| Heywood Holiday Cottages Bath Through the
ages; By kind permission of |
|
| Summary Timeline of some key events in
Bath |
| |
Year |
Event |
Year |
Population |
| |
850BC |
Bladuds mythical Birth |
1086 |
890 |
| |
60 |
Romans arrive in Bath |
1379 |
1025 |
| |
400 |
Romans Leave |
1660 |
1200 |
| |
577 |
Saxons capture Bath at Battle of Dyrham |
1699 |
3000 |
| |
676 |
Osric founds Monastry at Bath |
1750 |
9000 |
| |
818 |
Arthur defeats Saxons at Battle of Badon |
1799 |
34160 |
| |
973 |
King Edgar crowned in Bath Abbey |
1851 |
43023 |
| |
1066 |
Normans invade England |
1901 |
49839 |
| |
1086 |
Domesday book reveals Bath as largest town in
Somerset |
1911 |
69173 |
| |
1088 |
Bath is laid to waste |
1931 |
68815 |
| |
1643 |
John De Villula buys City |
1951 |
79294 |
| |
1702 |
"Beau" Richard Nash arrives in Bath |
1971 |
84670 |
| |
1727 |
Minervas Head is found |
1981 |
80771 |
| |
1754 |
Circus is complete |
2000 |
approx 85000 |
| |
1791 |
Site of Roman temple discovered |
|
|
| |
1881 |
Great Bath and sacred spring unearthed |
|
|
| |
1942 |
Bath is bombed during World War 2 |
|
|
| |
1964 |
Major excavation of Roman complex starts |
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| |
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Celtic Bath;
Bladud Bath was founded by Bladud, the eldest son of the
legendary King Lud. As a boy, Bladud contracted leprosy and was banished to
Swainswick to become a pig farmer. One day as he was watching his pigs,
Bladud noticed that some of the pigs were rolling around in the thick mud and
he went to take a closer look. The mud was hot, and he found that the marsh was
fed by a bountiful hot spring. Noticing that the pigs scurvy had been cleared
up by the mud, Bladud himself started to roll in it, smothering his whole body
from head to foot. His leprosy soon disappeared. When he was clear he ran back
in delight to his fathers court and in time was made King. In gratitude he
built a temple by the hot spring and founded the city of Bath.
Celtic Sun God Among the most
significant Celtic works of art of Roman Europe is the outstanding sun gods
head that welcomed pilgrims to the temple of Sulis Minerva in Bath. Within its
garlands of druids oak leaves and framed by great serpentine locks of hair, the
head of the Celtic sun god glowered all-seeing from its Roman temple pediment,
transfixing Roman and Briton alike.
Celtic Bath Although Bath was in
fact built nearly 1,000 years after Bladud, it was without doubt a major Celtic
place of power. The Celtic Dobunni guarded this most sacred site with five
hillforts which dominated the hot spring from their surrounding hilltops. Most
distinguished are the Celtic forts at Lansdown and Solsbury Hill. In a druids
grove by the hot steaming spring, the goddess Sul was worshipped as the
guardian to the gateway to the Underworld. Through major gateways such as Baths
hot spring, the Celts believed that deities and ancestors could be
approached.
Sulis Minerva The Romans had a
genius for appropriating local deities and blending them with their own gods.
So, Sul became Sulis Minerva when they built their temple where the druids
grove had stood. Sul, goddess of arcane prophecy, was tempered with the
cultured arts and science of Minerva. Like the Celts, the Romans believed that
the goddess guarded the entrance to the Underworld.
Roman
Bath
Aquae Sulis Although still
mostly buried under magnificent Georgian streets, the Roman ruins in Bath are
unsurpassed in Britain. Some believe Baths Roman art and sumptuousness
equal any in the empire; certainly Bath has no rivals north of the Alps. About
2m below the present level of the city, the Romans started building their great
baths and temple at the sacred spring soon after the Conquest, in the middle of
the 1st Century AD. They named their city Aque Sulis and soon transformed the
Celtic druids grove into one of the major therapeutic centres of the West. The
Romans revered the Spring just as the Celts had done; by the 3rd century its
stunning temple and luxurious baths attracted pilgrims from throughout the
Roman world.
