The early incursions into Wales by the
Roman army left them with a fortress at Usk and, indeed, at
numerous other locations to the West and North. Usk was established
in the mid 50s and was garrisoned by the Legio XX originally
based at Gloucester. Although Usk was situated on the river
of the same name it could not be supplied by the river because
it was not tidal this far inland and, indeed, the site was
subject to flooding; a rare example of a badly sited Roman
settlement.
The
period of the 60s was a difficult one for the Roman occupation
of Wales with numerous occurrences of guerrilla attacks by
the native Siluran forces and Usk was finally abandoned in
the late 60s, the garrison retiring to Wroxeter in the North.
When
they came again it was to a better site at Caerleon, more
easily supplied from the river and safe from flooding. The
Legio II Augusta, having been the replacement garrison at
Gloucester, moved West in AD 74 and arrived at Caerleon which
may well have been earmarked for their new base from the time
of abandonment of Usk. Although the site chosen for the construction
of their new base was a good one it was overlooked by Lodge
Hill which was the site, in the third century BC, of Bellinstock,
the fortress of King Bellinus. By the time the Romans arrived
at Caerleon this camp had been abandoned by the retreating
Silures and, indeed, is said to have been utilised as a training
ground and Summer camp for the Second Legion. Had the Silures
still been in control of the camp life for the Romans would
have been difficult with a hostile presence peering down upon
them.
One
of the main reasons for the choice of Caerleon was, of course,
the fact that it lay upon the tidal Usk, only about five miles
above the mouth of the river, with easy access across the
Bristol Channel to the Western end of the Via Julia at Sea
Mills. Ships from Rome itself could also make their way around
Cornwall and into the Severn Sea. It is not entirely clear
where the first wharf was situated but it was probably close
to the modern bridge and the quays built in that vicinity
in the seventeenth century. Exploration some 600 yards further
downstream has also indicated the possible remains of a quay
close to the bend in the river. That bend, in Roman times,
was much sharper than it is today with the right bank of the
river being situated some 300 yards closer to the town than
currently. Over the years the Usk has migrated across the
valley floor to a point where it has met with a rock cliff
and cannot migrate any more. The right bank has silted up
as part of this process. In the early part of the third century
a stone quay was constructed within a small inlet on this
bank, situated in line with a road striking Southwest from
the walls of the fortress which falls from the higher level
of the settlement about ten feet to the riverside meadows.
This quay was later extended, presumably to provide additional
loading space.
The
quay was excavated in 1963 and numerous artifacts were discovered
demonstrating its use for a period of some hundred years until
Caerleon was finally evacuated in the mid fourth century.
Actually, the time of construction is somewhat curious since
the Second Legion had been moved out of the fort in the mid
second century to assist with the construction of the Antonine
Wall in the Borders and later were involved in fighting in
Scotland. By the early third century, though, they were back
and there appears to have been much work in the town to rebuild
facilities such as the bath house. The quay actually appears
to have been used as much to embark troops as to bring in
sustenance for the garrison since the excavation revealed
large quantities of fragmented Prescelly slate which was probably
used as ballast in troop ships returning from West Wales.
At about this time, the piratical Desi people from Ireland
were casting their sights on the products of the gold mines
of Dolaucothi and it became essential to provide guards for
the shipments. Soldiers were shipped down to Carmarthen for
this purpose from Caerleon and later at least a part of the
Second Legion was sent across to the East coast to guard the
Saxon shore.
After
the turn of the third century there was little military activity
at Caerleon, the main population being administrators who
were, presumably, considered safe from attack by that time.
They would have still required some supplies, if only from
other parts of Britain and the use of the quay probably continued
for a while. The end was in sight for the Romans in Caerleon,
though, and most of the outward traffic on the river was made
up of worked stone from some of the buildings which were being
dismantled. Much of this material was taken to Cardiff where
one of the last fortresses of the Roman occupation was built
in an attempt to stave off the Irish invaders. In this period,
too, it appears that the quay was beginning to silt up for
some later work of timber piles seems to indicate that they
were trying to extend the structure into deeper water. By
the time the last of the Roman occupation left the town it
is probable that the quay was no longer usable.
Rome
did not just abandon Britain completely: over the years of
occupation native leaders had become of use to the occupying
force and had been given more freedom to run their own affairs
once they demonstrated that they had given up ambitions to
oppose Roman rule. From the fourth century, then, those leaders
were left with the task of governing the native population
and Caerleon was surely taken over by that population. Although
the Romans had taken away much of the fine stonework there
remained a lot of usable buildings, both outside the walls,
where the civilian inhabitants had traditionally dwelt, and
within the Roman city.
The
period is poorly documented, however, and conjecture must
be used to tell a story of this time. Undoubtedly, though,
the river would have remained in use for the purposes of trade
which must have continued to some extent. Agricultural produce
would have been traded largely and it is possible that the
small scale industrial processes of iron and brick making
operated by the Romans were carried on. Roman industry locally
was centred around iron production from the mines of the lower
Ebbw and Rhymney valleys with lead being mined near Lower
Machen where there was a substantial smelting industry. The
refined products were sent across to Bath to be used for armament
production, with some of the lead, at least, being used for
pipes which brought the water supply to Caerleon from mountain
streams North of the town.
