Magnis (Carvoran)
Magnis or Magna was a Roman fort near Hadrian's Wall in northern Britain. Its ruins are now known as and are located near Carvoran, Northumberland, in northern England. It was built on the Stanegate frontier and Roman road, linking Coria in the east to Luguvalium in the west, before the building of Hadrian's Wall.
The fort is now the site of the Roman Army Museum.
Name
The fort at Carvoran is generally identified with the 'Magnis' which appears both in the Ravenna Cosmography and the Notitia Dignitatum. Further evidence for the name comes from a fragmentary inscription apparently seen by the antiquary William Hutchinson in 1766 but which is now lost, which referred to "numerus MagneRoman fort
The site was occupied by several earlier timber-built camps as revealed by aerial photography, and a large enclosure of just under 8 acres below the later walls. The earliest dateable evidence is from the end of Domitian's reign.Magnis was built on the Stanegate frontier in about 80 AD to guard the junction of the Maiden Way Roman road with the Stanegate. As such the fort predates Hadrian's Wall.
The Maiden Way ran south from Magnis to Bravoniacum. An intermediate fort halfway between the two on the Maiden Way was Whitley Castle or Epiacum, just north of Alston, Cumbria.
Five hundred Hamian archers, known as Cohors Prima Hamiorum Sagittaria, the only regiment of archers known in Britain, were stationed at Magnis starting from 120 AD.
Hadrian's Wall was built from 122 only a few hundred yards north of the fort, and its Vallum ditch was dug to the north of the fort, separating it from the Wall and the frontier zone. The vallum was also diverted much further north of the fort than needed with no apparent reason. The fort was rebuilt in stone in 136-7 when the Antonine Wall was built in what is now Scotland. Further rebuilding was done at the end of the reign of Antoninus Pius and after the withdrawal from the Antonine wall, the same garrison that had occupied it in Hadrianic times fort returned.
Vicus
A large vicus was located on at least three sides of the fort as revealed by geophysical survey. It was identified by visitors to the remains including Horsley in 1732 and is also testified by many dedications to the god Vitiris.Archaeology
Artifacts recovered at Magnis include a iron spearhead, found at a depth of in a well, and the well-known modius, a bronze grain-measure.The site is under the care of the Vindolanda Trust and has the same preservation layers of organic remains. Supported by a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund, a five-year excavation began in 2023.