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Description
Photography by John Ball -- 11 August 2000 (with Olympus C-920Z digital camera)
Modern Caerleon is an attractive small town of 7000 people, situated close to the river Usk and to the north-east of Newport. In AD 74 or 75, the occupying forces of the Roman Empire established their strategic base here for the conquest of South Wales. They called their legionary fortress Isca, the Roman name for the river Usk, and their troops occupied Isca for the next 250 years. The fortress covered an area of 50 acres (20 hectares) and was the base for the Second Augustan Legion, a division of about 5,500 infantry, plus the necessary support staff.
Image 1:
Roman amphitheatre at Caerleon, viewed from the south-east.
When the Romans eventually vacated the fort, much of the material with which it was constructed was looted and used to build the houses of Caerleon, so in many cases only the foundations of the original Roman fortress remain. Archaeological excavation, begun in the early 20th century, revealed some notable features of the fortress, including the baths (equivalent to a modern leisure centre), a barracks, and a huge amphitheatre built just outside the fortress wall. The photographs in this Images of Wales feature illustrate the amphitheatre and barracks.
Amphitheatre
Image 2:
The north (foreground) and south (distance) main entrances to the amphitheatre.
It was through here that the procession of performers would enter the arena at the beginning of the games.
There were two main processional entrances (portae pompae), at the north and south ends of the long axis of the amphitheatre. Additionally, there were six lesser entrances spaced around the perimeter (see below).
The spectator, clutching his ticket in the form of a lead token, would descend the central steps then mount a stairway at the side, leading out onto the terraces of seats. His seat would probably have been numbered.
Between each pair of stairways communicating with the terrace was a square central room where gladiators or prisoners awaited their turn, and wild beasts would be penned before being released into the arena.
Image 5:
An artist's impression of the amphitheatre, viewed from the south-west. (Illustration by Dale Evans, after R. A. Anderson, 1988)
The timber grandstand seated about 6,000 spectators, slightly more than the full complement of the legion. The central arena was 165 feet long by 120 feet wide.
Image 6:
The amphitheatre viewed from the south-east.
Games were held in the amphitheatre to celebrate religious and military festivals. Like today's sporting stars, top gladiators were expensive to employ, but a star name might be hired for special occasions. Lesser performers such as amateurs were in more plentiful supply, and condemned criminals were sometimes made to fight the gladiators, or battle to the death with beasts such as bears, wolves, wild boars, or bulls.
Barracks
A short walk from the amphitheatre, and inside the perimeter of the fortress is the Prysg Field Barracks (below). This area was excavated in the 1920s revealing a row of barrack buildings each of which once housed a legion century of eighty men, commanded by a centurion, possibly equivalent to a modern sergeant major. The Second Augustan Legion comprised sixty centuries, requiring a total of sixty barrack blocks.
Image 7:
A general view of one of the long rectangular barrack blocks.
Each barrack block is divided into twelve pairs of small square rooms plus larger accommodation for the centurion. In the foreground (above) are the bases of circular ovens.
Image 8:
Part of a barrack block showing four of the small rooms.
Each pair of rooms would house eight men; one room was used for sleeping, the other for storage of the men's kit.
Image 9:
One of the circular oven bases which were built alongside the cookhouse (not shown).
The Roman fortress and amphitheatre at Caerleon are in the care of CADW: Welsh Historic Monuments which carries out the statutory responsibilities of the Secretary of State for Wales for protecting, conserving and presenting ancient monuments and historic buildings in Wales.
The artist's impression and much of the information in the captions above have been extracted from the second edition of the guide book Caerleon Roman Fortress by Jeremy K. Knight, published in 1994 by CADW, Cardiff: ISBN 0-948329-96-3.
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