You know, there is a second possible place where such stones could show up besides where they were placed. I'm Swedish, we of course don't have Roman milestones but we do have runestones which are widely searched for. Those tend to show up in 2 places: In situ and built in the foundation of old churches. More then a few have been found when someone noticed runes on an old foundation. I have only heard of them being found in churches from the 18th century or older (and I only heard of 2 stones in that new churches, most found were in far older foundations). In any case, if there is an old nearby church near where an old milestone should be, it might be worth looking on it's foundation because it was not uncommon to just take any stone large enough and chuck it in the foundation when building the church, most of the runestones found this way was completely intact too. It is certainly a worthy project to try to find one of these stones. I don't doubt at least some of them existed but if they have fallen over and are covered by earth you basically need a GPR to find them, which both is expensive and pretty impractical to bring when you are hiking. Good luck. :)
I've heard of one found when a road was widened I'm shure that will be pretty famous and on the map so yes probably ended up in a ditch or buildings walls or foundation.
@@dave_h_8742 That sounds right, We do see the Romans building small shops and houses next to roads but it is more likely that rain eventually widened the ditch so the stone fell in and later dirt filled in the ditch. Those are impossible to locate unless you are doing construction work in just the right place or use geophys. I think that is probably the main reason why so few stones have been recovered. I don't know if the found stones are in areas that seen more development, They did made a modern road over a large portion of the road parallel to the wall, so I bet they found some of them when they did that. Since the stones are not always easy to recognize either, it might very well be that there are still the majority of stones just waiting to be found. :)
Here, in Denmark, runestones (or fragments thereof) have been found recently when a couple in Randers was redoing their kitchen and, a few years earlier, one was found that had been used as a stone bench on a farm, so these old stones can show up in odd places :)
@@ralach They sure can, which is why I think Paul should have a look at old churches and ruins around where he expect to find a milestone. I don't think it would have been dragged too far, since that would be more job then sourcing the stone locally but within a kilometer or 2. I think he can find one with some work, they should be out there in large numbers but thinking outside the box will increase his chances. He already marked where he think a bunch of them should have stood so looking for old ruins and buildings near those places to see if there is a likely place one of them could have been moved to might be worth the work. Of course if he doesn't find them in situ first. And I mean, in worst case he will film an old ruin or church which always is fun to see anyways. ;)
Paul mentioned the Milestone Society. I am a member and on the back page of one of their 2023 newsletters was a photo of a Swedish Milestone in Bohuslän from 1737 with an information plaque. Using google text to image and then google translate, I provided the English text. It said that "In the middle of the 17th century, it was decided that all major roads in Sweden should be measured and that milestones should be set up. The posts marked out every full, half or quarter mile." [a Swedish Mile is 10km]. PS I then found some other photos of the milestone in Bohuslän complete with the other half of the plaque in English! The 1st UK turnpike road was in 1663.
Excellent! We are meant to have a roman mile post where I live "It is the oldest inscribed milestone found in Derbyshire. The inscription is 'TRIB POT COS II P P A NAVIONE M P XI' which means 'With the tribune's power, twice consul, father of this country. From Navio 11 miles."
@@phillipwakefield4678 Sorry now you run in another Problem: Agrippa's Imperial Roman mile was about 1,618 yards ; 4,854 ft; in length, so less than the 1,760 yards; 5,280 ft of the modern mile. Good luck with converting!
If I remember my A Level Archaeology correctly, wasn't that centurion called Biggus Dickus and didn't he marry the darling of the Rome social scene, Incontinentia Buttocks?
@@marqsee7948 Paul or Rebecca? And then we'd have to drag one of them around the country whenever we wanted to compare other roads. Oh, hang on, they'd probably be up for that...
Long live Emperor Whitewick. Younger than me, but already complaining about ageing. 🤣 Keep searching, one day you'll find a stone! And make videos while you're at it.
Thanks for getting so wet Paul. Even though you didn't find one we learned a lot about them and every bit of knowledge helps. We'll all be looking for them on walks near Roman settlements now.
Watching you walking in the rain, hood down, getting soaked, reminds me of an incident in the early years of my marriage. I was out working in the yard in what I considered not too bad a rain (I was soaked to the skin) when she arrived home from work driving along the road along the side yard, stopped to put down her window and yell, “What the hell is wrong with you!? You don’t have the sense god gave a peanut to come in out of the rain.” Standing up from the muddy hole I was digging I proudly stated, “Ha, peanuts don’t come in out of the rain so I am just as smart as a peanut!” Wait…that didn’t come out right.
I did some measuring on the OS map north of Chester along the Roman Road now followed roughly by the A540. And concluded that the small white early twentieth century County Council milestones are set at Roman Miles rather than statute miles. I concluded that the original Roman milestones at these points had simply been replaced - probably several times - over the centuries since the end of the Roman era. With little regard to accuracy along the route. Something else I noticed was that right angle junctions - ie roads joining a main road also appeared to be at exact multiples of the Roman Mile. Where there would have to be a post of some kind to indicate where the routes went to. So perhaps the reason there are no Roman Milestones to be found is that many have been replaced or updated. And on the sections of road that ceased to be proper roads for vehicles - these pieces of stone have been regarded as abandoned and were carted off to be used as building material. Keep up the good work though - keep looking.
I could see why you thought that could be one, Paul. It put me in mind of the one at Garstang in Lancashire. The Garstang example has only recently been identified as Roman. It’s just off the line of the Roman road, but for 270 odd years, it has been one of two gateposts on a turnpike. But it does show they can still be found - there’s always hope.