The Great Bath The art and
engineering of the remarkable baths at Minerva's temple offer us a glimpse of
Roman Britain at its most glorious. The complex housed no fewer than five
healing hot baths by the time it was completed in the 4th century AD. An
elaborate hypocaust heating system serviced a series of hot sweat rooms;
swimming pools and cold rooms cooled the pilgrims down. At the centre, in its
own hall and lined with 14 massive sheets of lead, was the Great Bath.
Surrounded by the gods, whose statues emerged mysteriously from the swirling
steam, the Great Bath must have seemed a wonder of the ancient world.
The Temple The ancient world
marvelled at Minerva's great temple in Bath. Shrouded in steam, pilgrims
approached the mysterious sacred spring at the heart of the temple believing it
to be the actual residing place of Sulis Minerva, whose healing cult had spread
from Britain throughout the Empire. Not only was Minerva's water renowned for
its healing powers; by throwing their offerings into the spring, pilgrims
believed that they could communicate directly with the Underworld. Almost
20,000 coins and several gold and silver artefacts have since been recovered.
The visual and symbolic focus of the temple was the sacrificial altar. The
great mass of stone stood nearly 2m high; its top was chiselled smooth and
slightly dished to hols the animals that were slaughtered for augury.
Curses Amongst the most
remarkable and revealing artefacts recovered from the Roman Baths are the
written dedications, vows and curses that centuries of pilgrims cast into the
hot spring. As well as appealing to Sulis Minerva for health or wealth, the
pilgrims inscribed curses on thin pewter sheets which were then usually rolled
up and placed in the water. Typically each curse stated a lost love or piece of
stolen property; numerous suspects 'whether pagan or Christian' were often
listed with an appeal that the guilty should meet some foul end. Common are
spells to counter others curses; writing backwards was thought to imbue the
magic with extra potency.
The Ruin Flooding finally ruined
Bath wondrous temple and the Great Bath complex. Built in the slight hollow
around the hot spring, the Baths and temple were particularly vulnerable to the
rising water level of the 4th century AD. The baths drained into the River
Avon, as they do today, and as the Avon's level rose so river water
increasingly backed up the drains until they were eventually blocked with mud
and silt. When the Romans withdrew from Britain, the baths were simply not
repaired and soon fell to ruin. Saxon Christians dismantled the sacrificial
altar to use as paving stones for their new monastery. Before long the hot
spring returned to marsh. The site of Minerva's great temple became a dumping
place for town refuse and, in later times, a Saxon graveyard.
Middle Ages
King Arthur Bath is well known
for being the site of the legendary battle of Badon, which the Welsh annals say
was the twelfth and greatest battle fought by Arthur against the invading
Saxons. Known as the 'Siege of Badon Hill', the exact site of the battle was
probably the refortified Celtic hillfort at Bannerdown, where farmers are
reported to have apparently 'dug up cupfuls of teeth'. The battle was at
turning point for Arthur and Britain. By not only defeating but also reversing
the initial aggressive thrust of the Saxons, Arthur may well have saved the
Celtic population to the West. According to the great Dark Age historian
Nennius '960 men were killed by one attack of Arthur and no-one save himself
laid them low'.
Saxon Bath Bath finally fell to
the Saxons at the Battle of Dyrham Park just to the north of the city. Although
the great Roman temple and baths were lost to flood and ruin, Bath continued as
an important religious site with the founding of a Saxon monastery in the 7th
century. As its lands increased, the monastery grew rich and powerful. King
Edgar was crowned in splendour in the new monastery church of St Peter in the
10th century, reflecting Bath's new status as one of the leading cultural and
religious centre's of Wessex. In the late Saxon era, Bath was fortified against
Viking attack and operated its own mint. Even under the French Benedictines,
the monastery continued to flourish; but with the death of William the
Conqueror, the hated William Rufus took control.
