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Temple of Claudius at Colchester. Andrew Delaney. Key Facts. 44AD T his was the grandest of all Roman buildings built in Colonia Claudia (Colchester), the first capital of Roman Britain The Romans saw the temple as a symbol of their power and success. Pre-Revolt.
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Temple of Claudius at Colchester Andrew Delaney
Key Facts • 44AD • This was the grandest of all Roman buildings built in Colonia Claudia (Colchester), the first capital of Roman Britain • The Romans saw the temple as a symbol of their power and success
Pre-Revolt • Nothing like it had ever been seen in Britain before. • Within the temple stood a life-size bronze statue of the Emperor Claudius, of which the head still survives. • The local tribal magnates were recruited into the temple cult • But the financial burden of running the temple and the arrogant maltreatment of the locals by the colonists was to cause resentment which boiled into the Boudiccan revolt
Boudiccan revolt – 60/61AD • The lack of soldiers stationed at Colchester and the prospect of destroying a major Roman town led the Iceni tribe to lay siege on Colchester. • Boudica's Army set fire to the temple killing all those held up inside and the whole city was eventually destroyed by the fire. • Even today a layer of ash can be found under the surface where the ancient city once stood
Function • Worship of Emperor Claudius, Imperial Cult. • To house the head from a life-size bronze statue of Claudius, found in the River Alde in 1907, roughly 30 miles from Colchester, could perhaps have been broken from a statue in the temple by Boudicca's forces and carried off as a trophy, although this cannot be more than a guess unless more evidence is found.
Description • 8 x 11 • 12 columns prostyle • 14 steps • Built on a huge podium (80 x 105ft) • Altar in front of temple • Marble • Built to commemorate Claudius’ invasion of Britain
Additional relevant topics • Religion • Architecture • Economy • Romanisation