Trekking Hadrian's Wall
A hike through Britain's second-century Roman past leads to spectacular views, idyllic villages and local brews
- By Andrew Curry
- Photographs by Sisse Brimberg and Cotton Coulson
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2009, Subscribe
In A.D. 122, a few years after taking control of the Roman Empire, which reached its greatest expanse by the time of his rule, Caesar Publius Aelius Traianus Hadrianus Augustus trekked to the edge of the known world. It was a bold journey, one that few of his contemporaries cared to make. "I would not like to be Caesar, to walk through Britain," a waggish poet wrote at the time.
There's no way to be sure how long he stayed in Britain or what he did there, but Hadrian apparently left orders to construct one of the most formidable building projects the world had ever seen: a wall 15 feet high and up to 10 feet thick, stretching from sea to sea.
Hadrian's Wall has long attracted hikers and history buffs and is now the heart of an 84-mile-long National Trail that winds through some of England's most scenic countryside, following in the footsteps of Roman soldiers who once patrolled the empire's frontier. Not long ago, I set out to see Hadrian's monumental fortification, crossing England east to west in search of the island's Roman past.
I began in Wallsend, a town outside Newcastle, in the shadow of shipyard cranes, where a small museum of Roman artifacts marks the wall's eastern terminus at the River Tyne. In Roman days, there was a four-acre fort here called Segedunum ("strong fort" or "victory fort"); today, all that remains are a few of the fort's stone foundations and a carefully reconstructed Mediterranean-style bathhouse guarded by a few bored-looking men in legionary costume.
Across the street, I got my first glimpse of the wall itself. A few dozen feet of sturdy stonework faces a row of squat brown brick townhouses, then disappears into a suburban development. I followed the dashed purple line for the wall on my official map past warehouses and abandoned lots, across a tangle of overpasses, raised walkways and bridges, and into bustling downtown Newcastle. Here the modern trail hews to the Tyne, but I took a shortcut along the main highway, a busy six-lane thoroughfare that runs close to where the wall once stood. The Roman surveyors did a good job: the A186 heads west from Newcastle in a straight line, twisting and turning only to follow the ridgeline. The wall suddenly appears again for about ten yards on the city outskirts, in a parking lot between an auto parts store and Solomon's Halal Punjabi Indian Cuisine.
Planning the trip, I had assumed I could make 15 or 20 miles a day. After all, Roman soldiers in leather sandals are said to have averaged about that distance, with time enough at the end of each march to build a fortified camp. But for the first couple of days I limped into bed-and-breakfasts after about eight miles with blisters on top of my blisters.
So on the third day I hopped a bus from Tower Tyne to one of the most important sites along the wall: Vindolanda ("white lawns," possibly after a native term), a Roman fort that predated the wall and covered four acres in Hadrian's day; it supplied and housed soldiers who manned the wall's 80 milecastles, akin to small forts, and 160 turrets. Robin Birley, 74, a stooped, bespectacled man proffering a muscular handshake, has been conducting an archaeological dig at Vindolanda for more than 50 years; his father began digging here in 1930, and Robin's son, Andrew, directs excavations at the site. The nearby house in which Robin Birley grew up is now the Chesterholm Museum, home to Vindolanda artifacts.
While digging a drainage ditch in 1972, Robin Birley punched through thick clay and found a large deposit of organic artifacts, including leather shoes, animal bones and wooden combs—all preserved by wet, oxygen-poor soil. Most important, Birley and his team have turned up almost 1,400 thin wooden writing tablets, inked in Latin, from A.D. 85 to 160. There are military documents, lists of kitchenware and other ephemera, including the oldest known examples of women's writing in Latin. "On the third day before the Ides of September, sister," to cite one letter, "for the day of the celebration of my birthday, I give you a warm invitation to make sure that you come to us, to make the day more enjoyable for me by your arrival."
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Related topics: Tourism Archaeology Roman Empire England
Additional Sources
Hadrian's Wall by David J. Breeze and Brian Dobson, Penguin Books (London), 2000
J. Collingwood Bruce's Handbook to the Roman Wall by David J. Breeze, Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne, 2006









Comments (16)
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I think it is a historical place, looks like A.D.
Posted by Reshma on April 22,2013 | 02:43 AM
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Posted by on June 2,2010 | 01:07 PM
I'd do just about anything to have a print of the pic on page 40, of the school girl climbing the fence on the wall. Brings together so much: wonder, pain, fair skin in the sun, the wind, her struggle, look of determination, a lot of movement - her blowing hair - in the photo that moves me so much! Definitely a thousand words in the photo. Well done, and thanks!
Posted by Sarah Kelly Burns on January 20,2010 | 02:02 PM
Great article, but slight error on your part. Alred Wainwright created the coast to coast walk. The Hadrians Wall path is something totally different and having walked it last year it follows a totally different route.
