians. It was proclaimed that Agricola had finally subdued all the tribes of Britain.[50] However, the Roman historian Cassius Dio reports that this circumnavigation resulted in Titus receiving his 15th acclamation as emperor in AD 79. This is five years before Mons Graupius is believed by most historians to have taken place.[51]

Marching camps may have been constructed along the southern shores of the Moray Firth, although their existence is questioned.[47][52][53][unreliable source?]

Flavian occupation

 
19th-century statue of Agricola in the Roman Baths in Bath, Somerset

The total size of the Roman garrison in Scotland during the Flavian period of occupation is thought to have been some 25,000 troops, requiring 16–19,000 tons of grain per annum.[54] In addition, the material to construct the forts was substantial, estimated at 1 million cubic feet (28,315 m3) of timber during the 1st century. Ten tons of buried nails were discovered at the Inchtuthil site, which may have had a garrison of up to 6,000 men and which itself consumed 30 linear kilometres of wood for the walls alone, which would have used up 100 hectares (247 acres) of forest.[55][56][unreliable source?][57]

Presumably as a consequence of the Roman advance, various hill forts such as Dun Mor in Perthshire, which had been abandoned by the natives long ago, were re-occupied. Some new ones may even have been constructed in the northeast, such as Hill O'Christ's Kirk in Aberdeenshire.[58][unreliable source?]

Soon after his announcement of victory, Agricola was recalled to Rome by Domitian and his post passed to an unknown successor, possibly Sallustius Lucullus. Agricola's successors were seemingly unable or unwilling to further subdue the far north. This inability to continue to hold the far north may be in part due to the limited military resources available to the Roman Proconsul after the recall of the Legio II Adiutrix from Britain, to support Domitian's war in Dacia. Despite his apparent successes, Agricola himself fell out of favour and it is possible that Domitian may have been informed of the fraudulence of his claims to have won a significant victory.[48] The fortress at Inchtuthil was dismantled before its completion and the other fortifications of the Gask Ridge (erected to consolidate the Roman presence in Scotland in the aftermath of Mons Graupius) were abandoned within the space of a few years. It is possible that the costs of a drawn-out war outweighed any economic or political benefit and it was deemed more profitable to leave the Caledonians to themselves.[59] By AD 87 the occupation was limited to the Southern Uplands and by the end of the 1st century the northern limit of Roman expansion was the Stanegate road between the Tyne and Solway Firth.[60][unreliable source?]

Hadrianic period (117–138)

Hadrian's Wall

The construction of 118 kilometres (73 mi) long Hadrian's Wall in the early 120s on the orders of the Emperor Hadrian consolidated the Roman line of defence (called limes) on the Tyne-Solway line, where it remained until c. AD 139.[61][62]

It was a stone and turf fortification built across the width of what is now northern England and was roughly 4 metres (13 ft) or more high along its length.[63] The vallum Aelii, as the Romans called it, may have taken six years to construct. Small guard posts called milecastles were built at mile intervals with an additional two fortified observation points between them. The wall was wide enough to allow for a walkway along the top.[64]

The purpose of the wall appears to have been in part at least to control contact between the subject Brigantes to its south and the client Selgovae to the north.[65]

Antonine period (138–161)

 
Southern Scotland in the reign of Antoninus Pius

Quintus Lollius Urbicus was made governor of Roman Britain in 138, by the new emperor Antoninus Pius. Urbicus was the son of a Libyan landowner[66] and a native of Numidia (modern Algeria). Prior to coming to Britain he served during the Jewish Rebellion (132–35), and then governing Germania Inferior.

Antoninus Pius soon reversed the containment policy of his predecessor Hadrian, and Urbicus was ordered to begin the reconquest of Lowland Scotland by moving north. Between 139 and 140 he rebuilt the fort at Corbridge and by 142 or 143, commemorative coins were issued celebrating a victory in Britain. It is therefore likely that Urbicus led the reoccupation of southern Scotland c. 141, probably using the 2nd Augustan Legion. He evidently campaigned against several British tribes (possibly including factions of the northern Brigantes), certainly against the lowland tribes of Scotland, the Votadini and Selgovae of the Scottish Borders region, and the Damnonii of Strathclyde. His total force may have been about 16,500 men.[67]

It seems likely that Urbicus planned his campaign of attack from Corbridge,[citation needed] advancing north and leaving garrison forts at High Rochester in Northumberland and possibly also at Trimontium as he struck towards the Firth of Forth. Having secured an overland supply route for military personnel and equipment along Dere Street, Urbicus very likely set up a supply port at Carriden for the supply of grain and other foodstuffs before proceeding against the Damnonii; success was swift.

It was possibly after the defences of the Antonine Wall were finished that Urbicus turned his attention upon the fourth lowland Scottish tribe,[citation needed] the Novantae who inhabited the Dumfries and Galloway peninsula. The main lowland tribes, sandwiched as they were between Hadrian's Wall of stone to the south and the new turf wall to the north, later formed a confederation against Roman rule, collectively known as the Maeatae. The Antonine Wall had a variety of purposes. It provided a defensive line against the Caledonians. It cut off the Maeatae from their Caledonian allies and created a buffer zone north of Hadrian's Wall. It also facilitated troop movements between east and west, but its main purpose may not have been primarily military. It enabled Rome to control and tax trade and may have prevented potentially disloyal new subjects of Roman rule from communicating with their independent brethren to the north and coordinating revolts.[68][69] Urbicus achieved an impressive series of military successes, but like Agricola's they were short-lived. Having taken twelve years to build, the wall was overrun and abandoned soon after AD 160.[70][71]

The destruction of some of the southern brochs may date to the Antonine advance, the hypothesis being that whether or not they had previously been symbols of Roman patronage they had now outlived their usefulness from a Roman point of view.[21]

In 1984, a candidate for a Roman fort was identified by aerial photography at Easter Galcantray, southwest of Cawdor.[72] The site was excavated between 1984 and 1988 and several features were identified which are supportive of this classification. If confirmed, it would be one of the most northerly known Roman forts in the British Isles.[73]

The possibility that the legions reached further north in Scotland is suggested by discoveries in Easter Ross. The sites of temporary camps have been proposed at Portmahomack in 1949, although this has not been confirmed.[74][75] In 1991 an investigation of Tarradale on the Black Isle near the Beauly Firth concluded that "the site appears to conform to the morphology of a Roman camp or fort."[76]

 
The course of the Antonine Wall, at Bar Hill

Antonine Wall

Construction of a new limes between the Firth of Forth and the Firth of Clyde commenced. Contingents from at least one British legion are known to have assisted in the erection of the new turf barrier, as evidenced by an inscription from the fort at Old Kilpatrick, the Antonine Wall's western terminus. Today, the sward-covered wall is the remains of a defensive line made of turf circa 7 metres (20 ft) high, with nineteen forts. It was constructed after AD 139 and extended for 60 km (37 mi).

Severan period (193–235)

The Roman frontier became Hadrian's Wall again, although Roman incursions into Scotland continued. Initially, outpost forts were occupied in the south-west and Trimontium remained in use but they too were abandoned after the mid-180s.[79] Roman troops, however, penetrated far into the north of modern Scotland several more times. Indeed, there is a greater density of Roman marching camps in Scotland than anywhere else in Europe, as a result of at least four major attempts to subdue the area. The Antonine Wall was occupied again for a brief period after AD 197.[80] The most notable invasion was in 209 when the emperor Septimius Severus, claiming to be provoked by the belligerence of the Maeatae, campaigned against the Caledonian Confederacy. Severus invaded Caledonia with an army perhaps over 40,000 strong.[81]

 
Rural Aberdeenshire, looking from the heights of Bennachie towards the lower-lying land in which Roman camps were situated.

According to Dio Cassius, he inflicted genocidal depredations on the natives and incurred the loss of 50,000 of his own men to the attrition of guerrilla tactics, although it is likely that these figures are a significant exaggeration.[82]

A string of forts was constructed in the northeast (some of which may date from the earlier Antonine campaign). These include camps associated with the Elsick Mounth, such as Normandykes, Ythan Wells, Deers Den and Glenmailen.[45] However, only two forts in Scotland, at Cramond and Carpow (in the Tay valley) are definitely known to have been permanently occupied during this incursion before the troops were withdrawn again to Hadrian's Wall circa 213.[83] There is some evidence that these campaigns are coincident with the wholesale destruction and abandonment of souterrains in southern Scotland. This may have been due either to Roman military aggression or the collapse of local grain markets in the wake of Roman withdrawal.[84]

By 210, Severus' campaigning had made significant gains, but his campaign was cut short when he fell fatally ill, dying at Eboracum in 211. Although his son Caracalla continued campaigning the following year, he soon settled for peace. The Romans never campaigned deep into Caledonia again: they soon withdrew south permanently to Hadrian's Wall.[83][85] From the time of Caracalla onwards, no further attempts were made to permanently occupy territory in Scotland.[83]

 
The inscription on the Roman altar at Cramond Roman Fort dedicated to the mothers of Alaterva and of the fields.

It was during the negotiations to purchase the truce necessary to secure the Roman retreat to the wall that the first recorded utterance, attributable with any reasonable degree of confidence, to a native of Scotland was made. When Julia Domna, wife of Septimius Severus, criticised the sexual morals of the Caledonian women, the wife (whose name is unknown) of the Caledonian chief Argentocoxos allegedly replied: "We fulfil the demands of nature in a much better way than do you Roman women; for we consort openly with the best men, whereas you let yourselves be debauched in secret by the vilest."[86]

Picts

 
Clach an Tiompain, a Pictish symbol stone in Strathpeffer

The intermittent Roman presence in Scotland coincided with the emergence of the Picts, a confederation of tribes who lived to the north of the Forth and Clyde from Roman times until the 10th century. They are often assumed to have been the descendants of the Caledonians though the evidence for this connection is circumstantial and the name by which the Picts called themselves is unknown.[87][88][unreliable source?] They are often said to have tattooed themselves, but evidence for this is limited. Naturalistic depictions of Pictish nobles, hunters and warriors, male and female, without obvious tattoos, are found on their monumental stones.[89] The Gaels of Dalriada called the Picts Cruithne,[90][91] and Irish poets portrayed their Pictish counterparts as very much like themselves.[92]

 
Reconstructed crannog on Loch Tay

The technology of everyday life is not well recorded, but archaeological evidence shows it to have been similar to that in Ireland and Anglo-Saxon England. Recently evidence has been found of watermills in Pictland and kilns were used for drying kernels of wheat or barley, not otherwise easy in the changeable, temperate climate.[93] Although constructed in earlier times, brochs, roundhouses and crannogs remained in use into and beyond the Pictish period.[94][95][96][97]

Elsewhere in Scotland wheelhouses were constructed, probably for ritualistic purposes, in the west and north. Their geographical locations are highly restricted, which suggests that they may have been contained within a political or cultural frontier of some kind and the co-incidence of their arrival and departure being associated with the period of Roman influence in Scotland is a matter of ongoing debate. It is not known whether the culture that constructed them was "Pictish" as such although they would certainly have been known to the Picts.[98]

Late Antiquity

Later excursions by the Romans were generally limited to the scouting expeditions in the buffer zone that developed between the walls, trading contacts, bribes to purchase truces from the natives, and eventually the spread of Christianity. The Ravenna Cosmography utilises a 3rd- or 4th-century Roman map and identifies four loci (meeting places, possibly markets) in southern Scotland. Locus Maponi is possibly the Lochmaben Stone near modern Gretna which continued to be used as a muster point well into the historic period. Two of the others indicate meeting places of the Damnonii and Selgovae, and the fourth, Manavi may be Clackmannan.[99][unreliable source?]

