The Antonine Wall

The Antonine Wall (HM1MLB)

Location: Falkirk
Country: United Kingdom
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N 55° 59.862', W 3° 51.518'

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At Rough Castle

— #2 —

The Antonine Wall was built by the Roman army in the 140's AD on the orders of the Emperor Antoninus Pius. For 20 years or more, the Wall was the north west frontier of the Roman Empire. It ran for 40 miles (64 km) from modern Bo'ness on the Forth to Old Kilpatrick on the Clyde.
The Antonine Wall frontier consisted of a solid wall of turf, probably topped by a timber defensive structure, known as a breastwork. In front lay a deep and wide ditch. The material from the ditch was tipped out to the north to form an upcast mound. To the south of the Wall were 16 forts, spaced about 3 km apart.
If you turn round you can see the remains of the Roman fort at Rough Castle. The Antonine Wall ditch is visible crossing the rising ground on the other side of the burn and you can also see the ditches marking the east side of the Roman fort. You are welcome to walk over and examine the remains of the fort.

The section of the wall and ditch running to your right and across the ground in front of you is one of the best preserved along the whole-line of the Antonine Wall. The turf wall, now a grassy mound, is very well preserved close to the car park, but has been levelled as it comes closer to where you are standing.
Here you can appreciated the massive building operations undertaken by the Roman army. We believe that this turf wall would originally have been at least 3m (10ft) high. Together with the massive ditch which you can also still trace on the ground, it would have been a very effective way of controlling the entry of people into the Roman province (to your left) from outside the Empire (to your right). The turf bank of the Antonine Wall is particularly well preserved across much of the area around Rough Castle and can be followed for some distance to either east or west.

About 50 m to your left is a low grass-covered mound, all that is left of a Roman Road, the Military Way. You may have some difficulty finding this as the remains are very slight, but if you succeed you will discover that the slight bank runs back towards the car park. This road ran to the south of the Antonine Wall and connected all the forts and fortlets. This is probably the best preserved section of the Miliary Way on the whole of the Antonine Wall.

WHY WAS THE WALL BUILT?
Experts still disagree about why the Romans built this Wall. It was probably intended to mark clearly the boundary of the Roman Empire and to control the movement of the local population across this area of Britain from north to south. It was also a symbol of the power of the Roman Empire, as it was a massive monument which would have made a deep impression on the local people so many generations ago.

PLAN SHOWING THE ARCHAEOLOGICAL TRAIL AND INFORMATION BOARDS
This is the second of four boards which will help you to understand the archaeological sites at Rough Castle. The third and fourth boards are on the other side of the burn, behind you.

(Illustration text)
Map of Antonie Wall showing properties in Historic Scotland's care in blue.
The Wall under construction.
Details
HM NumberHM1MLB
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Marker ConditionNo reports yet
Date Added Friday, August 7th, 2015 at 10:02am PDT -07:00
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Locationbig map
UTM (WGS84 Datum)30U E 446446 N 6206156
Decimal Degrees55.99770000, -3.85863333
Degrees and Decimal MinutesN 55° 59.862', W 3° 51.518'
Degrees, Minutes and Seconds55° 59' 51.72" N, 3° 51' 31.08" W
Driving DirectionsGoogle Maps
Closest Postal AddressAt or near B816, , GB
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