@@pwhitewick yes - I’ve posted the link above. As you point out in your video, there’s quite a range of styles. The Garstang one is different to the Middleton one and that’s different to the A66 version. I’m going to do a milestone video at some point with all the - roughly - in situ survivors!
As others had said already, worked stone has often been recycled by later people, so you might get lucky looking at building foundation after the romans. - Or even in places like drystone walls on farms. - Look at old buildings/ruins dated shortly after the Romans left and you might get to find one...Long shot I know but stranger things have happened !- Might also be worth reaching out to the metal detector communities around the country and see if anyone has spotted something interesting.
Quite right. I am reminded of some very rare examples of post roman inscribed memorial stones found in Wareham when the church was rebuilt in 1841. They had been used in pillers in the original saxon building.
I hope everyone appreciates the production vales and lengths you go to in your videos. One man with one camera, but all the cutaways showing your movement shows great thought and planning!
Sorry you didn't find what you were looking for, but I am glad you posted this. It's an honest adventure presented honestly, without any fabrication or sensationalism, which is something to be applauded.
great video again Paul, very interesting as always , looks like i will be keeping my eyes open when im out and about lol, really well done and thank you 😊
Thank you for sharing bits your journey. Even on that some may label as a "failure". The point of a journey isn't the end-goal, but rather what we learn and experience at alone the way.
Another excellent video Paul. You really are maintaining very high production values. To echo some of the comments on here, now you have a better understanding of the stones themselves, it may well be worth having a look at some of the older churches close to the roads. Stone may well have been used, and reused, and a trained eye may spot what others have missed.
Fascinating, please keep up the search! It reminded me of that child who used star charts to correctly predict where a lost Mayan city should be in the jungle, given that most of their cities aligned with constellations.
I do love your videos. This one was fascinating, even if your 'find' was not what you hoped. My money is on there being some out there somewhere and that you will find one, one day. Thanks for you dedication to keeping us entertained and educated!
A Roman mile of 1480 meters works out as about 4.8 ft (1.48 meters), Speaking for myself, my normal walking pace is about 4 ft (each step being so close to 2 ft that I've used it for years to measure distances quite reliably). That suggest to me that the 'Roman pace' was actually a jogging step rather than what we would consider a march.
If nothing else a very logical bit of detective work. We have a road near us that we like to travel. It was originally surveyed by the young George Washington. He set up milestones on it, probably based on the Roman ideas. They recently did a renovation down the whole road and located a good number of the lost milestones. Route 144 in Maryland. It is a very interesting historical road and maintains many of its most early features which includes town spacing's and their names.
Must be stunning to see these Roman era landmarks and partial structures. Your conversation and tour were great as always. Hello to Rebecca and see you on the next, Paul! 🇬🇧🙂👍🇺🇸
Gripped by your dedication to find one! There is something special about a stone marker, be that a milestone, a waymarker or some other special stone mark. They are too easy to walk past without even spotting but, with a keen eye and an awareness of these things, they do pop up in view sometimes! Cheers, Warren :)
Not finding any is just as significant as finding one. You are doing great on the ground research. And making very enjoyable videos as well. That's an achievement to be proud of!
I have recently been trying to trace the milestones on an early 19th century turnpike. A much easier quest than yours of course but worth baring in mind that in order to be visible from the road they are often on small mounds which could potentially still be identifiable. Also way markers are often used at junctions, another potential place to look. In looking for boundary stones in the New Forest some shown in early o/s maps seem to have been lost to road widening - so probably best to do as you seem to be doing avoiding busy modern roads. It might be possible to identify some potential targets on the mid 19th century 6in or 25inch o/s. Good luck.
Paul, I admire your dedication and persistence, 'against all odds'! 👍 The 'case of the missing milestones' brought to mind a similar story, although I'm not implying the milestones suffered the same fate! An American fellow, who likes to mess about in boats, was talking about an obscure journal he had encountered, belonging to a Mississippi boat skipper. He was employed by the authorities over a period of about 30 years around the turn of the C18th/C19th, to remove and dump offshore all the stone navigation stele up and down the Mississippi river system. They just happened to be inscribed with ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs!
This might be compared with the search for Range, Township and section stones over much of the USA. Many years ago I found 2 of them in place by digging out stones that had been buried by vegetation that turned to soil, and these Roman stones have had about a 16 century to 18 century head stat on these stones. The lost ones were often found in farmers gardens, having been collected as "Indian Stones"
Thanks Paul for enduring such awful weather and putting yourself out there! You are an inspiration in showing us that we mustn't let the great British weather spoiling our plans! Fascinating content: well done.
