Article contents
Auchendavy Roman Fort and Settlement
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 November 2011
Extract
The fort at Auchendavy on the Antonine Wall (FIG. I), 3 km east of Kirkintilloch, was first reported in the preamble to the Theatrum Orbis Terrarum of Johannes Blaeu, from notes made before 1625 by the Scottish geographer Timothy Pont. Subsequent references in the antiquarian authors over the following centuries are testimony to the gradual destruction of the once impressive fort-defences. Today the traveller by road along the B 8023 from Kirkintilloch eastwards towards Twechar passes the fort-site without a glance, even though the modern road traverses it more or less on the alignment of the via principalis. No organized excavation has ever been undertaken at Auchendavy, although small finds reported over the years from the fort-site and vicinity have included pottery, a deposit of ballista balls, a nicolo paste intaglio in an iron finger-ring, and several coins. In May 1771 during construction of the Forth & Clyde Canal, which cut away some part of the southern defences of the fort, workmen recovered a group of five altars, two iron mallets (lost or disintegrated by the later 19th century) and a broken cult-statue, from a pit seemingly just outside the fort-defences to the south (below, p. 33). An aureus of Trajan (datable to a.d. 100), reported from the site, may have been found at much the same time. From the late 1940s onwards aerial reconnaissance by Professor J. K. S. St Joseph provided a useful check on the layout of the fort-defences, and recent fieldwork and ground survey have added fresh details, so that a reappraisal of our knowledge of the fort is perhaps now a worthwhile proposition.
- Type
- Articles
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © L. J. F. Keppie and J. J. Walker 1985. Exclusive Licence to Publish: The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies
References
1 Blaeu, J., Theatrum Orbis Terrarum (Amsterdam, 1654), Part v, 4.Google Scholar
2 Sibbald, R., Historical Inquiries (Edinburgh, 1707), 29Google Scholar; Gordon, A., Itinerarium Septentrionale (London, 1726), 54Google Scholar; Horsley, J., Britannia Romana (London, 1732), 169Google Scholar; Maitland, W., History and Antiquities of Scotland (London, 1757), 178Google Scholar; Roy, W., Military Antiquities of the Romans in Britain (London, 1794), 160Google Scholar; Stuart, R., Caledonia Romana ed. 2 (Edinburgh, 1852), 325 ff.Google Scholar
3 Stuart, , op. cit. (note 2), 328.Google Scholar
4 idem.; M. Henig, Glasgow Arch. Journ. iii (1974), 71–3.
5 Roy, W., op. cit. (note 2) (App. 4 by J. Anderson, dated 1773).Google Scholar
6 Gough, R., Archaeologia iii (1775), 118CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Camden, W., Britannia, ed. Gough, R. (London, 1806), vol. iv, 98Google Scholar; Macdonald, G., PSAS lii (1917–1918), 224.Google Scholar
7 Gordon, , op. cit. (note 2), pl. 21.Google Scholar
8 Horsley, , op. cit. (note 2), 176 (map).Google Scholar
9 Roy, , op. cit. (note 2), pl. xxxv.Google Scholar
10 Stuart, op. cit. (note 2), end map.
11 Macdonald, G., The Roman Wall in Scotland, ed. 2 (Oxford, 1934), 285 ff.Google Scholar
12 CUCAP, Ref. nos. MP81, ADZ3, AGQ29; Joseph, J. K. S. St, JRS xli (1951), 61.Google Scholar
13 Stuart, , op. cit. (note 2), 328Google Scholar; Macdonald, , op. cit. (note 2), 286.Google Scholar
14 Roy, , op. cit. (note 2), 160.Google Scholar
15 Walker, J. J., Discovery & Excavation in Scotland (1974), 34.Google Scholar
16 Macdonald, G., PSAS xlix (1914–1915), 115 ff.Google Scholar
17 Gillam, J., Scottish Arch. Forum vii (1976), 51–6Google Scholar; cf. Keppie, L. J. F. and Walker, J. J., Britannia xii (1981), 143–62CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Keppie, L., Britannia xiii (1982), 96 ffGoogle Scholar; Hanson, W. and Maxwell, G., Rome's North West Frontier: The Antonine Wall (Edinburgh, 1983), 86 ff.Google Scholar
