Traces of Past Empires

By pastempires

Maumbury Rings, Roman Amphitheatre of Durnovaria

This is a shot taken in the fog of the extremely grim site of Maumbury Rings, a Neolithic earthwork in the south of Dorchester in Dorset.

It is a circular earthwork, 85 metres in diameter, with a single bank and internal ditch and an entrance to the north east. The ditch was created by digging a series of funnel-shaped shafts, each 10 metres deep, which were so closely positioned as to create a continuous trench. Human and deer skull fragments were found in the ditch fill when it was excavated in the early 20th century.

Two thousand five hundred years after construction, during the Roman occupation (c100AD), the site was adapted as an amphitheatre for the use of the citizens of the Roman town of Durnovaria. The entrance was retained and an inner enclosure built in the south west for the use of the performers. The inside of the henge was lowered, with the material produced piled onto the banks.

During the Civil War the site was reused as an artillery fort guarding the southern approach to Dorchester. The site as it exists today is a product of the remodelling during this era - the most significant modification was the large ramp opposite the entrance.

Its amphitheatre role was briefly revived in the late 17th and early 18th centuries, as a place of public execution. In 1685, at the close of the Monmouth Rebellion, Judge Jeffreys ordered eighty of the rebels to be executed here. In 1705 Mary Channing, a nineteen-year-old woman found guilty of poisoning her husband, was executed by strangulation and burning at the Rings. Thomas Hardy used this event in his poem The Mock Wife, and recorded some details of his research into the event in his personal writings

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