- Via Devana
The Via Devana was a
Roman Road inEngland that ran fromColchester in the south-east toChester in the north-west. Both were important Roman military centres and it is conjectured that the main reason the road was constructed was military rather than civilian. The Latin name forChester is "Deva" and it was thus 'The Chester Road'.Colchester was "Colonia Victricensis" 'the City of Victory' and lays claim to be the oldest Roman city inEngland . As it had little civilian rationale it fell into disuse following withdrawal of the lastRoman legion from Britain in407 . As a result its route is difficult to find, especially in its more northern reaches. It is omitted from some historians' maps for this reason but most nowadays accept its existence. The name "Via Devana" was created in about 1750 by Charles Mason, a Cambridge geology professor. [Codrington T, "Roman Roads in Britain", 1903, p137 [http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Periods/Roman/Topics/Engineering/roads/Britain/_Texts/CODROM/home.html (web version)] .]Its route ran north and west as follows:
*
Colchester - "Colonia Victricensis"
*Cambridge - (Latin name: "Cantabrigia". Roman Name: "Durolipons" or "Duroliponte ")
*Huntingdon /Godmanchester ("Durolipus" or "Durovigutum") where it crossedErmine Street
*Corby
*Medbourne - The stretch from Medbourne to Leicester is broken, but where it exists is nowadays known as the "Gartree Road"
*Leicester - ("Ratae Corieltauvorum "), meetingFosse Way
*Mancetter ("Manduessedum") where it joinedWatling Street until
* Water Eaton - (" [http://www.roman-britain.org/places/pennocrucium.htm Penncrucium] ") - where it went viaNewport, Shropshire to follow the A41 to
*Whitchurch, Shropshire - ("Mediolan" or "Mediolanum")
*Chester References
External links
* [http://www.leicesterchronicler.com/viadevana.htm "Via Devana" in Leicestershire]
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