Chartered Surveyors Doncaster South Yorkshire
Approximate Population: 67,977
Doncaster is located at the site of a Roman fort which was built in the 1st century AD at the site of a crossing across the River Don. The Roman empirical command of Ninius called this fort “Caer Daun”. Later the commands of Antoninus Pius and Notitia called this fort Danum, from which the town derives the Don part of its name; caster a Saxon word corrupted from the Latin original Castra, meaning a military camp.
Doncaster was home to the Roman Crispinian horse garrison. The cavalry took its name from Crispus, son of Constantine the Great. Crispus, son of the Emperor, lived at Danum (Doncaster) whilst his father lived 40 miles (64 km) further north at Eboracum (York). Much of Doncaster’s Roman past remains to be discovered.
The Doncaster garrison units are named in the Notitia Dignitatum or ‘Register of Dignitaries’, produced around the turn of the 5th century near the end of Roman rule in Britain. This important administrative document contains — among other things — the name of almost every military unit in the Roman empire, also the name of their respective garrison towns. The garrison unit was originally recruited from among the tribespeople living near the town of Crispiana in Upper Pannonia, near Zirc in the Bakony region of western Hungary.
The fact that Doncaster is included, highlights the importance placed by the Romans on Doncaster. The Doncaster entry is listed under the command of the Dux Britanniarum or the ‘Duke of the Britons’. Doncaster provided an alternative direct land route between Lincoln and York. The main route between Lincoln and York was Ermine Street which meant crossing the Humber estuary in boats. For obvious reasons this was not always practical and thus Doncaster became an important staging post on the Roman map.
























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