More than 500,000 images, such as this one of Housesteads Roman Fort on Hadrian's Wall, were used for the map More than half a million aerial images of historical sites in England have been used ...
Hadrian’s Wall in northern England was built to mark the boundaries of the Roman Empire and to keep the Scots out. Constructed after the visit of Emperor Hadrian in 122 AD by the Roman army ...
Hadrian’s Wall in northern England was built to mark the boundaries ... what obstacles will keep enemies out. Using a map of Britain, students could decide where the best place to locate their ...
Stop for a chariot repair? Part of the wall can be seen in front of a garage in Denton Burn Think of Hadrian's Wall and you are likely to envisage sweeping views across a Northumberland crag ...
For 23 years, between A.D. 142 and 165, Hadrian’s Wall actually wasn’t the Roman Empire’s northern frontier. After Hadrian’s death, his successor, Antoninus Pius, reinvaded Scotland.
Visitor numbers have remained "strong and sustained" along Hadrian's Wall despite the felling of Sycamore Gap, with more than 750,000 people visiting in 2024. Following the felling of the famous ...
During excavations of the barracks at Segedunum on Hadrian’s Wall, the mystery of where the horses were kept was solved. “We had never been able to identify stables in Roman forts because we ...
Drive along Northumberland's old military road towards Sycamore Gap and Hadrian's Wall, and it's easy to miss ... According to Historic England, the Grade-II listed church we see today was built ...