THE ROMAN WALL.
“Take these flowers, which, purple
waving,
On the ruined rampart grew,
Where, the sons of Freedom braving,
Rome’s imperial standard flew.
Warriors from the breach of danger
Pluck no longer laurels there;
They but yield the passing stranger
Wild-flower wreaths for Beauty’s
hair.”
Sir Walter
Scott.
(Lines
written for a young lady’s album.)
Of all the abundance of treasure which
Northumberland possesses, from a historical point
of view of all its wealth of interesting
relics of bygone days ancient abbey, grim
fortress, menhir and monolith, camp and tumulus none
grips the imagination as does the sight of that unswerving
line which pursues its way over hill and hollow, from
the eastern to the western shores of the north-land,
visible emblem, after more than a thousand years,
of the far-flung arm of Imperial Rome.
From Wallsend on the Tyne to Bowness
on the Solway Firth it strode triumphantly across
the land; even now in its decay it remains a splendid
monument to that mighty nation’s genius for having
and holding the uttermost parts of the earth that
came within their ken. As was inevitable, after
the lapse of nearly eighteen centuries the great work
is everywhere in a ruinous condition, and in many places,
especially at its eastern end, has disappeared altogether;
but not only can its course be traced by various evidences,
but it was actually standing within comparatively
recent years. As lately as the year 1800 lately,
that is, compared with the date of its building its
existence at Byker was referred to in a magazine of
the period. Now nothing is to be seen of it excepting
a few stones here and there, for many miles from Wallsend;
but the highroad westward from Newcastle, by Westgate
Road, as is well known, follows the course of the
Wall for nearly twenty miles. But farther west
we may walk along the uneven, broken surface of the
mighty rampart, or climb down into the broad and deep
fosse which lies closely against it along its northern
side, without troubling ourselves with the arguments
and uncertainties of antiquaries, who have by no means
decided on what was the original function of the Wall,
who was its real builder, why and when the earthen
walls and fosse which accompany it on the south were
wrought, and many other smaller controversial points,
which afford endless matter for speculation and discussion.
Early references to the Wall show
that our forefathers knew it as the Picts’ Wall;
it is now generally referred to as the Wall of Hadrian,
the general concensus of opinion yielding to that
indefatigable ruler the credit of having wrought the
mighty work. Whether built originally as a frontier
line of defence or not, opinions are not agreed; but
it is very certain that the Wall afforded the only
secure foothold in the North to the Romans for well-nigh
two centuries of hostility from the restless Brigantes
to the southward, and the Picts and Scots to the north;
and for another century or so after their southern
neighbours had become friendly and peaceful, it still
remained a substantial bulwark against the northern
barbarians.
Throughout the whole of its length
it steadily holds the line of the highest ridges in
its course, climbing up slopes and dipping down into
the intervening hollows with the least possible deviation
from its onward course. The most interesting,
because most complete, portion of the Wall, is that
in the neighbourhood of the three loughs Broomlee,
Greenlee, and Crag Loughs, which, with Grindon Lough
to the south of the Wall, boast the name of the Northumberland
Lakes. On this portion of the wall is situated
the large Roman station of Borcovicus, from which we
have gained a great deal of our information as to what
the life of the garrisons on this lonely outpost of
Empire was like.
The station is situated on hilly ground,
which slopes gently to the south, and is nearly five
acres in extent. On entering the eastern gateway
one cannot but experience a sudden thrill on seeing
the deep grooves worn in the stone by the passing
and repassing of Roman cart and chariot wheels.
That mute witness of the daily traffic of the soldiery
in those long-past centuries speaks with a most intimate
note to us who eighteen hundred years afterwards come
to look upon the place of their habitation. The
station itself is of the usual shape of the Roman towns
on the course of the Wall oblong, with rounded
corners. The greatest length lies east and west,
in a line with the Wall; and two broad streets crossing
each other at right angles lead from the north to the
south, and from the east to the western gateways.
Each of the four was originally a double gateway;
but in every case one half of it has been closed up,
no doubt when the garrison was declining in numbers,
and the attacks of the enemy were increasing in severity.
Considerable portions of the guard-chambers,
one at each side of each gateway, still remain; and
near one of them was found a huge stone trough, its
edges deeply worn by, apparently, the frequent sharpening
of knives upon it. Its use has not been determined;
Dr. Bruce tells us that one of the men engaged in
the work of excavation gave it as his firm opinion
that the Romans used it to wash their Scotch prisoners
in! The buildings of the little town a
row of houses against the western wall, two large
buildings near the centre of the camp, with smaller
chambers to the east of them in which the
garrison lived, worked, and stored their supplies,
are still quite plainly to be traced, although the
walls are only three or four courses high in most places,
and of the pillars the broken bases are almost all
that remain.
