Stone, Bronze, and Iron Ages The hills in the locality such as
Bathampton Down saw human activity from the
Mesolithic period. Several
Bronze Age round barrows were opened by
John Skinner in the 18th century. A
long barrow site believed to be from the
Early Bronze Age Beaker people was flattened to make way for
RAF Charmy Down.
Solsbury Hill overlooking the current city was an
Iron Age hill fort and the adjacent Bathampton Camp may also have been one.
Roman baths and town of the Great Bath at the
Roman Baths. The entire structure above the level of the pillar bases is a later construction and was not a feature of the building in Roman days. Archaeological evidence shows that the site of the
Roman baths' main spring may have been treated as a shrine by the
Britons, and was dedicated to the goddess
Sulis, whom the
Romans identified with
Minerva; the name Sulis continued to be used after the Roman invasion, appearing in the town's
Roman name, '''' (literally, "the waters of Sulis"). Messages to her scratched onto metal, known as
curse tablets, have been recovered from the sacred spring by archaeologists. The tablets were written in
Latin, and laid curses on personal enemies. For example, if a citizen had his clothes stolen at the baths, he might write a curse against the suspects on a tablet to be read by the goddess. A temple was constructed in AD 60–70, and a bathing complex was built up over the next 300 years. Engineers drove oak piles into the mud to provide a stable foundation, and surrounded the spring with an irregular stone chamber lined with lead. In the 2nd century, the spring was enclosed within a wooden
barrel-vaulted structure that housed the
caldarium (hot bath),
tepidarium (warm bath), and
frigidarium (cold bath). The town was later given
defensive walls, probably in the 3rd century. After the failure of Roman authority in the first decade of the 5th century, the baths fell into disrepair and were eventually lost as a result of rising water levels and silting. In March 2012, a hoard of 30,000 silver Roman coins, one of the largest discovered in Britain, was unearthed in an archaeological dig. The coins, believed to date from the 3rd century, were found about from the Roman baths.
Post-Roman and medieval It was suggested by
Geoffrey of Monmouth that a hillfort on the outskirts of Bath was the site of the 6th century
Battle of Badon, in which
Arthur defeated the
Anglo-Saxons, though that is not accepted by the majority of modern historians. The town was captured by the
West Saxons in 577 after the
Battle of Deorham; the Anglo-Saxon poem
The Ruin may describe the appearance of the Roman site about this time. A monastery was founded at an early date – reputedly by
Saint David although more probably in 675 by
Osric, King of the
Hwicce, perhaps using the
walled area as its precinct.
Nennius, a 9th-century historian, mentions a "Hot Lake" in the land of the Hwicce along the
River Severn, and adds "It is surrounded by a wall, made of brick and stone, and men may go there to bathe at any time, and every man can have the kind of bath he likes. If he wants, it will be a cold bath; and if he wants a hot bath, it will be hot".
Bede described hot baths in the geographical introduction to the
Ecclesiastical History in terms very similar to those of Nennius.
King Offa of
Mercia gained control of the monastery in 781 and rebuilt the church, which was dedicated to
St. Peter. According to the Victorian churchman
Edward Churton, during the Anglo-Saxon era Bath was known as
Acemannesceastre ('Akemanchester'), or 'aching men's city', on account of the reputation these springs had for healing the sick. published in 1610 By the 9th century, the old Roman street pattern was lost and Bath was a royal possession.
King Alfred laid out the town afresh, leaving its south-eastern quadrant as the abbey precinct. During the reign of
Edward the Elder coins were
minted in Bath based on a design from the
Winchester mint but with 'BAD' on the obverse relating to the Anglo-Saxon name for the town, Baðum, Baðan or Baðon, meaning "at the baths", and this was the source of the present name.
Edgar of England was crowned king of England in
Bath Abbey in 973, in a ceremony that formed the basis of all future
English coronations.
William Rufus granted the town, abbey and mint to a royal physician,
John of Tours, who became Bishop of
Wells and Abbot of Bath, following the sacking of the town during the
Rebellion of 1088. It was papal policy for bishops to move to more urban seats, and John of Tours
translated his own from Wells to Bath. The bishop planned and began a much larger church as his cathedral, to which was attached a priory, with the bishop's palace beside it. New baths were built around the three springs. Later bishops returned the episcopal seat to Wells while retaining the name Bath in the title,
Bishop of Bath and Wells.
St John's Hospital was founded around 1180 by Bishop
Reginald Fitz Jocelin and is among the oldest
almshouses in England. The 'hospital of the baths' was built beside the hot springs of the
Cross Bath, for their health-giving properties and to provide shelter for the poor infirm. Administrative systems fell within the
hundreds. The
Bath Hundred had various names including the Hundred of Le Buri. The Bath Foreign Hundred or Forinsecum covered the area outside the city and was later combined into the Bath Forum Hundred. Wealthy merchants had no status within the hundred courts and formed
guilds to gain influence. They built the first
guildhall probably in the 13th century. Around 1200, the
first mayor was appointed.
