Verulamium
The asteroid 4206 Verulamium was named in honour of the ancient city. |
Remains of the city walls |
Verulamium was the third largest city in
Roman Britain. It was sited to the south west of the modern city of
St Albans in
Hertfordshire, on what is now park and agricultural land, though parts have been built upon. A large portion of the city still awaits excavation by future generations of
archaeologists.
Before the Romans it was known as Verlamion, (meaning 'settlement above the marsh') the capital of the
Catuvellauni tribe. The settlement was established by their leader
Tasciovanus. In this pre-Roman form it was among the first places in
Britain recorded by name. It was built beside the
River Ver.
The Roman settlement was granted the rank of
municipium in c.
AD 50, meaning its citizens had all the rights of a citizen of Rome. It grew to a significant town, despite the attentions of
Boudica of the
Iceni in AD
61. It grew steadily —by the early
200s it covered an area of about 125
acres (0.5 km²), behind a deep ditch and wall. It had a
forum,
basilica and a
theatre, most of which were destroyed during two
fires, one in AD
155 and the other around AD
250. One of the few extant Roman inscriptions in Britain is found on the remnants of the forum; see
Verulamium Forum inscription. The town was rebuilt in
stone rather than
timber at least twice over the next 150 years. Occupation by the Romans ended between
450 and
500.
There are a few remains of the Roman city visible, such as parts of the
city walls and a
hypocaust and theatre. The city was ransacked for building material when St Albans was founded; indeed, much of the
Norman abbey was constructed from the remains of the Roman city. More remains are believed to exist under agricultural land near St Albans, which has apparently never been investigated by
archaeologists and which for a while were seriously threatened by deep
ploughing of the land.
The modern city takes its name from
Alban, a citizen of Verulamium who was condemned to death in the
3rd century for sheltering a
Christian priest who converted him to Christianity, and who became the first British Christian
martyr.
There is a museum in
Verulamium park (adjacent to
St Michael's Church) which contains much information about the town, both as a
Roman and
iron age settlement, plus Roman history in general. The museum contains many artifacts such as
pottery and
coins from the Roman town as well as
mosaics,
coffins and other remains unearthed in the surrounding area during
20th century building works. It is considered one of the best museums of Roman history in the country. Much of the modern city and its environs is built over Roman remains; it is not uncommon to unearth Roman artifacts several miles from the city itself, and a complete tile
kiln was found in Park Street some six miles from Verulamium in the
1970s.
Within the walls of Verulam, which he took for the name of his Barony, Sir
Francis Bacon, the essayist and statesman, built a refined small house that was thoroughly described by the
17th century diarist
John Aubrey; no trace of it is left, but Aubrey noted "At Verulam is to be seen, in some few places, some remains of the wall of this Citie" (see the illustration).