 
The Whitecleuch Chain, a silver Pictish torc

The Pictish relationship with Rome appears to have been less overtly hostile than their Caledonian predecessors, at least in the beginning. There were no more pitched battles and conflict was generally limited to raiding parties from both sides of the frontier until immediately prior to and after the Roman retreat from Britannia.[100][unreliable source?] Their apparent success in holding back Roman forces cannot be explained solely with reference to the remoteness of Caledonia or the difficulties of the terrain. In part, it may have been due to the difficulties encountered in subjugating a population that did not conform to the strictures of local governance that Roman power usually depended on to operate through.[6]

As Rome's power waned, the Picts were emboldened. War bands raided south of Hadrian's Wall in earnest in 342, 360, and 365 and they participated with the Attacotti in the Great Conspiracy of 367. Rome fought back, mounting a campaign under Count Theodosius in 369 which reëstablished a province which was renamed Valentia in honour of the emperor. Its location is unclear, but it is sometimes placed on or beyond Hadrian's Wall. Another campaign was mounted in 384, but both were short-lived successes.[101][unreliable source?] Stilicho, the magister militum, may have fought a war against the Picts in Britain in around 398. Rome had fully withdrawn from Britain by 410, never to return.[101]

Roman influence assisted the spread of Christianity throughout Europe, but there is little evidence of a direct link between the Roman Empire and Christian missions north of Hadrian's Wall. Traditionally, Ninian is credited as the first bishop active in Scotland. He is briefly mentioned by Bede[102] who states that around 397 he set up his base at Whithorn in the south-west of Scotland, building a stone church there, known as Candida Casa. More recently it has been suggested that Ninian was the 6th-century missionary Finnian of Moville,[103][104] but either way Roman influence on early Christianity in Scotland does not seem to have been significant.

Legacy

Historical

 
Notable figures from the Roman period in Scottish history, as depicted by the Victorian artist William Hole in the Scottish National Portrait Gallery in Edinburgh.

The military presence of Rome lasted for little more than 40 years for most of Scotland and only as much as 80 years in total anywhere. It's now generally considered that at no time was even half of Scotland's land mass under Roman control.[83]

Scotland has inherited two main features from the Roman period, although mostly indirectly: the use of the Latin script for its languages and the emergence of Christianity as the predominant religion. Through Christianity, the Latin language would become used by the natives of Scotland for the purposes of church and government for centuries more.

Although little more than a series of relatively brief interludes of military occupation,[105] Imperial Rome was ruthless and brutal in pursuit of its ends.[106][unreliable source?] Genocide was a familiar part of its foreign policy and it is clear that the invasions and occupations cost thousands of lives. Alistair Moffat writes:

The reality is that the Romans came to what is now Scotland, they saw, burned, killed, stole and occasionally conquered, and then they left a tremendous mess behind them, clearing away native settlements and covering good farmland with the remains of ditches, banks, roads, and other sorts of ancient military debris. Like most imperialists, they arrived to make money, gain political advantage and exploit the resources of their colonies at virtually any price to the conquered. And remarkably, in Britain, in Scotland, we continue to admire them for it.[1]

[unreliable source?]

All the more surprising given that the Vindolanda tablets[107] show that the Roman nickname for the north British locals was Brittunculi meaning "nasty little Britons".[1][unreliable source?]

Similarly, William Hanson concludes that:

For many years it has been almost axiomatic in studies of the period that the Roman conquest must have had some major medium or long-term impact on Scotland. On present evidence that cannot be substantiated either in terms of environment, economy, or, indeed, society. The impact appears to have been very limited. The general picture remains one of broad continuity, not of disruption.... The Roman presence in Scotland was little more than a series of brief interludes within a longer continuum of indigenous development."[108]

The Romans' part in the clearances of the once extensive Caledonian forest remains a matter of debate.[109] That these forests were once considerably more extensive than they are now is not in dispute, but the timing and causes of the reduction are. The 16th-century writer Hector Boece believed that the woods in Roman times stretched north from Stirling into Atholl and Lochaber and was inhabited by white bulls with "crisp and curland mane, like feirs lionis".[110] Later historians such as Patrick Fraser Tytler and William Forbes Skene followed suit as did the 20th-century naturalist Frank Fraser Darling. Modern techniques, including palynology and dendrochronology suggest a more complex picture. Changing post-glacial climates may have allowed for a maximum forest cover between 4000 and 3000 BC and deforestation of the Southern uplands, caused both climatically and anthropogenically, was well underway by the time the legions arrived.[111] Extensive analyses of Black Loch in Fife suggest that arable land spread at the expense of forest from about 2000 BC until the 1st-century Roman advance. Thereafter, there was re-growth of birch, oak and hazel for a period of five centuries, suggesting the invasions had a very negative impact on the native population.[112] The situation outside the Roman-held areas is harder to assess, but the long-term influence of Rome may not have been substantial.

The archaeological legacy of Rome in Scotland is of interest, but sparse, especially in the north. Almost all the sites are essentially military in nature and include about 650 km (400 mi) of roads.[113][114][unreliable source?] Overall, it is hard to detect any direct connections between native architecture and settlement patterns and Roman influence.[115] Elsewhere in Europe, new kingdoms and languages emerged from the remnants of the once-mighty Roman world. In Scotland, the Celtic Iron Age way of life, often troubled, but never extinguished by Rome, simply re-asserted itself. In the north the Picts continued to be the main power prior to the arrival and subsequent domination of the Scots of Dalriada. The Damnonii eventually formed the Kingdom of Strathclyde based at Dumbarton Rock. South of the Forth, the Cumbric speaking Brythonic kingdoms of Yr Hen Ogledd (English: "The Old North") flourished during the 5th–7th centuries, later supplanted by Anglo-Saxon settlement and the formation of Northumbria in the land between the Humber and the River Forth.

The most enduring Roman legacy may be that created by Hadrian's Wall. Its line approximates the border between modern Scotland and England and it created a distinction between the northern third and southern two-thirds of the island of Great Britain that plays a part in modern political debate. This is probably coincidental however, as there is little to suggest its influence played an important role in the early Medieval period after the fall of Rome.[116]

