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Vindolanda
Vindolanda
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Key Information

Vindolanda was a Roman auxiliary fort (castrum) just south of Hadrian's Wall in northern England, which it pre-dated. Archaeological excavations of the site show it was under Roman occupation from roughly 85 AD to 370 AD. Located near the modern village of Bardon Mill in Northumberland, it guarded the Stanegate, the Roman road from the River Tyne to the Solway Firth. It is noted for the Vindolanda tablets, a set of wooden leaf-tablets that were, at the time of their discovery, the oldest surviving handwritten documents in Britain.[1]

History and garrison

[edit]

The site is a hill on the Stanegate road, with steep slopes on the north, east, and south sides. It originally had a deep dip running north-south through the centre of the hill, which was gradually filled up by successive layers of occupation.[2] There is currently no evidence for settlement on the fortress site before the Roman period, but there was an iron-age hillfort at Barcombe Hill [d], 34 mile (1.3 km) to the northeast (which served as a quarry and signal station in the Roman period). Two pre-Roman farmsteads have been found in the area and two standing stones called the Mare and Foal, about 3 miles (5 km) to the west, are the remnants of a stone circle, which might have been the local religious centre.[3] The name "Vindolanda" is probably Celtic, meaning "white lawn" or similar.[note 1][4] An inscribed altar records a group called the Textoverdi, who may have been the native inhabitants of the area.[3]

Late first century AD (Periods I–III)

[edit]

Archaeological excavations, inscriptions, and the tablets indicate that Vindolanda was under Roman occupation from roughly 85 AD to 370 AD.[1][5] The garrison consisted of a series of different infantry and cavalry auxilia units, not components of Roman legions. The first unit to be based at the site was the Cohors I Tungrorum (First Cohort of Tungrians), composed of Tungri from Gallia Belgica, led by Julius Verecundus, who seem to have arrived after Gnaeus Julius Agricola's conquest of the north and built the First Timber Fort (Period I). Vindolanda Tablet 154, a troop roster, records that the unit contained 746 men and 6 centurions, of which 295 men and 1 centurion were then at Vindolanda itself, while 335 men and 2 centurions were away at Coria (Corbridge), and 116 men and 3 centurions were away on other missions. Of the troops at Vindolanda, 15 were sick, 6 were wounded, and 10 were out of action with conjunctivitis.[6] Around 92 AD, they rebuilt the site as the Second Timber Fort (Period II).[7]

In the 90s AD, the Cohors I Tungrorum were replaced by the Cohors IX Batavorum (ninth Cohort of Batavians), a combined infantry and cavalry cohort of 1,000 men, composed of Batavi from the Rhine delta in Germania Inferior (modern-day Netherlands). They had the privilege of being commanded by one of their own noblemen, first Flavius Genialis and later Flavius Cerialis [de].[8] Shortly after their arrival, they rebuilt the site again as the Third Timber Fort (Period III). The majority of the tablets found at Vindolanda belonged to Cerealis' archives. These include the correspondence of his wife Sulpicia Lepidina and his children's school exercises.[9] In 104 AD, the cohort was ordered to abandon the fort in order to join Trajan's second invasion of Dacia. The fort was demolished, valuables were removed, and rubbish was burnt on bonfires. The tablets were among the items thrown on the bonfire, but a chance rain storm seems to have saved them from destruction.[9]

Second century AD (Periods IV–VIb)

[edit]
Tombstone for Titus Annius, centurion of Cohors I Tungrorum

The Cohors I Tungrorum returned to Vindolanda in or after 105 and built the Fourth Timber Fort (Period IV).[10] They were joined by a contingent of Varduli cavalry, a Basque-speaking group from northern Spain.[11] A large tombstone for Titus Annius, a centurion of Cohors I Tungrorum, which records that he was "killed in the war", probably indicates that the cohort was involved in heavy fighting that broke out in northern Britain in 117 AD. This seems to have led to the cohort's reduction from 800 to 500 men.[12] This fighting prompted the construction of Hadrian's Wall slightly to the north and the fort probably served as an administrative hub during the construction of Hadrian's Wall. Vindolanda Tablet 344 and a very large wooden building may indicate that Hadrian resided at the fort for a period, as he oversaw the initial stages of construction in 122 AD.[13] In the 120s, the cohort rebuilt the fortress again as the Fifth Timber Fort (Period V). The original plan for Hadrian's Wall was for it to consist of a turf wall with a series of milecastles and watchtowers along its length, but the main garrison remaining at Vindolanda and the other existing fortresses along the Stanegate road, so the construction of the Fifth Fort may have been in preparation for it to serve in this role. Later, it was decided to build new fortresses on the wall itself. Around 128 AD, the Cohors I Tungrorum abandoned Vindolanda and moved into the nearest of these new fortresses, Vercovicium (Housesteads Roman Fort, about two miles (three kilometres) to the north-east of Vindolanda).[14][15]

In 142, Antoninus Pius moved the frontier north from Hadrian's Wall to the new Antonine Wall, but around 162 this was abandoned and the troops returned to Hadrian's Wall. It is unclear what happened to Vindolanda in this period. There are signs of a new timber fortress of late Hadrianic or early Antonine date.[16] By 162, Vindolanda was occupied by the Cohors II Nerviorum [de] (Second Cohort of Nervians), an infantry force composed of Nervii, a Belgic tribe from Gallia Belgica, who converted the timber fort into Stone Fort I (Period VIa).[14][15]

In the early third century AD, there was an increase of attacks on the Romans in northern Britain and Emperor Septimius Severus decided to resolve the matter by personally leading an invasion of Caledonia (modern-day Scotland) in 208 AD.[17] As part of these campaigns, a short-lived stone fortress, the Severan complex (Period VIb), was built at Vindolanda. The identity of the garrison in this period is uncertain. The Severan complex incorporated up to two hundred circular structures, which may have housed irregular auxiliary troops, native British civilians employed at the nearby quarries, hostages taken by Severus during the campaign, or pro-Roman British civilians seeking shelter from the disorder produced by the invasion.[18] A skull found in the south ditch of the fortress was probably displayed before the fortress as a war trophy.[19] Septimius Severus died at York in 211 AD; his sons Caracalla and Geta paid off the rebels and left for Rome.

Third and fourth centuries AD (Periods VII–IX)

[edit]
Dedicatory inscription to the goddess Gallia by Gauls and Britons

Sometime in the 210s, the Severan complex was demolished and replaced with Stone Fort II (Period VII) and a vicus (civilian settlement) was built to the west of the fortress.[20] The majority of the structures that are visible today belong to this period or later. The occupants of the site at this time were the Cohors IV Gallorum equitata (Fourth cavalry Cohort of Gauls).[21] A dedication to Caracalla shows that they were settled at Vindolanda by 213 AD.[22] It had been presumed that the title of the cohort was, by this time, purely nominal, with auxiliary troops being recruited locally but an inscription found in 2005 suggests that native Gauls were still to be found in the regiment and that they liked to distinguish themselves from British soldiers.[23] The inscription reads:

CIVES GALLI
DE GALLIAE
CONCORDES-
QUE BRITANNI

Translation:

The troops from Gaul dedicate this statue
to the goddess Gallia
with the full support of
the British-born troops

Selkirk 2006, pp. 4–5

Another inscription records that the cohort rebuilt the western gate of the fortress in 223 AD.[24] The cohort was commanded by Quintus Petronius Urbicus under Severus Alexander (222–235 AD). Marcus Caecilius Celer, Pituanius Secundus, and Gaius Sulpicius Pudens are also recorded as commanders, but their tenures cannot be dated.[25] The final evidence for the cohort at Vindolanda is a fragmentary inscription recording renovations or construction under the emperor Probus (276–282 AD).[24] Religious dedications survive from this period for a range of gods. Seventeen inscribed dedications have been found for Roman deities: seven for Jupiter, two for the genius (protective spirit) of the fortress headquarters, three for Mercury, one for the Fortune of the Roman People, one for Vulcan, one for Silvanus, one for Mars Victor, and one for Hercules. There are also statues of Diana, Hercules, and Priapus. Twenty dedications are attested for deities of northwestern Europe: twelve dedications to the Veteres ('old ones'), five for mother goddesses, and individual dedications for Cocidius, Mogons, and Maponus. There are also statues of the mothers and of Maponus. One dedication was erected for the goddess of Hama in Syria (a detachment from that city was based at Carvoran to the west).[26]

