The Roman Ninth Legion's Mysterious Loss
by Miles Russell
BBC News
The disappearance
of Rome's Ninth Legion has long baffled historians, but could a
brutal ambush have been the event that forged the England-Scotland
border, asks archaeologist Dr Miles Russell, of Bournemouth University.
One of the
most enduring legends of Roman Britain concerns the disappearance
of the Ninth Legion.
The theory
that 5,000 of Rome's finest soldiers were lost in the swirling mists
of Caledonia, as they marched north to put down a rebellion, forms
the basis of a new film, The
Eagle, but how much of it is true?
It is easy
to understand the appeal of stories surrounding the loss of the
Roman Ninth Legion a disadvantaged band of British warriors inflicting
a humiliating defeat upon a well-trained, heavily-armoured professional
army.
It's the ultimate
triumph of the underdog an unlikely tale of victory against
the odds. Recently, however, the story has seeped further into the
national consciousness of both England and Scotland.
For the English,
the massacre of the Ninth is an inspiring tale of home-grown "Davids"
successfully taking on a relentless European "Goliath".
For the Scots, given the debate on devolved government and national
identity, not to say the cultural impact of Braveheart, the tale
has gained extra currency freedom-loving highlanders resisting
monolithic, London-based imperialists.
The legend
of the Ninth gained form thanks to acclaimed novelist Rosemary Sutcliff,
whose masterpiece, The Eagle of the Ninth, became an instant bestseller
when published in 1954.
Since then,
generations of children and adults have been entranced by the story
of a young Roman officer, Marcus Aquila, travelling north of Hadrian's
Wall in order to uncover the truth about his father, lost with the
Ninth, and the whereabouts of the Legion's battle standard, the
bronze eagle.
The historians
have dissented, theorising that the Ninth did not disappear in Britain
at all, arguing both book and film are wrong. Their theory has been
far more mundane the legion was, in fact, a victim of strategic
transfer, swapping the cold expanse of northern England, for arid
wastes in the Middle East. Here, sometime before AD 160, they were
wiped out in a war against the Persians.
But, contrary
to this view, there is not one shred of evidence that the Ninth
were ever taken out of Britain. It's just a guess which, over time,
has taken on a sheen of cast iron certainty. Three stamped tiles
bearing the unit number of the Ninth found at Nijmegen, in the Netherlands,
have been used to support the idea of transfer from Britain.
But these all
seem to date to the 80s AD, when detachments of the Ninth were indeed
on the Rhine fighting Germanic tribes. They do not prove that the
Ninth left Britain for good.
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the rest of the article
March
21, 2011
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