There is one in the Village of St Nicolas on the A48 between Cardiff and Cowbridge, says Legit 11 August, another around Abergavenny somewhere, two in Neath Brecon one in Builth one on top of a mountain near Tregaron , the Pompeius Stone at Margam Museum was standing on the Via Marinari between Margam and Porthcawl, Wales is the least searched in Britain, some have been found in Farmers Walls. St Davids has some Roman Stones that may well have been Milestones, certainly the Stone you said that was not near a Roman Road is Roman, the Marks are of Treasure and a Possible burial, there are many like this between Margam and Cowbridge. Also in the South Wales Valleys near Gelligaer and Pontypridd and Caerphilly and Gelligaer. people are just blind to the History around them, there are Roman marker stones on Mynydd Baiden above Llangynwyd, which was a site of Battle in the 6th Century between Britons and Saxons also on the Margam Mountain and Baiden Mountain which join each other, there are Four Roman Forts, six Celtic Hillforts three of which were still in use in the 9th or 10th Century, also a Viking Fort that was from the 9th Century and was a Trading post with the Celtic people for about 30 Years and also one below at Stormy Down. There are many signs of the Romans that are not registered in Wales, they were everywhere, the Romans criss crossed the Welsh Mountains from North to South and East to West, of course there was no Wales or Scotland or England then and the peoples all spoke Brythonic Celtic , there were Major Gold Silver Lead Tin Copper Silica Iron Ore and other mines all across what is now Wales, with two very Large Iron ore mines at Pentyrch and Llanharri in Glamorgan, also Coal was mined and had been for at least 4000 Years before the Romans.
Good luck with your search, it's a great challenge and a noble one. Beautiful countryside. Lucky you don't have any aggressive snakes to contend with, though I keep thinking of Sean Lock's Tramp!!
Can remember as a kid jumping off of a stone in a a neighbours garden through which a roman road ran. Every one used to call it the roman stone. The neighour then decided to make a retaining wall and moved it in the late seventies. Just measured the distance from the centre of the nearby roman city, straight line 1300 metres, north out of the north gate and then picking up the roman road appoximatly 1450 metres.
You could run for 4 minutes and decide the strech is a "you-mile", not only can you now say youve succsesfully ran a 4 minute mile, but also you can measure your improvement compared to when you started :D
I live very close to Silchester, and the Imp stone in Pamber Heath. While I do believe that if it is a Roman milestone, it probably isn't in it's original location, I suspect it was originally on a Roman road that isn't identified as such.
Another interesting video 😊. We've got a roman milestone just out side of Dorchester (Dorset) it was moved about 25 years ago when the bypass was built, its still on the side of the road, just not where the Romans left it.
Ah yes. I found that a little too late for filming but it's hugely helpful. If thatbis in situ... and not moved far, then it tells us the Roman miles we're measured from the forum. As that distance fits perfectly.
Amazing work as always. I’ve been watching your channel quite a few years now. Today was a good day. One of your best videos to date. Keep up the good work. You have a lovely way of explaining things,, I see you brother!!!
Great video Paul. I know, from personal experience, how hard it is just trying to find "old boundary stones" showing on 1895 maps (especially in Dorset!). Great research & presentation as always.
outside the front door of 110 Lincoln High st is a stone that is known as a roman mile stone, but it has no inscription on it, it is placed in what would be the drainage ditch between the Foss Way and the Ermine St. so is very close to Roman infrastructure.
Very interesting, Paul. I suspect many of them could be under the ground now. Also, the passage of time has to be a reason why so few are found. Near my parents’ house in Suffolk is the remains of a medieval priory - by remains, it’s one section of wall, about 3 feet long. A Roman mile stone is about twice the age and much smaller than a medieval priory!
NZer here - you're sooo lucky, Paul, to be in such an old country with its *mountains* of history! Richard III, for example, being dug up in a car park! Even your geology is great - the dinosaur fossils that the UK has far outnumber ours!
I agree with what others have said about finding possible stones in churches. In my area (Mid-Essex) it is said that at least 2-3 churches were built on possible stone circle sites, some of which stones were incorporated into or under the building of the churches. A lot of Roman brick is visible in the fabric of the church walls. Also one church (St Mary's Broomfield) is thought to have been constructed using alot of material from a nearby deteriorated `Roman Villa, there is a stone in the exterior wall of the church which seems to have a face carved into it, as if it were part of a Roman statue or carving repurposed. I would be interested to see more videos on this Hunt.
I’m going to keep my eyes well open for signs of these on my metal detecting permissions - I can see evidence of a section of road and have found lots of Roman coins, building materials and artefacts. Great vid.
Hi Paul, I was willing you on to find one but it wasn't to be this time. I think one that had fallen down would be quite long as you would need to embed them in the ground so the one you found might be about the right size perhaps. My opinion is that there wouldn't be one every Roman mile. I think they would be sited at junctions or stopping points. How does that fit in with the 95 identified? Finding one really would be a legacy and I hope you get lucky!! All the best!!
Felt like I was watching a BBC documentary, one of those ones they were making plenty of back in the 2000s. Great stuff, and fingers crossed for finding one in a part 2!
Just love watching your dedication. The best history lessons on UA-cam. I hope some day you do find a milestone and you get the credit that you and Rebecca deserve.
"The best history lessons on UA-cam." Errr... well, you're entitled to your opinion, but I hard disagree. Hey, I like this channel a lot and appreciate it (otherwise I wouldn't be here watching, and reading the comments). But the best "history lessons" channel I know on UA-cam, is by far Apostolic Majesty - not only for the sheer breadth of subjects covered, but also the sheer depth. But because of that, it's not for the faint hearted, and it's also much more academic and therefore generally 'dry' content. It's not for everyone, I get that, but purely for "history lessons", it's in a different stratosphere to this here, objectively so.
