Burial of Durotriges was by
inhumation, with a last ritual meal provided even under exiguous circumstances, as in the eight burials at Maiden Castle, carried out immediately after the Roman attack. Most Durotrigian burials are laid down in crouched positions within shallow, oval graves. One such inhumation of a young Durotrigian woman was found at
Langton Herring in Dorset in 2010. The burial, which was laid down with a decorated mirror, had a
radiocarbon date of between AD 25 – 53. Although it was previously thought that the Durotriges strongly resisted the Roman invasion of AD 43/44, the historian
Suetonius recording some battles fought between tribes of southern Britain and the
second legion Augusta, then commanded by
Vespasian, we do not know if the Durotriges, in particular, were involved.
Mortimer Wheeler, who reported on the excavation of
Maiden Castle conducted by himself and
Tessa Wheeler between 1934 and 1938, interpreted a cemetery uncovered in the hill fort's east gate as evidence for a savage Roman assault. Later examination of Maiden Castle by Niall Sharples in 1985-6 and geophysical survey conducted in 2015 by Dave Stewart have shown that Wheeler's interpretation of a siege and subsequent massacre is unlikely. By 70 AD, the tribe was already starting to be Romanised and securely included in the
Roman province of
Britannia. In the tribe's area, the Romans explored some quarries and supported a local pottery industry. The Durotriges, and their relationship with the Roman Empire, form the basis for an ongoing archaeological research project directed by Paul Cheetham, Ellen Hambleton and
Miles Russell of
Bournemouth University. The Durotriges Project has, since 2009, been reconsidering the Iron Age to Roman transition through a detailed programme of field survey, geophysical investigation and targeted excavation. To date the programme of work has concentrated upon an enclosed late Iron Age
banjo enclosure containing round houses, work surfaces and storage pits, a Late Iron Age cemetery, two
Roman villas and a large Late Iron Age roundhouse settlement referred to as
Duropolis. A study published in 2025 of 57 Durotrigian genomes found that settlements were based on maternal lineages, with incoming unrelated males. This
matrilocal residence pattern has not been previously recorded in European prehistory. ==See also==