About Silchester
The parish of Silchester in Hampshire, UK, is the location of a large Roman town - Calleva Atrebatum. The Roman town, which was founded in the first century AD (nearly 2000 years ago), was built on the site of an Iron Age town, Calleva. The Roman amphitheatre and town walls are some of the best preserved in Britain, and are open to the public. The town was abandoned some time after 400AD for reasons that are not fully understood. This makes it one of only six Roman towns in Britain that are not still populated.
Find out more about the history of the site.
Archaeology at Silchester
Since 1997, the University of Reading's Department of Archaeology, led by Professor Michael Fulford and Amanda Clarke, have been investigating one block or 'insula' of the Roman town. The aim is to provide details of town life from its origins in the late Iron Age to the time it was abandoned. Excavations take place every July and August and members of the public are welcome visit the site or even to take part through the field school programme.
Find out more about the excavations:
- Watch videos of our activities
- Read about the discoveries
- Visit the site
- Take part - attend the field school
- See the Guide to Silchester
The discovery of the eagle
Calleva Atrebatum was first excavated by Reverend James Joyce. In 1866 he discovered a bronze eagle, now known as 'The Silchester Eagle' in the forum basilica, which he believed to be the imperial standard of a Roman legion. While the eagle is now thought to have had a different purpose, the idea of it as a military standard surviving in the rubble inspired children's author Rosemary Sutcliff, who based her novel 'The Eagle of the Ninth' on the story of Silchester's most famous find. This story has now been interpreted as a film, 'The Eagle', released in March 2011. The eagle is now held in Reading Museum.
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