Hadrian's Wall on Tyneside

Hadrian's Wall on Tyneside

HADRIAN’S WALL ON TYNESIDE AN INTRODUCTION AND GUIDE TO THE LATEST DISCOVERIES 1 The magnificent ‘water stone’, a Latin inscription which records the building of an aqueduct at the fort of Arbeia, South Shields, in AD 222 2 HADRIAN’S WALL ON TYNESIDE AN INTRODUCTION AND GUIDE TO THE LATEST DISCOVERIES 3 The fort baths at Wallsend (Segedunum) rediscovered after 200 years 4 CONTENTS 7 INTRODUCTION 8 HADRIAN’S WALL 14 WHAT WAS THE PURPOSE OF HADRIAN’S WALL? 16 WHAT HAPPENED TO LOCAL PEOPLE WHEN THE WALL WAS BUILT? 18 HADRIAN’S WALL ON TYNESIDE TODAY 19 SOUTH SHIELDS – ARBEIA 26 WALLSEND – SEGEDUNUM 29 WALLSEND FORT BATHS REDISCOVERED 37 HADRIAN’S WALL WEST OF THE FORT 40 FROM WALLSEND TO NEWCASTLE 44 ROMAN NEWCASTLE AND GATESHEAD 48 THE ROMAN BRIDGE AT NEWCASTLE 51 FROM NEWCASTLE TO BENWELL 53 BENWELL FORT – CONDERCUM 61 FROM BENWELL TO THE NORTH TYNE Published at Newcastle upon Tyne by Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums 66 AN EXCAVATION ON THE DITCH OF HADRIAN’S WALL 2017 68 QUEST FOR A LOST ROMAN ROAD © Copyright Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums ISBN 0905974964 75 THE FINAL ABANDONMENT OF THE WALL Text by Nick Hodgson 76 HADRIAN’S WALL AFTER THE ROMANS Designed by r//evolution 82 GUIDE TO FURTHER READING 5 Hadrian’s Wall 33 miles west of Newcastle 6 The most famous visible remains This book gives an introduction INTRODUCTION of the Wall are preserved in the to Hadrian’s Wall and its legacy remote upland landscape of on Tyneside, explaining what we Northumberland. The eastern know about Hadrian’s Wall in these 27 miles of the Wall, from urban less-visited areas. It also describes Hadrian’s Wall stretches all the way Tyneside to the river North Tyne, are discoveries made by WallQuest, a from Wallsend, in eastern Newcastle, largely invisible, its remains mostly community archaeology project, buried beneath modern highways supported by the Heritage Lottery to Bowness, on the Solway Firth, and buildings. Yet there are Fund and others, and managed by a distance of 73 miles. important archaeological remains Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums. preserved beneath the ground, and WallQuest aimed to improve the the Wall has shaped the townscape understanding and interpretation of modern Tyneside. Many of the of Hadrian’s Wall on Tyneside, and most important archaeological to give local people, who wouldn’t discoveries about the Wall in normally have the opportunity, recent times have been made in a chance to get involved in real excavations in urban Tyneside, and archaeological work to find out the area contains three of the major more about the Wall. Between 2012 forts of Hadrian’s Wall – Wallsend and 2016, 550 individual volunteers (Segedunum), Newcastle (Pons from the local community have Aelius) and Benwell (Condercum), taken part and investigated a as well as South Shields (Arbeia), number of different sites, not just in the Roman fort and supply-base at Tyneside but throughout the eastern the mouth of the Tyne. 30 miles of Hadrian’s Wall. Hadrian’s Wall and other Roman military sites in northern Britain 7 Left: Coin portrait of the HADRIAN’S WALL Emperor Hadrian Right The 80-Roman mile course of Hadrian’s Wall Within a few years of becoming empire had meant cuts to the from sea to sea (map by emperor in AD 117, Hadrian was number of troops in Britain and a Frontiers of the Roman confronted with a major war in gradual abandonment of the lands Empire Culture 2000 project (2005-2008)) Britain, and here and on other north of the line that would be frontiers of the Roman empire chosen for Hadrian’s Wall. he decided to give security to the The Wall was built across the 73 provinces by building substantial miles (80 Roman miles) between the barriers ‘to separate the Romans Tyne and Solway, and inscriptions from the barbarians’. Almost half show that work was in progress in a century earlier the Romans had the years immediately following a conquered Scotland, but military personal visit to Britain by Hadrian problems in other parts of the in AD 122. 8 The eastern 49 miles of the Wall later addition. 