Paul Kenneth Baillie Reynolds, CBE (1896–1973) was a British classical scholar and archaeologist who studied specialised Roman troops such as the frumentarii and the vigiles.
He was the son of Louis Baillie Reynolds, a stockbroker, and novelist Gertrude Minnie Robins.
Baillie Reynolds extensively researched the remains of ancient Rome's aqueducts.
While at Aberystwyth, he also directed the excavations of Kanovium, the Roman fort at Caerhun, North Wales, over a period of four summers from 1926.
[1][2] His last significant task was to oversee repairs to the Aqua Claudia aqueduct in Rome, which ran through the grounds of the British Embassy.