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Old November 1st 03, 01:18 PM posted to uk.transport.london
Angus Bryant Angus Bryant is offline
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First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Oct 2003
Posts: 47
Default London's Lost Roman Road

"AstraVanMan" wrote in message
...
However, it has been suggested before (so "you read it first hear"

seems
a bit implausible).


Very interesting, and you may have stumbled across some interesting

evidence
of the past. However I'm afraid I have to agree about reading it here

first.

A TV programme- probably Time Team, although if not something like it-

dug
up part of the grounds of Lambeth Palace to try to find the ford over

the
Thames which was the means by which Watling Street crossed to what's now
Westminster.

But anyway, if ths is real evidence of the route in urban parts of

London
it's an endevour to be applauded.


Indeed. And with people suggesting "why would they build their main route
away from the city of London" - well perhaps it was the first bypass!!!


South-east Kent would still have been the easiest place for the Romans to
access the UK, and so a bypass round London to reach the main artery to the
milands and the north-west (Watling St A5) would seem to make sense. Also
it's a bit of a coincidence that *both* the A2 and A5 are called Watling
Street - the logical explanation is that they are the same road.

Angus