'Viroconium Cornoviorum', or simply 'Viroconium', was a
Roman town, one corner of which is now occupied by the small
village of
Wroxeter in the
English county of
Shropshire, about 8 km (5 miles) east-south-east of
Shrewsbury.
Name
According to Rivet and Smith, the first part, ''viro-'', may mean either 'true' or 'man'. The second, '-conium' is unknown, although it appears to refer to some large geographic feature such as a lake or a forest. Jackson suggests the name is a
Latin form of the
Brythonic 'Uriconon' which would have been applied to the nearby
hill fort on
The Wrekin. The suffix, ''Cornoviorum'', means 'of the
Cornovii', the local tribe.
However, it has also been suggested that ''viro'' means specifically virile man and ''conium'' stands for a
conii tribe. That tribe may have come from Iberia through
Cornwall, where they are known as
cornovii (from the horn), so the complete city name: ''virile conii man from the horn'' - ''Viroconium Cornoviorum''.
Roman town
Viroconium was established about AD
58 as a legionary
fortress for the
XIVth legion during their invasion of what is now
Wales. They were later replaced by the
XXth legion, until abandoned by the military around AD
88. At this time the civilian settlement, which had grown up around the fort, took over the site. By AD
130 it had expanded to cover an area of more than 173 acres (70 ha). Viroconium was then fitted out with an impressive set of public buildings, including
public baths and a colonnaded
forum dedicated to the Emperor
Hadrian, as shown by the remains of a fine insciption. Simpler temples and shops have also been excavated. At its peak, Viroconium is estimated to have been the fourth largest Roman settlement in Britain with a population of more than 6,000 people.
Post-Roman town
Although in decline, unusually, the town continued to be occupied following the
Roman withdrawal in AD
410. A number of timber buildings were erected on and around the site of the old baths, notably a large winged structure described as an 'administrative centre' or 'palace'. Like many places in Britain, the town has therefore been suggested to be the original
Camelot of
Arthurian legend. Another possibility is that it was the residence of the
5th century British ruler,
Vortigern, whose family are said to have come from the region.
Remains
Impressive standing remains survive and further buildings have been excavated. This includes 'the Old Work', an archway - part of the baths'
frigidarium - that is the largest free-standing Roman ruin in England and the remains of a baths complex. These are on display to the public and, along with a small museum, are looked after by
English Heritage. Some of the more important finds are housed in the
Rowley's House Museum in Shrewsbury. Most of the town still remains buried, but it has largely been mapped through
archaeological geophysics and
aerial archaeology.
Literature
★
A. E. Housman refers to the town as "Uricon" in his poem ''
A Shropshire Lad''.
★
Wilfred Owen saw archaeological digs in progress at Wroxeter and refers to it in 1913, ''Uronconium - an Ode''.
★
Viriconium, a fictional town with a similar name, appears in the
science fiction and
fantasy novels of
M. John Harrison.
References
★ Guy de la Bedoyere. (1991). ''The Buildings of Roman Britain''.
★ Kenneth Jackson. (1970). 'An Appendix on the Place Names of the British Section of the Antonine Itinerary' in ''Britannia, 1''.
★ ALF Rivet & Colin Smith. (1979). ''The Place-Names of Roman Britain''.
External links
★
BBC
★
English Heritage site
★
★ class=wikiexternal target=_blank>.html Excavation report by Thomas Wright