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Verulamium
Verulamium:
The Roman City of St Albans
In its heyday Verulamium was the third largest city in Roman
Britain, with no less than seven temples within the city walls.
Why it was that Verlamion, the Iron Age settlement of the Catuvellauni,
became so prosperous and what this prosperity meant for its
inhabitants is the subject of Rosalind Niblett's wide-ranging
study which describes the development of St Albans from its
origin in the first century BC to the rise of the Saxon town
in the early eighth century AD. The last 20 years have seen
an unprecedented amount of archaeological research on Roman
St Albans, spearheaded by the author. She is thus ideally qualified
to write the first substantial account of Verulamium since Sir
Mortimer Wheeler's report of almost 70 years ago. Individual
chapters look at developing ideas about the Roman city; from
the Middle ages onwards; the development of the tribal centre
of the Catuvellauni; the first hundred years of the Roman city;
the life of the people in the second and third centuries; and
the story of the final centuries before the rise of the Saxon
town. Complete with 100 illustrations, many in full colour,
this authoritative yet readable account of Roman St Albans will
not only enthral local inhabitants but will be indispensable
for all those interested in Roman Britain.
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To Tour St Albans
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