Hadrian’s Wall Country
(walked a total of 40 miles and raised £910 for the M S
Society)
Hadrian's Wall was built following a visit by Roman Emperor
Hadrian (AD 76–138) in AD 122. Hadrian was experiencing
military difficulties in Roman Britain and 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 he was keen to impose order. However
the construction of such an impressive wall was probably also a
symbol of Roman power, both in occupied Britain and in
Rome.

Frontiers in the early empire were largely based on natural
features or fortified zones with a heavy military presence.
Military roads 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 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, who lived between the rivers Tyne and Humber, and
concentrated on building a more solid linear fortification to
the north of them. This was intended to replace the Stanegate
road which is generally thought to have served as the limes
(the boundary of the Roman Empire) until then.
I had a long held desire to walk Hadrian’s Wall. It had been
‘festering’ ever since I was a small boy. As I now have
Multiple Sclerosis, luckily only secondary progressive, I felt
it was time to fulfil my childhood ambition before things
deteriorate any further.

So.... The Walk
Hadrians Wall
Pictures
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