When you consider the depth that Roman mosaics are found in fields, soil depth increases by around 0.5 mm per year, in forested areas it will be around 1.0 mm per year, this means the likelihood of finding a milestone is almost zero. This is probably why so few have been found, unless its a tall pillar type, or ground has been disturbed the chances are very remote. The only other way to find one is if it's been reused in a building or boundary wall, but of course the context has been lost, so it will just be a rock with indistinct markings on it. I know this sounds all very negative but it doesn't hurt to keep your eyes peeled wherever you're walking, especially now you have an idea what they might look like.
the romans used a machine to mesure distance a cart like thing with the wheel rotation turning a cog that was connected to the wheel on the cart after so many rotations a ball would drop marking the distance .i seen this on a documentry .the fact it was mechanised made for better accrracy as you wouldnt be goverened by the stride of any one person as each person may have diffrent stride .
I love watery Wiltshire with it's streams,rivers,-- brooks and Winterbournes. Maybe they were more in the nature of indicators to the lonely traveller that he/she was ON THE TRACK to Somewhere.
Even with nothing unearthed or pinpointed, there is value in getting onto the cultural landscape. It's like the anglers saying they go out; catching fish is secondary. Same for some golfers: getting out on the ground it the thing, whether the ball goes in the hole or not is secondary.
Hearing you talk about no milestones before hadrian , reminded me of a lecture when Hedly Swain was speaking about Roman milestones in general , how few & many of those that have remains of inscriptions but no mention of miles.. I wonder how many are part of the structure of old farmhouses, re-used again and again over the centuries.
There is apparently a roman milestone next to a fragment of roman road on or near the roundabout for Kingston Maurwood on the Dorchester to London road, just outside of Dorchester or Durnovaria if you will on the eastern edge of the town, your mission should you choose to accept it is to find and identify and possibly prove your theory, good luck and may the force be with you ;)
Hi Paul Another interesting video, i dont know if you have done something like this previously, but your bookshelves always grab my attention. Would you consider doing a video on your top 10 reads for finding lesser known paths and roads. I have the old straight track and few on Hardy's Wessex and some on Glastonbury . Plus a few ordnance survey maps. I live in Brasil but venture back to the uk from time to time and do the rounds of 2nd hand bookshops etc.
Do you have distances from contemporary sources so that you can check how accurate the 1480 meter mile was measured? As you plot each stone the accumulation of errors grows quite large.
Yup. I didn't mention it. (Saved for Part 2). However there is one stone in situ near Dorchester. Said to be very close to its original location. It is 1482m from the Forum
This is the most British video I’ve ever watched. Brilliant. Makes me proud of Blighty.
You know, there is a second possible place where such stones could show up besides where they were placed.
I'm Swedish, we of course don't have Roman milestones but we do have runestones which are widely searched for. Those tend to show up in 2 places: In situ and built in the foundation of old churches. More then a few have been found when someone noticed runes on an old foundation.
I have only heard of them being found in churches from the 18th century or older (and I only heard of 2 stones in that new churches, most found were in far older foundations). In any case, if there is an old nearby church near where an old milestone should be, it might be worth looking on it's foundation because it was not uncommon to just take any stone large enough and chuck it in the foundation when building the church, most of the runestones found this way was completely intact too.
It is certainly a worthy project to try to find one of these stones. I don't doubt at least some of them existed but if they have fallen over and are covered by earth you basically need a GPR to find them, which both is expensive and pretty impractical to bring when you are hiking.
Good luck. :)
I've heard of one found when a road was widened I'm shure that will be pretty famous and on the map so yes probably ended up in a ditch or buildings walls or foundation.
@@dave_h_8742 That sounds right, We do see the Romans building small shops and houses next to roads but it is more likely that rain eventually widened the ditch so the stone fell in and later dirt filled in the ditch.
Those are impossible to locate unless you are doing construction work in just the right place or use geophys. I think that is probably the main reason why so few stones have been recovered.
I don't know if the found stones are in areas that seen more development, They did made a modern road over a large portion of the road parallel to the wall, so I bet they found some of them when they did that.
Since the stones are not always easy to recognize either, it might very well be that there are still the majority of stones just waiting to be found. :)
Here, in Denmark, runestones (or fragments thereof) have been found recently when a couple in Randers was redoing their kitchen and, a few years earlier, one was found that had been used as a stone bench on a farm, so these old stones can show up in odd places :)
@@ralach They sure can, which is why I think Paul should have a look at old churches and ruins around where he expect to find a milestone. I don't think it would have been dragged too far, since that would be more job then sourcing the stone locally but within a kilometer or 2.
I think he can find one with some work, they should be out there in large numbers but thinking outside the box will increase his chances. He already marked where he think a bunch of them should have stood so looking for old ruins and buildings near those places to see if there is a likely place one of them could have been moved to might be worth the work. Of course if he doesn't find them in situ first.
And I mean, in worst case he will film an old ruin or church which always is fun to see anyways. ;)
Paul mentioned the Milestone Society. I am a member and on the back page of one of their 2023 newsletters was a photo of a Swedish Milestone in Bohuslän from 1737 with an information plaque. Using google text to image and then google translate, I provided the English text. It said that "In the middle of the 17th century, it was decided that all major roads in Sweden should be measured and that milestones should be set up. The posts marked out every full, half or quarter mile." [a Swedish Mile is 10km].
PS I then found some other photos of the milestone in Bohuslän complete with the other half of the plaque in English! The 1st UK turnpike road was in 1663.
Excellent! We are meant to have a roman mile post where I live "It is the oldest inscribed milestone found in Derbyshire. The inscription is 'TRIB POT COS II P P A NAVIONE M P XI' which means 'With the tribune's power, twice consul, father of this country. From Navio 11 miles."
