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Feeding the Roman Army in Britain

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 August 2023

Peter Guest
Affiliation:
Vianova Archaeology & Heritage Services, UK
Hongjiao Ma
Affiliation:
School of History, Archaeology and Religion, Cardiff University, UK
Leïa Mion
Affiliation:
School of History, Archaeology and Religion, Cardiff University, UK
Angela L. Lamb
Affiliation:
National Environmental Isotope Facility, British Geological Survey, UK
Richard Madgwick*
Affiliation:
School of History, Archaeology and Religion, Cardiff University, UK
*
*Author for correspondence ✉ [email protected]
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Abstract

How did the Roman Empire supply and maintain its frontier garrisons? What was the impact on populations and landscapes of conquered territories? The Feeding the Roman Army in Britain project will answer these questions by establishing how soldiers were provisioned and how frontiers operated as economic as well as militarised zones.

Type
Project Gallery
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Antiquity Publications Ltd.

Introduction

Rome's success as a superpower was based on the ability to field large armies and to maintain sizeable provincial garrisons over extended periods of time. The imperial army comprised around 300 000 soldiers, but we are almost entirely ignorant about how the military authorities supplied units on the frontiers. Therefore, critical questions about the provisioning of the army and the impact on native populations of thousands of soldiers arriving in the provinces remain unanswered.

For many years, ancient literature was the only evidence through which to explore Roman military logistics, though these sources provided very little information regarding provisioning or related topics such as soldiers’ diets (e.g. Davies Reference Davies1971). From the 1970s, however, the study of excavated animal remains from Roman military sites produced the first direct evidence of the dietary habits of soldiers, and the rate of research on faunal assemblages in Britain has accelerated significantly in recent decades. This work, complementing the textual evidence, has led to a much better appreciation of the army's use of animals, not only to sustain the fairly meat-rich diet of the soldiers but also to provide milk, cheese, leather, wool and other resources (e.g. King Reference King, Blagg and King1984; Stallibrass & Thomas Reference Stallibrass and Thomas2008).

Despite this progress, we still have only a rudimentary understanding of the quantities of animals consumed by Roman soldiers, where and by whom these were reared, and how supply was organised. Simply feeding the 5500 men in a legion, for instance, required the control of considerable agricultural resources over a large area and the redistribution of those resources from producers to consumers. How Roman authorities achieved this remains almost entirely unknown, despite it being central to the success of Roman imperialism (e.g. Reece Reference Reece and Brewer2002).

A pilot study by members of the project team investigated the capacity of strontium isotope analysis to establish where animals consumed at the legionary fortress at Caerleon were reared (Madgwick et al. Reference Madgwick, Lewis, Grimes and Guest2019a). The analysis, crucially combined with local strontium biosphere samples, demonstrated that at least 25 per cent of cattle, and perhaps similar proportions of sheep/goats and pigs, came from beyond the local region, with some brought from at least as far as the Wessex chalklands and possibly further afield. This study marked the first step towards a better understanding of legionary supply, but also highlighted the limited resolution that can be achieved using strontium isotope analysis alone, particularly in geologically diverse regions.

Animal supply networks on the frontiers

Feeding the Roman Army in Britain (FRAB), funded by the Leverhulme Trust, will conduct an ambitious analytical programme to examine the logistics of Roman military supply and to address the army's impact in frontier provinces. Focusing on fauna from forts and rural settlements in three frontier zones, the project will produce one of the largest multi-isotope datasets in archaeological research to date, which will reveal animal origins, supply networks and any husbandry strategies introduced by the Romans to increase and intensify agricultural production.

FRAB's overarching aim is to address the question of how the Roman army was supplied on Britannia's frontiers. The project's objectives are to:

  • identify the supply networks to forts and fortresses by establishing the origins of the main taxa consumed;

  • reconstruct animal and landscape management strategies (i.e. manuring, foddering regimes and diet), and investigate evidence for agricultural intensification to meet the needs of the Roman army;

  • explore chronological variation in supply to establish whether or not provisioning changed when frontiers became established; and

  • provide a large comparative dataset and new mapping data to stimulate wider faunal provenancing studies in Roman archaeology and beyond.

