ST GEORGE

ST GEORGE - PATRON SAINT
OF ENGLAND
ST GEORGES DAY - APRIL 23RD
     
Every nation has its own ‘Patron Saint’ who in times of great peril is called upon to help save the country from its enemies. St George being the patron saint of England.
Very little is known about St. George’s life, but it is thought he was a high ranking officer in the Roman army who was killed in around AD 303.
      It seems that the Emperor Diocletian had St. George tortured to make him deny his faith in Christ. However despite some of the most terrible torture even for that time, St George showed incredible courage and faith and was finally beheaded near Lydda in Palestine. His head was later taken to Rome where it was interred in the church dedicated to him.

       King Edward III made him the Patron Saint of England when he formed the Order of the Garter in St. George's name in 1350, and the cult of the Saint was further advanced by King Henry V, at the battle of Agincourt in northern France.
       King Henry himself, who was both warlike and devout, was thought by his followers to possess many of the saint’s characteristics.
       St. George’s Day is still celebrated, and his flag flown, on his feast day, April 23rd all over  England.



The Romans legacy
     It is important to remember  that the Romans brought many good things to Britain. They improved trade and the quality of life for many  Britons.
      Roman towns showed the Britons that life could be comfortable and pleasant.
     Roman laws meant  that arguments could be settled peacefully. Some of our  modern laws are based on Roman laws.
      The Romans brought milestones to Britain. This drawing shows a stone milestone from Hadrian’s reign. Originally it would have stood 2-3 metres high. The letters ‘MPIIII’ mean ‘four miles from...’
Other things the Romans brought  to Britain

 Lead pipes  





Roof tiles 


Cats        





Wigs       







False teeth 





Cabbages






Carrots 






Peas





Cherries 
 





Plums 





Roses 







Pansies 






Poppies 





Stinging nettles



 

Many  of our words are based on Latin  words. The Romans gave us the names of all our months.
JANUARY    named after the Roman god JANUS. He could look both ways at once because he had two faces, and was the god of gateways
FEBRUARY  named after the Roman festival of FEBRUA
MARCH  named after MARS, the Roman war god
APRIL  from the Latin word APERIRE  meaning ‘to open’ – because of the unfolding of buds and blossom in spring
MAY  named after MAIA, the Roman mother goddess
JUNE  named after JUNO, wife of Jupiter, King of the Roman gods
JULY named after  JULIUS Caesar, who decided that the year should begin in January. Until  then it had begun in March.
AUGUST  named after the Roman Emperor AUGUSTUS
SEPTEMBER  from the Latin word SEPTEM, meaning ‘seven’. It was originally the seventh month of the year
OCTOBER  from the Latin word OCTO, meaning ‘eight’. It was originally the seventh month of the year
NOVEMBER  from the Latin word NOVEM, meaning ‘nine’. It was originally the ninth month of the year
DECEMBER  from the Latin word DECEM, meaning ‘ten’. It was originally the tenth month of the year

RomanBath



Roman Baths
Romas went to the bath to keep clean, relax, meet  their  friends and to exercise. Women and men bathed at separate times of the day. 
Why did the Romans take their baths in public?
Taking a bath was a lot more important for the Romans than it is for us today. Roman baths happened in great big buildings, like swimming pools. They had heated floors and many different rooms for different activities.
In the days before central heating systems, they were often heated using natural hot springs where water comes to the surfaces after having been warmed by the hot rock and magma underneath the ground.
________________________________________
Who went to the baths?
Almost everyone went to the baths at the end of the day, to exercise, socialise and clean themselves. People sealed business deals and chatted with friends while lying around in these hot pools of water.
The city of Rome had hundreds and hundreds of these public baths, where people paid a very small fee before going in and got to stay for hours.
Some public baths, like our swimming pools, were owned by the government and covered large parts of the city.
The largest baths was called the Baths of Diocletian.  It could hold up to 3,000 people at a time.
What did you do when you got to the baths?
The Romans had a special method for taking a bath. You had to go through many different rooms, with different temperatures and activities, in the right order. These rooms and their functions are:
1.    First you went to the apodyterium. This was like a cloakroom where you stored all your clothes.
2.    Then you go into the frigidarium. This was a cold room with a big tank of cold water.
3.    Then the tepidarium. This was a warm room, but not hot yet.
4.    Finally, the caldarium was a hot room with a hot bath that you would plunge yourself into now that you had grown used to the heat.
At the end of your bath you would return to the tepidarium for a massage with oils.
Some Romans would also have their body hairs plucked out and dead skin scraped off using metal implements in this room.
What happened to the Roman baths?
When the Roman Empire collapsed and the Romans left much of the territory they had conquered, they left many baths behind them.
Some of these were taken over by the local people, others were torn down and still others just left to slowly collapse over the years.

Many of these have now been restored, such as the Baths at Bath in England. Bath is a town that took its name from the prominent Roman baths that have been there for centuries. It is now open as a tourist attraction and many people go there on school trips to learn more about how the Romans took their baths and why.

How were Roman roads built?



