Britannia Prima

Britannia Prima

Britannia Prima was one of the provinces of Roman Britain in existence by c. 312 AD. It was probably created as part of the administrative reforms of the Roman Emperor Diocletian after the defeat of the usurper Allectus by Constantius Chlorus in 296 AD. In the 3rd century, the Romans created Britannia Superior to separate the southern Britain from the militarized northern Britain. A century later, this region was further divided into four distinct provinces, namely Britannia Prima (Wales and the West Country), Britannia Secunda, Flavia Caesariensis, and Maxima Caesariensis. Hence, Britannia Prima was part of the four regions which made up the Diocese of Britain. [Frere, pp. 198-199.]

Roman rule after the 3rd century

The Diocese of Britain was placed under the overall authority of the praetorian prefecture for the Gaullic region. Even though the late Roman civil administration of Britain is shadowy, it is only because of the survival of the "Notitia Dignitatum" that we can sketch the outline of Roman Britain. [Mattingly, pp. 227-228.] This document is the primary source of the changes and alterations made to the province of Britannia by the Roman government. The primary objective for the creation of new provinces was to improve the link between Britain and the near Continent, where the praetorian prefect had a main base at Trier. Britannia Prima had two legions, the Second Augusta at Caerleon and the Twentieth at Chester. Of the four provinces in the Diocese of Britain, Britannia Prima was the largest, and it was generally focused on western England, with either Cirencester or Gloucester as the capital. The main reason to believe that Cirencester was the capital of Britannia Prima is an inscription from Cirensester itself, referring poetically to a rector or ruler of Britannia Prima by the name of L. Septimius. The governors of Britannia Prima were of equestrian rank, although few are known by name. The province is named in the Verona List and probably encompassed all of what is now south western England as well as Wales, stretching from Cornubia to North Wales and east to the Gloucester and Cirencester area. [Creighton, "Britannia: The Creation of a Roman Province".]

References

ources

*cite book
last = Frere
first = Sheppard
authorlink = Sheppard Frere
title = Brittania: A History of Roman Britain
publisher = Harvard University Press
year = 1967
location = Cambridge
pages =

*cite book
last = Mattingly
first = David
authorlink = David Mattingly
title = An Imperial Possession: Britain in the Roman Province
publisher = Penguin
year = 2006
location = London
pages =

*cite book
last = Creighton
first = John
authorlink = John Creighton
title = Britannia: The Creation of a Roman Province
publisher = Routledge
year = 2006
location = London and New York

ee also

*Valentia

Further reading

*cite book
last = Braund
first = David
authorlink =
title = Ruling Roman Britain
publisher = Routledge
year = 1996
location = London and New York

*cite book
last = Johnson
first = Stephen
authorlink = Stephen Johnson
title = Later Roman Britain
publisher = Routledge & Kegan Paul
year = 1947
location = London and Henley


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