The project's source material comes from 15 sites in the three case-study areas (identified by an earlier scoping study), where excavations have produced optimal faunal assemblages for the project's objectives (Figure 1).

  1. 1. South Wales (c. AD 55–200)

    1. a. two legionary fortresses: Usk; Caerleon

    2. b. two auxiliary forts: Cardiff; Loughor

    3. c. three rural settlements: Nash; Thornwell Farm; Whitton

  2. 2. Hadrian's Wall (c. AD 120–220)

    1. a. five auxiliary forts: South Shields; Wallsend; Housesteads; Vindolanda; Birdoswald

    2. b. the town/supply base at Corbridge

  3. 3. Antonine Wall (c. AD 142–165)

    1. a. two auxiliary forts and supply bases: Inveresk; Cramond

Figure 1. Map of Roman Britain showing sample sites in the three case-study frontier zones (figure by L. Mion).

The project intends to analyse the remains of more than 500 animals, concentrating on the three dominant domestic taxa (cattle, sheep/goat and pig) from early military phases, with additional samples from later Roman occupation. While supply to military sites is the main focus, animals from selected rural settlements in south Wales also will be included to explore potential ‘producer’ sites. Therefore, this project will bring together, for the first time, two key categories of Romano-British settlements—military and rural—to examine how these sites were connected and how each affected the other, leading to new and better-informed interpretations of the economy of Roman Britain's frontier regions.

Isotope analysis is an exclusive approach (i.e. it is best suited to excluding, rather than pinpointing origins) and FRAB will employ four proxies (following Madgwick et al. Reference Madgwick, Lamb, Sloane, Nederbragt, Albarella, Pearson and Evans2019b), each with a specific role. Identifying origins is still challenging and the analytical strategy has been designed to refine provenance:

  • Strontium (87Sr/86Sr) will provide geological signals for animal origins;

  • Sulfur (δ34S) will show whether animals were raised in coastal, wetland or inland areas;

  • Carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) will reconstruct husbandry and foddering regimes.

A substantial biosphere-mapping component is also included in the project. The British biosphere is mapped in more detail than any other country (Evans et al. Reference Evans, Mee, Chenery and Marchant2023), but carefully selected modern plants, augmenting biosphere resolution, are critical to exploring animal origins, as demonstrated in the pilot study, as well as having benefits for future research beyond Roman archaeology.

Feeding the Roman Army in Britain: research outcomes

This ambitious interdisciplinary project will transform understanding of the Roman army and Roman imperialism, leading to an enhanced appreciation of Roman frontiers as economic as well as militarised regions. By providing the first direct evidence for the supply networks that provided soldiers in Britannia with meat and animal products, the project will stimulate similar approaches in other parts of the Roman Empire and extend our understanding of the processes by which provinces were colonised and native populations became ‘romanised’. Ultimately, this will reveal how the Empire functioned economically. Both themes are at the forefront of Roman studies and the FRAB project will provide substantial new evidence, as well as new methods, allowing archaeologists and scholars of ancient history to explore the Roman past in more nuanced ways.

The project will serve as a model for integrated and interdisciplinary research, combining history with archaeology and science, while connecting university research with museum collections. This is timely as we now have the means to integrate the vast corpus of archived faunal material with advanced multi-isotope methods and high-resolution biosphere mapping in Britain. The research will contribute to Roman studies and will also have benefits for future studies of mobility, both animal and human, providing an invaluable dataset and a blueprint for exploring trade, military supply, mobility and connectivity in a wide range of geographical and chronological contexts.

Acknowledgements

We are grateful to the Leverhulme Trust for funding the FRAB project (RPG-2021-060), and also the Roman Research Trust and Cardiff University's Seedcorn Fund for supporting the earlier pilot study and scoping project.

References

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Figure 0

Figure 1. Map of Roman Britain showing sample sites in the three case-study frontier zones (figure by L. Mion).