A considerable number of people dwelt
outside the walls of this, as of all the stations,
sheltering under its walls, and relying on the protection
of its garrison; the slope to the southward of Borcovicus
shows many traces of buildings scattered all over it.
On the northern side, the steep hill, massive masonry,
and deep fosse would seem to have offered well-nigh
insuperable difficulties to an attacking force such
as then could be brought against the camp; yet not
only here, but in all the stations whose remains yet
survive, there is unmistakable evidence that more
than once has the garrison been driven out by a victorious
foe, to re-enter and occupy it again at a later period.
And when we consider that the Wall and its forts were
garrisoned by the Romans for a period extending over
nearly three centuries, a period corresponding to
the time from the reign of James I. to the present
day, it becomes a matter of wonder, not that such
was the case, but that such occurrences were not more
frequent than the evidences seem to declare.
In spite of all the hard fighting,
however, the recreations of lighter hours would seem
not to have been forgotten; on the north of the wall
is a circular hollow in the ground, evidently a little
amphitheatre, in which doubtless many a captive Briton
and Pict played his part. On a little rise to
the southward, called Chapel Hill, stood the temple
where the garrison paid its vows to the various deities
of its worship. Many remarkably fine altars found
on this and other sites have been preserved, either
at the fine museum at The Chesters, or at the
Black Gate in Newcastle. One of the most striking
is the altar to Mithras, the Persian sun-god, found
in a cave near the camp, evidently constructed for
the celebration of the rites connected with the worship
of Mithras. The altar shows the god coming out
of an egg, and surrounded by an oval on which are
carved the signs of the Zodiac.
The Teutonic element in the garrison
is represented by the altars to Mars Thingsus, the
discovery of which caused great interest in Germany,
and by the altars to the Deae Matres the
mother-goddesses, whose carved figures are shown seated,
fully draped, and holding baskets of fruits on their
knees. They are generally found in sets of three;
but unfortunately they have been much mutilated, and
all the examples remaining are headless. The
Deae Matres would seem to correspond in some
degree to the Roman Ceres and the Greek Demeter, the
bountiful givers of the fruits of the earth.
The majority of the altars found are, as was to be
expected, dedicated to the deities of Rome; chiefly,
as shown by the constantly recurring I.O.M. Jovi
optimo máximo to “Jupiter, the
best and greatest.” The varying inscriptions
which follow as reasons for their erection as votive
offerings give us glimpses of the life in these communities
clearer than those afforded by anything else.
And as most, if not all, of our knowledge concerning
the details of the Roman occupation of the north-country
has to be obtained from the inscriptions which the
garrisons left behind them, the inscribed stones as
well as the altars are of the greatest possible interest
and value. One such stone, found at the Borcovicus
mile-castle, states that “the Second Legion,
the August (erected this at the command of) Aulus
Platorius Nepos, Legate and Propraetor, in honour
of the Emperor Cæsar Trajanus Hadrianus
Augustus.”
At “Cuddy’s” (Cuthbert’s)
Crag near Borcovicus is one of the most picturesque
bits of scenery to be found on the whole course of
the Wall. My first acquaintance with it was made
on a day of grey mist and drizzling rain, which completely
hid any view of the surrounding country, and of necessity
confined our attention to the stones (and wet grass!)
immediately beneath our feet. But another visit
was on a day of wind and sunshine, and in the company
of a group of light-hearted students. We explored
the ruins of Borcovicus, walked along the broad and
broken top of the Wall, and climbed up hill and down
dale with it under the pleasantest conditions, if
a trifle breezy on the heights. June was at her
traditional best, which she does not often vouchsafe
to show us; flowers waved all around, amongst the
grass and in the crannies between the stones, and
more than once the lines at the head of this chapter
were quoted by one to another. Again and again
our progress was stayed while we admired the glorious
view spread out all around, but especially was this
the case at Cuddy’s Crag. We looked westward
over Crag Lough, its usually dark waters flashing
in the afternoon sun; the three Loughs were all within
view; away to the southward, beyond Barcombe Hill,
and the site of Vindolana, Langley Castle could be
seen, “standing four-square to all the winds
that blew”; and further away again, beyond the
valley of the South Tyne, to the southwest the faint
outlines of Crossfell and Skiddaw. Northward it
was quite easy to imagine oneself looking out over
the Picts’ country still, so far do the moorlands
stretch, and so few are the signs of habitation.
