- 53°15′32″N 1°54′54″W / 53.259°N 1.915°W / 53.259; -1.915
Aquae Arnemetiae was a
small town in the
Roman province of Britannia. The
settlement was based...
-
Arnemetia is a
goddess in Romano-British religion. Her
shrine is at
Aquae Arnemetiae ("waters of Arnemetia"),
which is now
Buxton in Derbyshire, England. Arnemetia's...
- (Mediobogdum),
Eskdale Walls Castle (Roman Bath House), Ravengl****
Aquae Arnemetiae (Roman Buxton)
Ardotalia (Melandra Castle)
Derventio Coritanorum (Roman...
- (Isurium Brigantum) C Bath (Aquae Sulis) C
Brough (Petuaria) C
Buxton (Aquae
Arnemetiae)
Caerleon (Isca Augusta) C
Caernarfon (Segontium) C
Caerwent (Venta Silurum)...
- a
Roman road
connected Navio with the spa town of
Buxton (Latin
Aquae Arnemetiae) and, via a now lost
route Templebrough on the
River Don. Gate
means "road"...
-
along well-used routes.
Buxton was a
Roman settlement known as "Aquae
Arnemetiae" for its spring. The
Pecsaetan or peaklanders, an Anglo-Saxon tribe, inhabited...
- is now
usually ****ociated with the town of
Buxton in
Derbyshire (Aquis
Arnemetiae). The place-name
Alkborough seems to
contain an Old
English personal name...
-
Vernemeton (now Willoughby-on-the-Wolds, Nottinghamshire), in
Roman Aquae Arnemetiae (now Buxton, Derbyshire), and in the 1194
reference to Nametwihc, "Sanctuary-Town...
-
Neolithic longhouses. The
Romans developed a
settlement known as
Aquae Arnemetiae ("Baths of the
grove goddess").
Coins found show the
Romans were in Buxton...
- to Brough-on-Noe (Latin Navio) and the spa town of
Buxton (Latin
Aquae Arnemetiae) in Derbyshire. Gate
means "road" in
northern English dialects; the name...