Around the end of the third century, the fortress was briefly abandoned and then reconstructed (Period VIII). This may have been the result of reforms to the border defences of the Roman Empire by Diocletian.[20] Over the fourth century, the size of the garrison declined and the vicus was abandoned.[27] The fortress was once again rebuilt in the second half of the fourth century (Period IX), perhaps following Count Theodosius' defeat of the Great Conspiracy in 368.[20] This rebuild was accompanied by the construction of an apsed building, possibly a church.[28]

The last Roman troops left Britain in 407 AD, but occupation at Vindolanda continued for an uncertain amount of time. A small church was built inside the courtyard of the old headquarters sometime after 400 AD.[29] A Christian dedication dating to around 600 AD has been found at and near the site, which may indicate that there was a monastic establishment at Vindolanda in this period.[30] A tombstone for one Brigomaglos, whose name suggests Welsh origins, was found near Vindolanda and also dates to around 600 AD. He might have been a priest or a garrison commander for one of the kings of the Old North.[29] Some Anglo-Saxon brooches have been found on the site.[29]

Description

[edit]
The different periods of the fortress' history. Yellow = Period I (85–92 AD);
Red = Periods II and III (92–105 AD);
Green = Period IV and V (105–140 AD);
Brown = Period VI (140–160 AD);
Blue = Period VI–IX (160–410 AD)

The site consists of a series of fortresses built one on top of the other, which have been divided by archaeologists into nine periods. The first five periods are successive forts built of wood and turf with different footprints (Periods I–V).[5] They are buried as much as 13 feet (4 m) deep in the anoxic waterlogged soil and are covered by the remains of later periods, which makes excavation difficult, but has also led to the preservation of large amounts of organic matter. The fifth fort was converted to stone in period VIa, replaced with a new stone fort (the Severan complex) in Period VIb, and replaced with a second stone fort (Periods VII-IX), which accounts for most of the remains visible on the site today. Outside the fortress itself, a large bathhouse was built to the south in Period II, a smaller bathhouse and two temples were built to the west in Period VIa,[31] and a vicus (self-governing village) existed to the west of the fort in Period VII.

A lidar view of Vindolanda in its environmental context

First timber fort (Period I)

[edit]

The first timber fortress covers largely the same area as the stone fortress which is visible today, although on a slightly different alignment, and only a few sections of the outer ditch the surrounded the fortress have been excavated, at the western and southern sides. These contained various items of rubbish which were dumped there towards the end of the fort's life, including various wooden, leather, and metal objects, notably writing tablets, a toy wooden sword, the crest for a centurion's helmet, made from local hair moss, and an iron stylus.[32] The date of this fort is placed ca. 85 AD by a cache of Samian ware and a coin of Vespasian.[33]

Second timber fort (Period II)

[edit]

The second timber fort was about twice the size of the first fort and, unlike the first fort, it was aligned with the cardinal directions. The remains of this layer are up to 13 feet (4 m) below the modern ground level. The western portion of the wattle and daub timber praetorium (headquarters), the fortress' south gate, and adjacent parts of the south rampart have been excavated.[34] Dendrochronology suggests that the date of construction was 92 AD or shortly thereafter.[35]

The preserved portion of the praetorium consists of fifteen rooms from the western part of the structure (A–K, M–P), the western edge of the internal courtyard (Q), and a water tank in the courtyard (L). The floors were made of hard-packed clay, covered by a 2+142+58-foot (0.7–0.8 m) thick "carpet" of bracken, which was probably replaced annually.[36] This bracken preserved many metal and organic items, including several writing tablets and tent fragments.[37] The water tank was 35+14 feet (10.75 m) long, 10+14 feet (3.125 m) wide, and 4 feet (1.26 m) deep. The sides were made of wattle and daub. It was filled from the north by a conduit.[38]

The south rampart was made of turf and was 15 feet (4.5 m) wide. The south gate was a 10+58-foot-wide (3.23 m) cutting in this rampart. At each side of the gateway, the turf was held in place with horizontal wooden boards of alder, reinforced by four large oak posts on each side. There was a lintel of softwood held in place by the oak posts and iron spikes. There was probably a guard chamber above the gateway, supported by the oak posts. The gateway sat in a dip in the ground, through which water drains off the fortress site. Clay, tree branches, and split logs were buried to the north of the gateway in unsuccessful attempts to ameliorate the resulting instability of the ground.[36]

Pre-Hadrianic bathhouse

[edit]
View of the Pre-Hadrianic bathhouse, looking east from the cold rooms towards the hot rooms and main furnace

The pre-Hadrianic bathhouse was located outside the fortress, southeast of the gate, just above a steep drop down to Doe Sike stream. It is a Reihentyp bathhouse, consisting of a set of rooms laid out in a line, which the bather passed through in sequence. The cold rooms were located at the west end. The hot rooms with hypocaust floors and the furnace were at the east end. An additional furnace and heated room were added on the north side and a cold plunge pool was added on the south side at the west end. There was a separate latrine building just south of the cold plunge pool. A writing tablet indicates that it was built in Period II. The work was done by the local cohort, providing clear evidence that auxiliary cohorts and not just legionary troops, were capable of complex construction projects. The bricks and tiles for the building were probably manufactured on site. In subsequent periods, the garrison decreased in size and it became too big to run efficiently, so it was demolished in the mid-second century at the latest.[39]

Third timber fort (Period III)

[edit]

The third timber fort was built on the same location and with the same layout as the second fort, but to a higher quality. The only excavated structures are the western portion of the praetorium and the south gate.[40] Most of the Vindolanda tablets (128) derive from bonfires of official correspondence and other rubbish that was set to the west of the praetorium and was extinguished by rain and coated with mud before the first had a chance to incinerate them.[41] A structure to the north of the praetorium might be the principia (headquarters), but the layout of the structure, although poorly known, seems unusual for this.[42] The remains are about ten feet (three metres) below the current ground level.[43] The tablets indicate that this period ran from 97–105 AD.[44]

The explored portion of the praetorium is 166+18-foot-long (50.65 m) north-south and was at least 102+12-foot-wide (31.25 m) east-west (although only the westernmost 53+38 ft (16.25 metres) has been uncovered). This makes it one of the largest praetoria known from Britain.[45] The interior walls were supported on horizontal oak beams, with uprights of alder and birch, and the spaces between filled in with wattle and daub, which was covered over with a plaster wash.[46] The internal floors were dirt or timber, covered with a layer of bracken which was harvested in July–August, dried for a month, and then used for a year as a kind of 'carpet'. Many small objects were found lodged within this layer, as well as loads of nuts, shells, pupae of stable flies, and traces of excrement and urine.[47] As a result, the rooms would have been smelly and unhygienic, but warm.

The chamfron recovered from Room XI

Nineteen rooms have been identified (I–V, VIII–XII, XIV–XXII), as well as a yard at the southwest corner (VIA–VIB) and an internal courtyard (VII and XIII).[40] Room II, a large room in the southwest corner, measuring 31 by 18 feet (9.5 m × 5.5 m), with heavy beams to support an upper story, was probably used by the prefect for public audiences.[45] Room IV, a long, narrow room (23+14 by 8 feet or 7.1 m × 2.45 m) to the west contained many writing tablets, suggesting that it was a scribal office.[48] Room VIII was a small kitchen (9+34 by 9+34 feet or 2.95 m × 2.95 m), including two small bread ovens and a rubbish pit, containing several writing tablets relating to its operations. It had an attached store room for kitchen supplies (Room V), with a wooden floor made from a recycled tabletop (13+14 by 9+58 feet or 4.05 m × 2.95 m).[49] The southwest yard (VIA) contained the two bonfires of the Vindolanda tablets and a rubbish dump.[48] The east-west corridor, Room IX, was the servants' entrance to the praetorium from the road to the west. It connected to a north-south corridor, Room XII, which allowed access to Rooms X–XI and XV–XVII. At the northern end it led to the east-west corridor, Room XXI.[40] Room X (9+78 by 15+34 feet or 3 m × 4.8 m) was not fully cleared during the abandonment of the site. It contained a stack of oak roof-tiles, several metal, textile, and leather objects.[46] Room XI (14 by 15+34 feet or 4.25 m × 4.8 m) contained the best preserved section of wall, as well as some unique objects: a sock, a nearly complete chamfron.[46] Room XVIII (21+18 by 16 feet or 6.45 m × 4.86 m) in the northwest corner of the praetorium, accessed from corridor Room XXI, was the forge. A partition split the western part of the room in half. There were seven pits in the northeast corner. The whole floor was covered with 40 mm (1+58 inches) of coal dust, charcoal, and ash, containing hundreds of fragments of bronze, iron, and lead objects, largely military in nature.[50] Rooms XV–XVII to the east of corridor Room XII were accessed from the courtyard to the east. They were probably workspaces for the slaves of the prefect. Interesting finds included a comb in its leather case, a crowbar left lodged in the wall, gutting knives, barrel staves with brands and writing indicating that they had been imported from the Rhone valley.[51] The courtyard (VII and XIII) was cobbled and had three long oak mechanisms of unknown purpose embedded in it.[52]

