The Roman withdrawal from Britain was not a sudden thing. Some troops were withdrawn in 401 AD and in 410 AD Britain was told that they had to defend themselves. By 426 AD there was a complete withdrawal of remaining magistrates and civilians.
Unfortunately there is no solid answer to your question. We know that Julius Caesar reached Britain in 55 and 54 BC and that Claudius made it part of the Roman Empire in 43 AD. However in those 90 plus years there was a Roman presence in Britain as they had some military conquests, and some treaties with the local tribes. There was no doubt traders present, and when there are trading posts there are settlers who live around them. But firm dates are not available except for those of Caesar and Claudius.
The Romans conquered all of modern-day France.
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Britannia . It was first brought to the attention of the Roman people by the campaigns of Julius Caesar in 55 and 54 BC, but was not proven to be an island until the early eighties A.D., when the governor Gnaeus Julius Agricola sent an exploratory naval expedition around the north coast of Scotland
Bristol is in England. And we can guarantee that the Romans reached England. So Yes, The Romans reached Bristol
no
The Romans came by ship and saw the entry of the river as port for docking at Dover
the Romans brought Christianity to England in in the great invasion of 55 AD.
The Romans referred to England as Britannia because that was its name in Roman times.
The Angles, Saxon and Jutes from northern Germany and the Frisians from Frisia (in the north of the netherlands) settled in Britain after the Romans left the island.
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They conquered them so the could not settle as regular people. jusst prisoners
we think it was the Romans we are not entirely sure