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  • Hadrian's Wall
    (known in antiquity as the Vallum Hadriani or the Vallum Aelian) is a defensive frontier work in northern Britain which dates from 122 CE. The wall ran from coast to coast at a length of 73 statute miles (120 km). Though the wall is commonly thought to have been built to mark the boundary line between Britain and Scotland, this is not so; no one knows the actual motivation behind its construction but it does not delineate a boundary between two countries.
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  • stationed in forts is far more pronounced than the ones in the milecastles and turrets.[31]. Breeze discusses three theories about the soldiers on Hadrian's Wall.
  • In 122 CE, Emperor Hadrian visited Britannia. Later that year, building began on the structure which we know today as Hadrians Wall.
  • You can still see the remains of Hadrians Wall crossing east to west from the River Tyne to the Solway Firth and I just went to see it.
  • That meant Hadrians Wall was a cultural melting point, with cohorts from modern-day Netherlands, Spain, Romania, Algeria, Iraq, Syria – and more.
  • Hadrians Wall, also known as the Roman Wall or Picts’ Wall, is the largest and possibly most famous ancient monument in Northern Europe.
  • To mark the 10th anniversary of the Hadrian's Wall Path National Trail, celebrate the variety of things to see and do in Hadrian's Wall Country.
  • The sites managed by English Heritage along Hadrians Wall are Birdoswald Roman fort, Chesters...
  • What was Hadrian's Wall?
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    Yayınlandı19 Haz 2015
  • Hadrians Wall, as the name may suggest, was named after the Roman Emperor of the same name, and this Roman wall in England has a similarly long history.
  • Opened in 2003, Hadrians Wall Path is an 84-mile trail that stretches across Northern England and follows Hadrians Wall as closely as possible.