Not meters you can keep meters
@@phillipwakefield4678 Sorry now you run in another Problem:
Agrippa's Imperial Roman mile was about 1,618 yards ; 4,854 ft; in length, so less than the 1,760 yards; 5,280 ft of the modern mile. Good luck with converting!
@@marting1056I quote my car milage in "hogsheads to the furlong"
The stone found by the villa could have just been the house name of a retired centurion who decided to call it "Dunroman".
Oh Dere (Street).
😂😂😂
If I remember my A Level Archaeology correctly, wasn't that centurion called Biggus Dickus and didn't he marry the darling of the Rome social scene, Incontinentia Buttocks?
'Appian you're right.
@@andrewcollieI didn't do A-levels so I'm guessing it was GCSE history as I also learned that and I can't think where else it would be from 🤔🤔😁
i love the mixing of three distance measures in one video: meters, miles/yards and roman miles
Always!!
@@pwhitewick when in doubt, use yourself as a unit of measurement. 'This road is 10 Whitewicks wide.'
@@marqsee7948 Paul or Rebecca? And then we'd have to drag one of them around the country whenever we wanted to compare other roads. Oh, hang on, they'd probably be up for that...
Why would the milestones be visible when so many Roman ruins are buried below the surface?
Long live Emperor Whitewick. Younger than me, but already complaining about ageing. 🤣
Keep searching, one day you'll find a stone! And make videos while you're at it.
Thanks for the directions to Winchester Emperor Whitewick 😂Great video
Thanks for getting so wet Paul. Even though you didn't find one we learned a lot about them and every bit of knowledge helps. We'll all be looking for them on walks near Roman settlements now.
Many more to be found I feel
@@pwhitewickDo you recommend the coat ? Mine's like a bin bag full of sweat or old one leaks across the shoulders.
For the algorithems really
Watching you walking in the rain, hood down, getting soaked, reminds me of an incident in the early years of my marriage. I was out working in the yard in what I considered not too bad a rain (I was soaked to the skin) when she arrived home from work driving along the road along the side yard, stopped to put down her window and yell, “What the hell is wrong with you!? You don’t have the sense god gave a peanut to come in out of the rain.” Standing up from the muddy hole I was digging I proudly stated, “Ha, peanuts don’t come in out of the rain so I am just as smart as a peanut!” Wait…that didn’t come out right.
There’s nothing quite like a heroic lost cause. Thanks for the video Paul and better luck next time.
Paul has definitely been spending a lot of time thinking about the Roman Empire!
I did some measuring on the OS map north of Chester along the Roman Road now followed roughly by the A540. And concluded that the small white early twentieth century County Council milestones are set at Roman Miles rather than statute miles. I concluded that the original Roman milestones at these points had simply been replaced - probably several times - over the centuries since the end of the Roman era. With little regard to accuracy along the route. Something else I noticed was that right angle junctions - ie roads joining a main road also appeared to be at exact multiples of the Roman Mile. Where there would have to be a post of some kind to indicate where the routes went to. So perhaps the reason there are no Roman Milestones to be found is that many have been replaced or updated. And on the sections of road that ceased to be proper roads for vehicles - these pieces of stone have been regarded as abandoned and were carted off to be used as building material. Keep up the good work though - keep looking.
I could see why you thought that could be one, Paul. It put me in mind of the one at Garstang in Lancashire. The Garstang example has only recently been identified as Roman. It’s just off the line of the Roman road, but for 270 odd years, it has been one of two gateposts on a turnpike.
But it does show they can still be found - there’s always hope.
I recall you did a film on it?
@@pwhitewick ua-cam.com/video/NK2jtD0Llf0/v-deo.htmlsi=gEz_8DUqclnTd9Fv
@@pwhitewick yes - I’ve posted the link above. As you point out in your video, there’s quite a range of styles. The Garstang one is different to the Middleton one and that’s different to the A66 version. I’m going to do a milestone video at some point with all the - roughly - in situ survivors!
@WC21UKProductionsLtd excellent. Looking forward to it
@@WC21UKProductionsLtd Can't see the link - can you post it again please?
Long time fan of Time Team here, so the almighty algorithm brought me here, and I am happy for it. I am really enjoying these vids.
As others had said already, worked stone has often been recycled by later people, so you might get lucky looking at building foundation after the romans. - Or even in places like drystone walls on farms. - Look at old buildings/ruins dated shortly after the Romans left and you might get to find one...Long shot I know but stranger things have happened !- Might also be worth reaching out to the metal detector communities around the country and see if anyone has spotted something interesting.
Quite right. I am reminded of some very rare examples of post roman inscribed memorial stones found in Wareham when the church was rebuilt in 1841. They had been used in pillers in the original saxon building.
I hope everyone appreciates the production vales and lengths you go to in your videos. One man with one camera, but all the cutaways showing your movement shows great thought and planning!
Cheeeeers Bobby. Yep this was definitely a long one
@@pwhitewick ...not the first time you've used that line, I bet!
@@pwhitewick ...and who's Bobby?
Don't forget that Rebecca helps him a lot of the time - see the last few seconds of the video! ;-)
@@FamilyOfEyles now that's definitely not classed as helping. She was just blocking my shot 😆
Sorry you didn't find what you were looking for, but I am glad you posted this. It's an honest adventure presented honestly, without any fabrication or sensationalism, which is something to be applauded.
Thank you Paul, l can only imagine the work that went into this video. Good stuff.