The
period following the fifth century was, of course, marked
by the upheaval brought by the arrival of the first group
of invaders from the Northern continent, the Saxons. Once
the Romans gave up and returned to Rome where the very heart
of their Empire was under threat from the Visigoths, the Saxon
hordes had a free hand to take over large parts of Eastern
Britain and gradually encroached further West. They met little
resistance for the population had not been used to fighting
for centuries, having been largely gentrified by the occupying
Romans. Although this process had also taken place in Wales,
there were still men who were able to resist and the Saxons
found the British of these parts harder to conquer. This may
have been due, in part, to the need for the peoples of South
Wales to resist the Irish marauders against whom the late
Roman fort at Cardiff had been built. In the middle of the
fourth century the defences of the civilian city of Caerwent
were heavily strengthened in anticipation of raids up the
Severn. The Saxon advance on Wales was, therefore, more or
less halted after many years of fitful battles, including
the reputed twelve engagements involving King Arthur from
the year 512 to 518. Three of these are said to have taken
place in Gwent and on each occasion the Saxons were defeated.
Arthur's armies, of course, were far better equipped than
the Saxons; they had armour similar to that of the Romans
and many of them were mounted cavalry whereas the Saxon had
no tradition of mounted conflict. This advantage was only
of use in the right conditions although it did make it possible
for the British to travel long distances along the remaining
Roman roads to meet or pursue their foes.
What
has this to do with the port of Caerleon? Well, the generally
successful British resistance to the English (as the Saxons
became later known) in the West did allow them to continue
their own way of life which undoubtedly included trade of
greater or lesser degree. Moving on some years, when the Mercian
King Offa built his Dyke from the Dee to the Severn, commencing
in the year 784, the Kings of Gwent were able to induce him
to move the Dyke away from the Wye downstream of Redbrook.
This allowed the Welsh to maintain navigation and fishing
rights on the river to the mouth. In addition, part of the
Beachley peninsula was retained in Welsh hands giving access
to the ferry crossing to Aust. These arrangements clearly
imply that trade was flourishing at this time, despite the
periodic military confrontations, and this was almost certainly
also the case with other rivers such as the Usk.
Since
the English never reached Caerleon the town and port remained
much as they had been before the Roman departure three hundred
years before with continuing trade, largely in agricultural
produce and animals. It is possible that, even in these times
of turmoil, there may have been some import of luxuries for
the gentry, such as wine, oils and exotic fruits from the
Mediterranean although the fall of the Roman empire would
have cut off this source of supply.
Caerleon
was to suffer the attentions of the Danish and Viking raiders
who entered the Bristol Channel and Severn during the ninth
century. They came and went, though, not colonising but pillaging
and making off with their booty. They did not have things
all their own way, however, for the wreck of a Danish vessel
was found near the mouth of the River Usk during the building
of the Alexandra Dock in 1878 and it appears likely that it
was left after the defeat of a band of Danes in the mid tenth
century. It is believed that they came up the Usk to Caerleon
on at least one occasion and destroyed part of the town. Curiously,
though, in 1190 Giraldus Cambrensis (Gerald of Wales) came
to Caerleon and described it thus "an ancient and authentic
ci~y, excellently and well built in olden times by the Romans.
Many vestiges of its former splendour may yet be seen, mighty
and huge palaces with gilded roofs in imitation of Roman magnificence.
. . a town prodigious in size, wonderful bath buildings, the
remains of temples and theatres, all enclosed within fine
walls, which are yet partly standing. You will find on all
sides, both within and without the circuit of the walls, subterraneous
buildings, water pipes, and underground passages, and, more
remarkable than all, stoves contrived with wonderful art to
transmit the heat insensibly through the narrow flues up the
side of the walls." Since this was some two hundred years
after the apparent destruction of the town, perhaps some reconstruction
had taken place.
Throughout
this period there is no belief of significant trade at Newport
itself and Caerleon continued as the port of the Usk until
the Norman Conquest. From that time, the building of a castle
at Newport and, later, a bridge gave the place more importance
and trade began here although Caerleon continued to function
for a long time after this. The formation of the New Burgh
or Newport after 1090 was quickly consolidated by the replacement
of the original timber castle by one of stone, by the mid
twelfth century and then by town walls. Within these walls
trade was encouraged by the Normans as the best way to ensure
the control of the local population. Part of this trade was,
clearly, the coming and going of ships on the river and early
quays were built in the vicinity of the bridge.
Back
at Caerleon, the great earthen mound raised above a Roman
building just outside the town walls by the Welsh Kings was
used as the basis for a Norman castle built by the Earl of
Pembroke in the early thirteenth century. This was, almost
certainly, built of wood and was destroyed within ten years
by the local Welsh King, Morgan ap Hywel. It was never rebuilt,
the Normans presumably relying on the more secure structure
at Newport for control of the neighbourhood. The mound can
still be seen towering above the grounds of several houses
within a walled enclosure and it is said that a stone passage
was found leading towards the centre of the mound (called
The Mynde) late in the nineteenth century. Legend speaks of
the mound as marking the burial place of King Arthur; this
is only one of the many such supposed sites throughout the
country.
