Of course you've always wanted to see people marching through Nottinghamshire in sandals and togas, haven't you? Good, because later this month a merry band will be doing just that to raise money for Newark's forthcoming new museum and Civil War Centre, which is set to display many of the area's Roman and ancient treasures including the famous gold Iron Age Torc and the Roman cavalry cheekpiece that graces the cover of my Five Leaves book Roman Nottinghamshire. The team will be walking 68 miles from Lincoln to Leicester, basically following the Fosse Way. On June 20 they'll be stopping in Newark to hear a talk by me on the history of the Fosse Way (Newark Town Hall, 7.30pm, £4) and I may be joining them for the walk the day after. Newark hasn't had a decent museum for ages and consequently all the artefacts have been locked up in the town's Resource Centre. The Torc itself has been at the British Museum all these years as Newark didn't have facilities deemed good enough to put it on display. Now it's coming home. The best of the 100,000 artefacts found alongside the Fosse Way during the recent dualling work should also be coming to the new museum. Details of the talk can be seen at http://
Note: the picture is not Mark Patterson
Five Leaves' current best-selling book is Roman Nottinghamshire. Four weeks in and we are planning a reprint. It is also quite obvious that at some stage there will have to be a second edition. A talk in Retford alone produced some gold dust. Meantime we have set up a dedicated microsite to gather all the latest Roman Nottinghamshire news. Who knew this was such a big area? We have also heard a rumour of someone else writing a book on Roman Notts. Typical, you wait 1600 years and two books come along at once. Here's the microsite.