Rolling ridges stretch northward, wave upon wave,
clothed with grass and heather, amongst which Parnesius
and Pertinax went hunting with little Allô
the Pict; to the northeast the heights of Simonside
showed; and far beyond them, though more to the westward,
the rounded summits of the Cheviots lay on the horizon.
A short distance westward from the
Crag is Hot Bank farmhouse, a place which most visitors
to the Wall remember with grateful feelings; for what
is more refreshing, after a long tramp, than a farmhouse
cup of tea accompanied by that most appetising of
Northumbrian dainties, hot girdle cakes! The
Visitors’ Book at Hot Bank is a “civil
list” of all the most learned and noted names
in Great Britain, and many outside its shores, together
with legions of humbler folk. In this it resembles
the one at Cilurnum, which is the only other considerable
station along the line of the Wall in Northumberland.
This station of Cilurnum, or Chesters,
is a little over five acres in extent, and is quite
near to Chollerford station on the North British Railway.
To describe Cilurnum in detail, and the interesting
museum connected with it, filled with a wonderful
collection of objects found on the line of the Wall,
would require a book to deal with that alone.
The general plan is the same as that which we have
already seen at Borcovicus, with the same rounded
corners, and double gateway with guard-chambers at
each side; the western and eastern walls at Chesters,
however, have each an additional single gateway to
the south of the larger portals. We must content
ourselves with a short survey of the camp, with its
two wide streets at right angles to each other as at
Borcovicus, and the rest of them very narrow indeed,
little more than two feet in width; the remains of
its Forum and market, its barracks and houses, its
open shops and colonnades, the bases of the pillars
yet in position; its baths, with pipes, cistern, and
flues; and a vaulted chamber which was thought, on
its being first excavated, to lead to underground
stables, for a local tradition held that such were
in existence, and would be found, with a troop of
five hundred horses. The vault, however, did
not lead further, so that the tradition remained unproven.
Notwithstanding this, there was a grain of fact in
it; for Chesters was a cavalry station, and five
hundred was the full complement of the ala,
or troop (ala being a “wing,” and
cavalry forming the “wing” of an army
in position).
Outside the walls of Cilurnum are
traces of the usual suburban dwellings; and here,
near the river, stood the villa of the officer in
command of the station. The excavation of all
these buildings and many others took place in the
forties and fifties of last century, and were due
to the energy of Mr. John Clayton, the learned and
zealous antiquary, in the possession of whose family
the estate still remains. To Mr. N.G. Clayton
we owe the Museum at the Lodge gate, which he built
for the reception of the notable collection it contains
of antiquities gathered from all the various stations
in Northumberland. A very fine altar brought
from Vindolana at once strikes the eye, and may be
taken as a type of many others, though not many are
so perfect. The gravestone of a standard-bearer,
from the neighbouring station of Procolitia, shows
a full-length carving of the dead warrior. Other
inscribed stones are of great interest, though unfortunately
most of them are but fragments; still these fragments
not infrequently contain a few words which enable
students of them to confirm a date or a fact concerning
the garrisons, which must otherwise have been a matter
of pure conjecture. For instance, it might seem
very improbable that the same regiments should have
been quartered in certain stations for over two hundred
years; yet one of the inscribed stones proves that
such was the case at Cilurnum. The inscription
states that the second ala of the Asturians
repaired the temple during the consulate of certain
persons, which is found to be about the year 221.
In the Notitia, which was not compiled until
the beginning of the fifth century, the second ala
of the Asturians is given as the garrison of Cilurnum.
Another thing which strikes the imagination
is the sight, after the lapse of so many centuries,
of the erasures on various inscribed stones erasures
of some emperor’s or Caesar’s name after
his death by the chisel of a soldier in one of his
legions on this far-away post of his empire.
It is one thing to read one’s Gibbon, and learn
of the murder of Geta, son of Severus, by order of
his brother Caracalla, and another to see the youth’s
name roughly scratched out on a stone in Hexham Abbey
crypt; and to read of the assassination of Elagabalus
does not move us one whit, but to see his name erased
from a stone in Chesters museum brings the
tumultuous happenings in ancient Rome very closely
home to us.
Here are also several Roman milestones,
with their lengthy and sonorous inscriptions, from
various points on the Wall; and a miscellaneous and
deeply interesting collection of smaller articles,
such as ornaments of bronze, jet, or gold, fibulae
(brooches or clasps), coins of many reigns, Samian-ware,
terra-cotta and glass, parts of harness, etc.,
etc.