The south gate was 6+78 feet (2.08 m) west of its predecessor in the second timber fort, in order to decrease the amount of runoff flowing through it. Like its predecessor, it cut through the turf rampart wall. The sides of the gateway consisted of three pairs of oak posts on each side supported timber planks which held the soil of the rampart in place. The roadway was composed of clay with stone chippings on top.[53]

A wooden pipe carried water from wells near the western edge of the plateau to the centre of the fortress. The pipe consists of a series of alder trunks with holes bored through the centre. These are joined together and held in place by oak boxes between each stretch. Dendrochronology shows that the logs were chopped down in 97 AD.[54]

Romano-Celtic temple

[edit]

A small temple was built outside the fortress to the west in this period. It was a stone structure, with a cella measuring 16+34 by 11+12 feet (5.12 m × 3.5 m). There was a doorway in the midde of the southern wall and a covered walkway running around the outside of the structure. It seems to be mentioned in contemporary writing tablets. In the second-century AD, it was demolished and converted into a cemetery for cremations. A votive altar has been found, but the surviving portion of the inscription names the worshipped god only as deo ("the god").[54]

After the abandonment of the third fort in 105 AD, there was a short period when the site was left uninhabited. Then it was levelled, covered in a layer of clay and turf up to 85 cm (33 inches) deep and a new fortress was built. Dendrochronology indicates that this took place within a year or so of 105.[55]

Fourth timber fort (Period IV)

[edit]

The fourth fort was built on the same alignment as the second and third fortresses, but extended 200 feet (60 m) further west, making it the largest fortress ever built on the site. A large 'palatial building', a schola (junior officers' mess hall), and a barracks have been identified. Other remains have proven difficult to identify due to interference from later structures built on top and the decayed state of the soft wood used in the construction of the fortress.

The 'palatial building' was located north of the earlier praetorium. It was a timber building surrounding a central courtyard, but only the western portion has been uncovered. Three rooms have floors made of opus signinum. The walls were coated in plaster and there are signs of a private bath at the northeastern corner of the excavated area. The excavators suggest that it was built to house emperor Hadrian while he supervised the construction of Hadrian's Wall in 122 AD.[56]

West of the 'palatial building' was another large wooden structure, which has been identified as a schola. The finds from the structure were mostly linked with cooking and eating, but there were also some writing tablets. Extensive traces of ash and soot show that the structure was destroyed in a fire.[57]

The barracks occupied the site of the earlier praetorium. The area was subsequently the western ditch of stone fort I and the remains of the barracks have been heavily damaged by as a result. Nevertheless, it is clear that the structure consisted of fourteen single-room apartments (contubernia), in two rows, seven facing west and seven facing east, back to back, with a verandah running along the front on each side.[58] At a later stage, the eastern verandah was converted into additional accommodation space.[59] Each of the contubernia may have housed up to ten tightly packed soldiers. Finds of small shoes may have belonged to the soldiers' children and wives or to slave-boys serving the soldiers.[60] At the north end of the structure there were two larger dwellings, each consisting of a front room and a hallway leading to two back rooms, each equivalent in size to a contubernium. These apartments were probably for the centurions commanding the rest of the soldiers in the barracks.[58] Several long writing tablets were found in one of these quarters, including an appeal to someone addressed as "your majesty," perhaps the emperor Hadrian.[61] Several more writing tablets, shoes, styli, combs, leather, ballista bolts, tools, and other metal objects were found throughout the building.[62] Room XV contained dump including over a thousand leather fragments from a soldier's tent.[63]

Roughly thirty meters west of the 'palatial building', schola, and barracks are traces of a large courtyard with rooms around it. Loose finds included bronze probes, tweezers, spoons, knives, razors, and needles. The structure was probably an infirmary.[64] West of this infirmary were traces of another structure, which might be a barracks.[64]

Very large oak posts for a fortification wall have been uncovered to the west. The posts measure 2 by 2 feet (0.6 m × 0.6 m) and are found every 21 feet (6.5 m) for a distance of more than 115 feet (35 m). Dendrochronology shows that these posts date between 102 and 112 AD.[65]

Fifth timber fort (Period V)

[edit]

The fifth timber fort is the most poorly attested period on the site, because it was largely destroyed when the foundations for the first stone fort were dug. In the area of the earlier praetoria, a large multi-functional workshop (fabrica) was uncovered which measured 157 feet (48 m) north-south and about 66 feet (20 m) east-west. It consisted of one narrow room running down the whole west side, several large square rooms in the centre, and a series of small rooms along the east side. Large flagstones were used for the floors. The walls consisted of thick alder and oak posts with boards in between. Many of the rooms had substantial layers of coal dust and iron slag.[66] Room 9 contained a large forge (5+14 by 2 feet or 1.6 m × 0.6 m). Rooms 8 and 10 contained pits 4–5 feet (1.2–1.5 m) deep.[67]

Another fabrica has been found further to the west, a courtyard building measuring 84 by 52 feet (25.7 m × 15.7 m) or more, in which every building had a hearth.[68]

Stone forts, stone huts

[edit]

A stone fort was built at Vindolanda, possibly for the 2nd Cohort of Nervians.[15] The old stone fort was demolished, and replaced by an unconventional set of army buildings on the west, and an unusual array of many round stone huts where the old fort had been. Some of these circular huts are visible by the north and the southwest walls of the final stone fort. The Roman army may have built these to accommodate families of British farmers in this unsettled period.[17] The stone buildings were demolished, and a large new stone fort was built where the huts had been, for the 4th Cohort of Gauls.[21]

Vicus

[edit]

A vicus, a self-governing village, developed to the west of the fort. The vicus contains several rows of buildings, each containing several one-room chambers. Most are not connected to the existing drainage system. The one that does was perhaps a butchery where, for health reasons, an efficient drain would have been important. A stone altar found in 1914 (and exhibited in the museum) proves that the settlement was officially a vicus and that it was named Vindolanda.[21] To the south of the fort is a thermae (a large imperial bath complex), that would have been used by many of the individuals on the site. The later stone fort, and the adjoining village, remained in use until about 285 AD, when it was largely abandoned for unknown reasons.[69]

4th-century forts

[edit]

About 300 AD, the fort was again rebuilt, but the vicus was not reoccupied, so most likely the area remained too unsafe for life outside the defended walls of the fort.[1] In about 370, the fort was roughly repaired, perhaps by irregular soldiers. There is no evidence for the traditional view that Roman occupation ended suddenly in 410; it may have declined slowly.[1]

History of investigation

[edit]

Early accounts

[edit]

The first post-Roman record of the ruins at Vindolanda was made by the antiquarian William Camden, in his Britannia (1586). Occasional travellers reached the site over the next two hundred years, and the accounts they left predate much of the stone-stealing that has damaged the site. The military Thermae (bath-house) was still partly roofed when Christopher Hunter visited the site in 1702. In about 1715 an excise officer named John Warburton found an altar there, which he removed.

