Εμφανίζονται 8 τίτλοι με αναζήτηση: Πληροφορίες για τον τόπο στην ευρύτερη περιοχή: "ΤΣΕΣΤΕΡ Πόλη ΑΓΓΛΙΑ" .
Deva or Deva Victrix (Chester) Cheshire, England.
The site of a legionary fortress, initially garrisoned by Legio II Adiutrix p.
f. Established as part of the preparations for the subjugation of Wales and Brigantia,
it was strategically placed at the NW extremity of the Midland plain, astride
lines of communication between Wales and the N. The fortress was built on a sandstone
ridge at the head of the estuary, commanded a good ford, and was at the limit
of navigation for seagoing vessels. The Flavian fortress was a semipermanent base,
and its defenses therefore consisted of a turf wall 6 m thick, augmented by timber
gates and towers, and fronted by a ditch 1.5 m deep and ca. 3.5 m wide. Buildings
were in the main of timber, including the principia, and (outside the defenses)
the amphitheater. A large internal bath building in the E half of the praetentura
was also certainly of primary date. A building inscription from its large covered
palaestra records completion in A.D. 79. Lengths of lead water pipes with molded
inscriptions date the completion of aqueduct and water supply to the same year,
and foundation of the fortress may therefore be as early as ca. A.D. 75. Substantial
fragments of the colonnading from the exercise hall have been moved and erected
close to the amphitheater. Rebuilding in stone commenced under Trajan, probably
soon after A.D. 102. The garrison by this time was Legio XX Valenia Victrix (from
ca. A.D. 86-90). The defenses were strengthened by the addition of a stone wall
1.83 m wide at the base, narrowing to 1.37 m above offset and plinth, and standing
5 m high to the wall walk. The most substantial fragment of this wall is to be
found N of the E gate and close to the Cathedral. The ditch was enlarged at this
period to a width of 6 m and a depth of 3 m. There were four gates, one in each
side; the sites of the E and N ones are occupied by town gates today. Little is
known of any of them. Three of the corner towers have been located and explored,
and the SE one has survived. Smaller towers (22) were placed at intervals between
gates and corners: six have been located but none is now to be seen.
Apart from the bath building, which was used with additions and modifications
at least to the 3d c., the buildings so far located are the principia, praetorium,
horrea, workshops, and barracks, and fragments of the cross-hall and sacellum
of the principia have been preserved. A site immediately W of the principia and
praetorium was occupied by an unidentified building of an unusual elliptical plan;
on the S side of the complex was an extensive suite of baths. The three granaries
were placed close to the porta pnincipalis dextra which gave access to the harbor.
Barracks so far located include those of the First Cohort in latera praetorii,
another group just within the porta prillcipalis sinistra, and others E of the
bath building, N of the workshops, and across the N end of the site. Store buildings
and ovens have been found just within the defenses. The fortress had the usual
regular street pattern, and the viae principalis, praetoria, and decumana are
still in use today. Minor streets have less consistently survived: those found
by excavation have been 4-6 m wide.
Half of the exceptionally large amphitheater has been preserved and
may be visited. The harbor lay W of the fortress, and part of a supposed Roman
quay wall still survives. An extramural bath building on this side may have been
for officers; close to this was a building identified as a stable. Other fragments
of Roman buildings have been found in this area, but the principal part of the
vicus lay outside the E gate, beyond the parade ground. The civilian buildings,
which have been little explored, extended to ca. 300 m from the E gate. At a little
over 2 km E of the fortress an altar (now at Eaton Hall) indicates the source
of the aqueduct, the line of which ran along the S side of Watling Street. Although
inhumation cemeteries have been located W of the fortress, the main cemetery area
was S of the river in the suburb of Handbridge. On this side of the river may
also be seen Roman quarries (Edgar's Field), one of which contains a much-weathered
relief thought to have been of Minerva.
Building is known to have been done in the Antonine and Severan periods,
and some buildings (such as the praetorium) continued to be altered and repaired
well into the 4th c. At some time after A.D. 213-222, perhaps under Constantius
Chlorus, substantial portions of the N and W walls were rebuilt on a wider gauge
incorporating much inscribed material. Two well-preserved stretches, complete
to cornice level, may be seen in the sector between the porta decumana and the
NE corner.
The fortress was rectangular with rounded corners. The short axis
measured ca. 412 m and the long ca. 591 m, giving a comparatively deep retentura
in which postem gates may have been provided. The area was up to a fifth greater
than other British fortresses (24.3 ha). The reason is not known, although it
may be significant that the fortress was placed between two powerful and hostile
tribes, the Brigantes and Ordovices.
Abandonment predates the compilation of the Notitia Dignitatum, and
is perhaps to be attributed to Magnus Maximus. Subsequent occupation of the site
by Saxon burh and the mediaeval city has left comparatively little in situ, and
archaeological exploration has been confined largely to sites cleared for rebuilding.
Most of the finds are in the Grosvenor Museum, Chester, including an unusually
large collection of inscribed material.
D.F. Petch, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Feb 2006 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
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