Of carven figures there are several
besides the standard bearer already mentioned.
The best is a figure of Cybele, with elaborate draperies,
but unfortunately headless; another, of Victory, holds
a palm branch in the left hand, but the right arm
is missing. A soldier is shown with spear, shield,
and ornate head-piece; and a representation of a river-god,
the genius of the Tyne, is worthy of notice. He
is a bearded figure, after the style of the figures
of Nilus, or the representations in old prints of
Father Thames. From Procolitia comes an altar
to the goddess Coventina, a name not met with elsewhere,
the presiding genius of the well in that station.
She is shown reclining on a water-lily leaf, holding
in one hand a water-plant, and in the other a goblet
from which a stream of water runs. An elaborate
carving of three water nymphs, most probably meant
to be in attendance on the goddess, is one of the
few pieces of sculpture that are not greatly mutilated.
Centurial stones are numerous, having
been put up at all parts of the Wall to record the
building of such and such parts by various centurions
and their companies. The mark >, which Dr. Hodgkin
supposes to be a representation of the vine rod, a
centurion’s symbol of authority, and the sign
C or Q, are used to signify a century. Thus a
stone inscribed Q VAL. MAXI. states that the
century of Valerius Maximus built that part of the
Wall. Two or three small altars are inscribed
DIBVS VETERIBVS “To the Old Gods”;
and Mars Thingsus is well represented.
A very important relic of Roman times
found at Cilurnum was a bronze tablet of citizenship,
giving this coveted privilege to a number of soldiers
who had served in twenty-five campaigns and received
honourable discharge. There have been only three
specimens of this diploma found in Britain, and all
are preserved in the British Museum. There are
many memorial tablets erected by wives to their husbands,
and husbands to their wives, which leads to much speculation
as to how these ladies, high-born Roman, native Briton,
or freed-woman, liked their sojourn in a small garrison
town on the breezy heights of a Northumbrian moorland.
Those ladies who dwelt at Cilurnum, however, had not
so much cause to complain, for such natural advantages
as were to be had were certainly theirs, in that sheltered
spot. The scenery round about Cilurnum is quiet,
peaceful and pastoral, altogether different from the
wild beauty of Cuddy’s Crag, Limestone Corner,
or Whinshields.
Having now noticed the two chief stations
on the line of the Wall, it will be interesting to
follow the course of the rampart itself throughout
its journey across Northumberland, though to do so
in detail is impossible within the limits of so small
a volume as the present one. Neither would it
be necessary, or desirable, for the last word in detailed
description has been said long ago in the two wonderfully
exhaustive treatises on the subject by Dr. Bruce.
A list of Roman officials, civil and
military, throughout the empire has come down to us;
in this list Notitia Dignitatem et Administratem,
tam civilium quam militarium in partibus orientis
et occidentis the portion which relates
to the Wall is headed, Item per lineam Valli “Also
along the line of the Wall.” The following
is a copy of this portion, as given by Dr. Bruce in
his Handbook to the Roman Wall.
The Tribune of the fourth cohort of the
Lingones at Segedunum.
The Tribune of the first cohort of Cornovii
at Pons Aelii.
The Prefect of the first ala of
the Asturians at Condercum. The
Tribune of the first cohort of the Frixagi
(Frisii) at Vindobala.
The Prefect of the Savinian ala
at Hunnum.
The Prefect of the second ala of
the Asturians at Cilurnum.
The Tribune of the first cohort of the
Batavians at Procolitia.
The Tribune of the first cohort of the
Tungrians at Borcovicus.
The Tribune of the fourth cohort of the
Gauls at Vindolana.
The Tribune of the first cohort of Asturians
at Aesica.
The Tribune of the second cohort of Dalmatians
at Magna.
The Tribune of the first cohort of Dacians,
styled Aelia, at Amboglanna.
The Prefect of the ala called “Petriana,”
at Petriana.
The Prefect of a detachment of Moors,
styled Aureliani, at Aballaba.
The Tribune of the second cohort of the
Lingones at Congavata.
The Tribune of the first cohort of Spaniards
at Axelodunum.
The Tribune of the second cohort of the
Thracians at Gabrosentum.
The Tribune of the first marine cohort,
styled Aelia, at Tunnocelum.
The Tribune of the first cohort of the
Morini at Glannibanta.
The Tribune of the third cohort of the
Nervians at Alionis.
The Cuneus of men in armour at Bremetenracum.