In fiction

The 9th Spanish Legion participated in the Roman invasion of Britain, suffering losses under Quintus Petillius Cerialis in the rebellion of Boudica of 61, and setting up a fortress in 71 that later became part of Eboracum. Although some authors have claimed that the 9th Legion disappeared in 117,[117] there are extant records for it later than that year, and it was probably annihilated in the east of the Roman Empire.[118] For a time it was believed, at least by some British historians, that the legion vanished during its conflicts in present-day Scotland. This idea was used in the novels The Eagle of the Ninth by Rosemary Sutcliff, Legion From the Shadows by Karl Edward Wagner, Red Shift by Alan Garner, Engine City by Ken MacLeod, Warriors of Alavna by N. M. Browne, and in the feature films The Last Legion, Centurion and The Eagle.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Moffat (2005) p. 226.
  2. ^ "The Romans left us nothing of any enduring cultural value. Their presence in Scotland was brief, intermittent, and not influential on the course of our history."[1]
  3. ^ a b c Breeze, David J. "The ancient geography of Scotland" in Smith and Banks (2002) pp. 10–13.
  4. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica (1911) states that "a tribe of Caledones" are "named by the geographer Ptolemy as living within boundaries which are now unascertainable".
  5. ^ Moffat (2005) pp. 21–22.
  6. ^ a b Woolliscroft, D. J. "More Thoughts On Why the Romans Failed To Conquer Scotland" The Roman Gask Project. Retrieved 10 September 2016. Wooliscroft notes that Calgacus "is never referred to by any term, such as king or general".
  7. ^ Scottish Archaeological Research Framework (ScARF), National Framework, Roman (accessed May 2022).
  8. ^ Smith and Banks (2002) p. 219.
  9. ^ Smith and Banks (2002) p. 218 and p. 220.
  10. ^ Armit (2003) p. 55.
  11. ^ Armit (2003) p. 16. Euan MacKie has proposed a total of 104; the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland identify a total of 571 candidate sites.
  12. ^ Smith and Banks (2002) p. 218
  13. ^ Armit, Ian "Land and freedom: Implications of Atlantic Scottish settlement patterns for Iron Age land-holding and social organisation." in Smith and Banks (2002) pp. 15–26.
  14. ^ Miket, Roger "The souterrains of Skye" in Smith and Banks (2002) pp. 77–110.
  15. ^ Scottish Archaeological Research Framework (ScARF), Highland Framework, Iron Age (accessed May 2022).
  16. ^ Alexander, Derek "The oblong fort at Finavon, Angus" in Smith and Banks (2002) pp. 45–54.
  17. ^ Smith and Banks (2002) p. 220.
  18. ^ "The Dunbar Iron Age Warrior Grave" 3 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine AOC. Retrieved 14 July 2008.
  19. ^ "A Brief History of Alloa: Iron Age Warrior", Alloa.org.uk; retrieved 14 July 2008.
  20. ^ Moffat (2005) pp. 268–70.
  21. ^ a b Armit (2003) pp. 119–31.
  22. ^ Armit (2003) p. 132.
  23. ^ Aristotle or Pseudo-Aristotle (1955). "On the Cosmos, 393b12". On Sophistical Refutations. On Coming-to-be and Passing Away. On the Cosmos. translated by E. S. Forster and D. J. Furley. Harvard University Press. pp. 360–61. at the Open Library Project. DjVu
  24. ^ Greek: "... ἐν τούτῳ γε μὴν νῆσοι μέγιστοι τυνχάνουσιν οὖσαι δύο, Βρεττανικαὶ λεγόμεναι, Ἀλβίων καὶ Ἰέρνη...", ... en toútōi ge mēn nēsoi mēgistoi tynkhánousin oúsai dúo, Brettanikaì legómenai, Albíōn kaì Iérnē..., "... there are two very large islands in it called the Britannic Islands, Albion and Hibernia..."[23]
  25. ^ Βρεττανική. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project
  26. ^ Moffat (2005) p. 230.
  27. ^ Breeze, David J. "The ancient geography of Scotland" in Smith and Banks (2002) p. 11.
  28. ^ a b c Breeze, David J. "The ancient geography of Scotland" in Smith and Banks (2002) p. 12.
  29. ^ Moffat (2005) pp. 173–74.
  30. ^ Moffat (2005) pp. 239–40.
  31. ^ Moffat (2005) pp. 236–37.
  32. ^ Moffat (2005) pp. 173-74.
  33. ^ Thomson (2008) pp. 4–5 suggests that there may have been an element of Roman "boasting" involved, given that it was known to them that the Orcades lay at the northern extremity of the British Isles.
  34. ^ Moffat (2005) pp. 174-76.
  35. ^ Moffat (2005) p. 229.
  36. ^ Moffat (2005) pp. 230–31.
  37. ^ Moffat (2005) p. 247.
  38. ^ Moffat (2005) p. 233.
  39. ^ Although "Taus" is usually interpreted as referring to the River Tay/Firth of Tay, it has been suggested it was the Solway Firth. It cannot be the latter if Agricola was already campaigning much further north and Cerialis had previously reached the Gask Ridge.
    Schmitz, Leonhard "Agraulos" in Smith, William Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology (1867) Boston. Little, Brown and Company, volume 1, pp. 75–76; retrieved 26 July 2008.
  40. ^ "Lost Roman marching camp sheds new light on invasion of Scotland". scotsman.com. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
  41. ^ "New evidence uncovered for Roman conquest of Scotland". HeritageDaily - Archaeology News. 24 May 2019. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
  42. ^ Tacitus, Agricola 29. Wikisource.
  43. ^ Other estimates for the size of the Roman force based on Tacitus' account range from 17,000 to 30,000. See Hanson (2003) p. 203.
  44. ^ Roy, William (1793) The Military Antiquities of the Romans in Britain.
  45. ^ a b Hogan, C. Michael, "Elsick Mounth – Ancient Trackway in Scotland in Aberdeenshire" in The Megalithic Portal, ed. A. Burnham. Retrieved 24 July 2008.
  46. ^ Fraser, James E. (2005) "The Roman Conquest of Scotland: The Battle of Mons Graupius 84 AD (Revealing History)." Tempus. Edinburgh.
  47. ^ a b Wolfson, Stan (2002) "The Boresti; The Creation of a Myth" Tacitus, Thule and Caledonia. Tiscali.co.uk. Retrieved 24 July 2008.
  48. ^ a b Henig, Martin (September 1998) "Togidubnus and the Roman liberation" British Archaeology 37. Retrieved 27 July 2008.
  49. ^ a b Tacitus. Agricola Chapter 30. Translated by Alfred John Church and William Jackson Brodribb. Wikisource. Retrieved 23 November 2012.
  50. ^ Tacitus claims that Orkney was "discovered and subdued", but Thomson (2008) pp. 4–5 is as sceptical about Tacitus's claims on behalf of Agricola as he is about Claudius's earlier subjugation of Orkney (see above).
  51. ^ Hoffmann, Birgitta (15 December 2001) "Archaeology versus Tacitus' Agricola: a 1st Century Worst Case Scenario" The Roman Gask Project. Retrieved 8 July 2010.
  52. ^ Moffat (2005) p. 232.
  53. ^ Hanson (2003) p. 198 – "none of the postulated sites discovered by aerial survey in Moray and Nairn over recent years has the distinctive morphological characteristics of a Roman fort".
  54. ^ Hanson (2003) p. 203-05.
  55. ^ Hanson (2003) p. 206.
  56. ^ Moffat (2005) p. 267.
  57. ^ Smout (2007) p. 32.
  58. ^ Moffat (2005) p. 266.
  59. ^ Moffat (2005) p. 245.
  60. ^ Hanson (2003) p. 195.
  61. ^ Hanson (2003) pp. 195, 200.
  62. ^ "Frontiers of the Roman Empire". UNESCO. Retrieved 16 May 2020.
  63. ^ "Hadrian's Wall Gallery". BBC.co.uk. Retrieved 25 July 2008.
  64. ^ "History of Hadrian's Wall". English Heritage. Retrieved 16 May 2020.
  65. ^ Duncan (1989) p. 23.
  66. ^ Freeman, Charles (1999) Egypt, Greece, and Rome. Oxford University Press. p. 508; ISBN 0-19-872194-3.
  67. ^ Hanson (2003) p. 203.
  68. ^ Breeze (2006) pp. 144–59.
  69. ^ According to Robertson (1960) p. 39 many of the Antonine forts had strong defences to the south and other Roman forts in southern Scotland actually faced south.
  70. ^ "History", antoninewall.org; retrieved 25 July 2008.
  71. ^ Breeze (2006) p. 167.
  72. ^ Hanson, W. S. (1988) Roman campaigns north of the Forth-Clyde isthmus: the evidence of the temporary camps. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. 109: pp. 140–50
  73. ^ "Suspected Roman Fort Cawdor, Easter Galcantray, Highland Region" 14 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine roman-britain.org. Retrieved 6 July 2010.
  74. ^ "Port A' Chaistell" RCAHMS. Retrieved 6 July 2010. The tentative identification was by Crawford, O.G.S. (1949) Topography of Roman Scotland north of the Antonine Wall. Cambridge. p. 148, although he never actually visited the site.
  75. ^ Carver (2008) p. 176. Retrieved 5 February 2011.
  76. ^ Jones, G. D. B (1991) "Tarradale: Investigation of a crop mark site near Muir of Ord, Ross and Cromarty". (pdf) Manchester Archaeological Bulletin. Vol. 6. Retrieved 9 October 2013.
  77. ^ Hunter, Fraser; Carruthers, Martin. "ScARF Summary Roman Presence Report" (PDF). Scottish Heritage Hub. Retrieved 28 April 2018.
  78. ^ Kent, Emerson. "Alternative Map of the Wall". Retrieved 7 May 2018.
  79. ^ Hanson (2003) pp. 197–8.
  80. ^ Robertson (1960) p. 37.
  81. ^ W.S. Hanson (2002) "Roman campaigns north of the Forth-Clyde isthmus: the evidence of the temporary camps" (PDF), ads.ahds.ac.uk; retrieved 14 March 2011.
  82. ^ Hanson (2003) p. 203 suggests the total Roman force was 40–50,000 and according to Breeze (2006) p.42, the total Roman garrison of Britain at the time of the construction of the Antonine Wall included three legions and numbered about 48,700 troops.
  83. ^ a b c d Hanson (2003) p. 198.
  84. ^ Miket, Roger "The souterrains of Skye" in Smith and Banks (2002) p. 82.
  85. ^ Cassius Dio, Roman History. Book 77. Sections 11–15.
  86. ^ Cassius Dio "Roman History: Epitome of Book LXXVII". University of Chicago; retrieved 24 July 2008.
  87. ^ The Greek word Πικτοί (Latin Picti) first appears in a panegyric written by Eumenius in 297 and is taken to mean "painted or tattooed people".
  88. ^ The nature of the relationship between the Picts and the Caledonians is obscure. There are 3rd- and 4th-century Roman references to Picti and Caledonii and Ammianus Marcellinus states that the Picts consisted of the tribes of the Dicalydonae and the Verturiones. The idea that the Picts were heirs to the Caledonians would appear to be a convenient simplification of a complex flux of relationships. See for example Moffat (2005) p. 297 or "The Picts" (Siliconglen.com; retrieved 8 February 2009) for a more informal overview.
  89. ^ For art in general see for example Foster (2004) pp. 26–28.
  90. ^ The Cruithni are discussed by Byrne (1973) pp. 106–109.
  91. ^ The Britons in the south knew the Picts as Prydyn. Old Irish cruth and Welsh pryd are the Q- and P-Celtic forms respectively of a word meaning "form" or "shape". See MacBain's Dictionary; retrieved 26 December 2008.
  92. ^ Forsyth, Katherine (2000) pp. 27–28.
  93. ^ Foster, Picts, Gaels and Scots, pp. 52–53.
  94. ^ Armit (2003) pp 135–7.
  95. ^ Crone, B.A. (1993) "Crannogs and Chronologies". PSAS 123 pp. 245–254.
  96. ^ Foster, Picts, Gaels and Scots, pp. 52–61.
  97. ^ Ralston, Ian B. M. and Armit, Ian "The early Historic Period: An Archaeological Perspective" in Edwards and Ralston (2003) p. 226.
  98. ^ Crawford, Iain "The wheelhouse" in Smith and Banks (2002) pp. 127–28.
  99. ^ Moffat (2005) p. 284. Loci implied supervised meeting places rather than potentially hostile ones, but it is scarcely credible that military interventions of this nature were a regular occurrence at this time.
  100. ^ Moffat (2005) pp. 284, 299.
  101. ^ a b Moffat (2005) pp. 297–301.
  102. ^ Fletcher, Richard (1989). Who's Who in Roman Britain and Anglo-Saxon England. Shepheard-Walwyn. p. 19. ISBN 0-85683-089-5.
  103. ^ Clancy, Thomas O. (2001) "The real St Ninian." The Innes Review 52 pp. 1–28.
  104. ^ Fraser, James E. "Northumbrian Whithorn and the Making of St Ninian." (2002) The Innes Review, 53 pp. 40–59
  105. ^ Hanson (2003) 195.
  106. ^ For example, it is clear that an Iron Age village at Cardean in Angus was simply removed wholesale in order to construct a Roman Camp. See Moffat (2005) p. 254.
  107. ^ Hogan, C. Michael, (2007) "Vindolanda Roman Fort" in The Megalithic Portal, ed. A. Burnham. Retrieved 24 July 2008.
  108. ^ Hanson (2003) p. 216.
  109. ^ Hanson (2003) pp. 208–10.
  110. ^ Smout (2007) p.20.
  111. ^ Smout (2007) pp.20–32.
  112. ^ Smout (2007) p. 34.
  113. ^ Hanson (2003) p. 202.
  114. ^ Moffat (2005) p. 249.
  115. ^ Ralston, Ian B. M. and Armit, Ian "The early Historic Period: An Archaeological Perspective" in Edwards and Ralston (2003) p. 218.
  116. ^ Koch (2006) p. 903 notes that yr Hen Ogledd refers to the Welsh-speaking parts of northern Britain north and south of Hadrian's Wall and that these areas were "as integral to the Welsh tradition as Wales itself".
  117. ^ For example, Churchill, Winston (1956) A History of the English-Speaking Peoples vol.1.
  118. ^ "Legio VIIII Hispana" Livius.org. Retrieved 26 July 2008.

