52.2756°N, 1.1053°W
Bannaventa is tentatively identified with the Roman roadside settlement at Whilton Lodge in Northamptonshire on Watling Street, though some scholars place it at Norton. The site has produced evidence of roadside occupation, pottery production, and cremation burials. It served travellers on Watling Street between London and the north. Bannaventa is best known today as the possible birthplace of St Patrick, Britain's patron saint of Ireland, born in the late 4th century.
Roman small towns served as market centres, road junctions, and industrial sites. Many had official mansiones (posting inns) for government travellers and developed into significant local centres.
Rome's occupation of Britain lasted from the Claudian invasion of 43 AD to the early 5th century. At its height the province contained several major cities, hundreds of villas, thousands of miles of road, and a military establishment stretching to Hadrian's Wall. Every Aubrey report for a location in Roman Britain draws on the Portable Antiquities Scheme and Historic England monument records to include finds and sites relevant to your chosen location.
Named Roman roads recorded within 15 km of Whilton Lodge, from the Roman Roads in Britain dataset.
The Roman province of Britannia was created following the invasion ordered by the Emperor Claudius in 43 AD. Four legions and auxiliary troops landed on the south coast and advanced rapidly north and west. Within a generation, a network of roads, forts, and towns had been imposed on the landscape of lowland England, transforming the territory of the Iron Age tribes into a functioning Roman province.
At its fullest extent, Roman Britain stretched from the Channel coast to Hadrian's Wall — a stone frontier across northern England completed in the 120s AD. The province contained dozens of towns, hundreds of rural villas, industrial sites producing pottery, metalwork, and textiles, and a military establishment of some 50,000 soldiers.
The Roman presence did not end overnight. Formal Roman government had largely ceased by the early 5th century, but Roman buildings, roads, and land patterns shaped Britain's landscape for centuries. Every Aubrey report for a location in England includes Roman find spots, scheduled monuments, and road proximity data drawn from national heritage records.
These settlements were recorded in William the Conqueror's great survey of 1086 — they existed alongside and after the Roman occupation of this area.
An Aubrey report for a location near Whilton Lodge includes Roman road proximity, Portable Antiquities Scheme find records, scheduled monument data, and the full arc of the site's history from the Roman period to the present day.
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