In 1814 the first real archaeological work was begun, by the Rev. Anthony Hedley, but he died in 1835, without writing up his discoveries. Little more was done for a long time, although in 1914 a workman found another altar at the site, set up by the civilians living at the fort in honour of the Divine House and Vulcan. Several names for the site are used in the early records, including "Chesters on Caudley", "Little Chesters", "The Bower" and "Chesterholm"; the altar found in 1914 confirmed that the Roman name for the site was "Vindolanda", which had been in dispute as one early source referred to it as "Vindolana".[70]

Excavation

[edit]

In the 1930s, the house at Chesterholm where the museum is now located was purchased by archaeologist Eric Birley, who was interested in excavating the site. This became the family home of Eric and his wife Margaret "Peggy" Birley, a student of Eric's at Armstrong College who volunteered at the excavations at Vindolanda and Housestead, after she and Eric were married in 1934.[71][72] The excavations have been continued by his sons, Robin and Anthony, and his grandson, Andrew Birley, and granddaughter-in-law Barbara Birley into the present day. They are undertaken each summer.

Findings

[edit]
Vindolanda tablet 291

Some of the archaeological deposits reach depths of 20 feet (6 m). The anoxic conditions at these depths have preserved thousands of artefacts made of organic materials that normally disintegrate in the ground,[note 2] thus providing an opportunity to gain a fuller understanding of Roman life – military and otherwise – on the northern frontier. The most notable of these finds are the 850 ink tablets[73] The study of these ink tablets shows a literacy among both the high born who lived there, as with the party invitation from one officer's wife to another[74] and with soldiers and their families who send care packages with notes on the contents of the packages.[75] Other artefacts found on the site include over 160 boxwood combs,[76] most of a Roman military tent, and the largest known assemblage of Roman shoes. A study of spindle whorls from the north-western quadrant has indicated the presence of spinners of low- and high-status in the fort in the 3rd and 4th centuries AD.[77]

Boxing gloves found at Vindolanda

Nearly 2000-year-old Roman boxing gloves were uncovered at Vindolanda in 2017 by the Vindolanda Trust experts led by Dr Andrew Birley. According to The Guardian, being similar in style and function to the full-hand modern boxing gloves, these two gloves found at Vindolanda look like leather bands and date back to 120 AD. It is suggested that, based on their difference from gladiator gloves, warriors using this type of gloves had no purpose to kill each other. These gloves were probably used in a sport for promoting fighting skills. The gloves are currently displayed at Vindolanda's museum. According to Birley, they are not part of a matching pair:[78]

The larger of the two gloves is cut from a single piece of leather and was folded into a pouch configuration, the extending leather at each side were slotted into one another forming a complete oval shape creating an inner hole into which a hand could still easily be inserted. The glove was packed with natural material acting as a shock absorber.

Recent excavations have been accompanied by new archaeological methodologies. 3-D imaging has been used to investigate the use of an ox cranium in target practice.[79]

In 2021, a carved sandstone artifact was discovered a few inches below the floor of the fort. It depicts a nude warrior or deity before a horse or similar animal. Early interpretations point to the figure being of a Roman deity, perhaps of Mars or Mercury.[80]

In February 2023, a 2,000 year-old disembodied 160 mm (6+516 in) long wooden phallus toy was revealed, according to the research published in the journal Antiquity.[81][82]

Media attention

[edit]

In addition to the older initial findings of ink tablets, shoes and combs, several more artifacts and discoveries of note have been covered by the media. In 2017, the British newspaper The Guardian focused on a discovery of cavalry barracks that were uncovered during the excavation season that held a large number of artifacts including swords, ink tablets, textiles, arrowheads, and other military paraphernalia. Relative dating of the barracks had determined that they were built around 105 AD.[83] The Guardian also publicized the discovery of a cache of 25 ink tablets found earlier in the 2017 season. The tablets were discovered in a trench in one of the earliest layers of the fort, dating to the 1st century AD. This discovery was considered to be the second-largest discovery of ink tablets in the world, with the first being a cache that was also discovered at Vindolanda in 1992.[84]

In the 2014 excavation season, BBC ran a story about the discovery of one of the few surviving examples of a wooden toilet seat to be found in the Roman Empire.[85] In the same year, they also recorded the discovery of the only (very old, very worn) gold coin ever to be found on the site with a mint date of 64 or 65 AD, lying in a site layer dating to the 4th century AD.[86]

In 2010, the BBC announced the discovery of the remains of a child between the ages of 8 and 10 years, which was uncovered in a shallow pit in a barrack room in a position suggesting that its arms may have been bound. Further archaeological analysis indicated that it could be female. She is believed to have died about 1,800 years ago.[87]

Another find publicised on the BBC website in 2006 was a bronze and silver fibula modelled with the figure of Mars, with the name Quintus Sollonius punched into its surface.[88]

In 2020, archaeologists discovered a 5th-century chalice covered in religious iconography within a collapsed church structure. The images include crosses, angels, a smiling priestly figure holding a crook, fish, a whale, ships, the Greek letters chi-rho. In addition, the chalice bears scripts written in Latin, Greek, and possibly Ogham.[89][90]

Site museum

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Gardens outside the museum
Sandal found at Vindolanda and now on display in the Museum

The Vindolanda site museum, also known as Chesterholm Museum, conserves and displays finds from the site. The museum is set in gardens, which include full-sized reconstructions of a Roman temple, a Roman shop, a Roman house and Northumbrian croft, all with audio presentations. Exhibits include Roman boots, shoes, armour, jewellery and coins, infrared photographs of the writing tablets and, from 2011, a small selection of the tablets themselves, on loan from the British Museum. 2011 saw the reopening of the museum at Vindolanda, and also the Roman Army Museum at Magnae Carvetiorum (Carvoran), refurbished with a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund.[91]

A full-size replica of two sections of Hadrian's Wall, in turf and in stone was built on the site in 1973.[92]

Vindolanda Trust

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In 1970, the Vindolanda Trust, a registered charity,[93] was founded to administer the site and its museum, and in 1997, the Trust took over the running of the Roman Army Museum at Carvoran to the west, another Hadrian's Wall fort, which it had acquired in 1972. The current Curator of the Vindolanda Trust is Barbara Birley.[94] As of 2009, the Trust was the largest employer in Bardon Mill.[95]

See also

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Notes

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References

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Bibliography

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Vindolanda is a Roman auxiliary fort (castrum) located in present-day , , just south of , which it predates by several decades. Established around AD 85 along the Roman road, it functioned as a vital military outpost to safeguard Roman control over the region, remaining occupied until at least the 5th to AD. The site's exceptional anaerobic conditions have preserved a vast array of organic artifacts, providing unparalleled insights into daily life on the Roman , including military operations, civilian activities, and multicultural interactions. The fort complex evolved through at least nine successive timber and stone structures, each built by a new garrison that demolished its predecessor, accommodating up to 1,000 soldiers from diverse provinces such as the Tungrians (from modern ), Batavians (from the ), and Vardullian cavalry (from ). Its name, Vindolanda, derives from Latin meaning "white lawns" or "white fields," likely referring to the local landscape. Accompanied by an extensive extramural civil settlement (), the site supported a community of 1,500 to 5,000 people, including soldiers' families, traders, and slaves, evidenced by women's and children's footwear and imported goods like spices from Arabia, from the Baltic, and from the Mediterranean. Excavations, directed by the Vindolanda Trust since 1970, have uncovered only about 27% of the site, with ongoing work revealing details of Roman engineering, economy, religion, and post-Roman up to the 9th century. Vindolanda's global significance stems primarily from the discovery of over 1,700 wooden writing tablets, inscribed with ink in cursive Latin and dating mostly to around AD 100 during Emperor Trajan's reign. First unearthed in 1973, these postcard-sized artifacts include personal letters, military strength reports (such as one detailing 752 men, with 265 fit for duty in the First Cohort of Tungrians), accounts, and even a birthday invitation featuring the earliest known example of a woman's handwriting in Latin—from Claudia Severa to Sulpicia Lepidina, wife of the fort commander. Representing the largest collection of Roman ink tablets in the Empire, they illuminate intimate aspects of frontier society, administration, and social networks, now preserved and displayed at the British Museum and the site's Chesterholm Museum. Additional treasures encompass thousands of shoes and boots, jewelry, armor, tools, and religious altars, underscoring the site's role as one of the Empire's richest archaeological repositories for understanding Roman Britain.