Posted by Paul Mason on January 13,2010 | 08:14 AM
Dear Mr. Curry:
One question that has always been in my mind when I see structures such as Hadrian's Wall is how the ancients determined that was the narrowest part of the island to build the wall across?
Having no compass and, perhaps, not even a knowledge of latitude, how was the determination made?
Perhaps the soldiers were lined up on one shore and told to follow the sunrise/sunset and to count their steps until they found the opposite shore? The man with the lowest number of steps wins!
Have you ever heard any speculation as to how this determination was made?
Any ideas would be welcome.
Regards, R. Peterson
Posted by Richard P. Peterson on November 21,2009 | 05:12 PM
Mr. Curry,
I enjoyed your "Hadrian's Wall" article immensely. I am a student of Latin, post middle-age woman. I am curious to see the oldest Latin written by a woman. I can't quite make out the Latin on the object in the photo.
"On the third day before the Ides of September, sister," to cite one letter, "for the day of the celebration of my birthday, I give you a warm invitation to make sure that you come to us, to make the day more enjoyable for me by your arrival."
Winnetka, IL
starwhite2@aol.com
Posted by Jo-Ann Jahant on October 13,2009 | 04:48 PM
Thank you for such a great article. My husband and I walked the path for our honeymoon two years ago. What an experience! The scenery is amazing, and we met the most wonderful people along the way. Reading this almost makes me want to go do it again, blisters, aches, and all.
Posted by Mary Alice in Richmond, VA on October 12,2009 | 11:14 AM
Thank you so much for your excellent article on Hadrian's Wall. My company, Mountain Travel Sobek, just started running tours that walk the length of the wall, and nothing I've seen or heard so far has gotten me as excited about this trip as your article and the beautiful photos that accompany it. I can't wait to go now!
Thanks as well for publishing a consistently wonderful publication!
Chris Bettencourt
Richmond, California
Posted by Chris Bettencourt on October 7,2009 | 04:58 PM
I wonder about the translation of "Vindolanda" as "white lawns." The root "vindo-" seems to me to be the same Celtic one as the root of "Vindobona" (Latin for "Vienna") and also of "Vienne," a city in the Rhone Valley of France, near Lugudunum (Lyons). According to the definitition in J.Pokorny's "Indogermanisches Etymologisches Woerterbuch," it means "bright" or "shining," an is an appellation of the god Lugh.
I live in Cedar Falls, Iowa, USA, and my blog's URL is
http://reykr.livejournal.com/
Posted by Jerry Baker on October 6,2009 | 12:27 PM
For those wishing to learn more about life on Hadrian's Wall in Roman times, I recommend Anthony Birley's 'Garrison Life at Vindolanda: A Band of Brothers' (Stroud, 2002).
Sections of the Antonine Wall, which temporarily replaced Hadrian's Wall, can also be hiked. See here: http://www.antoninewall.org/
Cheers,
Ross Cowan, http://rosscowan.wordpress.com/
Posted by Ross Cowan on October 6,2009 | 07:32 AM
We were delighted to organise the author's trip on Hadrian's Wall. He e-mailed "You arranged a trek along Hadrian's wall and it was a top 5 life experience for me".
The article in the Smithsonian stands out as the best written of the many I have read about this great walk and I hope entice many more Smithsonian subscribers to experience it for themselves. More helpful info can be found on www.celtrail.com/hadrian/
Posted by Celtic Trails Walking Holidays on October 5,2009 | 06:55 AM
Epic! Our family traveled from Alaska to the UK in 2004 and 2006 to walk Hadrian's Wall Path coast-to-coast. It was an unforgettable and family-life-shaping experience, with our twins age 14 and then 16. Great article, loved the stop in the Centurion Inn (we had a nice pint there too) but don't get fooled by the advice to avoide the rainy season "November-April": we had more than our share of the wet stuff in August. Then again, perhaps climbing the crags in the pouring rain and envisioning the Romans doing the same 2,000 years ago made the adventure what it was: epic!
Posted by Con Jager, Anchorage, Alaska on October 3,2009 | 01:16 PM
Great article! I became intrigued with how the photo on page 46 could be looking east, with the sun seeming to cast shadows the "wrong" way in the northern hemisphere. A trip to Google Earth seemed to indicate the view was indeed to the west. But it takes a spectacular view such as that to make me that curious. That means my wife and I WILL go there!
Posted by Roy O'Conner on October 1,2009 | 02:09 PM
The cover of October 2009 with the smiling girl running is a great picture. Hats off to Sisse and Cotton! It should win an award, you caught the momment great. Thanks for bringing a smile to my face.
Posted by Keli Lunny on September 30,2009 | 03:04 PM
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