Thanks Robert. Yup.... this was on the high end of "hours put into a production".
Good luck in your search, I hope you find one.
great video again Paul, very interesting as always , looks like i will be keeping my eyes open when im out and about lol, really well done and thank you 😊
Thank you for sharing bits your journey. Even on that some may label as a "failure". The point of a journey isn't the end-goal, but rather what we learn and experience at alone the way.
Yes! Thank you!
What a work and research Paul. So interesting. Thank you for making this subject so enjoyable
appreciate your perseverance. Greetings from Canada.
Very nice video. As in Doctor Who 'The quest is the quest.' So keep carrying on.
This was fun and interesting :) A part two would be great :)
*Wow* !! Such an impressive video all the way around: Educational, “cinematic” and the narrative is well written and very engaging! Thank you Paul!
Thank you. Very kind.
Another excellent video Paul. You really are maintaining very high production values. To echo some of the comments on here, now you have a better understanding of the stones themselves, it may well be worth having a look at some of the older churches close to the roads. Stone may well have been used, and reused, and a trained eye may spot what others have missed.
Fascinating, please keep up the search! It reminded me of that child who used star charts to correctly predict where a lost Mayan city should be in the jungle, given that most of their cities aligned with constellations.
I do love your videos. This one was fascinating, even if your 'find' was not what you hoped. My money is on there being some out there somewhere and that you will find one, one day. Thanks for you dedication to keeping us entertained and educated!
For one of the Roman milestones, Dobbs Weir has one. It’s located just outside a public house, the Fish and Eels.
The best content on youtube. I SO wished you found one. Maybe you will. I'd bet on it.
You are very kind. Thank you.
I 😂always enjoy your adventures. Sometimes they work out, sometimes not. But I get a little more knowledge with each one. Thanks.
A Roman mile of 1480 meters works out as about 4.8 ft (1.48 meters), Speaking for myself, my normal walking pace is about 4 ft (each step being so close to 2 ft that I've used it for years to measure distances quite reliably).
That suggest to me that the 'Roman pace' was actually a jogging step rather than what we would consider a march.
Could well be yes.
If nothing else a very logical bit of detective work. We have a road near us that we like to travel. It was originally surveyed by the young George Washington. He set up milestones on it, probably based on the Roman ideas. They recently did a renovation down the whole road and located a good number of the lost milestones. Route 144 in Maryland. It is a very interesting historical road and maintains many of its most early features which includes town spacing's and their names.
Must be stunning to see these Roman era landmarks and partial structures. Your conversation and tour were great as always. Hello to Rebecca and see you on the next, Paul! 🇬🇧🙂👍🇺🇸
Gripped by your dedication to find one! There is something special about a stone marker, be that a milestone, a waymarker or some other special stone mark. They are too easy to walk past without even spotting but, with a keen eye and an awareness of these things, they do pop up in view sometimes! Cheers, Warren :)
Thanks Warren. Looking forward to next week.
Not finding any is just as significant as finding one. You are doing great on the ground research. And making very enjoyable videos as well. That's an achievement to be proud of!
Your research is remarkable making these videos very interesting to watch.
Thank you very much!
When science, technology, history and lore come together it is a beautiful thing. Thank for my armchair trek!
A pleasure.
One of your best videos so far. Thank you for sharing your adventure. Don´t give up! You´ll find something significant sooner or later
I do hope your better half makes your rainly days better.
I have recently been trying to trace the milestones on an early 19th century turnpike. A much easier quest than yours of course but worth baring in mind that in order to be visible from the road they are often on small mounds which could potentially still be identifiable. Also way markers are often used at junctions, another potential place to look.
In looking for boundary stones in the New Forest some shown in early o/s maps seem to have been lost to road widening - so probably best to do as you seem to be doing avoiding busy modern roads. It might be possible to identify some potential targets on the mid 19th century 6in or 25inch o/s.
Good luck.
Paul, I admire your dedication and persistence, 'against all odds'! 👍
The 'case of the missing milestones' brought to mind a similar story, although I'm not implying the milestones suffered the same fate!
An American fellow, who likes to mess about in boats, was talking about an obscure journal he had encountered, belonging to a Mississippi boat skipper. He was employed by the authorities over a period of about 30 years around the turn of the C18th/C19th, to remove and dump offshore all the stone navigation stele up and down the Mississippi river system. They just happened to be inscribed with ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs!
That is REALLY frustrating!,
This might be compared with the search for Range, Township and section stones over much of the USA. Many years ago I found 2 of them in place by digging out stones that had been buried by vegetation that turned to soil, and these Roman stones have had about a 16 century to 18 century head stat on these stones. The lost ones were often found in farmers gardens, having been collected as "Indian Stones"
Thanks Paul for enduring such awful weather and putting yourself out there! You are an inspiration in showing us that we mustn't let the great British weather spoiling our plans! Fascinating content: well done.
Thank you, it was a brutal one!
Maybe go to pubs/towns and ask the locals - a lot of them may have played around these markers as children and not know what they were.
Loved this. Love history, hope some day you will find one. Thanks for taking me along. Please take care
Excellent. There is still so much around us that is yet to be discovered.
Yup. Thats the joy for me.
