There are quite a few !... Manchester, Winchester, Lanchester (and Chester itself of course), Lancaster & Tadcaster... are some examples.
Brancaster Leicester
The inclusion of 'chester', 'caster' or 'cester' in a town or city's name usually indicates that it was a Roman town. For example: Chester, Lancaster, Tadcaster, Worcester, Leicester, Gloucester.
Manchester Winchester
Caster is a place-name suffix in England that came from the Roman castra indicated that a fort once stood there. Places in England ending in caster include: Lancaster, Ancaster, Brancaster, Hincaster, Doncaster, Tadcaster, and Muncaster.
Lancaster
Chester,Manchester,Glouchester
towns ending in ham
Chesterfield
The "caster" part of many English place names is a left over from the occupation of Britain by the Roman Empire, which lasted for about 500 years from around AD 50. The Romans named, or re-named places and the "caster" derives from the Latin word Castra which means a camp or settlement. See the related question link below.
can you list towns ending with the word Thorpe
It came into the towns on Roman "aqueducts".
The bath houses in Roman towns were used for getting clean and socializing.The bath houses in Roman towns were used for getting clean and socializing.The bath houses in Roman towns were used for getting clean and socializing.The bath houses in Roman towns were used for getting clean and socializing.The bath houses in Roman towns were used for getting clean and socializing.The bath houses in Roman towns were used for getting clean and socializing.The bath houses in Roman towns were used for getting clean and socializing.The bath houses in Roman towns were used for getting clean and socializing.The bath houses in Roman towns were used for getting clean and socializing.
many towns and villages in France have a name ending in 'ville'. This is an indication that the place was the location of a 'villa' - an agricultural domain - in Roman times.