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 t is, perhaps, needless to say that the division of the country known as Leicestershire had no existence during the Romano-British period. At the time of the Roman invasion probably the whole of this district was inhabited by the Coritani, a British tribe whose chief towns we learn from Ptolemy, writing about 120, were Lincoln (Lindum) and Leicester (Rhage or Ratae). The boundaries of the land occupied by this tribe are uncertain, but their territory probably extended into the counties of Lincoln, Northampton, Leicester, Rutland, Nottingham, and Derby. The Roman occupation under the Emperor Claudius began in 43; at first the subjugation of the country was comparatively easy. A strong foothold was obtained in Kent and Essex, and then the army was formed into three divisions, the Second Legion going south-west towards Somerset and Devon, the Fourteenth and Twentieth Legions north-west towards Shrewsbury and Chester, and the Ninth Legion north towards Lincoln. Possibly some evidence of the presence of the Ninth Legion may be traced at Leicester, as will be noted hereafter. By 47 or 48 the whole of the eastern part of Britain up to the Humber, including the district now known as Leicestershire, was occupied; and in A.D. 48, or shortly afterwards, the subjugation of the more hilly country northwards began, which latter enterprise, however, does not concern our present inquiry.

Professor Haverfield divides Britain into two districts; the eastern, southern, and south-western district or the lowlands he describes as civilian, whilst the northern and western district or the uplands he describes as military. Leicestershire falls within the former category, and was a part of the midland area which may be termed undistinguished. With the exception of Leicester it contained no great town. The villas in the county are few, its mineral wealth was unknown to the Romans, and on the whole it was not so well suited for agriculture and pasture as other parts of the country. It was wanting in that marked Romano-British life which was to be found in the surrounding district, such as at Colchester, Verulam, Silchester, Gloucester, Wroxeter, and elsewhere. It is clear that Leicestershire showed the peaceful and simple characteristics of the rest of the midlands, and the population must have been sparse. Probably the western side was