There is one in the Village of St Nicolas on the A48 between Cardiff and Cowbridge, says Legit 11 August, another around Abergavenny somewhere, two in Neath Brecon one in Builth one on top of a mountain near Tregaron , the Pompeius Stone at Margam Museum was standing on the Via Marinari between Margam and Porthcawl, Wales is the least searched in Britain, some have been found in Farmers Walls. St Davids has some Roman Stones that may well have been Milestones, certainly the Stone you said that was not near a Roman Road is Roman, the Marks are of Treasure and a Possible burial, there are many like this between Margam and Cowbridge. Also in the South Wales Valleys near Gelligaer and Pontypridd and Caerphilly and Gelligaer. people are just blind to the History around them, there are Roman marker stones on Mynydd Baiden above Llangynwyd, which was a site of Battle in the 6th Century between Britons and Saxons also on the Margam Mountain and Baiden Mountain which join each other, there are Four Roman Forts, six Celtic Hillforts three of which were still in use in the 9th or 10th Century, also a Viking Fort that was from the 9th Century and was a Trading post with the Celtic people for about 30 Years and also one below at Stormy Down. There are many signs of the Romans that are not registered in Wales, they were everywhere, the Romans criss crossed the Welsh Mountains from North to South and East to West, of course there was no Wales or Scotland or England then and the peoples all spoke Brythonic Celtic , there were Major Gold Silver Lead Tin Copper Silica Iron Ore and other mines all across what is now Wales, with two very Large Iron ore mines at Pentyrch and Llanharri in Glamorgan, also Coal was mined and had been for at least 4000 Years before the Romans.
Nice video. Fascinating topic. A lot of water was definitely flowing through that ford. Wonderful country.
Good luck with your search, it's a great challenge and a noble one. Beautiful countryside. Lucky you don't have any aggressive snakes to contend with, though I keep thinking of Sean Lock's Tramp!!
Can remember as a kid jumping off of a stone in a a neighbours garden through which a roman road ran. Every one used to call it the roman stone. The neighour then decided to make a retaining wall and moved it in the late seventies. Just measured the distance from the centre of the nearby roman city, straight line 1300 metres, north out of the north gate and then picking up the roman road appoximatly 1450 metres.
I'd rather try to run a 4 minute Roman mile than a 4 minute standard mile.
Either way, I have a vast amount of room for improvement!
You could run for 4 minutes and decide the strech is a "you-mile", not only can you now say youve succsesfully ran a 4 minute mile, but also you can measure your improvement compared to when you started :D
Im glad you were wearing you anorak
great video again Paul; hard to find something like that - after all nothing is set in stone!
I live very close to Silchester, and the Imp stone in Pamber Heath. While I do believe that if it is a Roman milestone, it probably isn't in it's original location, I suspect it was originally on a Roman road that isn't identified as such.
Yup. Every possibility. Also I think.... according to the geology book a showed it does fit.
From the fort to the IMP Stone is pretty straight so maybe 🤷♂️@@pwhitewick
Another interesting video 😊. We've got a roman milestone just out side of Dorchester (Dorset) it was moved about 25 years ago when the bypass was built, its still on the side of the road, just not where the Romans left it.
Ah yes. I found that a little too late for filming but it's hugely helpful. If thatbis in situ... and not moved far, then it tells us the Roman miles we're measured from the forum. As that distance fits perfectly.
Amazing work as always. I’ve been watching your channel quite a few years now. Today was a good day. One of your best videos to date. Keep up the good work. You have a lovely way of explaining things,, I see you brother!!!
Great video Paul. I know, from personal experience, how hard it is just trying to find "old boundary stones" showing on 1895 maps (especially in Dorset!). Great research & presentation as always.
Just found your channel. I had no idea there was so much Roman history in the UK. Fascinating stuff.
Welcome.
outside the front door of 110 Lincoln High st is a stone that is known as a roman mile stone, but it has no inscription on it, it is placed in what would be the drainage ditch between the Foss Way and the Ermine St. so is very close to Roman infrastructure.
Very interesting, Paul. I suspect many of them could be under the ground now.
Also, the passage of time has to be a reason why so few are found. Near my parents’ house in Suffolk is the remains of a medieval priory - by remains, it’s one section of wall, about 3 feet long. A Roman mile stone is about twice the age and much smaller than a medieval priory!
NZer here - you're sooo lucky, Paul, to be in such an old country with its *mountains* of history!
Richard III, for example, being dug up in a car park!
Even your geology is great - the dinosaur fossils that the UK has far outnumber ours!
I agree with what others have said about finding possible stones in churches. In my area (Mid-Essex) it is said that at least 2-3 churches were built on possible stone circle sites, some of which stones were incorporated into or under the building of the churches. A lot of Roman brick is visible in the fabric of the church walls. Also one church (St Mary's Broomfield) is thought to have been constructed using alot of material from a nearby deteriorated `Roman Villa, there is a stone in the exterior wall of the church which seems to have a face carved into it, as if it were part of a Roman statue or carving repurposed. I would be interested to see more videos on this Hunt.
I’m going to keep my eyes well open for signs of these on my metal detecting permissions - I can see evidence of a section of road and have found lots of Roman coins, building materials and artefacts. Great vid.
Hi Paul, I was willing you on to find one but it wasn't to be this time.
I think one that had fallen down would be quite long as you would need to embed them in the ground so the one you found might be about the right size perhaps.
My opinion is that there wouldn't be one every Roman mile. I think they would be sited at junctions or stopping points. How does that fit in with the 95 identified?
Finding one really would be a legacy and I hope you get lucky!!
All the best!!
Gorgeous countryside especially around 3:35.
Great video. Absolutely fascinating subject and one I had not even considered before. I hope one day your searching pays off. Many thanks.
