To add to your enjoyment,
the sites are all set in some of the UK's prettiest
landscape and amidst its oldest cities. There's
plenty more to see and do on this tour for those
who are not quite perhaps as enthusiastic about
learning of Roman Britain as others may be!
» DEPARTURE
DATES & PRICES FOR 2004
|
Tour
Code
|
Depart
London
|
Return
London
|
|
CB
|
Wednesday
|
Saturday
|
|
CB01
|
30
Jun 2004
|
03
Jul 2004
|
|
CB02
|
25
Aug 2004
|
28
Aug 2004
|
» TENTATIVE ITINERARY
Day One -
Nightstop Hampshire
We depart from London, heading for the English Channel
and an area rich in well-preserved Roman sites. In
keeping with our theme, we'll even use the old Roman
road to travel there (seeing a preserved section en
route).
Many modern English city
names give away their Roman origins; the suffix
'chester' is a corruption of the Latin 'caestra'
meaning fort. Today we'll explore the city and
immediate area around the pretty south coast city
of Chichester.
The highlights of our
day will be the splendid Fishbourne Palace and
the famed Bignor Villa.
The latter was only discovered
by accident in 1960. The site museum has fascinating
artefacts from the excavations along with plans,
reconstruction drawings and models. In the remains
of the North Wing of the Palace can be seen the
largest collection of in-situ mosaics in Britain,
including the famous 'Cupid on a Dolphin' mosaic.
Outside, the northern half of the formal garden
has been replanted to its original plan as recovered
by excavation. An attractive plant display area
contains a range of plants known to have been cultivated
by the Romans. Adjacent to it is a Roman Garden
Museum which includes a reconstructed Roman potting
shed with a selection of horticultural tools.
By contrast, Bignor Villa
has a been a museum since 1815! It contains a wealth
of interesting objects from everyday life found
in excavations.
We'll round the day off
with visits to Chichester itself, and then to see
the massive Roman walls of the Saxon Shore fort
at Pevensey castle.
More information: http://www.romansinsussex.co.uk/
Day Two - Nightstop South wales
Our first stop this morning
is the city of Winchester. Though more noted for
its Saxon links to Alfred the great, the street pattern
bears witness to its Roman origins.
Then to Old Sarum. This
impressive earthwork consists of an outer defensive
wall and an inner rampart rising at an angle of
over 45 degrees and measuring 40 feet from trough
to top. The fortification, named Sorviodunum in
Roman times, was occupied successively by the Romans,
the Saxons, the Danes, and finally by the Norman
conquerors of England. This great earthwork is
sometimes overlooked because of its proximity to
Stonehenge (a mere two miles away). That is unfortunate
because powerful impressions of the past still
linger, here, and, in a strange way, seem to be
amplified by the incredible beauty of the natural
environment.
This afternoon we drive
to Bath (Aquae Sulis). The first Roman camp was
established here in 44. The Roman town occupied
less than 25 acres, but commanded a vital bridging
point across the river Avon. Bath was later reconstructed
as a Temple and bathing complex due to the healing
springs there, and contains some of the finest
Roman remains in Britain. Construction of the complex
began approximately 15 years after the revolt of
the Iceni in 60AD and were part of the cult of
Sulis Minerva. We will visit the Roman Baths museum.
Day Three - Nightstop South Wales
In what is today's Wales,
we discover the extensive remains of the great legionary
fortress of Isca and town of Venta. Two thirds of
the Roman armies were employed in securing their
border and subduing the Welsh tribes. Know today
as Caerleon and Caerwent, the town and fortress became
the biggest in Wales with a jpoint population of
around 3,000. It was an important centre of Romanisation
in this era. Caerwent was the only walled city in
Wales at the time and you'll examine the 30 foot
high earthen (later a 16 foot stone) wall which was
built in the mid 2nd century. In nearby Caerleon
we find several superb sites, arguably amongst the
best in Britain. There's an amphitheatre, the remains
of a great circus and the fantastic Roman Legionary
Museum.
As a bonus, you'll also
see the famed Tintern Abbey and the scenic Wye
valley today.
For more information:
http://website.lineone.net/~amthomas/travel/caer_rom.htm
Day Four - London, accommodation not included
The county of Gloucester,
perhaps better known today as The Cotswolds', was
one of the most important settlement sites for the
Romans of the 1st and 2nd centuries. The city of
Gloucester was in fact a 'Colonia' - the highest
urban status granted in the Empire. Nearby was another
settlement now known as Cirencester.
Needless to say, the region
is rich in Roman finds; in the Gloucester city
museum there's a fantastic collection from the
Roman burial grounds. But it will be the Corinium
Museum in Cirencester that will prove the absolute
final day's highlight. This great museum will just
have completed a £5 million restoration project
by 2004. The results of which will arguably be
the most impressive display of things Roman in
the UK. Every detail of the new Museum has to be
carefully worked through to give the best possible
visitor experience. The new galleries require meticulous
research to ensure that they are both historically
accurate and evocative of life in Roman Britain.
For example the reconstructed rooms of a town house
excavated in Dyer Street, Cirencester will be decorated
using traditional materials and techniques, with
a wall-plaster based on the remains found during
the excavations in 1854.
More information: http://www.cotswold.gov.uk/museum/Corinium_Update1.htm
Depending on time, we have two other important sites
that can be visited on our return to London. The first
is the Chedworth Villa, set in picturesque Cotswolds
countryside, and the second, the remains of the city
of Silchester (set in the grounds of the Duke of Wellington's
country estate.
Price:
US
$689
Single Supplement: US
$75
Whats Included ? Click
here for full details
Advantages and
price justification - click here.