The camp was almost rectangular, measuring 784 metres (2,572 ft) from north west to south east, and 522 metres (1,713 ft) from north east to south west, covering an area of just over 41 hectares (100 acres).[1]
History
In 210 AD, the Emperor Septimius Severus made an attempt to conquer all Caledonia reaching the Moray Firth. He created a marching camp at Muiryfold,[2] near the one created in 84 AD by Agricola at Auchinhove.[3]
Speculation that Agricola and Septimius Severus reached further north in Scotland has been stimulated by discoveries at Portmahomack on the Dornoch Firth,[4] and Tarradale on the north shore of the Beauly Firth.[5] Neither have been confirmed as Roman sites.
"Muiryfold, Grange". Moray Sites and Monuments Record. Moray Council. Retrieved 4 October 2015.
Frere, S. Britannia: a History of Roman Britain. Londra, 1998. ISBN0-7126-5027-X
Hanson, W S (1980) The first Roman occupation of Scotland, in Hanson, W S and Keppie, L J F Roman Frontier studies 1979: Papers presented to the 12th International Congress of Roman Frontier Studies, Brit Archaeol Rep, International, vol.S71, 1 Oxford 15-43
Moffat, Alistair. Before Scotland: The Story of Scotland Before History. Thames & Hudson. Londra, 2005. ISBN0-500-05133-X
St Joseph, J K (1961) Air reconnaissance in Britain, 1958-60, J Roman Stud, vol.51 123