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Works to protect Roman Marching Camp that ‘tells the story of the Roman Conquest of Wales’ completed

09 May 2024 3 minute read
Image: NRW

Work to protect the remains of a Roman Marching Camp has been finished by contractors working on behalf of Natural Resources Wales.

  • The yellow area in the image denotes the site and boundaries of the camp near Ystradfellte that were worked on to preserve the scheduled monument.
  • The blue area in the image denotes areas of the Roman Marching Camp which are too damaged to be worked.

The camp is thought to have been used by the Romans during the conquest of Wales in the first century AD and is listed as a scheduled monument.

Duty

Remains of the earth boundary banks and ditch of the camp have been preserved by NRW as part of their duty to protect important historical features under the UK Woodland Assurance Standard.

The recent work to preserve the remains involved removing tree growth using a flail mounted on an excavator. The excavator itself moved using extra-wide floatation tracks to reduce ground pressure. These tracks reduced the impact of the work on the protected site, but also allowed the heavy excavator to work on the wet ground.

Paul Dann, Land Management Team Leader for Natural Resources Wales said: “Managing woodland sustainably is much more than what people usually think.

“We need to make sure that we produce quality timber and protect biodiversity, but we also need to protect the cultural and historical features on the land that we manage.”

Approach

Paul continued: “This means treating some parts of land differently. This could include simply not planting on the land or removing growth that will damage the historical feature.

“We work closely with Cadw to make sure that we approach the preservation of each ancient monument in the right way.

“Many scheduled monuments have been worn down over centuries, and might not be obvious to passers-by, but they are important pieces of our collective history and need to be preserved wherever possible.”

Felled trees. Image: NRW

Amelia Pannett, Field Monument Warden for Cadw, the Welsh Government’s historic environment service said: “We work closely with NRW officers across Wales to make sure that the scheduled monuments on the land they manage are preserved for future generations.

“In this case, we worked with NRW to produce an agreed management plan for the marching camp scheduled monument, and we advised them on how to carry out the work without damaging the historical value on site.

“This camp helps tell the story of the Roman conquest of Wales.

“While marching across the country, the Romans built these camps as temporary structures to protect themselves from attack, and as a base for their activities for no more than a couple of weeks.

“It is amazing that parts of a temporary structure can be appreciated roughly 2,000 years later.”


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Riki
Riki
2 days ago

“Conquest of Wales”? Can someone explain why the only King Lineage in all Europe that lines up with the dates as the “Roman” ones come from Wales?! Birth years, Years of Rule, and Death dates! Also, why exactly did the Italians wait several hundred years to dig up Rome? If they are indeed the continuation of the Roman Republic, it implies they weren’t aware of those ruins, it was the same in Egypt. It looks as though the modern people of Italy and Egypt are in fact not direct descendants of the ancients who build those monuments. Many have come… Read more »

Rhddwen y Sais
Rhddwen y Sais
2 days ago
Reply to  Riki

Elizabeth 1st like all Tudors totally Welsh through and through.

Riki
Riki
2 days ago
Reply to  Rhddwen y Sais

Yep, Henry Tudor and Elizabeth were very proud of their heritage, Henry the 8th on the other hand. Bloody Targaryens is what they were. lol. Henry the 8th tried to appease Rome by destroying most of the abbeys and any evidence of Pre Vatican Christianity in Wales, complete opposite of his Dad and Daughter.

Riki
Riki
2 days ago
Reply to  Rhddwen y Sais

Henry the 8th hated being from Wales and commit sever damage to our culture on behalf of a lot of outside influencers. Those in Rome and Berlin loved him.

Rhddwen y Sais
Rhddwen y Sais
2 days ago
Reply to  Riki

Henry always referred to Wales as “my beloved country of Wales”

Riki
Riki
1 day ago
Reply to  Rhddwen y Sais

Yes, Henry 7

Rhddwen y Sais
Rhddwen y Sais
1 day ago
Reply to  Riki

No 8th

Peter
Peter
2 hours ago

Gwych, ond someone needs to police the area as it is frequented by off road 4×4 motorbikes and illegal hunting from people with guns who just stand on the pathway without a care in the world. Sort the area out so that hunting and off roaders are properly dealt with.

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