18 Gillam, op. cit. (note 17).
19 Hanson, and Maxwell, , op. cit. (note 17), 106, 112.Google Scholar
20 Stuart, , op. cit. (note 2), 329.Google Scholar
21 RIB 2174–8.
22 Skinner, J., Archaeologia xxi (1827), 459, pl. xxi. 3; RIB 2179.Google Scholar
23 Davies, R. W., Glasgow Arch. Journ. iv (1976), 103–7CrossRefGoogle Scholar. cf. now Keppie, L. J. F., PSAS cxiii (1983), 395. no. 5Google Scholar; Keppie, L. J. F. and Arnold, B. J., Corpus Signorum Imperil Romani (Corpus of Roman Sculpture), Great Britain, fasc. iv (Scotland) (London, 1984), no. 116.Google Scholar
24 Birley, E. B., PSAS lxx (1935–1936), 363–77Google Scholar = Roman Britain and the Roman Army (Kendal, 1953), 87–103Google Scholar; cf. Birley, A. R., The People of Roman Britain (London, 1979), 78.Google Scholar
25 Gordon, , op. cit. (note 2), 54.Google Scholar
26 Stuart, , op. cit. (note 2), 328–9 (footnotes by Buchanan, J.).Google Scholar
27 Gordon, A., Additions and Corrections, by Way of Supplement to the Itinerarium Septentrionale (London, 1732), 5 ff.Google Scholar; Horsley, , op. cit (note 2), 198 ff., 339 f.Google Scholar; Camden, W., Britannia, ed. Gough, R., (London, 1806) vol. iv, 100, 359Google Scholar; Macdonald, J., Tituli Hunteriani (Glasgow, 1897), 65 ff., 86 ff.Google Scholar
28 Gordon, , op. cit. (note 27), pl lxvi.A; cfGoogle Scholar. Richmond, I. A. and Steer, K. A., PSAS xc (1956–1957), 1–6.Google Scholar
29 Wainwright, F. T., The Souterrains of Southern Pictland (London, 1963).Google Scholar
30 e.g. at Newstead (below, note 46), Cardean, Castledykes, and perhaps Strageath.
31 Watkins, T., PSAS, cx (1978–1980), 192 ff.Google Scholar
32 Keppie, and Arnold, , op. cit. (note 23), nos. 112–13.Google Scholar
33 RIB 2181–3; Keppie, and Arnold, , op. cit. (note 23), nos. 108–10.Google Scholar
34 Keppie, and Arnold, , op. cit. (note 23), no. 111.Google Scholar
35 RIB 2180; Keppie, and Arnold, , op. cit. (note 23), no. 114.Google Scholar
36 RIB 2139; cf. RIB 1147–8.
37 Horsley, , op. cit. (note 2), 198.Google Scholar
38 Gordon, loc. cit. (note 27).
39 RIB 2171.
40 Macdonald, , op. cit. (note 6), 447.Google Scholar
41 Horsley, , op. cit. (note 2), 198Google Scholar: ‘a little east of this (i.e. Shirva) house’. Peter Salway's suggestion that the inscriptions and sculpture derived from Shirva Dyke cottage, a mere 200 m east of Auchendavy fort, conflicts with the antiquarian tradition, see The Frontier People of Roman Britain (Cambridge, 1965), 159.Google Scholar
42 Robertson, A. S., Scott, M. and Keppie, L., Bar Hill: A Roman Fort and its Finds (Oxford, 1975), 11 ff., 40 ff.Google Scholar; Keppie, L., ‘Excavations at the Roman Fort of Bar Hill, 1978–82’, Glasgow Arch. Journ. xii (1985), forthcoming.Google Scholar
43 Birley, A. R., op. cit. (note 24), 128 suggests a link between Salmanes and the Syrian archer-cohort (I Hamiorum) at nearby Bar Hill.Google Scholar
44 Stuart, , op. cit. (note 2), 335.Google Scholar
45 Keppie and Walker, loc. cit. (note 17); Hanson, and Maxwell, , op. cit. (note 17), 127.Google Scholar
46 Smith, J. A., PSAS i (1851–1854), 213–17Google Scholar; RCAHMS, An Inventory of the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Roxburghshire (Edinburgh, 1956), vol. ii, no. 611.Google Scholar
47 Rosehill, Lord, PSAS viii (1868–1870), 105–9 (with plan)Google Scholar; Edwards, A. J. H., PSAS lix (1924–1925), 94 f.Google Scholar; RCAHMS Inventory of Monuments and Constructions in the Countries of Midlothian and West Lothian (Edinburgh, 1929), 53–4Google Scholar; Keppie, and Arnold, , op. cit. (note 23), no. 58.Google Scholar
- 2
- Cited by