Petuaria (or Petuaria Parisorum) was originally a Castra situated where the town of Brough in the East Riding of Yorkshire now stands. Petuaria means something like 'quarter' or 'fourth part', incorporating the archaic Brythonic * petuar, 'four' (compare modern Welsh language pedwar).
It was founded in 70 AD and abandoned in about 125. The adjacent civitas (civil town), ferry-crossing and (attested) port which grew over and replaced the fort survived until about 370, and was probably the capital of the Celts tribe called the Parisi. Petuaria marked the southern end of the Roman roads known now as Cade's Road, which ran roughly northwards for a hundred miles to Pons Aelius (modern day Newcastle upon Tyne). The section from Petuaria to Eboracum (York) was also the final section of Ermine Street.
His inscription was found re-used in the later stonework defences of Petuaria and gives a clear illustration of the standard of civic works and also civil and literary society which at one time existed in or around Roman Brough, at a tiny town whose modern magistrates court was only recently closed in the late 1990s, so ending nearly two thousand years of locally recorded justice unprecedented anywhere else in the British Isles . Their re-use of the Januarius stone also reveals how much, after two hundred years, the priorities of those living in East Yorkshire had changed in the later Roman Empire, at a time when it has been said that the two major preoccupations of the local people of the time were “floods and raids”,"Roman Humberside" B. Sitch & A. Williams the latter coming mainly across the North Sea from Northern Europe.
2. “Excavations at Brough on Humber 1958-1961” – J. Wacher 1964
3. “Brantingham Roman Villa: discoveries in 1962” – J. Liversedge; D.J. Smith and I.M. Stead.
4. “Britannia – A Journal of Romano-British and kindred studies” Volume 4, 1973
5. “Roman Mosaics in Britain: An Introduction to their schemes and a catalogue of paintings” – D.S. Neal 1981
6. “New Light on the Parisi: recent discoveries in Iron Age and Roman East Yorkshire” E. Riding Archaeological Society with University of Hull – editor P. Halkon 1989 (and subsequent editions)
7. “Brading, Brantingham and York: a new look at some fourth-century mosaics” – R. Ling “Britannia – A Journal of Romano-British and kindred studies” Volume 22, 1991.
8. “Roman Humberside” (2nd edn.) Humberside County Council Archaeology Unit: B. Sitch and A. Williams 1992
9. “Roman Mosaics of Britain: Volume I: Northern Britain incorporating the Midlands & East Anglia”: – D.S. Neal & S.R. Cosh ‘Society of Antiquaries of London’ 2002 Illuminata Publishers
10.“The Roman Mosaics at Hull” – D.S. Smith (3rd edition) 2005, M. Foreman and D. Crowther Hull & East Riding Museums & Art Gallery
|
|