UNAFFECTED alike by
Julius Caesar's invasion of Britain and by the conquests
accomplished during the reign of the Emperor Claudius, about a
hundred years later, the northern parts of the island were for a
long time protected by their inaccessibility, and it was not till
the seventy-ninth year of the Christian era that the Roman legions
entered territory north of the Solway. In the summer of the previous
year Julius Agricola arrived to take on hand the government of
Britain, and his plans for the subjugation of the northern tribes
were so successfully carried through that in the course of his third
summer campaign he had proceeded from Annandale to the strath of the
River Clyde, through Lanarkshire and Stirlingshire, and into the
vale of Strathern. The country thus acquired was secured by the
formation of roads and the erection of forts, and in the year 81,
Agricola, entering upon a work of special importance to the Glasgow
district, constructed a line of fortifications along the narrow neck
of land between the Firths of Forth and Clyde. Beyond this barrier
operations against the northern tribes were conducted for the
ensuing ,five years, and were successfully terminated in the great
battle of "Mons Graupius," fought in the year 86. But the territory
thus temporarily added to the Roman province remained in that
position for so short a time that the effect on the inhabitants was
probably of little account. Agricola
was speedily recalled
from the scene of his military triumphs, and after his departure and
on till the visit of the Emperor Hadrian, about the year 122, we
have little knowledge of what happened in Britain, but the fact that
the rampart then constructed between the Solway Firth and the River
Tyne was fixed as the limit of the Roman province indicates that the
former subjugation of the northern tribes had secured no permanent
advantage.
One result of the
movements of the Roman soldiers and sailors during Agricola's
campaigns has been of lasting interest, inasmuch as their
observations and reports supplied the bulk of the information
obtained by the geographer, Ptolemy, regarding the number and
position of the Caledonian tribes, their names, the situation of
their towns, and the leading geographical features of the country.
From Ptolemy's maps and descriptions it is learned that the modern
Strathclyde was included in the great nation of the Damnonii, which
extended as far north as the River Tay. South of the Firths of Forth
and Clyde the Damnonii possessed the territories now forming the
counties of Ayr, Lanark and Renfrew, and north of these estuaries
the counties of Stirling and Dumbarton with adjoining districts. In
the southern of these two groups were three towns: Colania, near the
source of the Clyde; Coria, supposed to be near Carstairs, where are
numerous Roman remains; [One of the marches of the burgh of Lanark's
lands in this quarter was called Watling Street in a charter dated
10th February, 1632 (Lanark Records, P. 324).] and the third
Vandogara or Vanduara, at one time claimed for Paisley, but now
believed to have been situated at Loudon Hill in Ayrshire. Coria was
on the main Roman highway which passed from the south into
Clydesdale, and, besides the westward branch road breaking off from
that point into Ayrshire, it is not improbable that the main line
was there joined by an eastward branch leading to and from Tweeddale
and passing the large camp at Lyne, [In the excavations made here by
the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland in igoi (Proceedings, vol.
35, PP. 154-86) two coins were found, one of Titus, A.D. 7, and the
other of Trajan, A.D. 104-10. ] a view which is supported by the
fact that in later times this was the line of highway from Glasgow
to towns in the Tweed valley.
Recurring to the main
road down the Clyde valley, it is shown on the map in Chalmers'
Caledonia as divided into two sections a few miles below Carstairs,
a northern branch going off in the direction of Falkirk, while the
western portion goes on to Kilpatrick, taking Glasgow in its way.
For the offshoot shown near the River Calder and leading to the
supposed "Vanduara" or Paisley, it is now considered there was not
sufficient authority. But with regard to the western and northern
roads, one leading to the west end and the other to the east end of
the Antonine `'Nall, the map may be accepted as sufficiently
correct.