Location and Context

Geographical Setting

Vindolanda is situated at grid reference NY 769 664, in the modern civil parish of Henshaw, , , approximately 1.5 kilometers south of . The site lies directly on the line of the , a key Roman military road extending roughly 50 kilometers westward from on the River Tyne to the , placing Vindolanda about 25 kilometers west of the Tyne valley. The topography of Vindolanda features a relatively flat valley floor at an elevation of around 160 meters above , nestled at the southern base of the Whin Sill, a prominent north-south trending ridge of dolerite that forms dramatic crags further north where is constructed. This position in a shallow alluvial , fed by local streams and a natural spring, has resulted in waterlogged, anaerobic soil conditions that inhibit bacterial decay and promote the exceptional preservation of organic artifacts such as wood, leather, and textiles. Local geology consists primarily of , , and deposits overlain by glacial gravels and , which provided readily available materials like clay for ramparts and for stone structures in later phases, while also contributing to the site's stable yet moisture-retentive subsurface. During the Roman occupation from the late first to early fifth century AD, the regional climate was part of the broader , characterized by milder temperatures (about 0.6°C warmer than present) and higher (up to 10% increase in late Roman period). Pollen records from Vindolanda indicate substantial anthropogenic before around AD 85, likely initiated by pre-Roman native farmers and intensified by military activity, leading to open s and arable fields that enhanced site defensibility but reduced natural cover. In contrast, the modern temperate features cooler, wetter winters and drier summers, with ongoing causing fluctuating water tables that threaten preservation; the Vindolanda Trust monitors these changes using probes and weather stations to assess impacts on buried . Today's landscape is more open due to historic clearance and , improving archaeological visibility compared to the more vegetated Roman-era setting, though scrub and still obscure some buried features.

Strategic Importance in Roman Britain

Vindolanda occupied a pivotal position on the Stanegate, an early Roman frontier road established around AD 105 that extended from Corbridge on the River Tyne in the east to Carlisle (Luguvalium) in the west, traversing the Tyne-Irthing gap through the northern Pennines. This route served as the initial defensive line for the province of Britannia prior to the construction of Hadrian's Wall in the AD 120s, functioning as a buffer zone with a chain of auxiliary forts spaced at approximately half-day marching intervals to facilitate rapid troop movements and oversight of the surrounding territory. As a key component of this system, Vindolanda played a crucial role in suppressing unrest among the , the dominant tribe in whose territory encompassed much of the and whose subjugation remained incomplete following initial conquests under governors like Agricola in the late first century AD. The fort's location enabled Roman forces to monitor and respond to potential revolts or incursions from Brigantian groups, contributing to the stabilization of the region after the partial withdrawal from southern around AD 105. Additionally, by securing routes through the , Vindolanda helped protect vital economic assets, including lead and silver mines that supplied imperial needs, though direct oversight of operations was more closely associated with inland forts further south. During the Hadrianic reorganization of the frontier in the AD 120s, Vindolanda evolved from a primary auxiliary fort into a secondary supply depot supporting the newly built , with its garrison aiding construction efforts and logistical operations. This shift intensified under the Antonine period following the temporary advance to the in and subsequent retreat around AD 158, when Vindolanda's role emphasized storage and distribution along the to sustain Wall garrisons amid ongoing northern threats. The fort's interactions with nearby installations underscored its networked strategic value, connected via the to —a major supply base approximately 18 kilometers east—and to Housesteads (Vercovicium) about 7 kilometers northeast across . These links supported efficient road-based communication and signaling systems, such as watchtowers or messengers, enabling coordinated defense and resource sharing across the frontier.

Historical Development

Periods I-III: Late First Century AD

The establishment of Vindolanda in the late first century AD marked the Roman Empire's consolidation of control along the northern frontier of Britain following the campaigns of Governor (AD 77–84), which had temporarily extended Roman influence into before a strategic withdrawal. Period I (c. AD 85–92) saw the construction of the site's first timber fort, covering approximately 1.6 hectares with a clay rampart and defensive ditches up to 4.5 meters across and 1.5 meters deep. The initial garrison was the Cohors I Tungrorum milliaria, a thousand-strong auxiliary cohort recruited from the Tungri tribe in modern , tasked with securing the road system that preceded . In Period II (c. AD 92–100), the fort underwent reconstruction, enlarging it slightly to accommodate ongoing military needs amid the stabilization of the after earlier upheavals in Britain. The shifted to the Cohors VIIII Batavorum, an auxiliary unit from the Batavian tribe in the , reflecting Rome's reliance on Germanic for frontier defense. This phase included the development of ancillary facilities, contributing to the site's role in supply lines and surveillance along the . Period III (c. AD 100–105) featured further upgrades to the timber structures, including enhanced timber-framing in key buildings like the (commander's residence), with dressed oak timbers and planked floors indicating improved quality of life for officers. The garrison remained the Cohors VIIII Batavorum, though evidence from writing tablets suggests interactions with other units, such as the Cohors III Batavorum, and possible elements; notable figures include Flavius Cerialis, whose correspondence provides insights into daily administration around AD 100. Archaeological finds also reveal early growth of a civilian (settlement) outside the fort, with timber buildings and artifacts pointing to families and traders accompanying the military, fostering a mixed community by the early second century. By around AD 105–120, the Cohors I Tungrorum returned as , aligning with Trajan's military reorganizations before Hadrian's arrival. The site experienced a temporary abandonment circa AD 120, likely due to unit redeployments during the transition to frontier system, leaving anaerobic conditions that preserved organic remains like the famous writing tablets. These early phases underscore Vindolanda's evolution from a provisional outpost to a vital hub, influenced by Agricola's earlier expansions and the dynamic shifts in Roman northern policy.

Periods IV-VIb: Second Century AD

The second century AD marked a period of significant evolution at Vindolanda, coinciding with the consolidation of Roman control along the northern frontier following the construction of around AD 122. During Periods IV and V (c. AD 105–160), the site transitioned from earlier timber structures to more permanent installations, reflecting the strategic shift from the road system to the wall as the primary defensive line. The garrison during Period IV (c. AD 105–120) was the Cohors I Tungrorum milliaria equitata, a part-mounted cohort recruited from the Tungri region of modern , numbering approximately 800 men, whose presence is attested by writing tablets and inscriptions detailing and daily operations. This unit oversaw the rebuilding of the fourth timber fort, incorporating stone footings for key buildings such as and granaries, which laid preparatory foundations amid the site's role in supplying the emerging wall defenses. Emperor Hadrian's visit to Britain in AD 122, part of his imperial tour to inspect and reorganize provinces, likely influenced developments at Vindolanda, as the fort's on the positioned it as a logistical hub during the wall's initial construction phase. In Period V (c. AD 120–130, extending into the Antonine era to c. AD 160), the Cohors I Tungrorum continued as , evidenced by artifacts and inscriptions. The fifth timber fort was expanded and reinforced, with the (civilian settlement) growing substantially to support military needs, including workshops and trade outlets, as indicated by pottery and tool finds reflecting increased . This phase aligned with the Antonine advance northward around AD 142, when the temporarily shifted to the in , leading to reduced but sustained occupation at Vindolanda; the fort served as a rearward base, with evidence of turf reinforcements and adaptations to accommodate the northern push. Periods VIa–VIb (c. AD 160–200) followed the Antonine withdrawal from around AD 158–160, prompting repairs and refurbishments to the fort's timber structures to restore functionality along the Hadrianic . The in Period VI (c. AD 140–160s) included the Cohors II Nerviorum, a 500-man infantry unit from modern , known from altars and building inscriptions, while later subphases (VIa–VIb) featured mixed auxiliary forces, possibly including specialist detachments, though specific units remain unidentified due to sparse epigraphic evidence. Archaeological layers reveal post-withdrawal repairs to ditches and ramparts, alongside heightened economic activity in the , such as leatherworking and metal production, evidenced by tannery remains and hoards that underscore the site's resilience and role in regional commerce during a period of stabilization. Overall, these periods highlight Vindolanda's adaptation to imperial policy changes, maintaining stability amid shifting defenses and fostering a vibrant extramural .

