Londinium: London in the Roman Empire (Phoenix Giants)

by John Morris

Paperback, 1999

Status

Available

Call number

936.2

Collection

Publication

Weidenfeld & Nicholson history (1999), Paperback, 400 pages

Description

At the time of the Roman invasion of Britain, the site of London was an untamed, uninhabited forest and the conquering Roman fleet founded Londinium, as they named it, not as a garrison or a fortress but as a centre of government. John Morris' LONDINIUM is an authoritative account of London's first 600 years, from pre-Roman to Saxon times.

User reviews

LibraryThing member MacDad
For most historians, the greatest single limitation to understanding the past is the availability of source material. Ultimately, our ability to decipher what came before is limited by the records at hand, a factor which can constrain even the best historian. This is particularly evident in John
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Morris' history of Roman London. A longtime historian of the Roman Empire and its aftermath in Britain, Morris draws upon the range of available archaeological and historical evidence to describe the first centuries of London's existence. With chapters on the development of the town, its governance, and the everyday habits of its inhabitants, he provides a good examination of life in Londinium and the role the city played in Rome's rule over Britain.

Yet Morris' command of the material cannot mask its thinness. Most of the first part of the book is devoted to providing a history of pre-Roman and Roman Britain, which, while useful, often loses relevancy and can feel a little like padding. Moreover, the absence of detailed evidence often forces Morris to resort to supposition, or inference from other Roman cities. This does not make it a bad book, but the age of the text (originally written in the early 1970s and revised after Morris' death) does beg for updating as new archaeological and historical evidence emerges which allows us to improve and refine our understanding of London's earliest inhabitants. Until then, we have Morris' fine, if dated study.
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Language

Physical description

400 p.; 8.9 inches

ISBN

0753806606 / 9780753806609
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