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English: OS Map of Hadrian's Wall, in Northern England, at a scale of 1:31,680 or two inches to one mile. Date: 31 December 1964: Source: Scan of original OS map: Author:
The Staffordshire Moorlands Pan, which may provide the ancient name of Hadrian's Wall (it reads in part VALI AELI, ie. the Wall of Hadrian, using his family name of Aelius) Hadrian's Wall was known in the Roman period as the vallum (wall), and the discovery of the Staffordshire Moorlands Pan in Staffordshire in 2003 has thrown further light on ...
The route of Hadrian's Wall (in brown) in northern England. The background map shows modern counties and urban areas. The background map shows modern counties and urban areas. Equirectangular map projection on WGS 84 datum, with N/S stretched 170%
File:Hadrians_Wall_map.png licensed with Cc-by-sa-3.0-migrated, GFDL 2009-01-01T22:03:09Z Mahahahaneapneap 800x995 (219681 Bytes) Compressed; 2005-09-20T21:00:40Z NormanEinstein 800x995 (294704 Bytes) This map shows the location of Hadrian's Wall and the Antonine Wall in Scotland and Northern England. Created by NormanEinstein, September 20, 2005.
Hadrian’s Wall in modern-day England marked one of the northern borders of the Roman Empire. But excavations along the wall are bringing to light a hidden history of the army and the Roman ...
Each milecastle on Hadrian's Wall had two associated turret structures. These turrets were positioned approximately one-third and two-thirds of a Roman mile to the west of the Milecastle, and would probably have been manned by part of the milecastle's garrison. The turrets associated with Milecastle 39 are known as Turret 39A and Turret 39B
Hadrian's Wall Path is a long-distance footpath in the north of England, which became the 15th National Trail in 2003. It runs for 84 miles (135 km), from Wallsend on the east coast of England to Bowness-on-Solway on the west coast. [ 1 ]
Bede obviously identified Gildas's stone wall as Hadrian's Wall, but he sets its construction in the 5th century rather than the 120s, and does not mention Hadrian. And he would appear to have believed that the ditch-and-mound barrier known as the Vallum (just to the south of, and contemporary with, Hadrian's Wall) was the rampart constructed ...