Roman Road routes
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Roman Road routes
Does anyone know where I can get an ACCURATE and detailed map or description of Britains Roman roads?
I already have a copy of Margary and I'm not sure how accurate the paths on OS maps are.
Also the same for France?
I already have a copy of Margary and I'm not sure how accurate the paths on OS maps are.
Also the same for France?
Re: Roman Road routes
David Ratledge has a site with lots of detail
http://www.twithr.co.uk/
And the Roman Road Research Association too
http://romanroads.org/
http://www.twithr.co.uk/
And the Roman Road Research Association too
http://romanroads.org/
Re: Roman Road routes
Yeah I'm familiar with the RRRA but unfortunately their website map hasn't been upgraded for years and only covers Yorkshire, Lancashire and Cumbria....
Re: Roman Road routes
The OS used to publish maps of Roman Britain, but I've not seen them for some time. I once borrowed a 1:2500 scale OS Roman London map from the library.
Re: Roman Road routes
The 1956 version issued by Ordnance Survey is available on the internet archive and is downloadable. Be aware that its a large file at the highest resolution (770 megabytes) but there is a smaller pdf version.
https://archive.org/details/RomanBritai ... rveyImages
PS if you download the large zip file you will need something like 7zip console to extract the files, windows chokes on it.
If you just want the map I will put it on Google Drive and send you a download link.
https://archive.org/details/RomanBritai ... rveyImages
PS if you download the large zip file you will need something like 7zip console to extract the files, windows chokes on it.
If you just want the map I will put it on Google Drive and send you a download link.
Re: Roman Road routes
The roman roads OS map is available for download at this link, it is out of copyright.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/14YsAXf ... sp=sharing
https://drive.google.com/file/d/14YsAXf ... sp=sharing
Re: Roman Road routes
If anyone is having problems try this link which is unrestricted, it should open the map in the viewer from which you can simply download the file.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/14YsAXf ... sp=sharing
Let me know if you are still having issues and I will try and sus it out.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/14YsAXf ... sp=sharing
Let me know if you are still having issues and I will try and sus it out.
Re: Roman Road routes
This is great, many thanks for sharing.KeithW wrote: ↑Fri Oct 22, 2021 20:56 If anyone is having problems try this link which is unrestricted, it should open the map in the viewer from which you can simply download the file.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/14YsAXf ... sp=sharing
Let me know if you are still having issues and I will try and sus it out.
Steven, is it of a scale where it could be meaningfully put on SABRE Maps? I'd want to use the fader tool to be able to trace routes of Roman Roads on the existing OSM map. I think the scale is such that it couldn't be calibrated accurately enough to be useful?
Simon
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- Steven
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Re: Roman Road routes
The OS Roman maps (as well as some similar maps from the time such as Dark Ages) are at 1:1,000,000 scale so they're less detailed even than Ten Mile or Route Planning Maps. Some of the other historic mapping is at the Ten Mile scale.M4Simon wrote: ↑Sat Oct 23, 2021 10:35 Steven, is it of a scale where it could be meaningfully put on SABRE Maps? I'd want to use the fader tool to be able to trace routes of Roman Roads on the existing OSM map. I think the scale is such that it couldn't be calibrated accurately enough to be useful?
So yes, they're doable, but not easily as they're not National Grid maps, or any of the other projections available on the SABRE Maps toolset.
Steven
Motorway Historian
Founder Member, SABRE ex-Presidents' Corner
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Motorway Historian
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Add your roads knowledge to the SABRE Wiki today!
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Re: Roman Road routes
If you want ultra-detailed you could compare the Roman OS map that KeithW links to against the OS 1:25k 1950s layer available on SABRE Maps, and use the tracing tools to trace them from that.
You could then use the SABRE Maps functionality to overlay the traces over whatever map layer you choose.
It could take some time... but then again, we did it for the F99 pages.
You could then use the SABRE Maps functionality to overlay the traces over whatever map layer you choose.
It could take some time... but then again, we did it for the F99 pages.
Is there a road improvement project going on near you? Help us to document it on the SABRE Wiki - help is available in the Digest forum.
Have you browsed SABRE Maps recently? Get involved! - see our guide to scanning and stitching maps
Have you browsed SABRE Maps recently? Get involved! - see our guide to scanning and stitching maps
Re: Roman Road routes
Would be good to see a Roman road map that distinguishes between the known knowns, the unknowns and the known unknowns.
Re: Roman Road routes
The OS Map is interesting but a world away in detail of what is known today, it is essentially a snapshot of what was known 70 years ago and we have learned a lot since then. The excavations along roads such as Ermine Street carried out when roads such as the M11, A14 and A1(M) have hugely increased the knowledge base.
If you want a modern starting point I would suggest these links.
https://roadsofromanbritain.org/
https://roadsofromanbritain.org/gazetteer.html
Best of all they are open to non commercial use of the information and have an aspiration to develop an online map. This could be the basis of a collaborative project.
This is their copyright statement
https://roadsofromanbritain.org/yorkshire.html
This is an active map so you can click on a road and see what is known about it.
Skipton-Settle-Ingleton for example.
http://roadsofromanbritain.org/gazettee ... rr722.html
It seems to me this would make a much better basis for tracing over OS one inch or 1:25,000 maps
If you want a modern starting point I would suggest these links.
https://roadsofromanbritain.org/
https://roadsofromanbritain.org/gazetteer.html
Best of all they are open to non commercial use of the information and have an aspiration to develop an online map. This could be the basis of a collaborative project.
This is their copyright statement
They have carried out a lot work in Yorkshire and have come up with this map on a modern OS Base.You are free to reproduce any of the text of this work for non-commercial purposes only, provided proper attribution, credit and citation is given to the author, any original contributor or source, and the RRRA. Where photographs and diagrams carry additional copyright details, this Creative Commons license does not apply.
https://roadsofromanbritain.org/yorkshire.html
This is an active map so you can click on a road and see what is known about it.
Skipton-Settle-Ingleton for example.
http://roadsofromanbritain.org/gazettee ... rr722.html
It seems to me this would make a much better basis for tracing over OS one inch or 1:25,000 maps
Re: Roman Road routes
I'm not sure where to put this, it is a sort of Roman route planner
https://orbis.stanford.edu/
https://orbis.stanford.edu/
"I intend to always travel a different road"
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Re: Roman Road routes
Try this site, its reasonably up to date , there are lots of parameters to select objects if interest and you can save an image.
https://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk/ar ... l/map.html
https://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk/ar ... l/map.html