The Prefect of the first ala, styled
Herculean, at Olenacum.
The Tribune of the sixth cohort of the
Nervians at Virosidum.
Of these stations, with their officers
and troops, only those as far as Magna are in Northumberland;
the rest continue the chain of defences across Cumberland
to the Solway Firth. Besides these stations, there
were castella at the distance of every Roman
mile (seven furlongs) along the Wall, from which circumstance
they are known as “mile-castles.”
They provided accommodation for the troops necessary
between the stations, which were at some distance from
each other; and between each two castella there
were also erected two turrets, so that communication
from one end of the Wall to the other was speedy and
certain.
All traces of the station of Segedunum
(Wallsend) have long since disappeared; the Wall from
there, beginning actually in the bed of the river,
ran almost parallel with the N.E.R. Tynemouth
Branch, a little to the south of it, and climbing
the hill to Byker, went down the slope to the Ouseburn
parallel with Shields Road, crossing the burn just
a little to the south of Byker Bridge. From there
its course has been traced to Red Barns, where St.
Dominic’s now stands, to the Sallyport Gate,
and over the Wall Knoll to Pilgrim Street; thence
to the west door of the Cathedral, and on past St.
John’s Church, up Westgate Road.
The station at Pons Aelii, it is generally
agreed, occupied the ground between the Cathedral
church of St. Nicholas and the premises of the Lit.
and Phil. Society. Following the Wall up
Westgate Road, we are now out upon the highway from
Newcastle to Carlisle, which, as we have seen, is
upon the very line of the Wall for nearly a score of
miles. At Condercum (Benwell) the next station,
garrisoned by a cavalry corps of Asturians from Spain,
a small temple was uncovered in the course of excavating,
and two altars found still standing in their original
position. Both of these were to a deity unknown
elsewhere, given as Antenociticus on one, and as Anociticus
on the other. The former was erected by a centurion
of the Twentieth Legion, the Valerian and Victorious,
whose crest, the running boar, we shall meet with more
than once in our journey.
Westward from here, near West Denton
Lodge, faint indications of the turf wall (generally
called the Vallum, to distinguish it from the
Murus, or stone wall), come into sight, and traces
of a mile-castle to the left of the road. After
this the Vallum and Murus accompany each
other for the rest of their journey, with but little
intermission. The next mile-castle was at Walbottle,
from which point a delightful view of the Tyne valley
and the surrounding country can be obtained. Passing
Throckley and Heddon-on-the-Wall, where the fosse on
the northern side of the Wall is well seen, and also
the Vallum and its fosse, Vindolana (Rutchester)
is reached; but there is little evidence here that
it is the site of a once busy and bustling garrison
station. Indeed, up to this point and for a considerable
distance further, a few courses of stones here and
there are all that is to be seen of the Roman Wall,
its material having for the most part been swallowed
up in the construction of the turnpike road on which
we are travelling. This road was made in 1745
because there was no road by which General Wade could
convey his troops from Newcastle to Carlisle, when
“Bonnie Prince Charlie” marched so gaily
to that city on his way southward, and so sadly, in
a month, returned again.
The Wall now makes for the ridge of
Harlow Hill, while the Vallum goes on in a perfectly
straight line past the picturesque Whittle Dene and
the waterworks, until the Wall joins it again near
Welton, where the old pèle-tower is entirely
built of Roman stones. After Matfen Piers, where
a road to the northward leads to the beautiful little
village of Matfen, and one to the southward to Corbridge,
the Wall passes Wall Houses and Halton Shields, where
the various lines of the Wall, road, and earthworks,
as well as the fosse of each, can be distinctly seen.
Passing Carr Hill, the Wall leads up to the station
of Hunnum (Halton Chesters), where Parnesius
was stationed when Maximus gave him his commission
on the Wall. It is not easy to recognise the site
now, but as we follow the road we may comfort ourselves
with the reflection that at least we have walked right
across it from the eastern gate to the western.
A short distance further on is Stagshawbank,
famed for its fairs, the glory of which, however,
has greatly departed since the days when Dandie Dinmont
had such adventures on returning from “Staneshiebank.”
It stands just where the Wall crosses the Watling
Street, which enters Northumberland at Ebchester,
and crossing the moors to Whittonstall, leads down
the long descent to Riding Mill; there turning westward
to Corbridge, it comes straight on to Stagshawbank,
leading thence northwestward past the Wall through
Redesdale to the Borders, which it reaches at Ad Fines
Camp, or Chew Green, where the solitudes of the Cheviots
and the silence of the deserted camp are soon to be
startled by the rifle-shots of Territorials at
practice. West of Stagshawbank the earthen ramparts
are to be seen in great perfection.
