Romancamp Gate | |
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Alternative name(s) | Bellie |
Type | Marching camp (possible) |
Location | |
Coordinates | 57°38′29″N3°04′35″W / 57.6414°N 3.0763°W /57.6414; -3.0763 |
Site notes | |
Discovery year | 1799 |
Bellie | |
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Alternative name(s) | Fochabers |
Type | Marching camp (possible) |
Location | |
Coordinates | 57°38′06″N3°04′58″W / 57.6349°N 3.0828°W /57.6349; -3.0828 |
Site notes | |
Discovery year | 1967 |
Bellie is a locality inMoray, Scotland.Little survives of the oldparish church at Bellie, located 2 miles north ofFochabers, although itsgraveyard is preserved. There is aBellie Kirk in Fochabers, which replaced the old church in 1798.
There are up to two possible Roman camps at Bellie.[1] Either of these sites, if accepted as a Roman camp, would constitute the most northerly example known, being 10 miles north-west of the known camps atAuchinhove andMuiryfold.[1]
The first site is known as Romancamp Gate, and lies 100 metres to the north-east of the old church of Bellie, with a 50 feet (15 m) cliff to the north-west that lies on the east bank of theRiver Spey.[1] The site was recorded by the antiquarianGeorge Chalmers in 1799 as "the remains of the Roman encampment overlooking the low ground by the river ... on plan nearly a rectangular parallelogram of 888' by 333', but the W and most of the N sides have been destroyed."[2] In the mid 20th centuryO. G. S. Crawford noted that the enclosure's size would make it considerably smaller than any other known Roman camp in Scotland and felt that the lack of identified gates counted against it being Roman, but also acknowledged that it was difficult to assign it to any other period.[2] Air investigation in 1943 revealedcropmarks of ditches, including a rounded corner at the south-west,[2] but the site was extensively damaged duringWorld War II by the construction of a military camp including emergency stone shelters.[3] In 1964 two pieces of silver 3 inches (7.6 cm) long and dated to AD51 were found at the rear of the site.[2] Excavation along the south-west side in 1971 revealed a ditch 2.5 feet (0.76 m) deep and 5 feet (1.5 m) wide, but found no evidence to prove that it was Roman.[2]
Approximately 400 metres (1,300 ft) south of the site at Romancamp gate, a second site was excavated in 1967 byKenneth St Joseph, who traced a V-shaped ditch running for 975 feet (297 m) on a north-south alignment, measuring 7 feet (2.1 m) wide and 3 feet (0.91 m) deep where best preserved.[4] St Joseph identified the position and profile of the ditch as strongly suggesting it was Roman, in which case he felt it would probably form part of a camp from theFlavian period measuring up to 900 feet (270 m) by 1,200 feet (370 m) and occupying around 30 acres (12 ha).[4]Aerial photography in 1984 recorded another linear cropmark on the site with a well-rounded northern corner, that was excavated in 1986 and revealed the shallow remains of a ditch about 2 metres (6.6 ft) wide.[4] Study of other aerial photographs taken on the 1970s and 1980s by theUniversity of Cambridge suggests cropmarks provisionally showing the characteristics of a Roman camp lying to the east of Bellie old church and partially covered by an adjacent plantation.[4]