Ancient Cambridgeshire
Or, an Attempt to Trace Roman and Other Ancient Roads that Passed through the County of Cambridge
Charles Cardale Babington author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:17th Jul '14
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
An 1853 work providing the first substantial account of Roman Cambridgeshire, covering roads, buildings, coins and artefacts.
This work by Charles Cardale Babington, published in 1853, is the first substantial account of Roman Cambridgeshire, describing not only the courses of the various roads but also finds such as the Roman villa at Comberton, the Roman cemetery at Trumpington, and large numbers of individual coins and other artefacts.This work, first published in 1853, grew from a paper describing the crossing of two Roman roads at Cambridge, and the small Roman fort at Grantchester. However, other Roman sites were added to the investigation, and the book came to encompass all the Roman and other ancient roads of Cambridgeshire, as well as the locations where Roman coins and other remains had been found. The author, Charles Cardale Babington (1808–95), is best remembered as the pupil and assistant of John Stevens Henslow and as his successor in the chair of botany at Cambridge. However, Babington was also keenly interested in archaeology, and this fascinating work of local history is the first substantial account of Roman Cambridgeshire, describing not only the courses of the various roads but also finds such as the Roman villa at Comberton, the Roman cemetery at Trumpington, and large numbers of individual coins and other artefacts.
ISBN: 9781108075572
Dimensions: 216mm x 140mm x 6mm
Weight: 130g
96 pages