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Far-sighted Romans, Short-sighted Britons


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In the second and third centuries, Roman Empire trade with Britannia was increasingly ravaged by seaborne pirates the Angles, Saxons, and Jutes, all of whom would eventually settle in Britain. At that time, Rome still ruled the waves, controlling the trade routes through the Normandy-Kent corridor; however, shipments were interrupted or diverted, deliveries missed, cargo sunk by these same pirates. All this, combined with the increasing resistance to Roman rule on the Continent, convinced the Empire of the need to build forts to defend its Britannia property. Thus were born the Saxon Shore forts.

They were nine in all, and they stretched north along the southeastern seacoast. The westernmost fort was at Portus Adurni, which is today Portchester. The northernmost fort was Branodunum, on the northern Norfolk coast. In between were Garaiannum and Othona (above the Thames) and Regulbium, Rutupiae, Dubris, Lemannis, and Anderitum (below the Thames). Armed to the teeth with catapults and ballistas and other heavy equipment, these forts were organized by the Count of the Saxon Shore, one of history's famous "shadowy figures," about which we know very little, and were models of Roman efficiency and planning.

These forts were successful, for the most part, in keeping Saxons and Angles and Jutes at bay, although one could convincingly argue that the Roman navy had a say in this as well. (One could argue that Roman military mystique played a hand here as well.)

However, the Romans left without much more than a by-your-leave in 410, a mere pittance of years after these forts were constructed and implemented. Naturally, the Romans took their navy with them. What was left to the Britons, then, was a ring of forts that should have done the trick. And they did, for a time. But as these things go, pressure from the north forced the Romano-British to spread their defenses, having to leave some of the Saxon shore unprotected. Then, as has been examined in previous essays, the Britons actually invited the Saxons to eat at their tables, fight by their side, and live on their land. By being in the right place at the right time, the Saxons accomplished more with less than they had in the two or three centuries previous. The Romans were gone for good, and the Saxons were in Britannia to stay.

Now, the Romans, it can be argued, were looking into the future when they built the Saxon Shore forts. The Count, be he one person or several persons, historical or fictitious, had the right idea. The forts were relatively close together and allowed defenders to coalesce into naturally defensive positions in order to harass and turn back attacking armies. The Romans picked the right spots to defend, too, by observing shipping patterns and maximizing the defensive perimeter. The Romans determined that such defensive maneuvers would send a message to pirates: This is our land and our trade; interfere with it at your peril.

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Here's the follow-up discussion on this article: View all related messages

2.   Nov 7, 2000 9:12 AM
In response to message posted by Ognyen:
Hadrian's Wall was built first, and the Antonine Wall was built later. The purpose ...

-- posted by hardworker


1.   Nov 6, 2000 11:59 AM
I wish I could remember my source, but it's been suggested that the walls were built to divide the northern tribes rather than to keep them to the North. Have you run into that yet? ...

-- posted by Ognyen





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