-
Durovernum Cantiacorum was a town and
hillfort (Latin: oppidum) in
Roman Britain at the site of present-day
Canterbury in Kent. It
occupied a strategic...
- the area now
called Kent, in south-eastern England.
Their capital was
Durovernum Cantiacorum, now Canterbury. They were
bordered by the
Regni to the west...
- a
million visitors per year. The
Roman settlement of
Durovernum Cantiacorum ("Kentish
Durovernum")
occupied the
location of an
earlier British town whose...
-
considered interchangeable terminuses. They only
differ in the
distance to
Durovernum: 14 and 17
Roman miles, respectively. The
route to
Lemanis was sometimes...
- Atrebatēs
Calleva Atrebatum Brigantēs/Brigantī
Isurium Brigantum Cantiacī
Durovernum Cantiacorum Carvetīī (*Carwetīī)
Luguvalium Catuvellaunī (*Catuwellaunī)...
- Street. The
Romans capture a
Brythonic settlement at Kent and
rename it
Durovernum Cantiacorum (modern Canterbury); and
establish a
Roman fort to
guard the...
- (Segontium) C
Caerwent (Venta Silurum) C Caister-on-Sea C
Canterbury (
Durovernum Cantiacorum) C
Carlisle (Luguvalium) C
Carmarthen (Moridunum) C Chelmsford...
- underground.
Ptolemy lists it as one of the
cities of the Cantiaci, but
Durovernum (Roman Canterbury) was
their tribal capital (civitas). It is possible...
- ****d
found in the city of Canterbury, Kent, south-east England,
ancient Durovernum Cantiacorum, in 1962, and now in the
Roman Museum, Canterbury, Kent. Copies...
-
Alphen aan den Rijn
Netherlands 43 AD
Lauri Woerden Netherlands 43 AD
Durovernum Cantiacorum Canterbury United Kingdom 43 AD
Regulbium Reculver United...