Antonine Itinerary

The Antonine Itinerary is a Latin document that can be described as the 'Road Map' of Roman Britain. It contains directions how to get from one Roman settlement to another, drawn up on the orders of Antoninus Augustus. There are 15 such itineraries in the document.

Itinerary 14

An example can be given of Itinerary 14, which reads as follows (and is also translated):

Original Latin

ITER XIV Item alio itinere ab Isca Calleva mpm ciii sic
  • Venta Silurum viiii
  • Abone xiiii
  • Traiectus viiii
  • Aquis Solis vi
  • Verlucione xv
  • Cunetione xx
  • Spinis xv
  • Calleva xv

English Translation

Itinerary 14 Likewise an alternate route from Isca Silurum to Calleva Atrebatum one-hundred and three thousand paces thus written
  • Caerwent, Gwent 9,000 paces
  • Sea Mills, Avon 14,000 paces
  • possibly Bitton, nr. Willsbridge, Avon 9,000 paces
  • Bath, Avon 6,000 paces
  • Sandy Lane, Wiltshire 15,000 paces
  • Mildenhall, Wiltshire 20,000 paces
  • unknown settlement near Newbury, Berkshire 15,000 paces
  • Silchester, Hampshire 15,000 paces

See also

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
dublin convention
birmingham military history
rick chiarelli
zecchino d'oro
virona
or zarua
michigan state highway 76
aliadriatica
welsh cake
dalene matthee
0x29a
fly to the rainbow
angella issajenko
vyronas
budd rail diesel car
lake temagami
carmine nigro
history of african americans in the civil war
jazz profiles
nii oshima
jean 'binta' breeze
march 0
crempog
infrared optical telescope array
codex astensis
the men who tread on the tiger's tail
ricetto
bump 'n' jump
demon sorcerers
361 bononia
362 havnia
treehouse of horror iv
363 padua
364 isara
neighbourhood (mathematics)
365 corduba
battle of lww (1920)
air nova
swansea castle
thomas murphy (republican)
easton maudit
opcode systems
visual dialog script
ilmt