An
important development, post Conquest, was the creation of
numerous places of religion, monasteries, priories and abbeys
and such an institution was established not far from Caerleon,
at Llantarnam, shortly after the arrival of the Normans. Actually,
the Cistercian abbey was founded by a local lord, Hywel ap
Iowerth in about 1179, an earlier institution having existed
in Caerleon itself. Llantarnam was a daughter house of the
great Strata Florida abbey in West Wales the prosperity of
which was based upon wool produced by the many sheep cropping
the vast areas of mountainside near the abbey. Llantarnam
also produced much wool and it was this that provided a major
component of cargoes out of the port of Caerleon in the early
Middle Ages. The wool and, indeed, fells (sheepskins complete
with wool) were shipped across to Bristol from whence the
products were carried across to the Low Countries where the
cloth trade flourished in the thirteenth century. British
wool was much sought after by the weavers of Antwerp and Bruges
and, in particular, they much appreciated the short fine wool
of Welsh border sheep from which fine cloth could be produced.
The
religious houses which sprang up in Gwent in the twelfth and
thirteenth centuries were an important element in the local
economy. They needed income, not only to support themselves,
but to do their work of providing spiritual guidance to the
local population, some of whom had only recently embraced
Christianity. Monastic orders seemed to possess a degree of
business acumen and organisational ability which enabled them
to run their secular arrangements as well as their spiritual
ones. Indeed, many of the houses and their incumbents seem
to have embraced business almost to the exclusion of their
other life.
Llantarnam
had, in 1291, 588 sheep which were kept almost exclusively
for their wool, together with 130 cattle. The output from
these animals was shipped out from Caerleon in the form of
dairy products, again for Bristol and the coastal communities
of the Bristol Channel. The trade of Caerleon received a boost
in 1324 when a charter was granted to the burgesses of Kerdiff,
Usk, Newport and Karlion by Edward II exempting them from
tolls on goods other than wool, woolfells, hides, leather
and wine. The duty, which was the earliest form of customs
levy, was set at 6s 3d per sack in 1303 under the Carta Mercatoria
which also set the levels for the other dutiable goods. Given
the level of wool exports and wine imports at this time, the
King was probably well in pocket even though appearing to
make a magnanimous gesture to his supporters in South Wales.
There appears to be no evidence of customs dues being collected
at Caerleon and in 1348 a Custom House or Tollbooth was erected
at the Westgate of the burgeoning town of Newport. This continued
to do the business of both Newport and Caerleon until the
early fifteenth century when it was decreed that customs business
should be discharged at a "great port". Cardiff
became the head port for the South Wales coast from Chepstow
to Swansea which must have been very inconvenient for vessels
trading at these outlying ports. This was to remain the situation
for many years, however and, indeed, the Collector for the
port in Stuart times lived in Caerleon. John Byrd must have
spent much time travelling the miry ways of the South Wales
seaboard in the twenty seven years that he held the office.
Byrd
was a good and faithful servant of the Crown for those years
but appears to have been badly treated and deprived of the
support that he needed to discharge his office properly. He
finally gave it all up in 1662 after the Restoration, having
been wrongfully accused of petitioning for the death of Charles
I. It is true that he served the Commonwealth, but then many
other officials did and he does appear, from the records,
to have been an extraordinarily faithful servant of the State.
It
appears that trade continued at both Caerleon and Newport
in the seventeenth century with records showing local vessels
carrying cargoes across to Bristol and coastwise to other
South Wales and Somerset ports. It was in the late eighteenth
century, however, that the commerce of industry began to develop.
In
1770 a tramway was built from forges at Cwmbran to the quayside
at Caerleon. The tramway also picked up the products of a
forge at Caerleon and a tinplate works at Ponthir. By this
means it was hoped that the port of Caerleon would continue
to thrive, handling the increasing output of developing industry
in Monmouthshire. This was not to be, however, because in
1791 a proposal was put forward to construct a canal from
above Pontypool down to the River Usk at Newport with a branch
from Crumlin joining it just North of Newport. This was a
function of the strongly increasing output of the collieries
and iron works in the North of the county which desperately
needed a more efficient outlet for their products.
The
Monmouthshire Canal, completed in 1796 with its proprietors
drawn from the ranks of the iron and coal interests, was the
one reason for the astonishing expansion of the port of Newport
and the virtual extinguishment of the old port of Caerleon.
The old quays at Caerleon did continue to handle some trade
for many years, with the tramway being extended to new quays
below the new bridge built in 1808. The vessel "Iron
and Tin Trader" continued to carry away the products
of the tinplate works for a number of years and a weekly market
boat, run by the Gething family who came from Brockweir, continued
to operate until the late nineteenth century. The Gethings
then threw in the towel and moved to Newport where they continued
in the maritime trade for a number of years.
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