References

  • Armit, I. (2003) Towers in the North: The Brochs of Scotland, Stroud: Tempus, ISBN 0-7524-1932-3
  • Breeze, David J. (2006) The Antonine Wall. Edinburgh. John Donald. ISBN 0-85976-655-1
  • Broun, Dauvit, "The Seven Kingdoms in De situ Albanie: A Record of Pictish political geography or imaginary map of ancient Alba" in E.J. Cowan & R. Andrew McDonald (eds.), (2005) Alba: Celtic Scotland in the Medieval Era. Edinburgh. John Donald. ISBN 0-85976-608-X
  • Byrne, Francis John (1973) Irish Kings and High-Kings. London. Batsford. ISBN 0-7134-5882-8
  • Carver, Martin (2008) Portmahomack: Monastery of the Picts. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0-7486-2441-6
  • Duncan, A.A.M (1989) Scotland: The Making of the Kingdom. The Edinburgh History of Scotland 1. Mercat Press. Edinburgh.
  • Forsyth, Katherine (2000) "Evidence of a lost Pictish Source in the Historia Regum Anglorum of Symeon of Durham", with an appendix by John T. Koch. pp. 27–28 in Simon Taylor (ed.) (2000). Kings, clerics and chronicles in Scotland, 500–1297: essays in honour of Marjorie Ogilvie Anderson on the occasion of her ninetieth birthday. Dublin. Four Courts Press. ISBN 1-85182-516-9
  • Foster, Sally M., (2004) Picts, Gaels, and Scots: Early Historic Scotland. London. Batsford. ISBN 0-7134-8874-3
  • Geary, Patrick J., (1988) Before France and Germany: The creation and transformation of the Merovingian World. Oxford. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-504457-6
  • Hanson, William S. "The Roman Presence: Brief Interludes", in Edwards, Kevin J. & Ralston, Ian B.M. (Eds) (2003) Scotland After the Ice Age: Environment, Archaeology and History, 8000 BC – AD 1000. Edinburgh. Edinburgh University Press.
  • Keay, J. & Keay, J. (1994) Collins Encyclopaedia of Scotland. London. HarperCollins.
  • Kirk, William "Prehistoric Scotland: The Regional Dimension" in Clapperton, Chalmers M. (ed.) (1983) Scotland: A New Study. Newton Abbott. David & Charles.
  • Koch, John T. (2006) Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. Oxford. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 1-85109-440-7
  • Moffat, Alistair (2005) Before Scotland: The Story of Scotland Before History. London. Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-05133-X
  • Robertson, Anne S. (1960) The Antonine Wall. Glasgow Archaeological Society.
  • Smith, Beverley Ballin and Banks, Iain (2002) In the Shadow of the Brochs. Stroud. Tempus. ISBN 0-7524-2517-X
  • Smout, T.C. MacDonald, R. and Watson, Fiona (2007) A History of the Native Woodlands of Scotland 1500–1920. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0-7486-3294-7
  • Thomson, William P. L. (2008) The New History of Orkney Edinburgh. Birlinn. ISBN 978-1-84158-696-0
  • Woolf, Alex (2006) "Dun Nechtain, Fortriu and the Geography of the Picts" in The Scottish Historical Review, Volume 85, Number 2. Edinburgh. Edinburgh University Press. ISSN 0036-9241

Further reading

  • Kamm, Anthony (2009) The Last Frontier: The Roman Invasions of Scotland. Glasgow. Neil Wilson Publishing. ISBN 978-1-906476-06-9
  • Jones, Rebecca H. (2011) Roman Camps in Scotland. Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. ISBN 978-0-903903-50-9.

External links

  • Comparison of the geography of Scotland recorded in the Ravenna Cosmography with Ptolemy's
  • The Antonine Wall: The North-west Frontier of the Roman Empire
  • Roman Scotland, which provides a full analysis of the contending sites for Mons Graupius
  • Scotland: the Roman presence (map p.3)

