button to main menu   West's Guide to the Lakes, 1778/1821

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Page 243:-
amongst rocks at the bottom: imagination is left to conceive the cause of the deep and solemn murmurs beneath.
Our ideas of the beauties of art and nature were mellowed and refined by those of venerable antiquity. We were now on classic ground, Overborough being most undoubtedly a Roman station and garrison - the Bremetonacoe (sic) of the emperor Antoninus, as may be collected from Tacitus and other ancient writers. Bremetonacae is placed twenty Roman (or eighteen English) miles north of Coccium, or Ribchester, and twenty-seven Roman (or twenty-four English) miles south of Galacum, which some antiquaries conceive to be Apulby, though others with more probability think it was Brough: the distances correspond, besides the additional argument of their being nearly in the same direction, whether we conceive Galacum to be Apulby or Brough. The Roman road is easily traced from Ribchester into Yorkshire, running on the north side of Slaidburn, through Crossa-Greta, then on the north side of Tatham Chapel, through Bentham, to Overborough; [1] afterwards the Roman road goes through Casterton and Middleton, and, as some think, by Borrow-bridge and Orton, to Apulby. Others, and perhaps from better reasons, are of opinion, the road went by Sedbergh, or Sedburgh, [2] over Blewcaster, along Ravenstonedale-street, and through Kirkby-Stephen, to Brough or Burgh. For Antoninus's tenth Itinerary runs from Glanoventa or Lanchester, in the county of Durham, by Galacum, Bremetonacae, Coccium, Mancunium or Manchester, to Glenovento or Draton, in the county of Salop. In various places by the side of this road are high artificial mounts of earth, which were without doubt the stations of centinels, to prevent any insurrections, or being surprised by an enemy: they may be now seen entire at Burton-in-Lons-
[1] A full account of the antiquities of Bremetonacae, or Overborough, may be seen in a quarto volume, published by Richard Rauthmell.
[2] Chester, or caster, is derived from the Latin word castrum, or camp. Street is derived from the Latin word stratum, or military road, or causeway. Borough, or Burgh, from the Greek word burgos, or watch tower.
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gazetteer links
button -- "Apulby" -- Appleby-in-Westmorland
button -- BluecasterBluecaster Side
button -- Brough
button -- Burton in Lonsdale
button -- Casterton
button -- Kirkby Lonsdale
button -- Kirkby Stephen
button -- (Leck, River)
button -- "Borrowbridge" -- Low Borrowbridge
button -- (Middleton)
button -- (Orton)
button -- "Overborough" -- Over Burrow
button -- Ravenstonedale
button -- "Bremetonacae" -- (roman fort, Overborough)
button -- (roman road 7c, Cumbria)
button -- Sedbergh

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