Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

WHAT IF … THE … ROMANS NEVER LANDED?

In the third of our What If series of articles, the University of Kent’s Dr Christophe­r Burden-strevens imagines a world where the Romans never ventured across the Channel to Kent

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In August 55BC, Julius Caesar became the first Roman commander to set foot upon British soil. Landingont­he coast between Walmer and Pegwell Bay, he had led his men to the edge of the known world.

Kent was where Roman maps quite literally stopped; some even believed Britain (the‘landoftin’inthe ancient Greek language) was a hoax.

Although inconseque­ntial, Caesar’s invasion of Kent was hailed as a triumph at the time: he had gone to the edge of the earth and returned alive. It was the ancient equivalent of the Moon landing.

A century later, the Romans returned to the county on the instructio­ns of the emperor Claudius; and by 47AD, the province of Britannia was an organised region of the Roman Empire with a Roman administra­tion from Canterbury to Lincoln. The history of Britain had changed forever. But if we could reverse Roman history – our history – and undo the Roman conquest of Britain, what country would we have inherited, and how would Kent look today?

In this non-roman world, up until the 20th century, the inhabitant­s of Kent would speak a Celtic dialect akin to Welsh or Cornish.

The Romans’ language of Latin never arrived in Britain, so instead of mouse (Latin: mus) we say logodenn; for flower (Latin: flos) we say blejyowa, and for navy (Latin: navis) we say a’n-lu-lystry. The Norman Conquest did not occur. England has never been ruled as a single state by a single king such as Alfred the Great: although former tribes have evolved to become stable and populous countries, Britannia is still effectivel­y a patchwork of smaller states. Without a single king like Harold Godwinson – and without the system of contracts introduced by the Romans, William the Conqueror had no claim to cross the Channel and fight at Hastings.

The landscape of Kent is unrecognis­able. This is most visible at the fishing settlement of Dover.

Its natural harbour is useful for trade with Belgium and France, which the archaeolog­ical record shows occurred long before the Roman invasion, but in this alternativ­e timeline Dover has no significan­t naval infrastruc­ture.

Dover Castle does not exist, seeing as the 2nd Century AD Roman lighthouse (Britain’s oldest standing building) was never present for subsequent generation­s to build around. Canterbury, originally the seat of the ancient tribal leaders of the people of Kent (the Cantii), would have become a major administra­tive centre and remained the capital of the south-east region. However, its architectu­re is entirely different from what we consider to be typical of a Western capital city today. The Romans brought to Britain four major architectu­ral advances which they had perfected: columns, arches, domes, and concrete. Imagine a major public edifice such as the Natural History Museum or the Bank of England without columns. In this hypothetic­al world the iconic dome of St Paul’s Cathedral is gone.

We have acquired a knowledge of arches from our neighbours, but our viaducts and bridges are far inferior to those on the continent. The lack of concrete and expertise in working it has also made most modern architectu­re difficult to construct; to many this will not necessaril­y be a disappoint­ment. Having never been a united entity with advanced engineerin­g, administra­tion, education, and a single language, the British states would have projected little power across the globe.

It was impossible to establish a colonial empire: the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand were colonised by our more advanced neighbours and now speak French, Spanish, and Dutch. Kent would have accordingl­y not have developed as its neighbours did from the economic benefits of colonialis­m.

Lack of internatio­nal interactio­n would have greatly reduced the need for the Medway dockyards, and they would certainly not be the powerhouse they came to be. Britain would still retain one particular advantage: its rich natural resources, including fine agricultur­al land and plentiful iron and coal. During the 19th century this made Britain, firstly Kent, an ideal target for its more advanced neighbours. This would be particular­ly evident in a bleak period of this other Kent’s history, in which the fertile plains and natural harbours of Kent would be occupied by Nazi Germany in order to acquire Lebensraum, a new settlement colony, for German families living under the Nazi regime. Without the substantia­l technologi­cal advances gained from a Roman presence many centuries earlier, Kent would have been defended only by the Channel.

It is a sign of how essential Rome has been to the developmen­t of Britain that this alternativ­e reality seems impossibly fanciful.

We cannot imagine our history without the advancemen­ts in technology, communicat­ions, trade, and culture brought to these shores by Rome.

The brutality of the Roman Empire should never be forgotten, but nor should its enormous contributi­on to the history and developmen­t of these islands.

Even without this history, one fact is worth rememberin­g: the word “Kent” is pre-roman in its origins.

As such, with or without our neighbours’ invasions, Kent was always here – and still would be, too.

■ In our previous What Ifs, we looked at the death of Thomas Becket and the Battle of Britain. Next week we ask What If Kent’s Anne Boleyn had lived?

Dr Christophe­r Burdenstre­vens is lecturer in Roman History at The University of Kent. His research focuses on the history of Rome around the time of Julius Caesar and its reception in later Latin and Greek literature.

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 ??  ?? Roman Aquaduct which supplied Carthage
Roman Aquaduct which supplied Carthage
 ?? Picture: Paul Hooper ??
Picture: Paul Hooper
 ?? Picture: Barry Goodwin ?? A view of St Paul’s Cathedral
Picture: Barry Goodwin A view of St Paul’s Cathedral
 ??  ?? The mosaic on the floor of a Roman villa dining room from about 140AD being carefully unearthed and restored at a site in Lullingsto­ne
The mosaic on the floor of a Roman villa dining room from about 140AD being carefully unearthed and restored at a site in Lullingsto­ne

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