scotland, during, roman, empire, refers, protohistorical, period, during, which, roman, empire, interacted, within, area, modern, scotland, despite, sporadic, attempts, conquest, government, between, centuries, most, modern, scotland, inhabited, caledonians, m. Scotland during the Roman Empire refers to the protohistorical period during which the Roman Empire interacted within the area of modern Scotland Despite sporadic attempts at conquest and government between the 1st and 4th centuries AD most of modern Scotland inhabited by the Caledonians and the Maeatae was not incorporated into the Roman Empire Roman cavalryman trampling conquered Picts on the Bridgeness Slab a tablet found at Bo ness on the Antonine Wall dated to around AD 142 and now in the National Museum of Scotland The Stirling torcs a hoard of gold Celtic torcs In the Roman imperial period the island of Great Britain north of the River Forth was known as Caledonia while the island itself was known as Britannia the name also given to the Roman province roughly consisting of modern England and Wales and which replaced the earlier Ancient Greek designation as Albion Roman legions arrived in the territory of modern Scotland around AD 71 having conquered the Celtic Britons of southern Great Britain over the preceding three decades Aiming to complete the Roman conquest of Britain the Roman armies under Q Petilius Cerialis and Gn Julius Agricola campaigned against the Caledonians in the 70s and 80s The Agricola a biography of the Roman governor of Britain by his son in law Tacitus mentions a Roman victory at Mons Graupius which became the namesake of the Grampian Mountains but whose identity has been questioned by modern scholarship Agricola then seems to have repeated an earlier Greek circumnavigation of the island by Pytheas and received submission from local tribes establishing the Roman limes of actual control first along the Gask Ridge and then withdrawing south of a line from the Solway Firth to the River Tyne i e along the Stanegate This border was later fortified as Hadrian s Wall Several Roman commanders attempted to fully conquer lands north of this line including a 2nd century expansion that was fortified as the Antonine Wall The history of the period is complex and not well documented The province of Valentia for instance may have been the lands between the two Roman walls or the territory around and south of Hadrian s Wall or Roman Wales Romans held most of their Caledonian territory only a little over 40 years they probably only held Scottish land for about 80 years Some Scottish historians such as Alistair Moffat maintain Roman influence was inconsequential 2 unreliable source Despite grandiose claims made by an 18th century forged manuscript it is now believed that the Romans at no point controlled even half of present day Scotland and that Roman legions ceased to affect the area after around 211 Scots and Scotland proper would not emerge as unified ideas until centuries later In fact the Roman Empire influenced every part of Scotland during the period by the time of the End of Roman rule in Britain around 410 the various Iron Age tribes native to the area had united as or fallen under the control of the Picts while the southern half of the country was overrun by tribes of Romanized Britons The Scoti Gaelic Irish raiders who would give Scotland its English name had begun to settle along the west coast All three groups may have been involved in the Great Conspiracy that overran Roman Britain in 367 The era saw the emergence of the earliest historical accounts of the natives The most enduring legacies of Rome however were Christianity and literacy both of which arrived indirectly via Irish missionaries The Broch of Gurness in Orkney Contents 1 Iron Age culture in Scotland 2 Settlements and southern brochs 3 Roman geography 4 Flavian period 69 96 AD 4 1 Battle of Mons Graupius 4 1 1 Calgacus 4 1 2 Aftermath 4 2 Flavian occupation 5 Hadrianic period 117 138 5 1 Hadrian s Wall 6 Antonine period 138 161 6 1 Antonine Wall 7 Severan period 193 235 8 Picts 9 Late Antiquity 10 Legacy 10 1 Historical 10 2 In fiction 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksIron Age culture in Scotland EditMain article Scottish Iron Age Ptolemy s tribes located north of the Forth Clyde isthmus include the Cornovii in Caithness the Caereni Smertae Carnonacae Decantae Lugi and Creones also north of the Great Glen the Taexali in the north east the Epidii in Argyll the Venicones in Fife the Caledonians in the central Highlands and the Vacomagi centred near Strathmore It is likely that all of these cultures spoke a form of Celtic language known as Common Brittonic The occupants of southern Scotland were the Damnonii in the Clyde valley the Novantae in Galloway the Selgovae on the south coast and the Votadini to the east 3 These peoples may have spoken a form of Brittonic language Little is known about this alliance of Iron Age tribes The exact location of Caledonia is unknown and the boundaries are unlikely to have been fixed 4 The name itself is a Roman one as used by Tacitus Ptolemy Pliny the Elder and Lucan 5 unreliable source but the name by which the Caledonians referred to themselves is unknown It is likely that prior to the Roman invasions political control in the region was highly decentralised and no evidence has emerged of any specific Caledonian military or political leadership 6 Despite the discovery of many hundreds of Iron Age sites in Scotland there is still a great deal that remains to be explained about the nature of the Celtic life in the early Christian era 7 Radiocarbon dating for this period is problematic and chronological sequences are poorly understood 8 For a variety of reasons much of the archaeological work to date in Scotland has concentrated on the islands of the west and north and both excavations and analysis of societal structures on the mainland are more limited in scope 9 Dun Telve broch in Glenelg The peoples of early Iron Age Scotland particularly in the north and west lived in substantial stone buildings called Atlantic roundhouses The remains of hundreds of these houses exist throughout the country some merely piles of rubble others with impressive towers and outbuildings They date from about 800 BC to AD 300 with the most imposing structures having been created around the 2nd century BC The most massive constructions that date from this time are the circular brochs On average the ruins only survive up to a few metres above ground level but there are five extant examples of towers whose walls still exceed 6 5 m 21 ft in height 10 There are at least 100 broch sites in Scotland 11 Despite extensive research their purpose and the nature of the societies that created them are still a matter of debate 12 In some parts of Iron Age Scotland quite unlike almost all of recorded history right up to the present day there does not seem to have been a hierarchical elite Studies have shown that these stone roundhouses with massively thick walls must have contained virtually the entire population of islands such as Barra and North Uist Iron Age settlement patterns in Scotland are not homogeneous but in these places there is no sign of a privileged class living in large castles or forts nor of an elite priestly caste or of peasants with no access to the kind of accommodation enjoyed by the middle classes 13 Over 400 souterrains have been discovered in Scotland many of them in the south east and although few have been dated those that have suggest a construction date in the 2nd or 3rd centuries The purpose of these small underground structures is also obscure They are usually found close to settlements whose timber frames are much less well preserved and may have been for storing perishable agricultural products 14 Scotland also has numerous vitrified forts but again an accurate chronology has proven to be evasive Extensive studies of such a fort at Finavon Hill near Forfar in Angus using a variety of techniques suggest dates for the destruction of the site in either the last two centuries BC or the mid 1st millennium 15 The lack of Roman artefacts common in local souterrain sites suggests that many sites were abandoned before the arrival of the legions 16 Unlike the earlier Neolithic and Bronze Ages which have provided massive monuments to the dead Iron Age burial sites in Scotland are rare and a 2008 find at Dunbar may provide further insight into the culture of this period A similar site of a warrior s grave at Alloa has been provisionally dated to AD 90 130 17 18 19 Settlements and southern brochs Edit Edin s Hall Broch near Duns in the Scottish Borders showing intramural chambers Ptolemy s Geography identifies 19 towns from intelligence gathered during the Agricolan campaigns of the 1st century No archaeological evidence of any truly urban places has been found from this time and the names may have indicated hill forts or temporary market and meeting places Most of the names are obscure Devana may be the modern Banchory Alauna the rock in the west is probably Dumbarton Rock and the place of the same name in the east Lowlands may be the site of Edinburgh Castle Lindon may be Balloch on Loch Lomond side 20 unreliable source There are the remains of various broch towers in southern Scotland that appear to date from the period immediately prior to or following Agricola s invasion They are about fifteen in number and are found in four locations the Forth valley close to the Firth of Tay the far south west and the eastern Borders Their existence so far from the main centres of broch building is something of a mystery The destruction of the Leckie broch may have come at the hands of the Roman invaders yet like the nearby site of Fairy Knowe at Buchlyvie a substantial amount of both Roman and native artefacts have been recovered there Both structures were built in the late 1st century and were evidently high status buildings The inhabitants raised sheep cattle and pigs and benefited from a range of wild game including red deer and wild boar Edin s Hall Broch in Berwickshire is the best preserved southern broch and although the ruins are superficially similar to some of the larger Orcadian broch villages it is unlikely that the tower was ever more than a single storey high There is an absence of Roman artefacts at this site Various theories for the existence of these structures have been proposed including their construction by northern invaders following the withdrawal of Roman troops after the Agricolan advance or by allies of Rome encouraged to emulate the impressive northern style in order to suppress native resistance perhaps even the Orcadian chiefs whose positive relationship with Rome may have continued from the beginnings of Romano British relations 21 It is also possible that their construction had little to do with Roman frontier policy and was simply the importation of a new style by southern elites or it may have been a response by such elites to the growing threat of Rome prior to the invasion and an attempt to ally themselves actually or symbolically with the north that was largely free of Roman hegemony 22 Map drawn from Claudius Ptolemy s cartographic works showing his rotation of Caledonia to the east From Edward Bunbury s A History of Ancient Geography Among the Greeks and Romans 1879 An early Greek map c 1300 from Ptolemy s description of the British IslesRoman geography EditFurther information Roman geography Scotland had been inhabited for thousands of years before the Romans arrived However it is only during the Greco Roman period that Scotland is recorded in writing The work On the Cosmos by Aristotle or Pseudo Aristotle mentions two very large islands called Albion Great Britain and Ierne Ireland 24 25 The Greek explorer and geographer Pytheas visited Britain sometime between 322 and 285 BC and may have circumnavigated the mainland which he describes as being triangular in shape In his work On the Ocean he refers to the most northerly point as Orcas Orkney 3 Originals of On the Ocean do not survive but copies are known to have existed in the 1st century so at the least a rudimentary knowledge of the geography of north Britain would have been available to Roman military intelligence 26 unreliable source 27 Pomponius Mela the Roman geographer recorded in his De Chorographia written around AD 43 that there were 30 Orkney islands and seven Haemodae possibly Shetland 28 There is certainly evidence of an Orcadian connection with Rome prior to AD 60 from pottery found at the Broch of Gurness 29 unreliable source By the time of Pliny the Elder d AD 79 Roman knowledge of the geography of Scotland had extended to the Hebudes The Hebrides Dumna probably the Outer Hebrides the Caledonian Forest and the Caledonians 28 A traveller called Demetrius of Tarsus related to Plutarch the tale of an expedition to the west coast in or shortly before AD 83 He stated that it was a gloomy journey amongst uninhabited islands but that he had visited one which was the retreat of holy men He mentioned neither the druids nor the name of the island 30 unreliable source A gloomy journey amongst uninhabited islands Demtrius of Tarsus Ptolemy possibly drawing on earlier sources of information as well as more contemporary accounts from the Agricolan invasion identified 18 tribes in Scotland in his Geography but many of the names are obscure His information becomes much less reliable in the north and west suggesting early Roman knowledge of these areas were confined to observations from the sea 28 31 unreliable source Famously his coordinates place most of Scotland north of Hadrian s Wall bent at a right angle stretching due eastward from the rest of Britain Ptolemy s catalogue of tribes living north of the Forth Clyde isthmus include the Caereni Smertae Carnonacae