As the Wall nears Chollerford, one
may see, a little to the northward, the little chapel
of St. Oswald, which, as we have seen in a former
chapter, marks the site of the battle of Heavenfield.
Just before reaching this point, there is a quarry
to the south of the Wall from which the Romans obtained
much building-stone, and one of them has left his
name carved on one of the stones left lying there,
thus (P)ETRA FLAVI(I) CARANTINI The
stone of Flavius Carantinus.
At Plane Trees Field and at Brunton
there are larger pieces of the Wall standing than
we have yet seen. The Wall now parts company with
the highroad, which swerves a little to the north
in order to cross the Tyne by Chollerford Bridge,
while the course of the Wall is straight ahead, for
the present bridge is not the one built and used by
the Romans. That is in a line with the Wall,
and therefore south of the present one; and as we
have already noticed, its piers can be seen near the
river banks when the river is low. A diagram
of its position is given in Dr. Bruce’s Handbook.
The Wall now leads up to the gateway
of Cilurnum, which we have already visited; and after
leaving the park, it goes on up the hill to Walwick.
Here it is rejoined by the road, which now for some
little distance proceeds actually on the line of the
Wall, the stones of which can sometimes be seen in
the roadway. The tower a little further on, on
the hill called Tower Tye, or Taye, was not built
by the Romans, although Roman stones were used in
its erection; it is only about two hundred years old.
At Black Carts farm, which the Wall
now passes, the first turret discovered on the line
of the Wall after the excavations had begun, and interest
in the subject was revived, was here laid bare by Mr.
Clayton in 1873. At Limestone Bank, not much
further on, the fosse north of the Wall, and also
that of the Vallum, show a skill in engineering
such as we are apt to fancy belongs only to these
days of powerful machinery, and explosives for rending
a way through the hardest rock. The ditches have
both been cut through the solid basalt, and great boulders
of it are strewn around; one huge mass, weighing many
tons, has been hoisted out by what means,
we are left to wonder; and another, still in the ditch,
has the holes, intended for the wedges still discernible.
A mile or so further on is Procolitia
(Carrawburgh), where is the famous well presided over
by the goddess Coventina, whose acquaintance we have
already made at Cilurnum. The remains of the station
at Procolitia are by no means to be compared with
those at Borcovicus or Cilurnum; very few of its stones
are yet remaining. The well was the most interesting
find at Procolitia. It was known to be there,
for Horsley had mentioned it; but the waters which
supplied it were diverted in consequence of some lead-mining
operations. Then the stream formed by its overflow
dried up, grass grew over its course and over the well,
and it was lost sight of entirely. But the same
thing which had led to its disappearance was the means
of finding it again. Some lead miners, prospecting
for another vein of ore in the neighbourhood, happened
to dig in this very spot, and soon struck the stones
round the mouth of the well. Mr. Clayton had
it properly excavated, and was rewarded by coming not
only upon the well, but a rich find of Roman relics
of all kinds, which had either been thrown pell-mell
into it for concealment in a moment of danger, or,
what is more likely, been thrown in during the course
of ages as votive offerings to the presiding goddess
of the well. There were thousands of coins, mostly
silver and copper, with four gold pieces among them;
and a large collection of miscellaneous objects, including
vases, shoes, pearls, ornaments, altars and inscribed
stones, all of which were taken to Chesters.
The next point of interest on the Wall is the farmhouse
of Carraw, which the Priors of Hexham Abbey once used
as a summer retreat. A little further on, at
Shield-on-the-Wall, Wade’s road crosses to the
south of the earthen lines, and parts company with
the Wall for a little while, for the latter bends
northward to take the high ridge, as usual, while
the road and Vallum continue in a straight
line. The fragments of a mile-castle are standing
just at the point where the Wall swerves northward;
indeed, we have been passing the sites of these castella,
with fragments more or less in evidence all along the
route, but those which we shall now encounter are
much more distinctly to be seen than their fellows
on the eastern part of the journey, many of which
have disappeared altogether.
The high crags which here shoulder
the Wall are part of the Great Whin Sill, an intrusive
dyke of dolerite which stretches from Greenhead northeastward
across the county nearly to Berwick. The military
road here leaves the Wall, with which it does not
again come into close contact until both are near
Carlisle, though in several places the Roman road
will be encountered near the Wall in a well-preserved
condition. The Wall now climbs another ascent
to the farmhouse of Sewingshields, which name is variously
explained as “Seven Shields,” and as “The
shiels (shielings, or little huts) by the seugh”
or hollow the hollow being the fosse.