The Normans A Norman doctor
turned churchman, John De Villula bought the ruined City of Bath for 500 pounds
of silver. Instituted as the Bishop of Bath, Villula started to build a new
cathedral on the burned Saxons abbeys ruins. With typical Norman ambition, the
huge 100m long cathedral was to be one of the largest in Europe. The present
abbey occupies only its nave. Villula also extended the monastery, whose
collegiate school was widely renown for its scholarship. But the most important
was his interest in the therapeutic qualities of Bath's hot springs. He ordered
the baths to be refitted and built treatment centres in the city. The wool
trade and cloth making maintained Bath's wealth. Although badly hit by the
plague, Bath continued to prosper and the old city walls were rebuilt. Yet
Villulas enormous cathedral was near ruined by neglect. Not until a dream
about Jacobs ladder inspired the 16th century Bishop King was it rebuilt.
Legend recounts that Bishop King was impelled by a great voice from Heaven
which said 'Let a King restore the church
.'; though it was rebuilt
to a much smaller scale.
Medieval Bath The great 16th
century traveller John Leland was inspired by Bath's Roman ruins but not at all
impressed by the hot water which 'rikketh like a sething potte', apparently.
The waters fed four baths to cater for the many afflicted who came to Bath for
their cures. Royalty and gentry enjoyed the King's Bath, built above the Great
Bath of Roman times and the major attraction, once the cathedral and monastery
were ruined. But in contrary the Cross Bath was foul. Contemporary accounts
recoil in horror at the thought of diseased men and women bathing naked
together while onlookers jeered and threw animals into the bath.
Sumwhat Decayed From its
magnificent Roman origins as a spa town, Bath became 'sumwhat decayed', as the
late-medieval traveller John Leland wrote. The baths themselves began to lose
their glory; many complained that only the sick now came to enjoy the waters.
The streets were also far from pleasing to the eye. According to Baths famous
architect John Wood 'Soil of all sorts, and even carrion, were cast and laid in
the streets, and the pigs turned out by day to feed and rout among it; butchers
killed and dressed their cattle at their own doors; people washed every kind of
thing they had to make clean at the common conduits in the open streets ....'
Georgian Bath
Bath's population multiplied itself by well over ten times
during the course of the 18th century. From a still small classic medieval city
of just 2000 people, with its market place and many mangers and defensive
walls, Bath was transformed into a fashionable metropolis of nearly 30,000
citizens in just 100 years.
The Dandy Into the 'decayed'
country town that was Bath at the start of the 18th century, walked the wigged
adventurer and dandy 'Beau' Richard Nash. A drop-out from Oxford University,
the army and the law, Beau Nash earned his money as a gambler and immaculate
socialite. With Queen Anne's visit to Bath in 1802 Beau Nash saw his chance to
make fortune and influential friends. Immediately, Nash set about transporting
Bath into the kind of fashionable resort in which his gambling skills would
thrive. Within just three years he had raised a considerable sum of money for
the repair of Bath's woeful roads. Beau Nash and his great new city of pleasure
and social elegance grew side by side. As Nash's influence increased, Bath with
its splendid new public buildings, orchestras and balls, began to rival London
as the place to be seen.
The Postmaster Perhaps the man
to whom Bath owes the most is Ralph Allen. Allen's story is remarkable.
Sheltering in a hut while a storm raged in , a postmaster noticed the child
Ralph Allen. Seeing genius in the boy, he found him a position in Bath's post
office. Young Allen thrived so meteoric was his career that he was soon known
as The Man of Bath. Ralph Allen's fortune and the new splendour of Bath were
made with limestone cut from his quarries near by. With the same golden stone,
he built a fabulous mansion in Prior Park at which such as Fielding, Pope,
Gainsborough and Garrick stayed; it was Allen who invited the young William
Pitt to stand as the MP for Bath.
