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Hadrian's Wall - Hadrian |  | Hadrian's Wall - Hadrian: Encyclopedia II - Hadrian's Wall - Hadrian |  | Hadrian's Wall was built following a visit by Roman emperor Hadrian. Hadrian was experiencing military difficulties not just in Britain, but from the peoples of various conquered lands across the Empire, including Egypt, Judea, Libya, Mauretania, and many of the peoples conquered by his predecessor Trajan, so was keen to impose order. However the construction of such an impressive wall was probably also built as a symbol of Roman po ...
See also:Hadrian's Wall, Hadrian's Wall - Route, Hadrian's Wall - Hadrian, Hadrian's Wall - Construction, Hadrian's Wall - Garrison, Hadrian's Wall - After Hadrian, Hadrian's Wall - Other fortifications, Hadrian's Wall - In fiction |  | | Hadrian's Wall, Hadrian's Wall - After Hadrian, Hadrian's Wall - Construction, Hadrian's Wall - Garrison, Hadrian's Wall - Hadrian, Hadrian's Wall - In fiction, Hadrian's Wall - Other fortifications, Hadrian's Wall - Route, Roman invasion of Britain, Roman Britain, History of Scotland, English Heritage Properties in England, Birdoswald Fort, Housesteads Fort, Vindolanda Fort, Banks East Turret, Hadrian's Wall long-distance footpath, Antonine Wall, Gask Ridge, List of walls, Great Wall of China |  | |
|  |  | Hadrian's Wall: Encyclopedia II - Hadrian's Wall - Hadrian
Hadrian's Wall - Hadrian
Hadrian's Wall was built following a visit by Roman emperor Hadrian. Hadrian was experiencing military difficulties not just in Britain, but from the peoples of various conquered lands across the Empire, including Egypt, Judea, Libya, Mauretania, and many of the peoples conquered by his predecessor Trajan, so was keen to impose order. However the construction of such an impressive wall was probably also built as a symbol of Roman power, both in occupied Britain and in Rome.
Frontiers in the early empire were based more on natural features or fortified zones with a heavy military presence. Military roads or limes often marked the border, with forts and signal towers spread along them and it was not until the reign of Domitian that the first solid frontier was constructed, in Germania Superior, using a simple fence. Hadrian expanded on this idea, redesigning the German border by ordering a continuous timber palisade supported by forts behind it. Although such defences would not have held back any concerted invasion effort, they did physically mark the edge of Roman territory and went some way to providing a degree of control over who crossed the border and where.
Hadrian reduced Roman military presence in the territory of the Brigantes and concentrated on building a more solid linear fortification to the north of them. This was intended to replace the Stanegate road which had previously served as the limes (the boundary of the Roman Empire).
Other related archives122, 138, 164, 180, 196, 197, 1987, 2004, 200s, 410, A69 and B6318 roads, Antonine Wall, Antoninus Pius, Arthur, Aulus Platorius Nepos, Birdoswald, Birdoswald Fort, Brigantes, Britannia, Carlisle, Causeways, Clyde, Corbridge, Cumbria, Domitian, Egypt, England, English, English Heritage, English Heritage Properties in England, Forth, Gask Ridge, Germania Superior, Great Britain, Great Wall of China, Hadrian, Hadrian's Wall long-distance footpath, History of Scotland, Housesteads, Housesteads Fort, Judea, King Arthur, Latin, Libya, List of walls, Marcus Aurelius, Mauretania, Max Brooks, Newcastle, Newcastle upon Tyne, Pictish, Pope, River Tyne, Roman Britain, Roman Empire, Roman emperor, Roman invasion of Britain, Roman legion, Roman legions, Roman mile, Roman province, Round Table, Scoti, Scotland, Selgovae, Septimius Severus, Sixth, Solway Firth, Stanegate, Trajan, Tyne, UNESCO, Vindolanda, Vindolanda Fort, Wallsend, World Heritage Site, ballista, berm, blockhouses, border, cavalry, citizens, cohorts, construction, customs, estuaries, fortification, garrisoned, glacis, governor, infantry, limes, married, milecastle, observation, palisade, raids, soldiers, stone, taxed, tourist, tribes, turf, wall, zombie
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Hadrian", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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