       One of the things the Romans built all over their Empire were ROADS. 
       There were no proper roads in Britian before the Romans came. There were muddy tracks that wound along from village to village, but these were no good for getting places quickly.
       Roman rulers needed to be able to control their Empire - they needed to send messages to regional governors quickly, they needed to transport goods and products from place to place efficiently, and they needed to move their legions to put down rebellions and defend against attacks very rapidly. To do all these things, the Romans built good quality roads. The easiest and fastest way is to build a straight road - so that is what they did. 

How were Roman roads built?

Here is a cut-through of a roman road. road_col.gif
The bottom layer is made from compacted sand or dried earth. Next comes a layer of crushed rock, then gravel mixed with a cement mortar. Above this is placed a layer of finer gravel mixed with sand and more cement. On the top are placed large flat stone slabs, fitted closely together. There are kerb stones placed at either side to mark the edges of the road. Beside the road is a drainage ditch to allow rainwater to drain away from the road easily. The road was about 24 feet wide - wide enough for a column of soldiers to march along, with room to spare for chariots to go by. The road was built up about 5 feet above the land. This helped drainage, but also allowed soldiers on the road a good view of what was on either side, to avoid being ambushed.
Some of the major roads we drive on today follow the same route that Roman roads did. You can usually tell if a road was once a Roman road if the road is very straight for a long distance. Roman roads were built so well that they lasted for hundreds of years. In fact some of these roads have only been resurfaced a few times since the Romans built them.

How did they build them so straight?

Roman roads are usually built as straight as can be from one point to another, only bending around very steep hills. Before building, a Surveyor would mark out the position of where the road should be built with a set of sticks. The surveyor used a tool called a Groma.
groma.gifA Groma is made from a long pole with a spike on the bottom for sticking into the ground. At the top is a cross, with a string hanging a weight at the end of each arm of the cross, and onother weight on a string at the centre.
The surveyor could stick the spike into the ground, then look across a set of three strings. If all three strings were hanging in the same line, then the surveyor knew he was in an exact straight line from his marker. If the strings were not hanging together then the surveyor would need to adjust his position until they were exactly right. He also use the Groma to mark out accurate 90-degree right-angles for buildings. Roman surveyors were very skilled, and had to learn how to use the Groma properly.

Why not have a go at making a Groma for yourself? You will need...
  • A pole
  • Some strips of wood to make a crosspiece and a support arm
  • Some string
  • Modelling clay to make into weights.
When you have made your Groma, you could try marking out straight lines across the playground.

Roman Roads
       THE FIRST ROADS in Britain were built by the Roman legions, which had their own surveyors, engineers and the equipment they needed for this type of construction work. The availability of local materials dictated the details of road construction, but the basic principles were always the same. The road took the form of an embankment, raised above the level of the surrounding land, with drainage ditches on either side. It would be built up in a series of layers, comprising a foundation of large rocks, followed by smaller stones, gravel and sand laid down in successive layers and rammed into place.
       A cobbled surface was commonplace in towns or areas of heavy use, but usually it would be gravel. The embankment was cambered for drainage, often 10m (33ft)or more wide; it was rarely less than 3m (91⁄2ft) wide to allow room for two-wheeled vehicles to pass. As elsewhere, Roman roads in Britain were built as straight as possible. The Roman surveyors had no need to worry about who owned the land along the route-way because as conquerors they could choose the most direct route. Nevertheless, they by-passed mountains, marshes and forest, where they posed particular obstacles, and they would seek out suitable crossing points at rivers.

        Although their primary purpose in the early days of the conquest was to speed the movement of troops, roads subsequently became even more important as communication routes between different parts of the empire. They enabled important information to be passed between Rome and the provincial governors of the areas under their control. In Britain, the Roman economy was agricultural, based around villa estates, which produced surplus food to provide supplies for the army and the urban populations. The roads also made possible the movement of  pottery and other goods, whose production became commonplace in Britain in the third and fourth centuries AD.
       Well-known Roman roads include Watling Street, which ran from London to Chester and the Fosse Way, which crossed England from Exeter in the south-west to Lincoln in the north-east. The latter followed a route in use since prehistoric times and around AD47 it marked the first boundary of the new Roman province. Roman roads later became a liability because invading barbarians could travel along them as quickly as the Roman armies. The Salisbury–Badbury road was deliberately blocked by the Bokerley Dyke during a crisis in the fourth century. The roads went into decline after the Roman departure and not until the advent of railways in the nineteenth century did Britain again enjoy such an efficient communications network.

      This reconstruction (above) reveals the benefits of Roman civilisation. The central feature is the road which provides easy transport for troops and commerce. The legionary cavalry soldier, accompanied by a foot soldier, is of high status and would have a cohort of legionnaires not far behind him. In the distance you can see the classical design of a villa which represents the beginning of an architecture that was new to Iron Age Britain.
       A small settlement takes advantage of the passing traffic. A woman is selling food and drink and you can see the amphora containing oil and wine – examples of imports introduced by Roman merchants. The buildings are roofed in tile and some have painted plaster. However, despite these innovations, you can also see Romano-British carrying on with their lives, emphasising that not every aspect of British life was romanised. The soldiers pay in coin – most likely small denomination bronze-copper alloy coins, received as change after paying taxes with silver or gold coins received as wages. The soldier on his knees in the foreground has lost the gold coin that represents a month’s wages – it will be this coin that will be found 1800 years later. The road is the Fosse Way – still a major route today. As in Roman times, it links up with a system with London as its hub.