Online Encyclopedia

CAERLEON

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 937 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CAERLEON  , an

ancient
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village in the
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southern
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parliamentary division of
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Monmouthshire, England, on the right (west)
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bank of the Usk, 3 M . N.E. of
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Newport . Pop . (1901) 1411 . Its claim to
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notice rests on its
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Roman and
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British associations . As Isca Silurum, it was one of the three
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great legionary fortresses of Roman Britain, established either about A.D . 50 (Tacitus, Annals, xii . 32), or perhaps, as coin-finds suggest, about A.D . 74–78 in the governorship of
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Julius Frontinus, and in either case intended to coerce the wild
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Silures . It was garrisoned by the Legio II .
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Augusta from its foundation till near the end of the Roman
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rule in Britain . Though never seriously excavated, it
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CAERPHILLY 937 contains plentiful visible traces of its Roman period—part of the ramparts', the site of an amphitheatre, and many inscriptions, sculptured stones, &c., in the
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local museum .

No

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civil
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life or
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municipality seems, however, to have grown up outside its walls, as at York (Eburacum) . Like Chester (see DEVA), it remained purely military, and the
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common notion that it was the seat of a Christian bishopric in the 4th century is unproved and improbable . Its later
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history is obscure . We do not know when the legion was finally withdrawn, nor what succeeded . But Welsh legend has made the site very famous with tales of Arthur (revived by Tennyson in his Idylls), of Christian martyrs,
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Aaron and Julius, and of an archbishopric held by St Dubric and shifted to St David's in the 6th century . Most of these traditions date from Geoffrey of Monmouth (about 1130-1140), and must not be taken for history . The ruins of Caerleon attracted notice in the 12th and following centuries, and gave plain cause for legend-making . There is better, but still slender, reason for the belief that it was here, and not at Chester, that five kings of the Cymry rowed Edgar in a barge as a sign of his
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sovereignty (A.D . 973) . The name Caerleon seems to be derived from the Latin Castra legionum, but it is not
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peculiar to Caerleonon-Usk, being often used of Chester and occasionally of Leicester and one or two other places . (F . J .

End of Article: CAERLEON
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