Skip to player
Skip to main content
Skip to footer
Search
Connect
Watch fullscreen
Like
Comments
Bookmark
Share
Add to Playlist
Report
The North East’s Oldest Settlement Dates back to 3000BC
National World - LocalTV
Follow
27/06/2025
Overlooking the mouth of the River Tyne in South Shields stands one of the most fascinating Roman sites in Britain. Arbeia Roman Fort, a UNESCO World Heritage site that once played a vital role in defending the northern frontier of the Roman Empire.
Category
🗞
News
Transcript
Display full video transcript
00:00
Overlooking the mouth of the River Tyne here in South Shield stands one of the most fascinating
00:04
Roman sites in Britain, Arbia Roman Fort, a UNESCO World Heritage Site that once played a vital role
00:11
in defending the northern frontier of the Roman Empire. Though not physically part of Hadrian's
00:16
Wall, Arbia was an essential cog in its defensive system. From its strategic position of the river
00:21
side, the fort controlled maritime access to the frontier and supplied grain and equipment to
00:26
garrisons along the Wall, a logistical lifeline for Rome's northernmost soldiers. But Arbia's
00:33
story began long before the Roman legions arrived. Evidence suggests that people settled here as far
00:39
back as 3,000 to 4,000 BC. Archaeologists have excavated an Iron Age farmstead dating to around
00:46
300 BC, highlighting the site's long history of human habitation. By the early 2nd century AD,
00:53
the Romans had built a timber fort in the area, a structure that predates Hadrian's Wall itself,
01:00
which was constructed in the beginning of 122 AD. This early fort was later replaced with a more
01:05
permanent stone fort around 163 AD, housing 480 infantry soldiers and 120 cavalry. In 208 AD, a major
01:16
shift took place. With Emperor Septimus Severus preparing for campaigns in Scotland, Arbia was
01:23
transformed into a massive supply base. 13 large granaries were constructed, the fort expanded in
01:29
size and walls were rebuilt to separate the storage zones from military quotas. A new headquarters building
01:35
was shortly added after. Severus himself may have stayed at Arbia. At its peak, the fort stored grain and
01:42
resources brought in by sea, not only from southern England but possibly the continent as well, for use
01:47
across Hadrian's Wall and beyond. The early 3rd century saw further change. After Scotland was abandoned
01:54
in 211 AD following Severus's death, Arbia's role as a supply hub continued. Around 222 AD, the garrison's
02:03
accommodation was completely rebuilt. By the late 3rd or early 4th century, disaster struck and the fort was
02:09
attacked and burned. The Romans rebuilt once more. Eight of the old granaries were converted back into
02:15
barracks and a ground courtyard house was constructed, likely for the commanding officer. With formal dining
02:22
rooms, a bath suite and private quarters, the house signalled both luxury and declining Roman standards
02:28
as heating systems fell into disuse and rooms were abandoned in the following decades. At this time,
02:34
Arbia received a new garrison, a unit of Tigris boatmen from modern-day Iraq.
02:39
It was renamed Arbia, meaning place of the Arabs, replacing its earlier likely name Lugardunham.
02:46
Even after the Roman Empire collapsed in Britain in the early 5th century, life at Arbia didn't
02:50
immediately end. Excavations have revealed bones of two young people with weapon wounds,
02:55
possibly victims of civil unrest or invasion.
Recommended
1:45
|
Up next
Plans for Historic North Shields Building to be Demolished
National World - LocalTV
29/04/2025
3:00
Wallsend Man Reclaims Wartime Legacy as Historic Norwegian Ship Docks on Tyne
National World - LocalTV
29/05/2025
3:00
Newcastle Castle: Where the City Began
National World - LocalTV
06/06/2025
0:40
Shields Ferries are relaunched onto the River Tyne following maintenance
Shields Gazette
26/05/2025
5:22
RNLI Tynemouth celebrates 200 years of the national charity
NewcastleWorld
04/03/2024
2:14
Tynemouth RNLI sign the 200th anniversary scroll in front of the South Shields Lifeboat Memorial
Shields Gazette
09/06/2024
3:00
Tiny Tyneside opens at Discovery Museum!
National World - LocalTV
15/04/2025
1:39
North Yorkshire artists creates stunning Roman mural in region's most northerly vineyard
Yorkshire Post
14/06/2021
3:05
5 things across the North East this week
National World - LocalTV
22/12/2022
0:32
La Strada - A South Tyneside favourite
Shields Gazette
26/11/2024
1:11
Three houses raided in South Shields and beyond amid Cannabis crackdown
Shields Gazette
29/02/2024
3:00
The History of the Tyne Bridge
National World - LocalTV
07/02/2025
1:21
Celebrations as the South Tyneside Metro line marks its 40th anniversary
Shields Gazette
19/03/2024
0:26
The finish line of the Great North Run 2022 in South Shields
Shields Gazette
11/09/2022
0:57
South Tyneside in the 1960s
Shields Gazette
04/12/2024
1:45
North East High Street Decline
National World - LocalTV
30/05/2025
1:00
River bank restoration for Tyne and Wear
National World - LocalTV
12/11/2024
1:00
North Shields’ Bedford Street revamp
National World - LocalTV
21/11/2024
1:54
South Tyneside's Veterans' Walk has been officially opened
Shields Gazette
05/04/2025
3:00
Unusual Antiques: Jesmond’s Fern Avenue Antique Centre
National World - LocalTV
28/02/2025
3:00
Ouseburn: A Hidden Gem of Newcastle
National World - LocalTV
24/01/2025
0:43
We asked the people of South Tyneside for their favourite North East day trip
Shields Gazette
12/04/2024
1:04
Black smoke pours from the Port of Tyne. Credit: Dan Lake
Shields Gazette
26/06/2024
0:44
Look around Tynemouth RNLI's all weather lifeboat
National World - Other Local Sites
04/03/2024
0:39
Aunt of murdered Leeds teenager Alfie Lewis remembers 'beautiful boy' as she calls for crackdown on crime
Yorkshire Evening Post
yesterday