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  1. Watling Street is a historic route in England that crosses the River Thames at London and which was used in Classical Antiquity, Late Antiquity, and throughout the Middle Ages. It was used by the ancient Britons and paved as one of the main Roman roads in Britannia (Roman-governed Great Britain during the Roman Empire).

  2. Oct 15, 2024 · The name came from a group of Anglo-Saxon settlers who called Verulamium by the name of Wætlingaceaster. This local name passed to the whole of the Roman road (Wæclinga stræt) by the 9th century. The tendency to give the name to other main roads is postmedieval and is often mere antiquarianism.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Feb 1, 2018 · The name Watling Street can be derived from the Latin term ‘Via Strata’ which was the designation for any paved roadway and ‘Waeclingas’ or “people of Waecla” who were a tribe who lived just a mile or two away from where I am writing this in the lands around the old city of St. Albans.

    • The Origin of The Name Watling Street
    • History of Watling Street
    • Antonine Itinerary and Watling Street

    The original Celtic and Roman name for the road is unknown, and the Romans may not have viewed it as a single path at all, since parts of it were assigned to two separate itineraries in one 2nd-century list. The modern name instead derives from the Old English Wæcelinga Stræt, from a time when “street” (Latin: via strata) referred to any paved road...

    The broad, grassy trackway found by the Romans had already been used by the Britons for centuries. The main path led from Richborough on the English Channel to a natural ford in the Thames at Thorney Island, Westminster, to a site near Wroxeter, where it split. The western continuation went on to Holyhead while the northern ran to Chester and on to...

    The Roman Antonine Itinerary lists sites along the route of Watling Street as part of a longer route of 500 Roman miles connecting Richborough with Hadrian’s Wall via Wroxeter. The continuation on to Blatobulgium (Birrens, Dumfriesshire) beyond Hadrian’s Wall in modern Scotland may have been part of the same route, leading some scholars to call thi...

  4. Jun 11, 2018 · Watling Street is the later name for the major Roman road from Dover through Canterbury to London and thence via Verulamium to Wroxeter (later the basis for Telford's Holyhead road, the A5).

  5. Watling Street is the name of an ancient route in England. It was first used by the Ancient Britons between Canterbury and St Albans. Later the Romans made it one of the main Roman roads in Britain. The Romans paved the route from London to the port of Dover, and from London to St Albans. 'Street' comes from the old word for paving.

  6. Watling Street was an Anglo-Saxon name for several Roman roads, one of which ran through Kent to London. Its course is a remarkably straight line, whose ends are conveniently at Canterbury cathedral and the archbishop’s London residence, Lambeth Palace.

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