Bless you, Paul, to endure your 'drowned rat' status!
Thank you for your efforts again for a great video.
What lovely British weather you had this week! Nice to see you again.
It really was mental.
13:24 roller for lawns, crushing stuff in a mill it could have been dug at the end accidentally with your boot to see if theres a round or square hole
Ah, cheers
Felt like I was watching a BBC documentary, one of those ones they were making plenty of back in the 2000s. Great stuff, and fingers crossed for finding one in a part 2!
Very kind. Thank you.
Just love watching your dedication. The best history lessons on UA-cam. I hope some day you do find a milestone and you get the credit that you and Rebecca deserve.
"The best history lessons on UA-cam." Errr... well, you're entitled to your opinion, but I hard disagree. Hey, I like this channel a lot and appreciate it (otherwise I wouldn't be here watching, and reading the comments). But the best "history lessons" channel I know on UA-cam, is by far Apostolic Majesty - not only for the sheer breadth of subjects covered, but also the sheer depth. But because of that, it's not for the faint hearted, and it's also much more academic and therefore generally 'dry' content. It's not for everyone, I get that, but purely for "history lessons", it's in a different stratosphere to this here, objectively so.
"Let's get hedge diving". Love your hidden easter eggs haha
Haha... you knew who that was aimed at
Another great video. I like it that you persist even against the worst odds.
I'm sure it didn't happen, but it is funny to imagine the Romans pulling them up as they left to use elsewhere.
When you consider the depth that Roman mosaics are found in fields, soil depth increases by around 0.5 mm per year, in forested areas it will be around 1.0 mm per year, this means the likelihood of finding a milestone is almost zero. This is probably why so few have been found, unless its a tall pillar type, or ground has been disturbed the chances are very remote. The only other way to find one is if it's been reused in a building or boundary wall, but of course the context has been lost, so it will just be a rock with indistinct markings on it. I know this sounds all very negative but it doesn't hurt to keep your eyes peeled wherever you're walking, especially now you have an idea what they might look like.
Yeah, if they are there, they'd be buried. Still if you can find the road bed, any surviving milestone should be roughly level with it I supposed.
the romans used a machine to mesure distance a cart like thing with the wheel rotation turning a cog that was connected to the wheel on the cart after so many rotations a ball would drop marking the distance .i seen this on a documentry .the fact it was mechanised made for better accrracy as you wouldnt be goverened by the stride of any one person as each person may have diffrent stride .
Fascinating video, Paul. Knowing you, I am sure that you will persevere until you find one. Good luck!
Great video, informative and gripping. If anyone can make the find it’s you. I think you might just be successful in this quest one day.
Thank you 😊
Lovely relaxing countryside video. Thankyou.
Thanks, I could have done without the rain. But all good.
Seems like Emperor Whitewick's rain is lasting a long time. Thanks for the great video! I hope the weather is better for your next excursion.
I love watery Wiltshire with it's streams,rivers,--
brooks and Winterbournes. Maybe they were more in the nature of indicators to the lonely traveller that he/she was ON THE TRACK to Somewhere.
Even with nothing unearthed or pinpointed, there is value in getting onto the cultural landscape. It's like the anglers saying they go out; catching fish is secondary. Same for some golfers: getting out on the ground it the thing, whether the ball goes in the hole or not is secondary.
Thanks for posting - I've often puzzled over this... 👍
Glad it was helpful!
After you said The Meaning of Life, I started hoping you found a Milestone 42 😄.
Haha... Missed a trick there.
brilliant Paul
Hearing you talk about no milestones before hadrian , reminded me of a lecture when Hedly Swain was speaking about Roman milestones in general , how few & many of those that have remains of inscriptions but no mention of miles..
I wonder how many are part of the structure of old farmhouses, re-used again and again over the centuries.
Love the hunt and research you do ..
There is apparently a roman milestone next to a fragment of roman road on or near the roundabout for Kingston Maurwood on the Dorchester to London road, just outside of Dorchester or Durnovaria if you will on the eastern edge of the town, your mission should you choose to accept it is to find and identify and possibly prove your theory, good luck and may the force be with you ;)
Superb video. Seriously excellent adventure!! X
"Paul & Rebecca's Excellent Adventure" :)
I really enjoyed this. It's a fascinating subject. Thanks.
There's a Roman milestone in the Holy Ghost Church cemetery on the A683 road between Kirkby Lonsdale and Sedbergh Cumbria.
Great video! Love the roman stuff especially roads and this sort of stuff!
Glad you enjoyed!
Brilliant video as ever - always makes me sad to have moved away from Hampshire and the south west.
honestly I think this is wonderful, thank you for sharing
Hi Paul
Another interesting video, i dont know if you have done something like this previously, but your bookshelves always grab my attention. Would you consider doing a video on your top 10 reads for finding lesser known paths and roads.
I have the old straight track and few on Hardy's Wessex and some on Glastonbury . Plus a few ordnance survey maps. I live in Brasil but venture back to the uk from time to time and do the rounds of 2nd hand bookshops etc.
Do you have distances from contemporary sources so that you can check how accurate the 1480 meter mile was measured? As you plot each stone the accumulation of errors grows quite large.
Yup. I didn't mention it. (Saved for Part 2). However there is one stone in situ near Dorchester. Said to be very close to its original location. It is 1482m from the Forum
Thank you!
You're welcome!
Awesome Paul. Fantastic channel, very informative.