Decantae Lugi and Creones all to the north of the Great Glen the Cornovii in Caithness the Taexali in the north east the Epidii in Argyll the Venicones in Fife the Vacomagi centred near Strathmore the Caledonians in the central Highlands 3 Flavian period 69 96 AD EditSee also Caledonia and CaledoniansThe earliest written record of a formal connection between Rome and Scotland is the attendance of the King of Orkney who was one of 11 British kings who submitted to the emperor Claudius at Colchester in AD 43 following the invasion of southern Britain three months earlier 32 unreliable source 33 The long distances and short period of time involved strongly suggest a prior connection between Rome and Orkney although no evidence of this has been found and the contrast with later Caledonian resistance is striking 34 unreliable source The apparently cordial beginnings recorded in Colchester did not last We know nothing of the foreign policies of the senior leaders in mainland Scotland in the 1st century but by AD 71 the Roman governor Quintus Petillius Cerialis had launched an invasion 35 Campaigns in Scotland in the early 80s The Votadini who occupied the south east of Scotland came under Roman sway at an early stage and Cerialis sent one division north through their territory to the shores of the Firth of Forth The Legio XX Valeria Victrix took a western route through Annandale in an attempt to encircle and isolate the Selgovae who occupied the central Southern Uplands 36 37 unreliable source Early success tempted Cerialis further north and he began constructing a line of Glenblocker forts to the north and west of the Gask Ridge which marked a frontier between the Venicones to the south and the Caledonians to the north 38 unreliable source Arthur s O on a Roman monument at Stenhousemuir near Falkirk from Alexander Gordon s 1726 work Itinerarium Septentrionale It was demolished 17 years later in 1743 In the summer of AD 78 Gnaeus Julius Agricola arrived in Britain to take up his appointment as the new governor Two years later his legions constructed a substantial fort at Trimontium near Melrose Excavations in the 20th century produced significant finds including the foundations of several successive structures Roman coins and pottery Remains from the Roman army were also found including a collection of Roman armour with ornate cavalry parade helmets and horse fittings with bronze saddleplates and studded leather chamfrons Agricola is said to have pushed his armies to the estuary of the River Taus usually assumed to be the River Tay and established forts there including a legionary fortress at Inchtuthil 39 In 2019 GUARD Archaeology team led by Iraia Arabaolaza uncovered a marching camp dating to the 1st century AD used by Roman legions during the invasion of Roman General Agricola According to Arabaolaza the fire pits were split 30 metres apart into two parallel lines The findings also included clay domed ovens and 26 fire pits dated to between 77 86 AD and 90 AD loaded with burn and charcoal contents Archaeologists suggested that this site had been chosen as a strategic location for the Roman conquest of Ayrshire 40 41 Battle of Mons Graupius Edit In the summer of AD 84 the Romans faced the massed armies of the Caledonians at the Battle of Mons Graupius Agricola whose forces included a fleet arrived at the site with light infantry bolstered with British auxiliaries It is estimated that a total of 20 000 Romans faced 30 000 Caledonian warriors 42 43 Agricola put his auxiliaries in the front line keeping the legions in reserve and relied on close quarters fighting to make the Caledonians unpointed slashing swords useless Even though the Caledonians were put to rout and therefore lost this battle two thirds of their army managed to escape and hide in the Scottish Highlands or the trackless wilds as Tacitus called them Battle casualties were estimated by Tacitus to be about 10 000 on the Caledonian side and roughly 360 on the Roman side A number of authors have reckoned the battle to have occurred in the Grampian Mounth within sight of the North Sea In particular Roy 44 Surenne Watt Hogan and others have advanced notions that the site of the battle may have been Kempstone Hill Megray Hill or other knolls near the Raedykes Roman camp These points of high ground are proximate to the Elsick Mounth an ancient trackway used by Romans and Caledonians for military manoeuvres 45 Other suggestions include the hill of Bennachie in Aberdeenshire the Gask Ridge not far from Perth 46 and Sutherland 47 It has also been suggested that in the absence of any archaeological evidence and Tacitus low estimates of Roman casualties that the battle was simply fabricated 48 Calgacus Edit The first resident of Scotland to appear in history by name was Calgacus the Swordsman a leader of the Caledonians at Mons Graupius who is referred to by Tacitus in the Agricola as the most distinguished for birth and valour among the chieftains 49 Tacitus even invented a speech for him in advance of the battle in which he describes the Romans as Robbers of the world having by their universal plunder exhausted the land they rifle the deep If the enemy be rich they are rapacious if he be poor they lust for dominion neither the east nor the west has been able to satisfy them Alone among men they covet with equal eagerness poverty and riches To robbery slaughter plunder they give the lying name of empire they make a solitude and call it peace 49 Aftermath Edit The fort at Cawdor is located near Inverness Calgacus fate is unknown but according to Tacitus after the battle Agricola ordered the prefect of the fleet to sail around the north of Scotland to confirm that Britain was an island and to receive the surrender of the Orcadians It was proclaimed that Agricola had finally subdued all the tribes of Britain 50 However the Roman historian Cassius Dio reports that this circumnavigation resulted in Titus receiving his 15th acclamation as emperor in AD 79 This is five years before Mons Graupius is believed by most historians to have taken place 51 Marching camps may have been constructed along the southern shores of the Moray Firth although their existence is questioned 47 52 53 unreliable source Flavian occupation Edit 19th century statue of Agricola in the Roman Baths in Bath Somerset The total size of the Roman garrison in Scotland during the Flavian period of occupation is thought to have been some 25 000 troops requiring 16 19 000 tons of grain per annum 54 In addition the material to construct the forts was substantial estimated at 1 million cubic feet 28 315 m3 of timber during the 1st century Ten tons of buried nails were discovered at the Inchtuthil site which may have had a garrison of up to 6 000 men and which itself consumed 30 linear kilometres of wood for the walls alone which would have used up 100 hectares 247 acres of forest 55 56 unreliable source 57 Presumably as a consequence of the Roman advance various hill forts such as Dun Mor in Perthshire which had been abandoned by the natives long ago were re occupied Some new ones may even have been constructed in the northeast such as Hill O Christ s Kirk in Aberdeenshire 58 unreliable source Soon after his announcement of victory Agricola was recalled to Rome by Domitian and his post passed to an unknown successor possibly Sallustius Lucullus Agricola s successors were seemingly unable or unwilling to further subdue the far north This inability to continue to hold the far north may be in part due to the limited military resources available to the Roman Proconsul after the recall of the Legio II Adiutrix from Britain to support Domitian s war in Dacia Despite his apparent successes Agricola himself fell out of favour and it is possible that Domitian may have been informed of the fraudulence of his claims to have won a significant victory 48 The fortress at Inchtuthil was dismantled before its completion and the other fortifications of the Gask Ridge erected to consolidate the Roman presence in Scotland in the aftermath of Mons Graupius were abandoned within the space of a few years It is possible that the costs of a drawn out war outweighed any economic or political benefit and it was deemed more profitable to leave the Caledonians to themselves 59 By AD 87 the occupation was limited to the Southern Uplands and by the end of the 1st century the northern limit of Roman expansion was the Stanegate road between the Tyne and Solway Firth 60 unreliable source Hadrianic period 117 138 EditHadrian s Wall Edit A section of Hadrian s Wall near Greenhead Northumberland Main article Hadrian s Wall The construction of 118 kilometres 73 mi long Hadrian s Wall in the early 120s on the orders of the Emperor Hadrian consolidated the Roman line of defence called limes on the Tyne Solway line where it remained until c AD 139 61 62 It was a stone and turf fortification built across the width of what is now northern England and was roughly 4 metres 13 ft or more high along its length 63 The vallum Aelii as the Romans called it may have taken six years to construct Small guard posts called milecastles were built at mile intervals with an additional two fortified observation points between them The wall was wide enough to allow for a walkway along the top 64 The purpose of the wall appears to have been in part at least to control contact between the subject Brigantes to its south and the client Selgovae to the north 65 Antonine period 138 161 Edit Southern Scotland in the reign of Antoninus Pius Quintus Lollius Urbicus was made governor of Roman Britain in 138 by the new emperor Antoninus Pius Urbicus was the son of a Libyan landowner 66 and a native of Numidia modern Algeria Prior to coming to Britain he served during the Jewish Rebellion 132 35 and then governing Germania Inferior Antoninus Pius soon reversed the containment policy of his predecessor Hadrian and Urbicus was ordered to begin the reconquest of Lowland Scotland by moving north Between 139 and 140 he rebuilt the fort at Corbridge and by 142 or 143 commemorative coins were issued celebrating a victory in Britain It is therefore likely that Urbicus led the reoccupation of southern Scotland c 141 probably using the 2nd Augustan Legion He evidently campaigned against several British tribes possibly including factions of the northern Brigantes certainly against the lowland tribes of Scotland the Votadini and Selgovae of the Scottish Borders region and the Damnonii of Strathclyde His total force may have been about 16 500 men 67 It seems likely that Urbicus planned his campaign of attack from Corbridge citation needed advancing north and leaving garrison forts at High Rochester in Northumberland and possibly also at Trimontium as he struck towards the Firth of Forth Having secured an overland supply route for military personnel and equipment along Dere Street Urbicus very likely set up a supply port at Carriden for the supply of grain and other foodstuffs before proceeding against the Damnonii success was swift It was possibly after the defences of the Antonine Wall were finished that Urbicus turned his attention upon the fourth lowland Scottish tribe citation needed the Novantae who inhabited the Dumfries and Galloway peninsula The main lowland tribes sandwiched as they were between Hadrian s Wall of stone to the south and the new turf wall to the north later formed a confederation against Roman rule collectively known as the Maeatae The Antonine Wall had a variety of purposes It provided a defensive line against the Caledonians It cut off the Maeatae from their Caledonian allies and created a buffer zone north of Hadrian s Wall It also facilitated troop movements between east and west but its main purpose may not have been primarily military It enabled Rome to control and tax trade and may have prevented potentially disloyal new subjects of Roman rule from communicating with their independent brethren to the north and coordinating revolts 68 69 Urbicus achieved an impressive series of military successes but like Agricola s they were short lived Having taken twelve years to build the wall was overrun and abandoned soon after AD 160 70 71 The destruction of some of the southern brochs may date to the Antonine advance the hypothesis being that whether or not they had previously been symbols of Roman patronage they had now outlived their usefulness from a Roman point of view 21 In 1984 a candidate for a Roman fort was identified by aerial photography at Easter Galcantray southwest of Cawdor 72 The site was excavated between 1984 and 1988 and several features were identified which are supportive of this classification If confirmed it would be one of the most northerly known Roman forts in the British Isles 73 The possibility that the legions reached further north in Scotland is suggested by discoveries in Easter Ross The sites of temporary camps have been proposed at Portmahomack in 1949 although this has not been confirmed 74 75 In 1991 an investigation of Tarradale on the Black Isle near the Beauly Firth concluded that the site appears to conform to the morphology of a Roman camp or fort 76 The course of the Antonine Wall at Bar Hill Antonine Wall Edit Forts and fortlets 77 associated with the Antonine Wall 78 from west to east Bishopton Old Kilpatrick Duntocher Cleddans Castlehill Bearsden Summerston Balmuildy Wilderness Plantation Cadder Glasgow Bridge Kirkintilloch Auchendavy Bar Hill Croy Hill Westerwood Castlecary Seabegs Rough Castle Camelon Watling Lodge Falkirk Mumrills Inveravon Kinneil Carriden Main article Antonine Wall Construction of a new limes between the Firth of Forth and the Firth of Clyde commenced Contingents from at least one British legion are known to have assisted in the erection of the new turf barrier as evidenced by an inscription from the fort at Old Kilpatrick