Early modern By the 15th century, Bath's abbey church was dilapidated and
Oliver King, Bishop of Bath and Wells, decided to rebuild it on a smaller scale in 1500. The new church was completed just a few years before Bath Priory was
dissolved in 1539 by
Henry VIII. The abbey church became derelict before being restored as the city's
parish church in the
Elizabethan era, when the city experienced a revival as a
spa. The baths were improved and the city began to attract the aristocracy. A
royal charter granted by Queen
Elizabeth I in 1590 confirmed
city status. James Montagu, Bishop of Bath and Wells from 1608, spent considerable sums in restoring Bath Abbey and actively supported the Baths themselves, aware that the 'towne liveth wholly by them'. In 1613, perhaps at his behest, Queen Anne visited the town to take the waters: the Queen's Bath was named after her. The cue for the visit may have been the completion of the restoration work to Bath Abbey, the last instalment of which had been paid for two years previously.
Anne of Denmark came to Bath in 1613 and 1615. By the beginning of the
English Civil War, the city was a first-class resort. However, it lost much of this trade in 1642; with the outbreak of war, fiddlers, "ladies who are there", and ale-house guides, lost their customers. The city was initially garrisoned for
Charles I. Seven thousand pounds was spent on fortifications, but on the appearance of parliamentary forces the gates were thrown open and the city surrendered. It became a significant post for the Western Association army under
William Waller. Bath was retaken by the royalists in July 1643 following the
Battle of Lansdowne and occupied for two years until 1645. The city was spared widespread destruction of property, overcrowding, bubonic plague, or starvation of its inhabitants, etc, unlike nearby Bristol and
Gloucester, and it had good water piped in from its surrounding hills. Still, soldiers who were billeted in private houses contributed to disorder and vandalism, though this never caused the general destruction and plundering seen in
Marlborough and other towns. Bath remained a health resort, often for wounded soldiers, its markets continued open and well-regulated, and its shopkeepers and craftsmen continued busy. Nevertheless, council spending, rents and grants all decreased and the finances of the Bath City Council were seriously affected. and Circus from the air (connected by link road, thus creating the famous "
question mark" formation). Georgian taste favoured the regularity of Bath's streets and squares and the contrast with adjacent rural nature. Several areas of the city were developed in the
Stuart period, and more building took place during
Georgian times in response to the increasing number of visitors who required accommodation. Architects
John Wood the Elder and
his son laid out the new quarters in streets and squares, the identical façades of which gave an impression of palatial scale and classical decorum. Much of the creamy gold
Bath stone, a type of
limestone used for construction in the city, was obtained from the
Combe Down and Bathampton Down Mines owned by
Ralph Allen (1694–1764). Allen, to advertise the quality of his quarried limestone, commissioned the elder John Wood to build a country house on his
Prior Park estate between the city and the mines. Bath had become perhaps the most fashionable of the rapidly developing British spa towns, attracting many notable visitors such as the wealthy London bookseller
Andrew Millar and his wife, who both made long visits. In 1816, it was described as "a seat of amusement and dissipation", where "scenes of extravagance in this receptacle of the wealthy and the idle, the weak and designing" were habitual.
Late modern towards the northern suburbs, showing the variety of housing typical of Bath The population of the city was 40,020 at the 1801 census, making it one of the largest cities in Britain.
William Thomas Beckford bought a house in
Lansdown Crescent in 1822, and subsequently two adjacent houses to form his residence. Having acquired all the land between his home and the top of
Lansdown Hill, he created a garden more than in length and built
Beckford's Tower at the top. Emperor
Haile Selassie of Ethiopia spent four years in exile, from 1936 to 1940, at
Fairfield House in Bath. During
World War II, between the evening of 25 April and the early morning of 27 April 1942, Bath suffered three air raids in reprisal for
RAF raids on the German cities of
Lübeck and
Rostock, part of the
Luftwaffe campaign popularly known as the
Baedeker Blitz. During the
Bath Blitz, more than 400 people were killed, and more than 19,000 buildings damaged or destroyed. Houses in
Royal Crescent,
Circus and
Paragon were burnt out along with the
Assembly Rooms. The buildings have all been restored although there are still signs of the bombing. A postwar review of inadequate housing led to the clearance and redevelopment of areas of the city in a postwar style, often at variance with the local Georgian style. In the 1950s, the nearby villages of
Combe Down,
Twerton and
Weston were incorporated into the city to enable the development of housing, much of it
council housing. In 1965, town planner
Colin Buchanan published
Bath: A Planning and Transport Study, which to a large degree sought to better accommodate the motor car, including the idea of a traffic tunnel underneath the centre of Bath. Though criticised by conservationists, some parts of the plan were implemented. In the 1970s and 1980s, it was recognised that conservation of historic buildings was inadequate, leading to more care and reuse of buildings and open spaces. In 1987, the city was selected by
UNESCO as a
World Heritage Site, recognising its international cultural significance. Between 1991 and 2000, Bath was the scene of a series of rapes committed by an unidentified man dubbed the "
Batman rapist". The attacker remains at large and is the subject of Britain's longest-running serial rape investigation. Although the offender's DNA is known and several thousand men in Bath were DNA tested, the attacker continues to evade police. In 2021, Bath become part of a second UNESCO World Heritage Site, a group of spa towns across Europe known as the "
Great Spas of Europe". ==Government==