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Romano-British culture

The Romano-British culture arose in Britain under the Roman Empire following the Roman conquest in AD 43 and the creation of the province of Britannia. It arose as a fusion of the imported Roman culture with that of the indigenous Britons, a people of Celtic language and custom.[1]

Scholars such as Christopher Snyder believe that during the 5th and 6th centuries – approximately from 410 when the Roman legions withdrew, to 597 when St Augustine of Canterbury arrived – southern Britain preserved an active sub-Roman culture[2] that survived the attacks from the Anglo-Saxons and even used a vernacular Latin when writing.[3]

British Latin

British Italians

Daco-Roman

Gallo-Roman culture

Illyro-Roman

Roman sites in the United Kingdom

Romano-British temple

Thraco-Roman

Jones, Michael (1996) The End of Roman Britain. Ithaca: Cornell University Press

Myres, John (1960) Pelagius and the End of Roman Rule in Britain. In: Journal of Roman Studies, 50, 21–36.

Pryor, Francis (2004) Britain AD: a Quest for Arthur, England and the Anglo-Saxons. London: HarperCollins  0-00-718186-8

ISBN

(1939) Tintagel Castle. London: H.M.S.O. (Reprinted by English Heritage 1985)

Radford, C. A. Ralegh

Thomas, Charles (1993) Tintagel: Arthur and Archaeology. London: English Heritage

The Romans in Britain

The Plague that made England

Google Books: The making of England of Richard Green (1881)

Ethnic and cultural consequences of the war between Saxons and romanised Britons