The Circus Beau Nash made Bath
fashionable, Ralph Allen gave his administrative genius and blocks of Bath
stone, but the great Georgian city would never have been built without the
brilliance of the architects John Wood and his son of the same name. With Allen
as his patron, Wood the Elder's dream was to build a city with the visual
splendour and magnificence of ancient Rome. Wood died before his dream was
realised, but the work was superbly completed by his son. 'I proposed to make a
grand Place of Assembly, to be called the Royal Forum of Bath; another place,
no less magnificent, for the Exhibition of Sports, to be called the Grand
Circus; and a third place, of equal state with either of the former, for the
Practice of Medicinal exercises, to be called the Imperial Gymnasium,' Wood the
Elder wrote. Soon Queen Square and the Parades rose gloriously from the
medieval city. Work began on the grand Circus, which was completed by Wood's
son. The Circus is the earliest attempted in Britain. Its bold and brilliant
design amazed 18th century society. Similarly outstanding was Wood the
Younger's Royal Crescent - the first open curved terrace built in Europe.
The Minerva Head In 1727,
stylish Bath was thrilled by the discovery of the head of Minerva's cultic
statue. The gilded bronze head of the Roman goddess was found when a vast
trench was dug to lay sewers. This was Georgian Bath's first glimpse of its
great Roman temple. The actual site of Minerva's temple remained undiscovered
for 60 years. When new foundations were being laid for the Pump Room in 1790, a
solid Roman pavement was unearthed 4m below ground. Minerva's great temple had
finally been found.
High Society As well as the
many dukes, duchesses, earls and lords who enjoyed Bath, the Georgian city was
home to many of the great people of their time. Horace Walpole, Dr Johnson,
James Boswell and Thomas Gainsborough frequented Bath's card tables, concerts
and balls. Bath's MP was Sir William Pitt. Jane Austen lived and wrote in Bath
at the beginning of the 19th century and Bath is the place where Charles
Dickens wrote The Pickwick Papers.
The 19th Century Bath's last
great building project was inspired and financed by the richest man in England
of his time - Sir William Pulteney, after whom the stunning Pulteney Bridge was
named. When Great Pulteney Street was completed in 1790, Bath's glorious
century was drawing to an end. With the huge expense of fighting the Napoleonic
Wars in Europe, Britain slipped into recession at the start of the 19th century
and a financial scandal caused the collapse of Bath's banks. Apart from
rebuilding the abbey in 1833, Bath's great boom was at an end.
The Fosseway
At Bath the River Avon crossed the Fosse Way and the major road
from London to Wales. The Roman roads themselves followed great prehistoric
routes that converged on the vital river-crossing at Bath. As well as
connecting Bath with the great places of Roman Britain the Fosse Way provided
the Romans with lead mined in the Mendip Hills to line their remarkable hot
baths. The Avon was to prove vital to Bath's great 18th century building boom.
By improving its course to Bath, Ralph Allen was able to transport his huge
blocks of quarried stone to the city. As the Industrial Revolution dawned,
Allen's Avon Navigation became the birthplace of the Kennet and Avon Canal. The
12m wide and 100 km long canal was an amazing engineering feat; its 79 locks
took Bath's cloth to London and the world. The canal was in turn replaced by
Brunel's Great Western Railway.
The Civil War
Like many of Somerset's fast-changing cities and towns, Bath's
population was deeply divided in the years leading up the Civil War. It was a
division based on social, economic and religious grounds. The local gentry
joined with Bath's merchants and cloth-makers in their revolt against the
tax-raising whims and religious edicts of an aloof and Catholic king. The
Royalists were determined to prevent the Puritans from dismantling the Church
and State and to stop what they saw as extreme Puritan religious reforms. By
the summer of 1643, two great rival armies occupied Somerset's two Episcopal
cities only twenty miles apart - the Royalist army had marched to Wells and the
Puritans held Bath.
