Hadrian S Wall Exploring Its Past To Protect Its Future


Download Hadrian S Wall Exploring Its Past To Protect Its Future PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Hadrian S Wall Exploring Its Past To Protect Its Future book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.

Download

Hadrian’s Wall: Exploring Its Past to Protect Its Future


Hadrian’s Wall: Exploring Its Past to Protect Its Future

Author: Marta Alberti

language: en

Publisher: Archaeopress Publishing Ltd

Release Date: 2022-05-21


DOWNLOAD





Celebrating the 1900th anniversary of Hadrian’s visit to Britain and the building of the Wall, this book presents studies from from the point of view of those living, visiting, researching and working along it. The book offers a realistic discussion of current issues and solutions in the exploration, management and protection of Hadrian’s Wall.

Frontiers of the Roman Empire: Hadrian's Wall


Frontiers of the Roman Empire: Hadrian's Wall

Author: David J. Breeze

language: en

Publisher: Archaeopress Publishing Ltd

Release Date: 2023-09-22


DOWNLOAD





This highly illustrated book offers an accessible summary of Hadrian’s Wall, and an overview of the wider context of the Roman frontiers.

Excavations Along Hadrian’s Wall 2019–2021


Excavations Along Hadrian’s Wall 2019–2021

Author: Rob Collins

language: en

Publisher: Oxbow Books

Release Date: 2024-04-30


DOWNLOAD





This study focuses on the fabric, construction and preservation of stretches of Hadrian's Wall in its more remote locations, providing significant insights into the places between the mile castles and important forts and associated settlements. The Hadrian’s Wall Community Archaeology Project (WallCAP) conducted a series of fieldwork projects along the Hadrian’s Wall corridor between 2019 and 2021. The work focused on sites that were poorly understood or under particular threat and aimed to improve understanding of them so they could be better managed in future. At several sites excavation was followed by conservation and consolidation work. This volume brings together the final reports of these excavations, at six Roman sites in the Wall corridor. As the sites were spread along the length of the Wall the character and afterlife of the Wall in very different landscape locations could be compared. An assessment of the Vallum at Heddon on the Wall identified how earthwork archaeology survived in a sloped, heavily ploughed landscape. Three excavations investigated the condition of the stone Wall curtain: at Port Carlisle, Walltown Crags, and Steel Rigg and Cats Stairs. At each site the Wall builders had responded to the demands of the local terrain and made use of local resources. At each site the Wall had a different post-Roman history. Excavations at the bridging point of the Cam Beck revealed for the first time how the Wall was carried over a ‘minor’ watercourse, and discovered traces of the Turf Wall. Small buildings were also identified just south of the Wall as it approached the bridge. At Corbridge Roman town, excavations on the northern periphery of the settlement demonstrated that from early in its history the most northerly town in Europe was of considerable extent. The area investigated showed that, even at the edge of town, shops lined the roads alongside well-appointed houses with bustling yards. Later on in the Roman period the town contracted behind walls and cremation burials were inserted by the road. Each site is reported on independently, presenting the primary data for each investigation. The volume concludes with a synthetic analysis of what the results of these excavations together reveal about Hadrian’s Wall, considering, amongst other things, construction details and the decay and destruction of the monument in the centuries following Roman occupation.