Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-r6qrq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T09:18:06.304Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Life of an ancient monument: Hadrian's Wall in history

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Extract

The Romans are Britain's favourite invaders, and Hadrian's Wall is among the largest and finest of the relics they left behind on the island. However, as our authors urge, we should demand more intellectual depth from our monuments today. Not simply a cultural asset anchored in the Roman empire, Hadrian's Wall had a busy afterlife, a material history reflecting the uses, attitudes and emotions of later centuries. Its ‘biography’ not only captures new information about the last two millennia, it offers a story that the modern visitor deserves to hear.

Type
Research article
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 2012 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ayres, P. 1997. Classical culture and the idea of Rome in eighteenth-century England. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Barkan, L. 1999. Unearthing the past: archaeology and aesthetics in the making of Renaissance culture. New Haven (CT): Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Barlow, P. 2007. Tyneside's modern Rome: the north-east's image of its Roman past and its lost Englishness, in Fawcett, H. (ed.) Made in Newcastle. Visual culture: 135–52. Newcastle upon Tyne: Northumbria University Press.Google Scholar
Barrett, J. 1994. Fragments from antiquity. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Beard, M. 2002. The Parthenon. London: Profile Books.Google Scholar
Bell, T. 2005. The religious reuse of Roman structures in early medieval England. Oxford: Archaeopress.Google Scholar
Bender, B. 1998. Stonehenge: making space. Oxford: Berg.Google Scholar
Bidwell, P., Miket, R. & Ford, B.. 1988. Portae cum turribus: studies of Roman fort gates (British Archaeological Reports British series 206). Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.Google Scholar
Birley, E. 1961. Research on Hadrian's Wall. Kendal: Titus Wilson & Son.Google Scholar
Breeze, D.J. 2003. John Collingwood Bruce and the study of Hadrian's Wall. Britannia 34: 118.Google Scholar
Breeze, D.J. 2006. J. Collingwood Bruce's handbook to the Roman Wall. Newcastle upon Tyne: Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne.Google Scholar
Breeze, D. & Dobson, B.. 2000. Hadrian's Wall. Harmondsworth: Penguin.Google Scholar
Bruce, J.C. 1863. The wallet-book of the Roman Wall. London: Longman.Google Scholar
Crow, J. 2004. Housesteads: a fort and garrison on Hadrian's Wall. Stroud: Tempus.Google Scholar
Ellis, S.G. 1999. The English state and its frontiers in the British Isles, 1300-1600, in Power, D. & Standen, N. (ed.) Frontiers in question: Eurasian borderlands, 700-1700: 153–81. Basingstoke: MacMillan.Google Scholar
Ewin, A. 2000. Hadrian's Wall: a social and cultural history. Lancaster: Centre for North-West Regional Studies.Google Scholar
Foucault, M. 1989. The archaeology of knowledge. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Griffiths, H. 2003. Britain in ruins: the Pict's Wall and the union of the two crowns. Rethinking History 7: 89105.Google Scholar
Hepple, L.W. 2003. William Camden and early collections of Roman antiquities in Britain. Journal of the History of Collections 15: 159–74.Google Scholar
Hill, P.R. 2004. The construction of Hadrian's Wall (British Archaeological Reports British series 375). Oxford: Archaeopress.Google Scholar
Hingley, R. 2008. The recovery of Roman Britain 1586-1906: ‘a colony so fertile’. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Hingley, R. 2010. ‘The most ancient boundary between England and Scotland’: genealogies of the Roman Walls. Classical Reception Journal 2.1: 2543.Google Scholar