The Battle of Lansdown In July
1643, the two armies met at Bath. A huge Royalist force had marched form Wells
and taken Bradford-on-Avon. By securing Bradford's vital bridge, they
threatened to encircle and destroy the smaller Parliamentary army barracked in
Bath, just a few miles down-river .On the morning of July 5th, the massive
Royalist army approached Parliament's forces entrenched on Lansdown Hill. Led
by the 'Conqueror' Sir William Waller, Parliament's army slipped out of the
city to take up a stronger defensive position on the steep slopes of Lansdown
by an Iron Age hillfort. So impregnable seemed Parliament's position on
Lansdown Hill that the Royalist army saw no no option but to retreat. Seizing
their opportunity, Parliament's cavalry charged down the hill to attack the
retreating Royalist horses and routed them. Some galloped all the way to
Oxford; but the Royalist Cornish infantry stood firm. Somehow the Cornish
pikemen held , Parliament's charging horses, winning time for their army to
turn around and re-engage. The pikemen forced Parliament's cavalry back up the
and then attacked. With astonishing bravery, they advanced up the steep slope
into Parliament's great guns and took Lansdown. It was a Pyrrhic victory:
Parliament was defeated but Royalist losses were appalling.
The Monmouth Rebellion Just 42
years after the bloody Battle of Lansdown, the cloth-makers and merchants again
rose up against taxes and royal religious edicts, supporting the Protestant
Duke of Monmouth in his claim for the throne. As Monmouth marched through
Somerset, his ranks swelled from the 80 men who landed with him from Holland to
four whole regiments. Within two weeks his swelling Puritan army reached Bath,
where the royal army was barracked. Monmouth's herald called up to the city
walls for the Royalists to surrender but was quickly answered with a well-aimed
bullet to the head. Monmouth skirted Bath and stayed the night of Friday June
26th in the George Inn at nearby Norton St Philip. He was surprised on the very
next day with a Royalist attack. The royal army stormed the town, threatening
to overrun the barricade that Monmouth had erected to protect his headquarters
in the George Inn; but in a brilliant ambush, the rebels managed to flank the
royal force. Harried and surrounded on three sides, the King's troops scrambled
through hedges and small lanes to where their big guns waited. Royal losses
were mounting when torrential rain forced Monmouth to pull back.
World War 2
Strategic
position Although some of Bath's manufacturers were engaged on
wartime production, producing gun mountings, torpedo parts, aircraft propellers
and other products for military use, German Intelligence had not identified
Bath as a strategic target. Similarly, although the Admiralty had moved its
entire warship design operation from London to Bath, the intelligence at the
time thought that just a few high ranking staff officers had decamped to Bath
and were staying in hotels. Thus Bath was officially "a lesser town without
specific aiming points" and to maintain that fiction Bath was deliberately
undefended, having neither a balloon barrage nor anti-aircraft guns. Hostile
aircraft did fly over Bath, but usually on their way to other targets such as
Bristol.
The Bath Blitz Nine times during
the "Air Battle for England" bombs fell within Bath's boundaries, but these
were strays which were intended for targets elsewhere and became misdirected
due to bad weather or poor navigation. Mostly they fell without casualties, but
in March 1941, 6 people died when bombs fell on Twerton, and the following
month, 11 were killed when Widcombe was the target.
But in April 1942, Bath itself was the target, in a reprisal for
the RAF bombing of Lübeck. During two nights and the following morning at
the end of April, many hundreds of high explosive bombs and countless
incendiary devices were dropped. The official figures show that around 900
buildings were completely destroyed and around 12,500 buildings were damaged
during these raids. Over 400 people were killed, many of them women and
children. Yet contemporary Bath bears almost no sign of its recent history: it
appears to be an elegant and intact Georgian city. Many of the buildings were
repaired, or rebuilt to the original design. Unlike other cathedral cities that
were bombed, Bath has no memorial to those who died, and as time marches on,
fewer residents who remember it. It is for that reason the Bath Blitz Memorial
Project was founded and gives details of what happened and their plans for a
memorial. |