The provision of defenses around towns in Roman Britain has attracted interest since the 1930s,Footnote 1 with a well-established general outline. in the 1st c. CE, the provision of defenses was limited to a few public towns (coloniae, municipia, civitas capitals).Footnote 2 In the 2nd c. CE, a large number of earthwork defenses were erected in public towns, as well as in settlements subordinate to civitas capitals in political and administrative status (henceforth, small towns).Footnote 3 In the 3rd c. CE, more small towns received walls, and finally, in the 4th c. CE, external towers were added to existing walls.Footnote 4
Although it should be noted that the issue of defining a “small town” continues to be debated,Footnote 5 with the selection and subdivision commonly based on characteristics such as function or origin,Footnote 6 small towns differ from civitas capitals in several ways: they often lacked official administrative status, planned rectangular street grids, and key public facilities such as a forum and bathhouses.Footnote 7 Although the presence of small towns is common to all provinces of the Roman Empire,Footnote 8 the large-scale provision of defenses around small towns in Roman Britain – whether during or after the 2nd c. – is without parallel.Footnote 9 Fortification of small towns in neighboring provinces such as Gaul, Germany, and Raetia remained rare, with defenses often limited to settlements with civitas status.Footnote 10 Due to this, Esmond-Cleary suggests that small towns from the 2nd c. onward played a more significant role within the civitates and Roman Britain more generally compared to other provinces.Footnote 11
Traditionally, the motivation to construct defenses around towns has been driven by two hypotheses: (1) a centralized government response to an actual or perceived threat,Footnote 12 or (2) a symbol of civic pride initiated by local authorities.Footnote 13 Although civic pride and display is considered a plausible explanation for defenses around higher-status towns (coloniae, municipia, civitas capitals),Footnote 14 the significant number of small towns defended in the 2nd c. remains more difficult to explain.Footnote 15 For example, the defense of small towns has been related to specific periods of historical upheaval,Footnote 16 such as the usurpation of Clodius Albinus (r. 193–197 CE). However, the use of “external threat” as the explanatory model has become less tenable because defenses show chronological phasing, as well as the more general issue of fitting archaeological evidence into historical narratives.Footnote 17 Furthermore, although the motivation of civic pride has been used as an explanation for the provision of defenses around small towns,Footnote 18 Esmond-Cleary notes that this is “no more than a possibility and does little to explain the fortification of the ‘small towns.”Footnote 19
In contrast, the defense of small towns has been linked to important installations, such as the mansiones and mutationes that were integral for the development and functioning of the Roman provincial transportation system (cursus publicus).Footnote 20 Through the cursus publicus, government communication was made possible – which was essential for securing and maintaining control throughout the empire.Footnote 21 Nonetheless, this led Smith and Fulford to ask: “if the common factor linking defended settlements on the major roads was that they supported the cursus publicus […], why were not all such settlements provided with defences?”Footnote 22 With this question in mind, this research will use network analysis and spatial inference methods to identify provincial-level patterns in the relationship between small towns fortified in the 2nd c. and the connectivity of the Roman road network.
Specifically, two testable hypotheses will be investigated:
(1) Defended small towns were well integrated within the road network for the efficient transfer of information.
(2) Defended small towns were located on roads that were important for controlling the flow of information across the road network.
Materials and methods
The data and code are available at https://github.com/josephlewis/Defended_Small_Towns.
Roman road network
The Roman road network was downloaded from Bishop.Footnote 23 Based on Roman roads identified by Ivan Margary,Footnote 24 this dataset represents the most comprehensive Roman Britain road network currently available. It should be noted, however, that knowledge of the Roman road network is currently incomplete,Footnote 25 with the region north of London showing a greater concentration of roads.Footnote 26 Although this reflects local interest in identifying Roman roadsFootnote 27 rather than the true distribution of Roman roads in Roman Britain, the impact of this on the analysis is outside the scope of this paper and will therefore not be further explored.
To ensure that the Roman road network as currently understood was interconnected, and thus sufficient for network analysis, small gaps were manually fixed by connecting road ends via straight lines (Fig. 1a). The choice to manually join roads – predominately to urban centers – over other automated methods such as connecting all road ends within 500 mFootnote 28 or least-cost path analysisFootnote 29 aimed to minimize the introduction of additional uncertainty.Footnote 30 The road network was converted to a network graph, with road vertices acting as nodes and road segments as edges (Fig. 1a).
Small towns
Data on 90 small towns with sufficient information on the date of defenses was collated from Millett,Footnote 31 using Smith and Fulford for more accurate chronologies when possible.Footnote 32 Four small towns (Brough-on-Fosse, Dorn, Dropshot, and Sandy Lane) were removed from the analysis due to uncertainty in the dates of fortification.Footnote 33 Nonetheless, the large number of small towns included within the analysis aims to sufficiently represent small towns as a category. The 90 small towns were filtered to those within 1 km from the Roman road network, ensuring that the small towns were deemed to be sufficiently integrated within it. The remaining 79 small towns were used within the analysis, with 22 (28%) defended in the 2nd c. The small towns were subsequently attached to the Roman road-network graph to become nodes (Fig. 2).
