ISCA DUMNONIORUM
(Exeter) Devonshire, England.
The cantonal city of the Dumnonii, the
Iron Age tribes inhabiting the modern counties of Cornwall, Devon, and West Somerset. The city was named
from the river Exe, Celtic Eisca, Wysc, meaning river
abounding in fish. The position is given in road-books
in the 2d c.:
Antonine Itinerary, Iter XV, in the
Peutinger
Table fragment, and is twice mentioned in the
Ravenna
Cosmography. Excavation has demonstrated that the
site began as a Claudian military post, a fort, probably of
2.4 ha, S of the later city and supplemented by a lookout fortlet on the crest of Stoke Hill, 3.2 km NE. About
A.D. 47-48 this was replaced by a legionary fortress,
probably the headquarters of the Second Augustan
legion. Remains of roads, timber barracks, workshops,
officers' houses and an imposing stone bath building
have recently been identified in the center of Exeter. A
reduction in the garrison took place during the reign of
Vespasian, when the caldarium of the baths and the
barracks were altered. By A.D. 80 there was a general
military withdrawal from the SW consequent on the need
to garrison Wales and the North, and the fortress was
converted for civilian use. The military bath house became part of the municipal offices with a new entrance
and an extensive forum. New public baths, of which a
plunge bath in the frigidarium and a stone conduit for
the waste have been located, were built on an adjacent
site.
The defenses, a rampart and ditch with stone gates,
were begun after A.D. 160 and supplemented by a massive
stone wall during the early 3d c. The 3.2 km circuit of
the wall mostly survives, apart from the gates, enclosing
a city of 36.8 ha. The Roman masonry consists of a
facing of rectangular blocks of local volcanic stone on
a core of grouted rubble 3 m thick; a chamfered plinth
indicates the Roman ground level. Bastions were added
in mediaeval times, and there is much later repair with
different stone.
The road grid, only partly known, is irregular because
of the hilly character of the interior. Little is known of
domestic buildings; 10 tessellated pavements have been
recorded but fragments of only two with geometric designs survive. Trade with the Mediterranean in the 3d c.
is indicated by Alexandrian coins, and the existence of
a Christian community by a Chi-Rho inscribed on a
cooking-pot sherd.
The forum was in disuse by A.D. 375 and the coin
series ends effectively with Gratian A.D. 383. Finds of
imported amphorae show that part of the municipal
offices were altered and occupied into the 5th or 6th c.
It is likely that an impoverished city was still inhabited
when the Saxons arrived in the mid 7th c. The finds are
in a museum in Rougemont House, Exeter.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
A. Fox,
Roman Exeter (1952); “Roman discoveries in Exeter 1951-52,”
Proc. Devon Arch.
Soc. 4 (1951) 106; “Excavations in Bear Street, Exeter,”
ibid. 5 (1953) 30; “Excavations at the South Gate,
Exeter,” ibid. 26 (1968) 1;
Exeter in Roman times
(rev. ed. 1973).
A. FOX