6m (20RF) in front of were built of stone, the western the Wall ran a great V-shaped ditch, 31 miles of turf, later replaced in generally over 8m wide and up to stone. The stone Wall was started 3m deep. to a width of 10 Roman Feet (RF) The wide space between the Wall (3m) and was originally some 20 and its ditch was a deliberate feet (6m) high, almost certainly measure to provide space for extra with a walkway and battlements obstacles – sharpened branches along the top. The 10 foot wide set in pits – a previously unknown ‘Broad Wall’ only occurs west of element of the Wall, seen for Newcastle. Between Newcastle and the first time in recent years in Wallsend the Wall is narrow (2.4m excavations on Tyneside. wide) – this stretch was a slightly 9 Reconstruction of the Narrow Wall, a turret and a milecastle, looking west from Byker towards Newcastle 10 At every Roman mile was a small fort which functioned as a fortified gateway through the Wall – a ‘milecastle’. Between every two milecastles were two towers (‘turrets’). The milecastles are numbered from east to west, and the turrets in each Wall-mile have the number of the preceding Milecastle with the suffixes A and B. So, for example, between Milecastles 48 and 49, we find Turrets 48A and 48B. Note however that few positions of milecastles in Tyneside are known with certainty: we can guess where they should be from the regular spacing, but rarely have the actual structures been discovered in the urban areas. No turret has been reliably seen in the whole 7-mile stretch from Wallsend to Denton, west of Newcastle. In some areas, particularly in Newcastle City centre, the line taken by the Wall itself is still not known, and will only be discovered Right: Reconstruction at Wallsend-Segedunum by future archaeological research. showing cross section through the Wall as it would have appeared originally 11 Major garrison forts, for full Along this corridor, between the Roman army units, also occur Wall and the Vallum, there ran a along the Wall, some 15 in all. Roman road, the main means of In urban Tyneside there are three: communication and supply, known Wallsend, Newcastle and Benwell, as ‘the Military Way’. Apart from a each of which had a civilian brief period in AD 140-60 when the settlement (vicus) outside its walls. Romans advanced to build another The series of forts continues west wall, known as the Antonine Wall, of Benwell, with sites at Rudchester, in Scotland, Hadrian’s Wall was Halton Chesters, and Chesters, continuously held by the Roman the last guarding the crossing of army for three hundred years, until the North Tyne. Rome lost control of Britain in the To the rear of the Wall (but not early fifth century. east of Newcastle), was a linear earthwork, the so-called Vallum. This was a flat-bottomed ditch, 6m wide and 3m deep, with a substantially built mound to either side. This formidable obstacle demarcated and secured the southern edge of the military zone of the Wall-forts, milecastles and turrets. Above: Plan of Wallsend (Segedunum) Roman fort in the 2nd century AD. Note Hadrian’s Wall joining the west side and south-east corner of the fort 12 How the building of the Wall would have looked - scene form Trajan’s Column in Rome showing legionaries building 13 WHAT WAS THE PURPOSE OF HADRIAN’S WALL? The Wall was the most massively and out of the province, preventing Left: How a typical built of all Roman frontier barriers, unauthorised access. Wall-soldier would have looked, around an extraordinary construction, Others suggest that in emergencies AD 230 deliberately built to impress and the Wall helped to defend overawe the warriors of the Right: Hadrian’s Wall against raiders and even larger- and its system of unconquered part of Britain and to scale invasions. The discovery on obstacles on Tyneside proclaim the glory of Hadrian and Tyneside, as recently as 2000, of an reconstructed Rome. But it also had a practical extra-layer of defensive obstacles purpose, as its maintenance for between the Wall and its frontal 300 years by later Roman emperors ditch, tends to suggest that the Wall shows. When first built, the forts was designed with defence against on Hadrian’s Wall housed around attackers in mind. The Wall was 10,000 soldiers (not legionaries, not meant to be an impregnable but non-citizen troops called fortress for withstanding long auxiliaries, originally recruited from sieges, like a medieval town or native warriors in other frontier castle wall. It was merely one layer areas of the empire). This great in a deep zone of military defence, army was obviously intended to which included outpost forts to the repel invasions and raids on the north and many forts far behind the province of Britannia, and probably Wall. As a defensible structure the to raid the lands to the north. Wall would allow small numbers of Archaeologists disagree on how troops to fight off small-scale raids the Wall itself, and the milecastles or to delay larger attacking forces and turrets, were supposed to for long enough for messengers to work. Some believe that the barrier seek reinforcements and for a wider controlled peaceful movement in military response to be organised. 14 15 WHAT HAPPENED TO LOCAL PEOPLE WHEN THE WALL WAS BUILT? The pre-Roman people of Tyneside, mining has revealed many more Northumberland and Durham of these sites since the turn of were Iron Age farmers, who the millennium, and radiocarbon lived in a cleared and cultivated dating techniques have allowed landscape.

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