The wall just
referred to, placed on the line of Agricola's forts between the
Forth and Clyde, was constructed about the year 142, by which time
the frontier of the Roman province had again been advanced thus far
beyond the limits established by Hadrian, but though the area within
the wall, amid many harassing interruptions, was at one time
believed to remain as part of the province till the Romans finally
left the island in 410, it seems to be fairly well established that,
early in the reign of the Emperor Commodus (180-92), the Romans
finally abandoned the whole country north of the Cheviots and
Solway. One of the most serious invasions which the retained
province had to endure was organized by Picts from the north and
Scots from the west, in 360, and in the course of the next eight
years part of the district south of Hadrian's Wall seems to have
been in possession of the invaders, but in 369 they were expelled by
the eminent Roman commander, Theodosius, who renewed the stations
along the wall, and effectively protected the province against
further interference for the time.
[For an account of
the Antonine Wall, see full Report on the subject by the Glasgow
Archaeological Society, issued in 1899. Reference may also be made
to Stuart's Caledonia Romana (1845) with its excellent
illustrations.
The results of the
more recent investigations are fully described in Curie's- Roman
Frontier Post and its People (1911) and Macdonald's Roman Wall in
Scotland (1911).]
In consequence of the
Roman occupation of the country being of so short duration, the
influence of their civilization on the inhabitants of the district
where Glasgow is now situated was probably slight, but we have
really no definite knowledge of their condition at that time. So far
as physical appearances go, there is little existing evidence of
Clydesdale having passed through such an experience. Isolated
portions of the wall, not far from the city, can, however, still be
pointed out, and inscribed stones taken from the original earthworks
are preserved; [There is now preserved in the Hunterian Museum at
the University a fine collection of inscribed stones and other Roman
remains, illustrative of the nature of the Roman occupation in this
part of the country. See Dr. James Macdonald's Tituli Hunteriani: An
Account of the Roman Stones in the Hunterian Museum (1897) : also
Dr. George Macdonald's Roman Wall in Scotland (iii).
In Glasgow; Past and
Present, published in 1856, p. 663, John Buchanan. says: "Coins of
the Romans have been found in the vicinity of the Cathedral,
especially those of the warlike Hadrian, and of Crispina, wife of
Commodus, the degenerate son of Marcus Aurelius, some of which are
in my possession."
The edition of Past
and Present referred to throughout the present volume is that of
1851-6. In David Robertson's edition of 1884 the-contents are made
readily accessible by its complete Index.] some of the thoroughfares
of the city seem to be identified with the line of the Roman
highway, and coins and other Roman relics have been discovered. In
1876 a Roman bowl of Samian ware was unearthed on the Green, [MacGeorge's
Old Glasgow, pp. 249, 253; Catalogue of Glasgow Exhibition, 1901,
No. 200; Scottish History and Life (1902), p. 33, from which work
the' illustration here given is reproduced.] and in the course of
some digging operations, carried out in 1867 at Yorkhill, near the
east bank of the River Kelvin, opposite to Partick, some Roman
coins, fragments of broken vessels and a small quantity of wheat
were found. One of the coins bore the image of the Emperor Trajan,
who reigned A.D. 98-117. [Catalogues of Glasgow Exhibitions (1888),
Nos. 85-92; (1901), Nos. 203-10; also Taylor's Partich (1902), pp.
2, 3.]
It is generally
believed that at least as early as the second century the Christian
religion had made its way into Britain under Roman auspices, and
that a Christian church had been established within the province,
but it is not till the closing years of the Roman occupation that we
have specific information regarding the spread of the faith in the
northern districts. Towards the end of the fourth century Ninian, a
native of Britain, was trained at Rome in the doctrine and
discipline of the Western Church, and, having been ordained a
bishop, was sent on an evangelizing mission to the western parts of
his own country. On his way thither he visited the famous St. Martin
at Tours, in Gaul, and having obtained masons who accompanied him to
Whithorn, he there, about the year 397, built that church of white
stone, which is best known by its Latin name of Candida Casa. From
his headquarters thus established Ninian went on a mission to the
people whom Bede, writing two centuries later, designates the
Southern Picts, and as a result of his efforts they abandoned their
idolatrous worship and received the true faith. It has been
maintained, on grounds which need not be repeated here, that
Ninian's missionary labours extended over the whole eastern seaboard
of Scotland, but it is sufficient for present purposes to point out
that in any case Glasgow lay in the route which he would be likely
to take both in going and -returning, [Skene's Celtic Scotland, ii.