Hingley, R. In press. Hadrian's Wall: a life. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Hodgson, N. 2008. After the Wall periods, in Bidwell, P. (ed.) Understanding Hadrian's Wall: 1124. Kendal: Arbeia Society.Google Scholar
Hodgson, N. & Mckelvey, J.. 2006. An excavation on Hadrian's Wall at Hare Hill, Wall Mile 53, Cumbria. Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society 6: 4560.Google Scholar
Jolly, R. 1996. Robert Louis Stevenson and Samoan history: crossing the Roman Wall, in Bennett, B., Doyle, J.E. & Nandan, S. (ed.) Crossing cultures: essays on literature and culture of the Asia-Pacific: 113–20. London: Skoob Books.Google Scholar
Lawson, W. 1966. The origins of the military road from Newcastle to Carlisle. Archaeologia Aeliana 4th Series, 44: 185207.Google Scholar
Lengkeek, J. 2008. The authenticity discourse of heritage, in Breeze, D. & Jilek, S. (ed.) Frontiers of the Roman empire: the European dimension of a World Heritage Site: 3751. Edinburgh: Historic Scotland.Google Scholar
Merriman, M. 1984. ‘The Epystle to the Queen's Majestie’ and its ‘Platte’. Architectural History 27: 2532.Google Scholar
Nesbitt, C. & P.Tolia-Kelly, D.. 2009. Hadrian'sWall: embodied archaeologies of the linear monument. Journal of Social Archaeology 9(3): 368–90.Google Scholar
Phillips, G. 1999. The Anglo-Scots wars 1513-1550. Woodbridge: Boydell.Google Scholar
Pittock, M.G.H. 1997. Inventing and resisting Britain: cultural identities in Britain and Ireland, 1685-1789. London: MacMillan.Google Scholar
Robertson, J. 1995. Empire and union: two concepts of the Early Modern European political order, in Robertson, J. (ed.) A union for empire: political thought and the British Union of 1707: 336. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Shannon, W.D. 2007. Murus ille famosus [that famous wall]: depictions and descriptions of Hadrian's Wall before Camden. Kendal: Titus Wilson & Son.Google Scholar
Simpson, F.G. 1976. Watermills and military works on Hadrian's Wall: excavations in Northumberland 1907-1913. Kendal: Titus Wilson & Son.Google Scholar
Smiles, S. 1994. The image of antiquity: ancient Britain and the romantic imagination. New Haven (CT) & London: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Stukeley, W. 1754. 23 Oct. 1754 [diary extract], The family memoirs of the Rev. William Stukeley, M. D. and the antiquarian and other correspondence of William Stukeley, Roger & Samuel Gale, etc. (Publications of the Surtees Society 80): 141–43. Durham: Andrews & Co.Google Scholar
Summerson, H. 2000. The history of Lanercost Priory, in Summerson, H. & Harrison, S. (ed.) Lanercost Priory, Cumbria: survey and documentary history (Cumberland & Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society. Research series 10): 180. Carlisle: Cumberland & Westmorland Antiquarian & Archaeological Society.Google Scholar
Symonds, M. & Mason, D.. 2009. Frontiers of knowledge: a research framework for Hadrian's Wall. London: English Heritage.Google Scholar
Todd, J.M. 1997. Introduction, in Todd, J.M. (ed.) The Lanercost Cartulary (Publications of the Surtees Society 203): 150. Durham: Surtees Society.Google Scholar
Warburton, J. 1753. Vallum Romanum. London: J. Robinson & R. Baldwin.Google Scholar
Whitworth, A.M. 2000. Hadrian's Wall: some aspects of its post-Roman influence on the landscape (British Archaeological Reports British series 296). Oxford: Archaeopress.Google Scholar
Witcher, R.E. 2010a. The fabulous tales of the common people, part 1: representing Hadrian's Wall. Public Archaeology 9(3): 126–52.Google Scholar
Witcher, R.E. 2010b. The fabulous tales of the common people, part 2: encountering Hadrian's Wall. Public Archaeology 9(4): 211–38.Google Scholar
Witcher, R.E., Tolia-Kelly, D.P. & Hingley, R.. 2010. Archaeologies of landscape: excavating the materialities of Hadrian's Wall. Journal of Material Culture 15(1): 105–28.Google Scholar
Woodside, R. & Crow, J.. 1999. Hadrian's Wall: an historic landscape. London: The National Trust.Google Scholar