Periods VII-IX: Third and Fourth Centuries AD

Period VII, spanning approximately AD 213 to 300, marked a significant reconfiguration of the Vindolanda site following the disruptions of the Severan campaigns in northern Britain around AD 208–211. The previous Antonine-period structures were demolished, and the site was reorganized into a complex that included an annexe and over 200 circular stone huts, potentially serving as temporary housing for refugees or interned locals amid the instability of the early third century. This arrangement was soon superseded by the construction of Stone Fort II, a substantial stone structure measuring about 3.5 acres, which incorporated added and defensive enhancements to accommodate the . The Cohors IV Gallorum equitata, a partially mounted auxiliary cohort originally recruited from (modern ), was stationed here during this phase, as evidenced by epigraphic and archaeological finds. Chalet-style , featuring partitioned quarters rather than traditional communal contubernia, were introduced in the mid-third century during this period or transitional phases to Period VIII. In Period VIII (c. AD 300–367), the fort underwent further modifications amid the broader military reforms of the late , likely influenced by Diocletian's reorganization of frontier defenses, which emphasized fortified units along the borders. These chalet-style barracks continued, reflecting adaptations to integrate civilian dependents or respond to troop reductions and economic pressures from ongoing barbarian incursions in the region. The Cohors IV Gallorum continued as the primary garrison, maintaining the fort's role in securing the frontier despite evidence of resource strain, such as improvised workshops within the ramparts. Period IX (post-AD 367 to c. AD 370 or later) represented the final major occupation phase, with the stone fort rebuilt and reinforced, including updates to the and additional rampart features, amid the declining military presence on the northern . The garrison's identity remains unknown, though the overall size likely diminished as part of the late Roman shift toward mobile field armies under the system. Civilian elements may have become more integrated, with possible militarization of local populations to bolster defenses, as the was largely abandoned by the mid-fourth century. The fort saw limited post-Roman reuse into the fifth century or beyond, but was effectively vacated by the late fourth century, signaling the empire's withdrawal from Britain.

Site Structures and Features

Timber Forts (Periods I-V)

The timber forts at Vindolanda represent the earliest phases of occupation, spanning Periods I to V from approximately AD 85 to 120, characterized by temporary wooden structures built atop waterlogged, anaerobic layers that exceptionally preserved organic materials such as wood and . These forts were constructed using local timber and turf, reflecting the Roman army's for rapid establishment along the northern frontier before the construction of . Dendrochronological analysis of oak timbers has provided precise , revealing a pattern of frequent rebuilds every 8–10 years, indicative of high labor demands and the impermanent nature of these defenses amid ongoing military adjustments. In Period I, established around 85, the fort covered approximately 3.5 acres with turf ramparts supported by timber revetments and an external about 4.5 meters wide and 1.5 meters deep. Inside, timber accommodated roughly 500 auxiliary infantrymen, arranged in a standard playing-card layout with a central principia serving as the for administrative and religious functions. This initial setup followed the Roman withdrawal from northern , positioning Vindolanda as a key supply base. Period II saw the fort enlarged to about 7 acres (2.8 hectares), with the addition of an intervallum road circling the interior perimeter to facilitate troop movement and logistics. A pre-Hadrianic bathhouse was constructed nearby, featuring an underfloor heating system with pilae supports for raised floors, providing essential amenities for the despite the temporary materials. These enhancements underscore the site's growing strategic role in the late first century. During Period III (AD 97–105), internal rebuilds improved structural quality, including the use of dressed timbers and plank floors in key buildings. Granaries with raised floors for ventilation were erected to store supplies, while officer quarters, possibly including a , offered elevated accommodations confirmed by associated inscriptions. Drainage systems were enhanced to combat into earlier ditches, with the south gateway relocated westward for stability. Periods IV and V (AD 104–120) marked a transition, with timber structures incorporating stone bases for durability while maintaining wooden superstructures in and other facilities. These phases completed five iterative timber iterations, each rebuilt rapidly—often within months using labor—to adapt to troop rotations and frontier threats, as evidenced by dendro-dated timbers from AD 104 onward. The anaerobic soil conditions, resulting from the site's proximity to a , sealed these layers oxygen-free, preserving details like postholes and wattle walls that reveal the scale of construction efforts.

Stone Forts and Extensions (Periods VI-IX)

The transition to permanent stone construction at Vindolanda began in Period VI (c. AD 140–160), marking the first stone fort on the site, which encompassed approximately 4 acres (1.6 hectares). This fort featured robust stone walls approximately 7 feet thick, pierced by four principal gates aligned with the cardinal directions, facilitating access and defense along the frontier. The central principia, the administrative , included a secure strongroom for storing valuables and records, underscoring the military's emphasis on centralized control and security in this phase. During Periods VII and VIII (c. AD 200–300), the stone fort underwent significant modifications to enhance defensive capabilities and accommodate evolving needs. Chalet-style barracks were introduced, characterized by stone foundations supporting timber-framed upper stories that resembled alpine chalets in their sloped roofs and , providing durable housing for auxiliary troops. Corner towers were added to the ramparts, improving and positioning, while an intervallum strip—a clear space between the inner buildings and the fort wall—was maintained to allow for rapid troop movements and defensive maneuvers. These adaptations reflect the site's response to ongoing pressures during the Severan and post-Severan eras. The final reconfiguration occurred in Period IX (c. 300–370), resulting in a more compact 3.5-acre stone fort designed for a smaller amid late Roman reorganizations. Walls were substantially thickened, reaching up to 10 feet in places, to bolster resilience against potential incursions. Possible additions of signal towers integrated the fort into broader communication networks along . Throughout these periods, essential facilities such as communal latrines for , workshops for weapon and equipment maintenance, and a valetudinarium () supported daily operations, with the fort's southern boundary aligning closely with the vallum for coordinated frontier defense.

Vicus and Civilian Elements

The at Vindolanda, the extramural settlement, extended along the sides of the fort in a linear or striped layout, primarily following the main roads leading from the gates, and covered approximately 15 acres by the third century AD, significantly larger than the three-acre fort itself. This arrangement included rows of timber and stone buildings such as shops (tabernae) and inns (hospitia), which supported daily and lodging for travelers and residents outside the . The settlement's development paralleled the fort's phases, with early timber structures from Period I onward evolving into more permanent stone constructions by Periods VI-IX, integrating loosely with the fort's defensive perimeter through shared roadways. Key structures within the included a dating to the third to fourth centuries AD (Periods VII-IX), featuring a central surrounded by a and , likely dedicated to local or syncretic deities and serving as a focal point for religious practices among civilians. Multiple bathhouses (balneae) were also prominent, with notable examples such as the east gate complex, which included a , , and heated by systems, providing communal hygiene and social facilities for the non-military population. These public buildings, constructed in both timber and stone phases, underscore the 's role as a self-sustaining hub. Economically, the functioned as a vibrant and industrial zone, with evidence of shops selling goods, tanneries processing from animal hides—indicated by deposits of tanning waste and tools—and possible brothels inferred from the presence of domestic structures with associated artifacts suggesting entertainment services. Local production is attested by remains and wasters (mis-fired vessels), pointing to on-site of coarse wares to supply the fort and settlement, alongside imported fine tablewares. High concentrations of coins and trade-related debris further confirm its importance as a commercial center along the road network. Socially, the vicus supported a mixed population of over 1,000 individuals, including soldiers' families, merchants, artisans, and native Britons, fostering cultural blending evident in hybrid artifacts and practices. grounds were located extramurally, often along roadsides, with graves containing both Roman-style cremations and native inhumations, reflecting diverse customs. Roadside shrines, including small altars and votive deposits, dotted the settlement's periphery, serving communal worship and possibly marking transitions between military and civilian spaces. This demographic and cultural diversity highlights the as a microcosm of frontier interactions in .