pp. z, 2 ; St. Ninian, pp. 1-15; S. Ninian by Archibald B. Scott
(1916).] and whether in pursuit of his mission, or resting from his
labours, it is probable that he took the opportunity of making there
a sojourn of some duration. Indeed, so much
is implied by the
statement in Joceline's Life of S. Kentigern that it was Ninian who
had consecrated the cemetery where Fergus was laid, procedure likely
to be entered into only by one who had more attachment to the place
than could be expected of an occasional visitor. [According to
Dempster, who cites authorities in his Ecclesiastical History of
Scotland, edition 1829, vol. ii. p. 502, St. Ninian had an
exceptional place in the ritual of Glasgow Cathedral.]
Another apostle of
the Christian faith, the son of a magistrate in a provincial town,
comes into notice just about the time that Ninian finished his
course. By his own account Patrick's birthplace was "the village of
Bannavem of Tabernia," a district not identified, though it is
likely to have been on the south-west border of Scotland, seeing it
was exposed to the incursions of the Scots. The honour of being
Patrick's birthplace has been claimed for Old Kilpatrick, a village
situated about eleven miles west of Glasgow and five miles east of
Dumbarton, and also for Dumbarton itself, the ancient Alcluyd, but
any information we have on the subject is too vague for more than
mere conjecture.
['The writer of the
Old Statistical Account of the Parish of Old Kilpatrick says: "there
are many circumstances favouring this tradition," such as there
being an ancient stone in the churchyard bearing a figure supposed
to represent St. Patrick; and in the River Clyde, opposite to the
church, there was a large stone or rock, visible at low water,
called St. Patrick's Stone.
The chapel of
Dumbarton Castle is mentioned in 1271. It was dedicated to St.
Patrick; and on 23rd March, 1390-1, King Robert III., referring to
grants to the chapel, by previous sovereigns, of eight merks yearly
furth of the burgh ferms of Dumbarton, added two merks yearly from
the same source, the latter gift being for the weal of the souls of
himself and of Annabella, his consort (Origines Parochiales, vol. i.
p. 24; Reg. Mag. Sig. i. No. 802). One of the burgh fairs sanctioned
by royal charter dated 13th December, 16og, was held on St.
Patrick's Day (17th March) and continued for four days (Reg. Mag.
Sig. vii. No. 190).]
Patrick dwelt at "Bannavem"
till his sixteenth year, when he was taken captive and brought to
Ireland with many others. Employed in tending sheep, he remained six
years in slavery, and then effected his escape in a ship which was
crossing to his own country. After living with his parents in the
Roman province for a few years, he returned to Ireland as a
missionary, and preached the gospel to the people for the next
fifteen or twenty years, at the expiry of which time he was
consecrated a bishop. Patrick's episcopate was crowned with success
and seems to have lasted till the latter half of the fifth century.
In his own writings we are told that through his ministry clerics
had been ordained for the people, and that " those who never had the
knowledge of God and had hitherto only worshipped unclean idols have
lately become the people of the Lord."
A mass of legendary
lore has gathered round the names of Ninian and Patrick and the
evangelistic work carried on by them and their disciples, but into
the speculations thereby raised it is unnecessary to enter here. It
is enough for the present purpose to have called attention to such
accounts as seem to be historical regarding the work of these two
famous men, seeing Glasgow, or at least its vicinity, can reasonably
claim some connection with each.
For a century and a
half after the withdrawal of the Romans we have scarcely any
contemporary information as to what was happening in this country,
but about the end of the sixth century, when our knowledge becomes
less obscure, four separate nations are found in possession. The
Picts, divided into northern and southern sections, still maintained
their hold in the parts north of the Forth, except perhaps where
they had been displaced by the Scots from Ireland, who were then
established in Dalriada and the western isles. Anglian or Saxon
settlers occupied the east coast from the Forth to the Tweed and
beyond ; and the remaining people consisted of the Britons, who
possessed what was left of the old Roman province, including
Strathclyde, with its chief seat at Alcluyd or Dumbarton, and with
territory extending as far south as the River Derwent in Cumberland. |