Network analysis and spatial inference
The application of network analysis to archaeological research has rapidly increased.Footnote 34 By representing data as a network graph – with nodes signifying points, and edges representing the connections between them – the fundamental characteristics of a network structure at a node and network level can be analytically described.Footnote 35 For example, Pau de Soto assessed the accessibility of the Iberian Peninsula using the Roman road network,Footnote 36 Orengo and Livarda analyzed the circulation of goods in relation to Roman Britain road network properties,Footnote 37 and Brookes and Huynh assessed the correlation in town PageRank values to their status in Roman and early medieval England.Footnote 38
Although less common in archaeology, the network representation of archaeological data can also be used in the formal testing of hypotheses.Footnote 39 More specifically, the significance of a spatial pattern – in this case, whether defended small towns were well integrated within the road network and located on Roman roads important for controlling the flow of information – can be quantified by randomly reshuffling the characteristic of interest while keeping all other aspects of the data not relevant to the hypothesis constant.Footnote 40 Through this, the underlying process of interest and whether it resulted in the spatial pattern can be evaluated. More simply put, how likely is it that the observed spatial pattern of defended small towns has arisen from a random process given the underlying spatial distribution of small towns?Footnote 41
Network analysis measures
NODAL EFFICIENCY
The efficiency of defended small towns for communication was measured via nodal efficiency, which is the inverse of the average length of the minimum path length between a given node and all other nodes in the network (Fig. 3).Footnote 42 Nodes with high nodal efficiency are well integrated within the overall network and indicate a higher capability of transferring information efficiently to all other nodes.Footnote 43 The nodal efficiency of all small towns was calculated, with the nodal efficiency of defended small towns mean averaged.
EDGE BETWEENNESS
The importance of a road segment for controlling the flow of traffic was measured via edge betweenness, which is the number of shortest paths in the graph that pass through a given edge.Footnote 44 Edges with high edge betweenness therefore control the flow of information and act as “bridges” between multiple parts of the networkFootnote 45 (Fig. 4). The edge betweenness of all road segments was calculated, with the edge betweenness of roads with defended small towns situated along them mean averaged.
CREATING THE NULL HYPOTHESIS
The null hypothesis of mean nodal efficiency and mean edge betweenness was calculated by randomizing the status of small towns – that is, randomly relabeling whether a small town was “defended” or “nondefended” (Fig. 5). The randomization in the status of the small towns reflects that of a random process,Footnote 46 with the rejection of the null hypothesis signifying that the observed pattern of defended small towns is unlikely to have occurred by chance. A one-sided Monte Carlo hypothesis test was used to statistically compare the mean nodal efficiency and mean edge betweenness of the observed pattern of defended small towns against 999 simulations where the “defended” or “nondefended” status of small towns was randomized (p < 0.05). Although a relatively small number of simulations are required when using Monte Carlo hypothesis testing, with 99 simulations often sufficient,Footnote 47 999 simulations results in a better estimate of the p-value.Footnote 48 Under a Monte Carlo hypothesis test procedure,Footnote 49 N values of the test statistic (e.g., mean nodal efficiency) from simulations under the null hypothesis (where status is randomized) are compared to the observed statistic (where status is not randomized), with the p-value obtained by counting the number m of simulated test statistics at least as extreme as the observed test statistic (p-value = [m + 1] / [N + 1]).Footnote 50
Results
Network measures of defended small towns
The mean nodal efficiency of the defended small towns is greater than nondefended small towns, with the defended small towns showing less variance in nodal efficiency values (Fig. 6a). Furthermore, the mean edge betweenness of road segments with defended small towns is greater than road segments with nondefended small towns (Fig. 6b).
Using the Monte Carlo hypothesis test procedure, the mean nodal efficiency of the 22 defended small towns is statistically significant (p < 0.05) compared to the 999 randomized simulations (Fig. 7a). This means that the defended small towns on average possess a higher capability of transferring information to other nodes and are therefore more integrated within the road network than small towns chosen at random. Similarly, the mean edge betweenness of road segments with defended small towns is statistically significant (p < 0.05) compared to the randomized simulations (Fig. 7b), showing that defended small towns were on average located on roads that had more control over the flow of information while also acting as bridges to other parts of the Roman province.
Discussion and conclusion
Although the relationship between defended small towns and the Roman road network has been noted previously,Footnote 51 this research has shown that the connectivity of the Roman road network is associated with the fortification of small towns in the 2nd c. CE. Defended small towns in the 2nd c. on average not only possessed higher nodal efficiency but were located on roads with higher values of edge betweenness than nondefended small towns. Furthermore, the rejection of the null hypotheses shows that the small towns defended in the 2nd c. were on average better integrated within the road network than small towns at random, and they were situated along road segments that were important for controlling the flow of information across the road network. Although the reason for fortifying small towns was complex and likely not due to a single cause,Footnote 52 the provincial-level pattern of defended small towns in the 2nd c. having high connectivity while also being well integrated within the road network echoes the fundamental role defended small towns played in the communication of information via the cursus publicus.Footnote 53 This suggests that, as noted by Millett,Footnote 54 although civic competition between communities might have driven the provision of defenses, government officials were keen to ensure that the defenses also protected administrative infrastructure related to the functioning of the cursus publicus.
Nevertheless, it is important to be aware of limitations. First, the nodal efficiency and edge betweenness are based on the edges present within the road network. Although the impact of missing road segments – as well as filling in gaps using straight lines – is assumed to be minimal, it highlights the need for a more complete understanding of the road network in Roman Britain.Footnote 55 Second, this analysis ignores the possibility of maritime and river navigation, resulting in potentially undervaluing the nodal efficiency and edge betweenness for small towns and road segments near rivers and the coast. Although this effect is assumed to be small due to the majority of defended small towns being in the central belt of Roman Britain, future research is needed to incorporate multiple types of transportation when conducting provincial-level analyses.Footnote 56 Last, given that the present analysis focused exclusively on small towns defended in the 2nd c., there is a need to determine whether and how much the road network continued to have an influence on which small towns were fortified in later periods.
Despite the limitations, it has been shown that the connectivity of the Roman road network played a fundamental role in which small towns were defended during the 2nd c. The provision of defenses around small towns and the association with the protection of the administrative infrastructure reflects the importance of the cursus publicus in the establishment and maintenance of Roman rule within the Roman province of Britannia.
Declaration of Competing Interest
The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.