April 20, 2023INDEX
"The climate is wretched with frequent rains and mists but there is no extreme cold... The soil will produce good crops except olives, vines and other plants which usually grow in warmer lands. Other plants are slow to ripen though they shoot quickly; both facts being due to the same cause, the extreme moistness of the soil and atmosphere." So wrote Tacitus in AD 98, a decade or two before the Romans built a fort and port in what is now Maryport, to the west of Hadrian's Wall. The Roman museum today has a quite extraordinary collection of Roman altars, pre-Christian relics, which thanks to being discarded (and used by the Romans as part of the foundation for a huge wooden structure) are in remarkably good condition. They look better than most of the inscribed stones you see in modern high streets. Mostly the altars commemorate Roman gods, and there is one praising Vulcan, proving that the Romans were Star Trek fans too (not all that surprising since Maryport is sited on a Hadrians cycle track). Aside from the anachronisms, the real story is that Vulcan was a deity honoured by blacksmith and this is the only known altar dedicated to the god found in Britain.
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INDEX April 20, 2023 Jonathan Brind