ABSTRACT

Roman Britain, first published in 1972, gives the young reader a vivid impression of the British Isles immediately preceding, during and after the Roman occupation, which lasted for 400 years. Using a selection of extracts, both historical and imaginative, it offer a suitably comprehensive account of Roman Britain: the campaigns fought to subdue it, the military and civil government established to govern it, relations between the Imperial administration and the natives, and the departure of the legions to fight elsewhere in the Empire.

Selections of poetry by John Masefield, W.H. Auden, Rudyard Kipling and A.E. Housman are included, together with prose extracts from Bede, Tacitus, Hilaire Belloc, Henry Treece, Alfred Duggan, Rudyard Kipling. Physically compact, Roman Britain encourages young classicists and historians to engage imaginatively with the subject, whilst also supplying ample opportunity for more detailed discussion and further reading.

part |7 pages

The fair land

part |21 pages

Invasion

part |33 pages

Early peace and resistance

part |32 pages

The long peace

chapter |1 pages

The Roman Wall

chapter |1 pages

Roman Wall blues

chapter |3 pages

The soldier's god

chapter |4 pages

Stonehenge raid

chapter |2 pages

Taliesin

chapter |2 pages

Out of the rain

chapter |5 pages

On the run

part |14 pages

The Romans leave