Archaeological Investigations

Early Accounts and Initial Excavations

Interest in the Roman remains at Vindolanda emerged in the early among local antiquarians, who recognized the site's significance as a military outpost south of . The Reverend Anthony Hedley conducted the first notable excavations in the 1830s, uncovering structures and artifacts including altars and tombstones, though his work lacked systematic recording and he died in 1835 without publishing his findings. Hedley also constructed the Chesterholm cottage on the site, which later served as the museum building. John Clayton, a prominent Newcastle antiquarian and owner of nearby Chesters Roman fort, visited Vindolanda in the 1830s and 1840s, documenting the ruins through sketches and notes that highlighted visible stone structures and the site's topography along the road. After acquiring the Vindolanda estate in 1863, Clayton inherited earlier finds and conducted limited excavations, notably in 1874 when he uncovered a small dedicated to a local . These efforts revealed additional inscriptions and sculpted stones, adding 23 such items to his collection at , though his focus remained primarily on sites rather than comprehensive digs at Vindolanda. The late 19th and early 20th centuries saw continued amateur interest marred by challenges such as unregulated looting by locals and visitors seeking souvenirs, which damaged unexcavated areas, alongside inconsistent documentation that hindered scholarly analysis. Eric Birley, inspired by a family visit to the site in , initiated more structured investigations in after acquiring Chesterholm farmhouse; his work established the foundational nine-period classification system for Vindolanda's occupation phases, laying the groundwork for modern while addressing the site's layered timber and stone fortifications.

Modern Excavation Projects

Modern excavations at Vindolanda began in earnest under the direction of Robin Birley, who led annual campaigns from the 1970s through 2015 as part of the Vindolanda Trust's efforts. These systematic digs, building on earlier family-led explorations, revealed the site's nine sequential occupation periods spanning from the late first to the fourth century AD, through meticulous stratigraphic work across the fort, , and surrounding areas. Birley's tenure emphasized community involvement, establishing volunteer programs in 1970 that have since engaged thousands of participants in hands-on excavation and post-excavation processing. Following Robin Birley's leadership, his son Andrew Birley assumed the role of Director of Excavations in 2005, continuing the Trust's large-scale operations into the present day. Under Andrew's guidance, excavations have maintained an annual rhythm, focusing on unresolved areas of the site while integrating findings with broader management to inform regional frontier studies. A key initiative launched in 2024 is the Castrum project, a five-year endeavor (2024-2028) targeting the northeastern quadrant of the Period IX stone fort—the last major unexcavated turf-covered section within the fort's boundaries—to explore late Roman adaptations. The 2025 season, part of this project, featured regular video updates from site directors documenting progress in real-time and highlighting collaborative efforts between professional archaeologists and volunteers, with the season concluding in September 2025. Excavation techniques at Vindolanda prioritize open-area methods to preserve spatial relationships and stratigraphic integrity, complemented by geophysical surveys such as to map subsurface features before digging. Over the decades, these projects have uncovered about 27% of the total area, contributing to coordinated conservation strategies across the corridor.

Key Methodological Advances

One of the most significant methodological advances at Vindolanda stems from the exploitation of its waterlogged, anaerobic deposits, which have preserved organic materials like wood, leather, and textiles that typically degrade in aerobic environments. These conditions arise from clay layers deposited during Roman occupation, creating low-oxygen zones that inhibit fungal and bacterial decay, with unique chemical profiles—such as elevated phosphorus (up to 1.094%) and iron levels—promoting the formation of protective vivianite minerals. Recovery techniques emphasize careful excavation and sieving of sediments to 2 mm mesh size, allowing the extraction of fragile artifacts without disturbance, a process refined through ongoing monitoring of the site's hydrological stability to prevent environmental threats like drying or acidification. This approach has set a benchmark for handling waterlogged Roman sites, enabling the retrieval of thousands of organic finds that illuminate daily life on the frontier. Dendrochronological has further revolutionized site at Vindolanda, providing precise dates for timbers that the occupation phases with annual resolution. Over 300 timbers have been examined across multiple excavation campaigns, yielding dated sequences that confirm the of the first timber fort (Period I) to AD 85/86, based on outer ring measurements from structural elements like posts and beams. Earlier studies, such as those from 1991 excavations, cross-matched samples against master chronologies, establishing ranges for Periods I-III (c. AD 85-105) and demonstrating phased rebuilding tied to imperial policy shifts. This method's precision—often to within a single year—has advanced Roman frontier dating beyond or coin evidence, influencing interpretations of and timber sourcing from local woodlands. For the Vindolanda tablets, techniques have been pivotal in deciphering faint carbon-based s on thin wooden slivers, employing filtration to enhance contrast and reveal erased or obscured texts. Initial used -sensitive , but subsequent with high-resolution cameras and filters (wavelengths around 700-900 nm) has allowed non-invasive reading of over 1,000 tablets, capturing subtle traces invisible to the naked eye. analysis complements this by highlighting surface preparations like wax residues, contributing to comprehensive transcriptions that preserve the originals while enabling global scholarly access. These optical methods, developed specifically for the site's thin tablets, have become a standard in for organic writing supports. Recent technological integrations, including LiDAR surveys, continue to push methodological boundaries at Vindolanda. LiDAR-based 3D modeling, applied in the 2010s and 2020s through airborne laser scanning, has mapped the extensive vicus beyond the fort walls, revealing buried structures like roads and buildings via digital elevation models with sub-meter accuracy, aiding non-invasive planning for excavations. These tools exemplify Vindolanda's role in adopting interdisciplinary, high-tech approaches to Roman .

Major Discoveries and Artifacts

The

The consist of over 1,700 thin wooden leaf-tablets inscribed with carbon-based , discovered primarily during excavations at the Roman fort of Vindolanda between 1973 and the 1990s, with additional finds continuing annually. The first tablet was unearthed in by Robin Birley in the south-western corner of the site, within anaerobic rubbish layers associated with the civilian of Period III (ca. AD 97–105), where organic materials like were exceptionally preserved due to waterlogged, low-oxygen conditions involving deposits of , , and animal waste. By the end of the 1973 season, over 200 fragments had been recovered, followed by several hundred more in 1975, mostly from similar dumps near a probable (fabrica) and debris in layers dated to ca. AD 95–115. These finds, typically postcard-sized slices of imported or fir rather than local , represent the largest corpus of Roman-era wooden documents from Britain. The tablets' contents, written in cursive Latin script, encompass a range of everyday administrative and personal documents, offering rare glimpses into life under Roman occupation. Categories include correspondence such as orders for supplies and troop movements, financial accounts detailing expenditures on and equipment, and intimate personal letters exchanged among soldiers, officers, and their families. A notable example is Tablet 291, a invitation from Claudia Severa, wife of the prefect Aelius Brocchus, to her friend Lepidina, wife of the Flavius Cerialis, for Severa's birthday celebration on 11 (ca. AD 100), where Severa expresses eagerness for Lepidina's company to "make the day more enjoyable" and adds greetings from her household. Other invitations and letters reveal social networks, including requests for visits and shared festivities, while accounts list provisions like , (including Celtic-style variants), and fat for unit celebrations. Transcribing the tablets presents significant challenges due to their format as folded diptychs—two leaves bound with string through notches and tie-holes—often resulting in ink impressions on inner surfaces that transfer when unfolded, compounded by the faint, unpunctuated and fragmentary preservation. Palaeographic expertise has been essential, with key scholarly editions advancing readability: Alan K. Bowman and J. David Thomas's Vindolanda: The Latin Writing-Tablets (1983) published the first 100+ legible texts; their 1994 volume (Tabulae Vindolandenses II) expanded to over 400, including improved imaging techniques; and the 2003 edition (Tabulae Vindolandenses III) incorporated digital enhancements for further fragments. These works, supported by the Online project at the , have made high-resolution scans and transcriptions publicly accessible, facilitating ongoing analysis. The tablets hold profound scholarly significance as the earliest surviving examples of dated handwriting from , dating to the late first and early second centuries AD, and providing unparalleled evidence of and daily routines on the northern . They illuminate personal relationships, such as women's social roles—exemplified by Claudia Severa's autograph addition to her letter, the oldest known Latin text penned by a in Britain—and administrative logistics, from supply shortages to interpersonal disputes among . Linguistic features reveal bilingualism, with Latin texts incorporating Celtic loanwords for local items like clothing (e.g., bracae for in Tablet 346) and provisions, reflecting cultural interactions between Roman soldiers and indigenous communities. Recent discoveries, including around a dozen new tablets in 2023, continue to uncover details of social events and community life, underscoring the corpus's enduring value for understanding Romano-British society.

