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TIME TRAIL
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Exploring Exeter through the ages

Prehistory

< AD55

Roman Fortress

55-75

Roman Town

75-400

Dark Ages

400-900

The Saxons

900-1068

The Normans

1068-1200

Middle Ages

1200-1500

Tudor/ Stuart

1500-1640

Civil War

1642-1660

Golden Age

1660-1750

Late Georgian

1750-1840

Victorian City

1840-1900

20th Century

1900-2000

 

THEMES:

The Form & Growth of the City Defence & Warfare Public Buildings & Works Church & Religion House & Household Crafts & industries Regional & Foreign Trade Dress & Display Medicine & Health Children & Education

Defence & Warfare

The city’s defences distinguished Exeter from its less important neighbours - a symbol of authority, wealth and prestige, as well as security. The city wall, which still survives in large part today, was only one element of a system of defence which also included a rampart behind the wall, a large protective ditch in front of it, and gates.

Roman WallThe present circuit of defences was built by the Romans and stood for centuries after they left. It was re-used to protect the late Saxon burh from the time of Alfred the Great, and were strengthened before the Norman Conquest, when the city held out against William the Conqueror.

Throughout the Middle Ages and the Tudor period the defences were repeatedly improved and repaired: towers were added and gates strengthened, and decayed lengths of walls rebuilt.

The whole system was greatly modernised and elaborated in the Civil War between Charles I and Parliament (1642-47) when further defences were added outside the city walls.

After the Civil War the defences soon fell into decay. By Georgian times the gates were seen as barriers to a modernised city, and they were swept away between the 1760s and 1819. Nowadays much more survives of the wall than is commonly appreciated: about 70 per cent still stands.

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