the Antonine Wall s western terminus Today the sward covered wall is the remains of a defensive line made of turf circa 7 metres 20 ft high with nineteen forts It was constructed after AD 139 and extended for 60 km 37 mi Severan period 193 235 EditMain article Roman invasion of Caledonia 208 210 The Roman frontier became Hadrian s Wall again although Roman incursions into Scotland continued Initially outpost forts were occupied in the south west and Trimontium remained in use but they too were abandoned after the mid 180s 79 Roman troops however penetrated far into the north of modern Scotland several more times Indeed there is a greater density of Roman marching camps in Scotland than anywhere else in Europe as a result of at least four major attempts to subdue the area The Antonine Wall was occupied again for a brief period after AD 197 80 The most notable invasion was in 209 when the emperor Septimius Severus claiming to be provoked by the belligerence of the Maeatae campaigned against the Caledonian Confederacy Severus invaded Caledonia with an army perhaps over 40 000 strong 81 Rural Aberdeenshire looking from the heights of Bennachie towards the lower lying land in which Roman camps were situated According to Dio Cassius he inflicted genocidal depredations on the natives and incurred the loss of 50 000 of his own men to the attrition of guerrilla tactics although it is likely that these figures are a significant exaggeration 82 A string of forts was constructed in the northeast some of which may date from the earlier Antonine campaign These include camps associated with the Elsick Mounth such as Normandykes Ythan Wells Deers Den and Glenmailen 45 However only two forts in Scotland at Cramond and Carpow in the Tay valley are definitely known to have been permanently occupied during this incursion before the troops were withdrawn again to Hadrian s Wall circa 213 83 There is some evidence that these campaigns are coincident with the wholesale destruction and abandonment of souterrains in southern Scotland This may have been due either to Roman military aggression or the collapse of local grain markets in the wake of Roman withdrawal 84 By 210 Severus campaigning had made significant gains but his campaign was cut short when he fell fatally ill dying at Eboracum in 211 Although his son Caracalla continued campaigning the following year he soon settled for peace The Romans never campaigned deep into Caledonia again they soon withdrew south permanently to Hadrian s Wall 83 85 From the time of Caracalla onwards no further attempts were made to permanently occupy territory in Scotland 83 The inscription on the Roman altar at Cramond Roman Fort dedicated to the mothers of Alaterva and of the fields It was during the negotiations to purchase the truce necessary to secure the Roman retreat to the wall that the first recorded utterance attributable with any reasonable degree of confidence to a native of Scotland was made When Julia Domna wife of Septimius Severus criticised the sexual morals of the Caledonian women the wife whose name is unknown of the Caledonian chief Argentocoxos allegedly replied We fulfil the demands of nature in a much better way than do you Roman women for we consort openly with the best men whereas you let yourselves be debauched in secret by the vilest 86 Picts EditMain article Picts Clach an Tiompain a Pictish symbol stone in Strathpeffer The intermittent Roman presence in Scotland coincided with the emergence of the Picts a confederation of tribes who lived to the north of the Forth and Clyde from Roman times until the 10th century They are often assumed to have been the descendants of the Caledonians though the evidence for this connection is circumstantial and the name by which the Picts called themselves is unknown 87 88 unreliable source They are often said to have tattooed themselves but evidence for this is limited Naturalistic depictions of Pictish nobles hunters and warriors male and female without obvious tattoos are found on their monumental stones 89 The Gaels of Dalriada called the Picts Cruithne 90 91 and Irish poets portrayed their Pictish counterparts as very much like themselves 92 Reconstructed crannog on Loch TayThe technology of everyday life is not well recorded but archaeological evidence shows it to have been similar to that in Ireland and Anglo Saxon England Recently evidence has been found of watermills in Pictland and kilns were used for drying kernels of wheat or barley not otherwise easy in the changeable temperate climate 93 Although constructed in earlier times brochs roundhouses and crannogs remained in use into and beyond the Pictish period 94 95 96 97 Elsewhere in Scotland wheelhouses were constructed probably for ritualistic purposes in the west and north Their geographical locations are highly restricted which suggests that they may have been contained within a political or cultural frontier of some kind and the co incidence of their arrival and departure being associated with the period of Roman influence in Scotland is a matter of ongoing debate It is not known whether the culture that constructed them was Pictish as such although they would certainly have been known to the Picts 98 Late Antiquity EditMain article Sub Roman Britain Later excursions by the Romans were generally limited to the scouting expeditions in the buffer zone that developed between the walls trading contacts bribes to purchase truces from the natives and eventually the spread of Christianity The Ravenna Cosmography utilises a 3rd or 4th century Roman map and identifies four loci meeting places possibly markets in southern Scotland Locus Maponi is possibly the Lochmaben Stone near modern Gretna which continued to be used as a muster point well into the historic period Two of the others indicate meeting places of the Damnonii and Selgovae and the fourth Manavi may be Clackmannan 99 unreliable source The Whitecleuch Chain a silver Pictish torc The Pictish relationship with Rome appears to have been less overtly hostile than their Caledonian predecessors at least in the beginning There were no more pitched battles and conflict was generally limited to raiding parties from both sides of the frontier until immediately prior to and after the Roman retreat from Britannia 100 unreliable source Their apparent success in holding back Roman forces cannot be explained solely with reference to the remoteness of Caledonia or the difficulties of the terrain In part it may have been due to the difficulties encountered in subjugating a population that did not conform to the strictures of local governance that Roman power usually depended on to operate through 6 As Rome s power waned the Picts were emboldened War bands raided south of Hadrian s Wall in earnest in 342 360 and 365 and they participated with the Attacotti in the Great Conspiracy of 367 Rome fought back mounting a campaign under Count Theodosius in 369 which reestablished a province which was renamed Valentia in honour of the emperor Its location is unclear but it is sometimes placed on or beyond Hadrian s Wall Another campaign was mounted in 384 but both were short lived successes 101 unreliable source Stilicho the magister militum may have fought a war against the Picts in Britain in around 398 Rome had fully withdrawn from Britain by 410 never to return 101 Roman influence assisted the spread of Christianity throughout Europe but there is little evidence of a direct link between the Roman Empire and Christian missions north of Hadrian s Wall Traditionally Ninian is credited as the first bishop active in Scotland He is briefly mentioned by Bede 102 who states that around 397 he set up his base at Whithorn in the south west of Scotland building a stone church there known as Candida Casa More recently it has been suggested that Ninian was the 6th century missionary Finnian of Moville 103 104 but either way Roman influence on early Christianity in Scotland does not seem to have been significant Legacy EditHistorical Edit Notable figures from the Roman period in Scottish history as depicted by the Victorian artist William Hole in the Scottish National Portrait Gallery in Edinburgh The military presence of Rome lasted for little more than 40 years for most of Scotland and only as much as 80 years in total anywhere It s now generally considered that at no time was even half of Scotland s land mass under Roman control 83 Scotland has inherited two main features from the Roman period although mostly indirectly the use of the Latin script for its languages and the emergence of Christianity as the predominant religion Through Christianity the Latin language would become used by the natives of Scotland for the purposes of church and government for centuries more Although little more than a series of relatively brief interludes of military occupation 105 Imperial Rome was ruthless and brutal in pursuit of its ends 106 unreliable source Genocide was a familiar part of its foreign policy and it is clear that the invasions and occupations cost thousands of lives Alistair Moffat writes The reality is that the Romans came to what is now Scotland they saw burned killed stole and occasionally conquered and then they left a tremendous mess behind them clearing away native settlements and covering good farmland with the remains of ditches banks roads and other sorts of ancient military debris Like most imperialists they arrived to make money gain political advantage and exploit the resources of their colonies at virtually any price to the conquered And remarkably in Britain in Scotland we continue to admire them for it 1 unreliable source All the more surprising given that the Vindolanda tablets 107 show that the Roman nickname for the north British locals was Brittunculi meaning nasty little Britons 1 unreliable source Similarly William Hanson concludes that For many years it has been almost axiomatic in studies of the period that the Roman conquest must have had some major medium or long term impact on Scotland On present evidence that cannot be substantiated either in terms of environment economy or indeed society The impact appears to have been very limited The general picture remains one of broad continuity not of disruption The Roman presence in Scotland was little more than a series of brief interludes within a longer continuum of indigenous development 108 The Romans part in the clearances of the once extensive Caledonian forest remains a matter of debate 109 That these forests were once considerably more extensive than they are now is not in dispute but the timing and causes of the reduction are The 16th century writer Hector Boece believed that the woods in Roman times stretched north from Stirling into Atholl and Lochaber and was inhabited by white bulls with crisp and curland mane like feirs lionis 110 Later historians such as Patrick Fraser Tytler and William Forbes Skene followed suit as did the 20th century naturalist Frank Fraser Darling Modern techniques including palynology and dendrochronology suggest a more complex picture Changing post glacial climates may have allowed for a maximum forest cover between 4000 and 3000 BC and deforestation of the Southern uplands caused both climatically and anthropogenically was well underway by the time the legions arrived 111 Extensive analyses of Black Loch in Fife suggest that arable land spread at the expense of forest from about 2000 BC until the 1st century Roman advance Thereafter there was re growth of birch oak and hazel for a period of five centuries suggesting the invasions had a very negative impact on the native population 112 The situation outside the Roman held areas is harder to assess but the long term influence of Rome may not have been substantial Hen Ogledd The archaeological legacy of Rome in Scotland is of interest but sparse especially in the north Almost all the sites are essentially military in nature and include about 650 km 400 mi of roads 113 114 unreliable source Overall it is hard to detect any direct connections between native architecture and settlement patterns and Roman influence 115 Elsewhere in Europe new kingdoms and languages emerged from the remnants of the once mighty Roman world In Scotland the Celtic Iron Age way of life often troubled but never extinguished by Rome simply re asserted itself In the north the Picts continued to be the main power prior to the arrival and subsequent domination of the Scots of Dalriada The Damnonii eventually formed the Kingdom of Strathclyde based at Dumbarton Rock South of the Forth the Cumbric speaking Brythonic kingdoms of Yr Hen Ogledd English The Old North flourished during the 5th 7th centuries later supplanted by Anglo Saxon settlement and the formation of Northumbria in the land between the Humber and the River Forth The most enduring Roman legacy may be that created by Hadrian s Wall Its line approximates the border between modern Scotland and England and it created a distinction between the northern third and southern two thirds of the island of Great Britain that plays a part in modern political debate This is probably coincidental however as there is little to suggest its influence played an important role in the early Medieval period after the fall of Rome 116 In fiction Edit The 9th Spanish Legion participated in the Roman invasion of Britain suffering losses under Quintus Petillius Cerialis in the rebellion of Boudica of 61 and setting up a fortress in 71 that later became part of Eboracum Although some authors have claimed that the 9th Legion disappeared in 117 117 there are extant records for it later than that year and it was probably annihilated in the east of the Roman Empire 118 For a time it was believed at least by some British historians that the legion vanished during its conflicts in present day Scotland This idea was used