Sewingshields Castle, long since disappeared, is the
scene of the knight’s adventures in Sir Walter
Scott’s “Harold the Dauntless.”
And tradition asserts that King Arthur, with Queen
Guinevere and all the court, lies in an enchanted
sleep beneath the castle, or at least its site.
Not only is there no castle, but the Wall also has
been despoiled to supply the material for building
the farmhouse and other buildings in the neighbourhood.
The Wall climbs unfalteringly over the crags, one
after the other, until the wide opening of Busy Gap
is reached. This being such a convenient pass
from north to south, it was naturally used constantly
by raiders and thieves; and such an unenviable notoriety
did it possess, that to call a person a “Busy
Gap rogue” was sufficient to lay oneself open
to an action for libel. Climbing the next slope
we look down on Broomlee Lough and reach the portion
of the Wall we have already noted Borcovicus
(Housesteads), Cuddy’s Crag, Hot Bank farmhouse,
and Crag; Lough.
The course of the Wall continues,
past Milking Gap, along the rugged heights of Steel
Rig, Cat’s Stairs, and Peel Crag, till on reaching
Winshields we are at the highest point on the line,
1,230 feet above the sea-level. Dipping down
to Green Slack, the Wall crosses the valley called
Lodham Slack, and begins to ascend once more.
The local names of gaps and heights in this neighbourhood
are highly descriptive, and sometimes weirdly suggestive;
we have had Cat’s Stairs, and now we come to
Bogle Hole, Bloody Gap, and Thorny Doors. A little
further west from here the very considerable remains
of a mile-castle may be seen, in which a tombstone
was found doing duty as a hearth-stone. The inscription
recorded that it had been erected by Pusinna to the
memory of her husband Dagvaldus, a soldier of Pannonia.
Westward from this mile-castle the
Wall climbs Burnhead Crag, on which the foundations
of a building, similar to the turrets, were exposed
a few years ago; then it dips down again to Haltwhistle
Burn, which comes from Greenlee Lough, and is called,
until it reaches the Wall, the Caw Burn. From
the burn a winding watercourse supplied the Roman station
of AEsica (Great Chesters) with water. Just
here the Wall is in a very ruinous condition; and
of the station of AEsica but little masonry remains,
though the outlines of it can he clearly traced.
Beyond AEsica, however, is a splendid portion of the
Wall, standing some seven or eight courses high.
Here it climbs again to the top of the crags which
once more appear, bold and rugged, to culminate in
the “Nine Nicks of Thirlwall,” so called
from the number of separate heights into which the
crags divide, and over which the Wall takes its way.
At Walltown, on this part of its course,
is to be seen an old well, in which Paulinus is said
to have baptised King Edwin; but the local name for
it is King Arthur’s Well. Now the Wall descends
to a level and pastoral country, leaving behind it
the wild moorland and craggy heights across which
it has travelled so long; but unfortunately much of
it has been destroyed by the quarrying operations
at Greenhead. Of the station of Magna (Caervoran)
little can be seen at the present day. This station
and Aesica are nearer to each other than are any other
two stations on the Wall, and a line of camps, five
in number, stand south of the Wall and Vallum,
from Magna to Amboglanna, showing that a third line
of defence was deemed necessary where the natural
defences of moorland ridge, lough or crag were absent.
The Roman way called the Stanegate
comes from the eastward almost up to the station of
Magna, which stands a little to the south of both Wall
and Vallum, between them and Wade’s road,
which here approaches nearer to the Wall than it has
done for many miles.
Another Roman road, the Maiden Way,
comes from the South closely up to the Vallum,
quite near to Thirlwall castle. The name “Thirlwall”
was supposed to commemorate the “thirling”
(drilling or piercing) of the Wall at this point by
the barbarians, but this is extremely doubtful; though
the difficulty of defending the wall on this level
tract lends an air of likelihood to this supposition.
Near here the little river Tipalt flows across the
line of the Wall on its way southward to join the North
Tyne.
Passing Wallend, Gap, and Rose Hill,
where Gilsland railway station now stands, we follow
the Wall to the deep dene of the Poltross Burn, which
forms the boundary between Northumberland and Cumberland.
The railway just beyond the burn crosses the line
of the Wall; and, further on, an interesting portion,
several courses high, takes its way through the Vicarage
garden. Here we will leave it to continue its
way through Cumberland, and turn our attention to
the chief Roman ways which cross Northumberland, with
other stations standing upon them.
