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CASTELL COLLEN Wales.

This Roman auxiliary fort in E central Wales is unknown to history, and its Roman name is lost, but excavation has revealed that it played a recurrent role on the W limes from its foundation ca. A.D. 75-78 until the 4th c.

The fort was in a characteristic position on a low knoll within a great bend of the river leithon, just off the supposed line of the N-S military road which formed the E boundary of the Welsh limes. About 2.5 km S of the fort is a major group of practice-camps. The visible remains are those of the bank and ditch of a fort ca. 125 m square, capable of holding a cohors quingenaria peditata, but this is known to have replaced an original fort of ca. 170 x 125 m; this, with twice the troop accommodation, would have been suitable for a cohors milliaria peditata. Traces of the masonry administrative buildings—principia, praetorium and horreum—are also to be seen in a dilapidated condition. The barracks and other buildings were, however, always of wood.

Minor excavations were carried out in 19 11 and 1913, and more sustained excavations in 1954-57. These demonstrated a complex pattern of building, abandonment, and reoccupation. Actual dating evidence is not abundant, but the following sequence has been suggested. I, milliary fort with turf and timber defenses, ca. A.D. 75-78. II, defenses and gates rebuilt in stone; portae praetoria et principales had projecting semicircular gate-towers, the earliest known in Britain in a military context; Antonine. III, retentura abandoned and its rampart razed, new quingenary fort enclosing original administrative block and praetentura; Severan. IV, rampart and gates refurbished, ditch recut to a wide profile perhaps for artillery defense; late 3d or 4th c. Periods of abandonment, inferred from the collapse of the rampart, intervened between these building-phases. Nothing is known of the history of the internal buildings, but the single horreum would be appropriate to the reduced fort. Externally, a large bath house was explored in 1955-57. It was distinguished by a large basilica, for drill or exercise, in place of the customary changing-room. Its development ran parallel with that of the fort itself.

Among the finds now in the museum at Llandrindod Wells, Radnorshire, the most important is part of an Antonine building inscription ornamented with peltae terminating in griffins' heads. Apart from its artistic interest, this reveals that the building work of phase II was carried out by a vexillation of Legio II Augusta. There is no evidence to show what unit or units were stationed at Castell Collen.


BIBLIOGRAPHY

L. Alcock, “The defences and gates of Castell Collen auxiliary fort,” Archaeologia Cambrensis 113 (1964) 64-96PI; F. H. Thompson, “The zoomorphic pelta in Romano-British art,” AnJ 48 (1968) 47-58; V. E. Nash-Williams, The Roman Frontier in Wales (rev. 1969)MP.

L. ALCOCK

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