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Ermine Street is a major in England that ran from ( ) to Lincoln ( ) and ( ). The Old English name was Earninga Strǣt (1012), named after a tribe called the Earningas, who inhabited a district later known as Armingford Hundred, around Arrington, Cambridgeshire, and Royston, Hertfordshire. "Armingford", and "Arrington" share the same Old English origin. The original and names for the route remain unknown. It is also known as the Old North Road from London to where it joins the A1 Great North Road near .


Course
Ermine Street begins at , where one of the seven gates in the wall surrounding was located. From here it runs north up , Shoreditch High Street and through (forming Stoke Newington Road and Stoke Newington High Street), , Edmonton and eastern Enfield (Ponders End, Enfield Highway, Enfield Wash and Freezywater) to Royston. This section of Ermine Street from to Royston is now largely part of the A10. At this point it crosses the . From Royston, it was formerly the A14 to the A1 but now it is the A1198 to ( Durovigutum). Ignoring bypasses and modern diversions, the road through to the Alconbury junction on the A1 gives the line. The section from to , ignoring modern bypasses such as that at , follows the A1. Ermine street used to pass through Durobrivae, the slight remains of which can be seen to the east, alongside the A1 at Peterborough. The modern road returns to Ermine Street north-west of Stamford, near , through which Ermine Street ran.

The post-Roman road wandered off for through , but Ermine Street continues as the B6403, through Ancaster to the A17. It then continues as a public right of way, easily walked, until blocks it at . The route from Colsterworth, through Ancaster, to Bracebridge Heath is known as High Dike. It runs roughly parallel with and to the east of the A607 between and . High Dike takes to the level, open, dry country of the Heath while the A607 wanders through the villages on the below. From the Antonine Itinerary there is known to have been a Roman Settlement on the road in South Lincolnshire, called which has been variously identified with Ancaster Roman Town or Saltersford, south of Grantham.

Another long section remains, now the A15, running north out of Lincoln, past and Corner, past Kirton in Lindsey at grid reference , and continuing almost to the at . Before the diversion was made round the extended runway at Scampton, with a very slight diversion at Broughton, it was possible to travel about , from the , the Roman north gate at Lincoln, to the of Winteringham along a road so slightly curved as to be regarded as straight.

Roman Winteringham was the terminal for the ferry to (Brough) on the north shore of the Humber. From there, the road curved westwards to York.

This landing place on the south shore of the Humber is significant because Winteringham translates as "the homestead of Winta's people". Apart from , the god, the first leader on Lindsey's list of kings is Winta. Clearly, the end of the ridge at the Humber was significant in the English settlement of Lincolnshire. Winterton is a little further inland. Ermine Street and the together were evidently an important early route of entry into early post-Roman Britain.


Alternative courses
The author Thomas Codrington proposed a more westerly route for "Erming" Street north of London, going via what is now . This route is marked on many maps.

The Roman Map of Britain above shows a sector of Ermine Street for which there was an alternative route. As Ermine Street extended north out of Lincoln and past an alternative course of Ermine Street curved left and formed a semicircle on a wide heading west of the . The straight northerly route, traced in red on the map, between Lincoln and was the shorter, but was not passable over the Humber Estuary during adverse weather conditions. Thus an alternative route was established (see also Roman roads in Britain). This 'alternative' route is detailed in the Antonine Itinerary and linked York (Eboracum), (Lagecium), (Danum), Littleborough (Agelocum) and Lincoln (Lindum). Beginning at the modern Lincolnshire Showground the portion of this route in Lincolnshire is known as Till Bridge Lane, the modern A1500. The route in the Doncaster area, and again north of Castleford, is known as the Roman Ridge or Roman Rigg.

A large section of this road formed for many later centuries the Great North Road between and .


See also


Notes
  • I. D. Margary, Roman Roads in Britain (3rd ed. 1973)
  • Ordnance Survey 1:50 000 maps. (1972 to 2001)
  • Ordnance Survey, Map of Roman Britain (3rd edn. 1956)
  • Soil Survey of England And Wales, Soils of England and Wales , Sheet 4 (1983)
  • XTC song Chalkhills and Children, from Oranges and Lemons (1989)


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