The Watling Street or Dere Street,
we have already noticed; and the chief station on
it, which has also proved to be the largest in Northumberland,
is Corstopitum, near Corbridge. The recent excavations
since 1906 have resulted in the finding of many interesting
relics, including some hundreds of coins, amongst
which were forty-eight gold pieces, of later Roman
date, ranging from those of Valentinian I. to those
of Magnus Maximus. Pottery in large quantities
has also been found, most of it, of course, in a fragmentary
condition, but some pieces, notably bowls of Samian
ware, almost perfect, and dating from the first century.
Several interesting pieces of sculpture have been
unearthed; one a finely sculptured lion standing over
an animal which it has evidently just killed; this
was, no doubt, used as an outlet for water at the
fountain, judging by the projection of the lion’s
lower lip. Another piece of sculpture represents
a sun-god, the rays surrounding his face; and several
altars and many inscribed stones are also amongst
the treasures lately revealed. A clay mould of
a human figure was also found, which is supposed to
represent some Keltic deity; but as the figure wears
a short tunic not unlike a kilt, and carries a crooked
club, the workmen promptly christened it Harry Lauder!
The buildings in this town, for it is much more than
a military station, have been large and imposing,
as is shown by each successive revelation made by
the excavators’ spades. The portion of the
Watling Street leading from Corstopitum to the river
has also been laid bare.
The Roman road called the Stanegate
runs westward from the North Tyne at Cilurnum, a little
to the north of Fourstones railway station, through
Newbrough, on past Grindon Hill, Grindon Lough, which
it passes on the south, and Grindon Dykes, to Vindolana
(Chesterholm) another Roman town, which lies a mile
due south from Hot Bank farmhouse on the Wall.
Vindolana stood on a most favourable site, a high platform
protected on three sides, and it covered three and
a half acres of ground. Here no excavations have
yet been made, and the site is grass grown and desolate
although the outlines of the station may be distinctly
traced. A ruinous building to the west of this
station was popularly called the Fairies’ Kitchen,
a name given to it on account of the marks of fire
and soot on the pillars. From the station several
inscribed stones and altars have been taken to the
museum at Chesters. One of them is dedicated
to the Genius of the Camp by Pituanius Secundus, the
Prefect of the fourth Cohort of the Gauls, which
cohort, as we have already seen by the Votitia,
was stationed here. In the valley below Vindolana
a little cottage is standing. It is built entirely
of Roman stones, and was erected by an enthusiastic
antiquary, Mr. Anthony Hedley, for himself. Many
of the stones used in its construction have inscriptions
on them; and in the covered passage, leading from
the cottage down to the burn, we come upon one of
them inscribed with the name of our old friend the
XXth Legion, and its crest, the running boar.
The most interesting relic of all in the neighbourhood
is a Roman mile-stone, standing in its original position
on the Stanegate.
Leaving Vindolana, this road goes
on westward to Magna, where it joins the Maiden Way,
another important Roman road, which runs from north
to south. Coming from the neighbourhood of Bewcastle
Fells, it enters Northumberland at Gilsland, and leading
eastward as far as Magna, then turns directly southward
past Greenhead.
In concluding this chapter on the
Roman remains in our county, apropos of the
wholesale destruction of the Wall and larger stations
which has taken place in the last century or two,
I will quote the words of two historians on that subject.
Dr. Thomas Hodgkin says: “In the reign of
Queen Elizabeth, Camden, the enthusiastic antiquary,
dared not traverse the line of the wall by reason
of the gangs of brigands by whom it was infested.
The union of the two countries brought peace, and peace
brought prosperity; prosperity, alas! more fatal to
the Wall than centuries of Border warfare. For
now the prosperous farmers of Northumberland and Cumberland
awoke to the building facilities which lurked in these
square green enclosures on their farms, treated them
as their best quarries, and robbed them unmercifully
of their fine well-hewn stones. Happily that
work of demolition is now in great measure stayed,
and at this day we visit the camps for a nobler purpose,
to learn all they can teach us as to the past history
of our country.”
None, I think, will disagree with
these words of the learned Doctor, whether or not
they may go as far as Cadwallader J. Bates, who, in
concluding his chapter on the Roman Wall, gave it as
his opinion that “unless the island is conquered
by some civilized nation, there will soon be no traces
of the Wall left. Nay, even the splendid whinstone
crags on which it stands will be all quarried away
to mend the roads of our urban and rural authorities.”