Sculptures, Inscriptions, and Other Finds

Excavations at Vindolanda have uncovered over 50 stone inscriptions, providing evidence of military dedications, religious practices, and construction activities across the site's periods. These include numerous altars dedicated to local and Roman deities, with at least five known dedications to Cocidius, a popular among auxiliary troops on the northern frontier. For instance, RIB 1683 records an altar set up by Decimus Caerellius Victor, of the Second Cohort of Nervians, to Cocidius during the early second century AD. Other inscriptions, such as building records and centurial stones, reflect the fort's evolving phases, with some milecastle materials from reused in later fort structures, as seen in RIB 1706. Sculptural finds at Vindolanda include artifacts and stone that highlight Roman artistic influences and religious . A notable example is a decorated in high with an armed figure of Mars, the god of war, discovered in the area and dating to the second or third century AD. Stone and altar panels often feature deities or military motifs, such as those accompanying dedications to or local gods, though few intact sculptures survive due to post-Roman stone robbing. These pieces, typically small-scale and functional, were likely placed in temples or shrines within the fort and civilian settlement. The site's anaerobic waterlogged layers have preserved a wealth of organic remains, offering unparalleled insights into daily life. Over 5,000 leather shoes and boots, ranging from military hobnailed caligae to civilian footwear for women and children, represent the largest such collection from a single Roman site in . Textiles, primarily fragments from garments, tents, and bandages, demonstrate local production using northern British sheep , with evidence of techniques adapted for cold frontier conditions. Animal bones from Vindolanda reveal a protein-rich diet dominated by from , supplemented by sheep, , pigs, and , with confirming omnivorous patterns including and . Dog remains, lacking butchery marks, suggest they were kept as pets or for rather than food. Imported Samian ware , a glossy red tableware produced in , forms a significant portion of the assemblage, indicating connections and status display in messes and homes. Other artifacts include tiles from bathhouse heating systems, featuring pilae pillars and box flue tiles stamped with legionary marks like those of the Twentieth Legion, essential for underfloor and wall warming in the forts. Economic evidence comes from coin hoards and scatters, with bronze issues circulating up to around AD 350, reflecting continued occupation into the late Roman period despite declining silver content in later issues. Medical implements, such as bronze spoons possibly used for mixing remedies, appear sporadically in the finds, underscoring the ' self-sufficiency in healthcare.

Recent Discoveries (Post-2000)

Excavations at Vindolanda in the and yielded significant insights into military infrastructure and civilian life. In 2017, archaeologists uncovered a cache of equipment, including swords, arrowheads, and ballista bolts, abandoned on the floor of a barrack room dating to the early second century AD, highlighting the rapid evacuation of the site during a period of instability. Further digs expanded understanding of the , revealing strip buildings likely used as shops and workshops that supported the fort's garrison and families, with evidence of economic activity persisting into later periods. Isotope analysis of human remains, such as a child's discovered in a barrack room in 2010, indicated origins from a warmer , possibly the Mediterranean, underscoring the multi-ethnic composition of the site's population. The 2024 launch of the Castrum project targeted the previously unexcavated north-eastern quadrant of the final stone fort (Period IX, circa 300–367 AD), uncovering remains of late Roman infantry barracks and associated drainage systems that managed water flow in the frontier environment. This multi-year initiative integrates geophysical surveys and targeted digs to map the fort's final phases, yielding artifacts like jet ornaments and copper-alloy objects that reflect daily military routines. In May 2025, volunteer excavators discovered a 47 cm by 28 cm depicting the winged Victoria, reused in a rubble pile above third-century , marking one of the rare sculptural finds from the site's later occupation. This artifact, showing the goddess in a dynamic pose with one leg forward, emphasizes her role in Roman devotion. Also in 2025, analysis of sediments from the fort's drainage system revealed eggs of multiple intestinal parasites, such as roundworm (Ascaris lumbricoides) and whipworm (Trichuris trichiura), indicating widespread infections among Roman soldiers and highlighting poorer sanitation conditions than previously assumed. These post-2000 findings enhance comprehension of Vindolanda's evolution, with the Victoria illuminating late Roman practices tied to and imperial loyalty in a setting, while skeletal and artifactual evidence confirms the garrison's multi-ethnic makeup, drawn from across the empire.

Preservation and Public Engagement

Vindolanda Trust and Site Management

The Vindolanda Charitable Trust was established in 1970 by Birley, a pioneering who had conducted initial scientific excavations at the site in , with the primary aim of systematically excavating and preserving the Roman fort for public education and research. As a registered charity, the Trust operates independently to manage the site's ongoing archaeological work and conservation. The current director, Andrew Birley, represents the third generation of the Birley family involved in the site's stewardship, following his grandfather and father Robin. The Trust's operations center on annual excavation seasons from to , engaging over 400 volunteers each year who contribute directly to fieldwork and post-excavation processing under professional supervision. These efforts have involved more than 8,000 participants since , fostering hands-on archaeological training. To advance research, the Trust maintains partnerships with academic institutions, including a Knowledge Transfer Partnership with from 2022 to 2024 that integrated , digital tools, and into excavation practices. Recent projects, such as the Castrum excavations (2024–2028), build on these collaborations to explore the site's later Roman phases. Conservation efforts leverage the site's natural waterlogged, anaerobic soil layers, which have preserved organic materials like wood and leather for nearly 2,000 years by limiting oxygen exposure and microbial decay. Upon excavation, artifacts receive immediate specialist treatment in on-site labs to stabilize them against deterioration, including cleaning, drying, and chemical consolidation. Since the 2010s, the Trust has addressed climate-induced threats like increased erosion and fluctuating water tables through monitoring probes installed in 2023 and collaborative studies with universities to assess and mitigate environmental risks to buried remains. Funding for the Trust's activities derives primarily from charitable grants, private donations, and income from site visitors, as it receives no ongoing support. Notable grants include £1.625 million from the in 2023 for the Roman Magna project and £82,000 from in 2019 for digitizing wooden artifacts. In 2025, the Trust allocated resources from its budget and private donations to an archives project focused on digital archiving of collections, supporting the Castrum initiative's emphasis on data preservation and .

Museum and Educational Resources

The Vindolanda museum, officially known as the Roman Vindolanda Fort & Museum, is a modern facility dedicated to showcasing artifacts from the site's ongoing excavations, located adjacent to the ancient fort along . Managed by the Vindolanda Trust, it features dedicated exhibition spaces including the Wooden Underworld gallery, which opened in 2018 and displays preserved organic materials from anaerobic conditions. The nearby Roman Army Museum, also under Trust oversight and situated approximately 15 miles east, complements these efforts with immersive galleries on Roman military life, including life-size replicas, a holographic , and interactive films. Key collections in the Vindolanda museum include reconstructed models of the fort's structures, such as bath houses and residences, providing visitors with a tangible sense of Roman frontier . The renowned Vindolanda Writing Tablets are displayed in a hermetically sealed case since 2011, with replicas available for closer examination to highlight their historical significance as the oldest surviving handwritten documents in Britain. Exhibits rotate to feature recent discoveries, such as the 2025 depicting the Roman goddess Victoria, which will be showcased in the "Recent Finds" exhibition starting in early 2026. The broader collection encompasses over 35,000 objects, including , wood, metalwork, and textiles, with about one-third digitized for enhanced accessibility. Educational programs emphasize hands-on and multi-sensory learning, particularly for school groups, with curriculum-aligned visits to both the Vindolanda site and Roman Army Museum tailored for Key Stages 1 and 2. These include guided tours, activity packs, worksheets, and video resources to explore Roman daily life and heritage. elements are integrated through online tours and exhibits, such as the "Digging up Memories" virtual display featuring 3D models of wooden artifacts and . Publications support broader outreach, including the annual Friends Report detailing excavations and conservation efforts. An online database of the provides searchable high-resolution images, transcriptions, translations, and scholarly notes, facilitating global research access. The museums collectively attract over 100,000 visitors annually to Vindolanda alone, contributing to more than 5.3 million total visits to Trust sites since 1970 and fostering public engagement with Roman history. This impact aligns with the site's role in the World Heritage-listed Frontiers of the (), where the Trust advocates for ongoing preservation and interpretation in the .

References

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