• The foundations of the Roman baths. The Jewry Wall is visible on the extreme right of the photo, and Jewry Wall Museum on the left.
  • The grade 1 listed Jewry Wall is one of the largest upstanding civilian Roman remains in the UK, forming part of the remains of a larger bath complex.
  • It was built in the 1960s, facing the Jewry Wall ruins in a building shared with Vaughan College. It housed artefacts from Iron Age, Roman, and medieval Leicester.
  • Some of the more distant sites are a little disappointing but those close to Jewry wall are well worth a visit. As to the Museum, it is still closed for major work.
  • Medieval builders demolished the rest of the baths in order to reuse the stone, leaving only one fragment, the Jewry Wall, upstanding.
  • Revitalising Jewry Wall. 11th October 6:30pm at LCB Depot. ... completely built over, you can just see the very top of the Jewry Wall behind St Nicholas Church.
  • The Jewry Wall is a section of wall from a Roman bathhouse, standing in the middle of modern Leicester, a few blocks from the cathedral.
  • For evidence of this opulence, simply take a trip to the Jewry Wall Museum that adjoins the wall itself, where you will find a host of beautiful Roman artifacts...
  • Visit Jewry Wall the Roman Centre of Britain located next to the largest pieces of surviving civil Roman architecture in Britain dating to 130AD.
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