- Carrawburgh
Carrawburgh is a village in
Northumberland . In Roman times, it was the site of a 3½ acre (1.5 ha) auxiliary fort onHadrian's Wall called Brocolitia, Procolita, or "Brocolita" [The name "Procolita" is found in the 5th century documentNotitia Dignitatum , and "Brocoliti" in the 7th centuryRavenna Cosmography . In both instances it appears between the entries forChesters (Cilurnum /Celunnum) andHousesteads (Borcovicium /Velurtion).] [ [http://www.roman-britain.org/places/brocolitia.htm Roman Britain - Brocolitia] ] This name is probably based on the Celtic name for the place, and one possible translation put forward is 'badger holes'. The fort there was the Wall's northernmost point, and just over a mile west of the nearestmilecastle , Milecastle 30. It either used the Wall (narrow gauge on a broad base at this point) itself as its northern rampart, or was built parallel to it but detached. It certainly postdates both the Wall and the vallum (which it is built across).Only the fort's earthworks are now visible, the Wall at this point and the fort's north ramparts having been demolished for the construction of
General Wade 's early 18th century military road (now theB6318 ). The late nineteenth century archaeologistJohn Clayton carried out a partial excavation of the site, revealing a military bath-house outside the fort's west gate (in 1873) and the fort's south-west corner-tower (in 1876).The "
Roman Inscriptions of Britain " lists 48 inscriptions for the site. They show its garrisoning units to have been as follows:
*RIB 1550 - Hadrianic? - First Cohort ofAquitani
*RIB 1563b - AD122-138 - First Cohort ofTungri
*End 2nd century - Cohors I Cugernorum
*RIB 1544 [Altar to Mithras] , RIB 1553, and "Notitia Dignitarum" - AD213-222? and AD237 respectively [The latter is one of the few pieces of evidence for the governorTuccianus , under the emperorMaximinus ] - First Cohort ofBatavians The First Cohort of
Frisiavones are also attested at Brocolitia at some stage, as shown by an inscription on an altar stone, which tells us thatOptio Maus had repaid a vow to the goddess Coventina. (This unit is also recorded as present atArdotalia [ [http://www.roman-britain.org/places/ardotalia.htm Roman Britain - Ardotalia] ] .) Whether this altar was the repayment of the vow is unknown.In the small "
vicus " on the low-lying marshy ground outside the fort's south-west corner have been found three religious sites, all connected with a small tributary stream of Meggie's Dene Burn, which runs three miles from Carrawburgh to empty into the River South Tyne nearNewbrough 's fort on theStanegate . Nearest to the fort was an early 3rd centuryMithraeum , of which remains can be seen onsite, and a reconstruction atNewcastle University 'sMuseum of Antiquities . It was discovered in 1949. Behind it was anymphaeum (found in 1957 and dug in 1960). The third site was "Coventina's Well", a centre for worship of the Romano-British goddessCoventina found in Clayton's 1876 dig, and from which the stream sprung. No remains of the nymphaeum or Well can now be seen onsite.References
External Links
* [http://gallery.beautifulengland.net/main.php?g2_itemId=14813&g2_page=11 Photographs of Carrawburgh and Hadrian's Wall]
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