Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T04:03:28.689Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Excavation of the Roman Temporary Camps at Dullatur, North Lanarkshire

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 November 2011

C.E. Lowe
Affiliation:
Headland Archaeology Ltd
R. Moloney
Affiliation:
RCAHMS, Edinburgh
V.G. Swan
Affiliation:
Centre for Roman Provincial Archaeology, Durham

Extract

The two camps at Dullatur (FIG. 1), near Cumbernauld, lie on a north-facing slope, some 400 m south of the Antonine Wall, between Westerwood and Croy Hill. The excavation was undertaken in 1998 by Headland Archaeology in advance of the development of the site for housing. The work was conducted in accordance with the detailed specification prepared by the West of Scotland Archaeology Service (WoSAS) on behalf of North Lanarkshire Council. The area of the development comprised two zones: one coincident with the site of the two camps and a smaller area (not illustrated) to the north-west.

Type
Articles
Information
Britannia , Volume 31 , November 2000 , pp. 239 - 253
Copyright
Copyright © C.E. Lowe, R. Moloney and V.G. Swan 2000. Exclusive Licence to Publish: The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Breeze, D. J. 1977: ‘The fort of Bearsden and the supply of pottery to the Roman army’, in Dore, J. and Greene, K. (eds), Roman Pottery Studies in Britain and Beyond: Papers Presented to John Gillam, July 1977, BAR Suppl Ser 30, Oxford, 133–45Google Scholar
Dunwell, A.J., and Keppie, L.J.F. 1995: ‘The Roman temporary camp at Dunning, Perthshire: evidence from two recent excavations’, Britannia 26, 5162CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Feachem, R.W. 1956: ‘Six Roman camps near the Antonine Wall’, Proc. Soc. Antiq. Scotland 28 329–39Google Scholar
Gillam, J.P. 1973: ‘Sources of pottery found on northern military sites’, in Detsicas, A. (ed.), Current Research in Romano-British Coarse Pottery, CBA Res. Rept 10, London, 5365Google Scholar
Gillam, J.P. 1976a: ‘Possible changes in plan in the course of the construction of the Antonine Wall’, Scottish Archaeological Forum 7, 51–6Google Scholar
Gillam, J.P. 1976b: ‘Coarse fumed ware in North Britain and beyond’, Glasgow Archaeol. Journ. 4, 5780CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hanson, W.S. 1978: ‘Roman campaigns north of the Forth-Clyde isthmus: the evidence of the temporary camps’, Proc. Soc. Antiq. Scotland 109, 140–50CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hanson, W.S. 1979: ‘Croy Hill’, in Breeze, D.J. (ed.), Roman Scotland: Some Recent Excavations, Edinburgh, 1921Google Scholar
Hanson, W.S., and Maxwell, G.S. 1983: Rome 's North-West Frontier: The Antonine Wall, EdinburghGoogle Scholar
Hodgson, N. 1995: ‘Were there two Antonine occupations of Scotland?Britannia 26, 2949CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hughes, G., Leach, P., and Stanford, S.C. 1995: ‘Excavations at Bromfield, Shropshire 1981–1991’, Shropshire Hist. Archaeol. 70 (1995), 2394Google Scholar
Keppie, L.J.F. 1976: ‘Some rescue excavations on the line of the Antonine Wall, 1973–6’, Proc. Soc. Antiq. Scotland 107, 6180CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keppie, L.J.F. 1978: ‘Excavation of Roman sites at Dullatur and Westerwood, 1974–6’, Glasgow Archaeol. Journ. 5, 918CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keppie, L.J.F. 1995: ‘Roman Britain in 1994, 2. Scotland’, Britannia 26, 332–42Google Scholar
Keppie, L.J.F., and Speller, K. 1995: ‘Garnhall’, in Keppie, L.J.F., Bailey, G.B., Dunwell, A.J., McBrien, J.H., and Speller, K., ‘Some excavations on the line of the Antonine Wall, 1985–93’, Proc. Soc. Antiq. Scotland 125, 601–72, at 631–43Google Scholar
Lowe, C.E. 1998: Dullatur Roman Temporary Camps: Archaeological Data Structure Report, unpublished archive report prepared for North Lanarkshire CouncilGoogle Scholar
Macdonald, G. 1934: The Roman Wall in Scotland, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Maxwell, G.S. 1974: ‘The building of the Antonine Wall’, in Pippidi, D.M. (ed.), Actes du IXème Congrès International d'Etudes sur les Frontières Romaines, Mamaia, 6–13 Septembre 1972, Bucharest, 327–32Google Scholar
Maxwell, G.S. 1989: The Romans in Scotland, EdinburghGoogle Scholar
Maxwell, G.S. 1998: A Gathering of Eagles: Scenes from Roman Scotland, EdinburghGoogle Scholar
McCord, N., and Tait, J. 1978: ‘Excavations at Kerse, East Polmont, Stirlingshire, July 1963’, Proc. Soc. Antiq. Scotland 109, 368–72CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pitts, L.F., and St Joseph, J.K.S. 1985: lnchtuthil: the Roman Legionary Fortress, Britannia Monograph 6, LondonGoogle Scholar
RIB 2: Frere, S.S., Tomlin, R.S.O.et al. (eds) 1990–95: The Roman Inscriptions of Britain, 2, GloucesterGoogle Scholar
RCAHMS 1997: Eastern Dumfriesshire: An Archaeological Survey, EdinburghGoogle Scholar
Robertson, A.S. 1969: ‘The Roman camp(s) on Hillside Farm, Dunblane, Perthshire’, Glasgow Archaeol. Journ. 1, 35–6CrossRefGoogle Scholar
St Joseph, J.K.S. 1955: ‘Air reconnaissance in Britain, 1951–55’, JRS 45, 82–9Google Scholar
St Joseph, J.K.S. 1969: ‘Air reconnaissance in Britain, 1965–68’, JRS 59, 104–28Google Scholar
Shepherd, A.S. 1986: ‘Excavations at Kintore Roman temporary camp, 1984’, Proc. Soc. Antiq. Scotland 116, 205–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Speller, K. 1994: ‘Garnhall (1) (Cumbernauld Parish): Roman temporary camp’, Discovery and Excavation in Scotland, 61Google Scholar
Swan, V.G. 1984: The Pottery Kilns of Roman Britain, RCHM Suppl Ser 5, LondonGoogle Scholar
Swan, V.G. forthcoming: ‘The Twentieth Legion and the history of the Antonine Wall’, Proc. Soc. Antiq. ScotlandGoogle Scholar
Webb, A. 1998: Dullatur Roman Camps, Cumbernauld, North Lanarkshire: Gradiometer Survey, WYAS Report 598, unpublished survey report to Headland ArchaeologyGoogle Scholar
Webster, P.V. 1994: ‘Roman pottery’, in Keppie, L.J.F., ‘Excavations at the Roman fort of Westerwood on the Antonine Wall’, Glasgow Archaeol. Journ. 19, 93–5 and microficheGoogle Scholar
Welfare, H.G., and Swan, V.G. 1995: Roman Camps in England, The Field Archaeology, RCHME, LondonGoogle Scholar