The Sanctuary at Bath in the Roman Empire


Front cover of Eleri Cousins's book

Dr Eleri Cousins's new book, The Sanctuary at Bath in the Roman Empire, retells the story of Roman Bath.

The Roman sanctuary at Bath has long been used in scholarship as an example par excellence of religious and artistic syncretisms in Roman Britain. With its monumental temple, baths, and hot springs, its status as one of the most significant Roman sites in the province is unquestioned. But our academic narratives about Roman Bath are also rooted in the narratives of our more recent past.

The book begins by exploring how Georgian and Victorian antiquaries developed our modern story of a healing sanctuary at Roman Bath. It shows that a curative function for the sanctuary is in fact unsupported by the archaeological evidence. It then retells the story of Roman Bath by focusing on three interlinked aspects: the entanglement of the sanctuary with Roman imperialism, the role of the hot springs in the lives of worshipers, and Bath's place within the wider world of the western Roman Empire.

Eleri Cousins is Lecturer in Roman History at Lancaster. The Sanctuary at Bath in the Roman Empire is published by Cambridge University Press.

Back to News