in the novels The Eagle of the Ninth by Rosemary Sutcliff Legion From the Shadows by Karl Edward Wagner Red Shift by Alan Garner Engine City by Ken MacLeod Warriors of Alavna by N M Browne and in the feature films The Last Legion Centurion and The Eagle See also EditTimeline of prehistoric Scotland Celtic tribes in Britain and Ireland Roman client kingdoms in Britain Hibernia ancient Ireland amp Scoti Irish raiders Prehistoric OrkneyNotes Edit a b c Moffat 2005 p 226 The Romans left us nothing of any enduring cultural value Their presence in Scotland was brief intermittent and not influential on the course of our history 1 a b c Breeze David J The ancient geography of Scotland in Smith and Banks 2002 pp 10 13 Encyclopaedia Britannica 1911 states that a tribe of Caledones are named by the geographer Ptolemy as living within boundaries which are now unascertainable Moffat 2005 pp 21 22 a b Woolliscroft D J More Thoughts On Why the Romans Failed To Conquer Scotland The Roman Gask Project Retrieved 10 September 2016 Wooliscroft notes that Calgacus is never referred to by any term such as king or general Scottish Archaeological Research Framework ScARF National Framework Roman accessed May 2022 Smith and Banks 2002 p 219 Smith and Banks 2002 p 218 and p 220 Armit 2003 p 55 Armit 2003 p 16 Euan MacKie has proposed a total of 104 the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland identify a total of 571 candidate sites Smith and Banks 2002 p 218 Armit Ian Land and freedom Implications of Atlantic Scottish settlement patterns for Iron Age land holding and social organisation in Smith and Banks 2002 pp 15 26 Miket Roger The souterrains of Skye in Smith and Banks 2002 pp 77 110 Scottish Archaeological Research Framework ScARF Highland Framework Iron Age accessed May 2022 Alexander Derek The oblong fort at Finavon Angus in Smith and Banks 2002 pp 45 54 Smith and Banks 2002 p 220 The Dunbar Iron Age Warrior Grave Archived 3 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine AOC Retrieved 14 July 2008 A Brief History of Alloa Iron Age Warrior Alloa org uk retrieved 14 July 2008 Moffat 2005 pp 268 70 a b Armit 2003 pp 119 31 Armit 2003 p 132 Aristotle or Pseudo Aristotle 1955 On the Cosmos 393b12 On Sophistical Refutations On Coming to be and Passing Away On the Cosmos translated by E S Forster and D J Furley Harvard University Press pp 360 61 at the Open Library Project DjVu Greek ἐn toytῳ ge mὴn nῆsoi megistoi tynxanoysin oὖsai dyo Brettanikaὶ legomenai Ἀlbiwn kaὶ Ἰernh en toutōi ge men nesoi megistoi tynkhanousin ousai duo Brettanikai legomenai Albiōn kai Ierne there are two very large islands in it called the Britannic Islands Albion and Hibernia 23 Brettanikh Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project Moffat 2005 p 230 Breeze David J The ancient geography of Scotland in Smith and Banks 2002 p 11 a b c Breeze David J The ancient geography of Scotland in Smith and Banks 2002 p 12 Moffat 2005 pp 173 74 Moffat 2005 pp 239 40 Moffat 2005 pp 236 37 Moffat 2005 pp 173 74 Thomson 2008 pp 4 5 suggests that there may have been an element of Roman boasting involved given that it was known to them that the Orcades lay at the northern extremity of the British Isles Moffat 2005 pp 174 76 Moffat 2005 p 229 Moffat 2005 pp 230 31 Moffat 2005 p 247 Moffat 2005 p 233 Although Taus is usually interpreted as referring to the River Tay Firth of Tay it has been suggested it was the Solway Firth It cannot be the latter if Agricola was already campaigning much further north and Cerialis had previously reached the Gask Ridge Schmitz Leonhard Agraulos in Smith William Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology 1867 Boston Little Brown and Company volume 1 pp 75 76 retrieved 26 July 2008 Lost Roman marching camp sheds new light on invasion of Scotland scotsman com Retrieved 13 September 2020 New evidence uncovered for Roman conquest of Scotland HeritageDaily Archaeology News 24 May 2019 Retrieved 13 September 2020 Tacitus Agricola 29 Wikisource Other estimates for the size of the Roman force based on Tacitus account range from 17 000 to 30 000 See Hanson 2003 p 203 Roy William 1793 The Military Antiquities of the Romans in Britain a b Hogan C Michael Elsick Mounth Ancient Trackway in Scotland in Aberdeenshire in The Megalithic Portal ed A Burnham Retrieved 24 July 2008 Fraser James E 2005 The Roman Conquest of Scotland The Battle of Mons Graupius 84 AD Revealing History Tempus Edinburgh a b Wolfson Stan 2002 The Boresti The Creation of a Myth Tacitus Thule and Caledonia Tiscali co uk Retrieved 24 July 2008 a b Henig Martin September 1998 Togidubnus and the Roman liberation British Archaeology 37 Retrieved 27 July 2008 a b Tacitus Agricola Chapter 30 Translated by Alfred John Church and William Jackson Brodribb Wikisource Retrieved 23 November 2012 Tacitus claims that Orkney was discovered and subdued but Thomson 2008 pp 4 5 is as sceptical about Tacitus s claims on behalf of Agricola as he is about Claudius s earlier subjugation of Orkney see above Hoffmann Birgitta 15 December 2001 Archaeology versus Tacitus Agricola a 1st Century Worst Case Scenario The Roman Gask Project Retrieved 8 July 2010 Moffat 2005 p 232 Hanson 2003 p 198 none of the postulated sites discovered by aerial survey in Moray and Nairn over recent years has the distinctive morphological characteristics of a Roman fort Hanson 2003 p 203 05 Hanson 2003 p 206 Moffat 2005 p 267 Smout 2007 p 32 Moffat 2005 p 266 Moffat 2005 p 245 Hanson 2003 p 195 Hanson 2003 pp 195 200 Frontiers of the Roman Empire UNESCO Retrieved 16 May 2020 Hadrian s Wall Gallery BBC co uk Retrieved 25 July 2008 History of Hadrian s Wall English Heritage Retrieved 16 May 2020 Duncan 1989 p 23 Freeman Charles 1999 Egypt Greece and Rome Oxford University Press p 508 ISBN 0 19 872194 3 Hanson 2003 p 203 Breeze 2006 pp 144 59 According to Robertson 1960 p 39 many of the Antonine forts had strong defences to the south and other Roman forts in southern Scotland actually faced south History antoninewall org retrieved 25 July 2008 Breeze 2006 p 167 Hanson W S 1988 Roman campaigns north of the Forth Clyde isthmus the evidence of the temporary camps Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 109 pp 140 50 Suspected Roman Fort Cawdor Easter Galcantray Highland Region Archived 14 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine roman britain org Retrieved 6 July 2010 Port A Chaistell RCAHMS Retrieved 6 July 2010 The tentative identification was by Crawford O G S 1949 Topography of Roman Scotland north of the Antonine Wall Cambridge p 148 although he never actually visited the site Carver 2008 p 176 Retrieved 5 February 2011 Jones G D B 1991 Tarradale Investigation of a crop mark site near Muir of Ord Ross and Cromarty pdf Manchester Archaeological Bulletin Vol 6 Retrieved 9 October 2013 Hunter Fraser Carruthers Martin ScARF Summary Roman Presence Report PDF Scottish Heritage Hub Retrieved 28 April 2018 Kent Emerson Alternative Map of the Wall Retrieved 7 May 2018 Hanson 2003 pp 197 8 Robertson 1960 p 37 W S Hanson 2002 Roman campaigns north of the Forth Clyde isthmus the evidence of the temporary camps PDF ads ahds ac uk retrieved 14 March 2011 Hanson 2003 p 203 suggests the total Roman force was 40 50 000 and according to Breeze 2006 p 42 the total Roman garrison of Britain at the time of the construction of the Antonine Wall included three legions and numbered about 48 700 troops a b c d Hanson 2003 p 198 Miket Roger The souterrains of Skye in Smith and Banks 2002 p 82 Cassius Dio Roman History Book 77 Sections 11 15 Cassius Dio Roman History Epitome of Book LXXVII University of Chicago retrieved 24 July 2008 The Greek word Piktoi Latin Picti first appears in a panegyric written by Eumenius in 297 and is taken to mean painted or tattooed people The nature of the relationship between the Picts and the Caledonians is obscure There are 3rd and 4th century Roman references to Picti and Caledonii and Ammianus Marcellinus states that the Picts consisted of the tribes of the Dicalydonae and the Verturiones The idea that the Picts were heirs to the Caledonians would appear to be a convenient simplification of a complex flux of relationships See for example Moffat 2005 p 297 or The Picts Siliconglen com retrieved 8 February 2009 for a more informal overview For art in general see for example Foster 2004 pp 26 28 The Cruithni are discussed by Byrne 1973 pp 106 109 The Britons in the south knew the Picts as Prydyn Old Irish cruth and Welsh pryd are the Q and P Celtic forms respectively of a word meaning form or shape See MacBain s Dictionary retrieved 26 December 2008 Forsyth Katherine 2000 pp 27 28 Foster Picts Gaels and Scots pp 52 53 Armit 2003 pp 135 7 Crone B A 1993 Crannogs and Chronologies PSAS 123 pp 245 254 Foster Picts Gaels and Scots pp 52 61 Ralston Ian B M and Armit Ian The early Historic Period An Archaeological Perspective in Edwards and Ralston 2003 p 226 Crawford Iain The wheelhouse in Smith and Banks 2002 pp 127 28 Moffat 2005 p 284 Loci implied supervised meeting places rather than potentially hostile ones but it is scarcely credible that military interventions of this nature were a regular occurrence at this time Moffat 2005 pp 284 299 a b Moffat 2005 pp 297 301 Fletcher Richard 1989 Who s Who in Roman Britain and Anglo Saxon England Shepheard Walwyn p 19 ISBN 0 85683 089 5 Clancy Thomas O 2001 The real St Ninian The Innes Review 52 pp 1 28 Fraser James E Northumbrian Whithorn and the Making of St Ninian 2002 The Innes Review 53 pp 40 59 Hanson 2003 195 For example it is clear that an Iron Age village at Cardean in Angus was simply removed wholesale in order to construct a Roman Camp See Moffat 2005 p 254 Hogan C Michael 2007 Vindolanda Roman Fort in The Megalithic Portal ed A Burnham Retrieved 24 July 2008 Hanson 2003 p 216 Hanson 2003 pp 208 10 Smout 2007 p 20 Smout 2007 pp 20 32 Smout 2007 p 34 Hanson 2003 p 202 Moffat 2005 p 249 Ralston Ian B M and Armit Ian The early Historic Period An Archaeological Perspective in Edwards and Ralston 2003 p 218 Koch 2006 p 903 notes that yr Hen Ogledd refers to the Welsh speaking parts of northern Britain north and south of Hadrian s Wall and that these areas were as integral to the Welsh tradition as Wales itself For example Churchill Winston 1956 A History of the English Speaking Peoples vol 1 Legio VIIII Hispana Livius org Retrieved 26 July 2008 References EditArmit I 2003 Towers in the North The Brochs of Scotland Stroud Tempus ISBN 0 7524 1932 3 Breeze David J 2006 The Antonine Wall Edinburgh John Donald ISBN 0 85976 655 1 Broun Dauvit The Seven Kingdoms in De situ Albanie A Record of Pictish political geography or imaginary map of ancient Alba in E J Cowan amp R Andrew McDonald eds 2005 Alba Celtic Scotland in the Medieval Era Edinburgh John Donald ISBN 0 85976 608 X Byrne Francis John 1973 Irish Kings and High Kings London Batsford ISBN 0 7134 5882 8 Carver Martin 2008 Portmahomack Monastery of the Picts Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 2441 6 Duncan A A M 1989 Scotland The Making of the Kingdom The Edinburgh History of Scotland 1 Mercat Press Edinburgh Forsyth Katherine 2000 Evidence of a lost Pictish Source in the Historia Regum Anglorum of Symeon of Durham with an appendix by John T Koch pp 27 28 in Simon Taylor ed 2000 Kings clerics and chronicles in Scotland 500 1297 essays in honour of Marjorie Ogilvie Anderson on the occasion of her ninetieth birthday Dublin Four Courts Press ISBN 1 85182 516 9 Foster Sally M 2004 Picts Gaels and Scots Early Historic Scotland London Batsford ISBN 0 7134 8874 3 Geary Patrick J 1988 Before France and Germany The creation and transformation of the Merovingian World Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 504457 6 Hanson William S The Roman Presence Brief Interludes in Edwards Kevin J amp Ralston Ian B M Eds 2003 Scotland After the Ice Age Environment Archaeology and History 8000 BC AD 1000 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press Keay J amp Keay J 1994 Collins Encyclopaedia of Scotland London HarperCollins Kirk William Prehistoric Scotland The Regional Dimension in Clapperton Chalmers M ed 1983 Scotland A New Study Newton Abbott David amp Charles Koch John T 2006 Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia Oxford ABC CLIO ISBN 1 85109 440 7 Moffat Alistair 2005 Before Scotland The Story of Scotland Before History London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 05133 X Robertson Anne S 1960 The Antonine Wall Glasgow Archaeological Society Smith Beverley Ballin and Banks Iain 2002 In the Shadow of the Brochs Stroud Tempus ISBN 0 7524 2517 X Smout T C MacDonald R and Watson Fiona 2007 A History of the Native Woodlands of Scotland 1500 1920 Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 3294 7 Thomson William P L 2008 The New History of Orkney Edinburgh Birlinn ISBN 978 1 84158 696 0 Woolf Alex 2006 Dun Nechtain Fortriu and the Geography of the Picts in The Scottish Historical Review Volume 85 Number 2 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISSN 0036 9241Further reading EditKamm Anthony 2009 The Last Frontier The Roman Invasions of Scotland Glasgow Neil Wilson Publishing ISBN 978 1 906476 06 9 Jones Rebecca H 2011 Roman Camps in Scotland Society of Antiquaries of Scotland ISBN 978 0 903903 50 9 External links EditComparison of the geography of Scotland recorded in the Ravenna Cosmography with Ptolemy s The Antonine Wall The North west Frontier of the Roman Empire Roman Scotland which provides a full analysis of the contending sites for Mons Graupius Scotland the Roman presence map p 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scotland during the Roman Empire amp oldid 1141197116, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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