Durotriges
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| Durotriges | |
| Geography | |
| Capital | Durnovaria (Dorchester) |
|---|---|
| Location | Dorset South Wiltshire South Somerset Devon |
| Origins (Likely) |
? |
The Durotriges were one of the Celtic tribes living in the British Islands prior to the Roman invasion of Britain. The tribe lived in modern Dorset, south Wiltshire and south Somerset. After the Roman conquest, their main civitates or cites were Durnovaria (modern Dorchester) and Lindinis (modern Ilchester).
The Durotriges were more a tribal confederation than a tribe.[1] They were one of the few groups that issued coinage before the Roman conquest, part of the cultural "periphery", as Barry Cunliffe characterised them, round the "core group" of Britons in the south. These coins were rather simple and had no inscriptions, and thus no names of coin-issuers can be known, let alone evidence about monarchs or rulers. Nevertheless, the Durotriges presented a settled society, based in the farming of lands[2] surrounded and controlled by strong hill forts that were still in use in 43 AD. Maiden Castle is a preserved example of one of these hill forts.
The area of the Durotriges is identified in part by coin finds:[3] few Durotrgan coins are found in the "core" area, where they were apparently unacceptable and were reminted. To their north and east were the Atrebates, beyond the Avon and its tributary Wylye. The New Forest[4] may have provided a buffer zone, as dense forest on the Continent did.[5] Their main outlet for the trade across the Channel, strong in the first half of the first century BC, when the potter's wheel was introduced, then drying up in the decades before the advent of the Romans, was at Hengistbury Head. Numismatic evidence shows progressive debasing of the coinage, suggesting economic retrenchment accompanying the increased cultural isolation. Analysis of the body of Durotrigan ceramics suggests to Cunliffe that the production was increasingly centralised, at Poole Harbour (Cunliffe 2005:183). Burial of Durotriges was by inhumation, with a last ritual meal provided even under exiguous circumstances, as in the eight burials at Maiden Castle, carried out immediately after the Roman attack.
Not surprisingly, the Durotriges resisted Roman invasion in AD 43, and the historian Suetonius records some fights between the tribe and the second legion Augusta, then commanded by Vespasian. By 70 AD, the tribe was already Romanised and securely included in the Roman province of Britannia. In the tribe’s area, the Romans explored some quarries and supported a local pottery industry.
[edit] See also
[edit] Notes
- ^ "The Durotriges were a close-knit confederacy of smaller units centred on modern Dorset," writes Barry Cunliffe, Iron Age Communities in Britain: An Account of England, Scotland and Wales from the Seventh Century BC Until the Roman Conquest, 4th ed. 2005:178, in beginning his Part II.8 "The tribes of the periphery: Durotriges, Dobunni, Iceni and Corieltauvi" (pp 178-201).
- ^ Several homestead sites have been excavated in Cranborne Chase.
- ^ Cunliffe 2005: fig. 8:2.
- ^ "New" only in the sense of the "new" forest laws that set it apart as a royal chase under the Anglo-Normans.
- ^ See, for example, the buffer provided by Silva Carbonaria into Merovingian times.
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