Calgary Herald

Hadrian’s Wall attracts new group of invaders

Emperor Hadrian’s ancient border fence is the original statement wall

- JERRY HARMER

“Looks like we BRAMPTON, ENGLAND brought the weather with us from California,” the elderly tourist says, pulling on a hat and strolling past me. He disappears up a grass slope, beneath a brilliant, blue sky, his wife beside him.

It’s the first of several American accents I hear that morning.

Perhaps they’ve come to see what a real border fence looks like.

Because that’s precisely what’s drawn them, and me, to this remote and spectacula­r part of northern England: an imposing, defensive barrier meant to keep the bad guys out and the good guys safe.

At least, that’s how the ancient Romans would have seen it.

Hadrian’s Wall — named after the emperor who commission­ed it — was begun in the second century, in the year 122. Soldiers toiled for a decade or so, piling stone upon stone until it stretched from coast to coast, across the very top of what’s now northern England, a distance of 118 kilometres.

It stood up to 4.6 metres high, with walls three metres wide. It bristled with towers, forts and watch posts, called milecastle­s, and gave commanding views of the surroundin­g countrysid­e.

Trendy designers today like to talk of statement walls. This was, indeed, a statement wall. It was where civilizati­on ended.

The wall let the Romans control who and what came into the empire. And it kept the peace. Beyond it were warmongeri­ng communitie­s in what is, today, Scotland, itching to ravage the settlement­s of refined Roman Britain and bring fire down on the hated invaders. Hadrian’s Wall kept them out. Almost 2,000 years on, long sections on Hadrian’s Wall still stand, remarkably well-preserved. The thick stone line snakes for miles across rugged uplands, and down into wooded valleys. UNESCO named it a World Heritage Site in 1987 for its “extraordin­arily high cultural value.”

My family and I start at the ruins of Birdoswald Fort, said by English Heritage, a charity that looks after historic sites, to have the most impressive remaining defences of all the original 16 forts. We then follow the wall, in blazing sunshine, as it undulates eastward. But they soon tire of this huge slab of history, preferring the lure of a shady riverbank and a packed lunch. I go on alone, past the impressive remains of abutments that once supported a triple bridge across the River Irthing. The wall’s thick spine ascends a hill ahead of me.

You are not meant to climb up on it, but I have an urge to connect.

I run my hand against the sunwarmed stones; some a whitishgre­y, others blackened by an eternity of wild, northern winters.

I marvel that the last person to touch them, before me, was quite possibly the man who laid them, back when Hadrian’s Wall marked the extreme northern edge of the Roman Empire’s vast reach.

Sitting on the edge of an escarpment, among the ruins of Harrow’s Scar milecastle, a ruddyfaced walker is taking a breather. Bill Vincent is halfway through a six-day trek along the wall’s entire length, coast to coast, “to mark the start of my 60th year.”

I ask him whether he thinks about the history as he walks: the garrisons, shivering behind the ramparts; the tattooed tribal warriors, staring resentfull­y at this massive stone affront.

“Yes, you can’t help but do that,” he says, “but, to be honest, I think more about my feet.”

 ?? PHOTOS: JERRY HARMER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sheep rest in the lee of a section of Hadrian’s Wall, in Cumbria, northern England. The wall was commission­ed by the Roman emperor Hadrian and was begun around AD 122.
PHOTOS: JERRY HARMER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sheep rest in the lee of a section of Hadrian’s Wall, in Cumbria, northern England. The wall was commission­ed by the Roman emperor Hadrian and was begun around AD 122.
 ??  ?? A stretch of Hadrian’s Wall cuts through the northern English countrysid­e, near Birdoswald Fort, Cumbria. Large parts of it remain today.
A stretch of Hadrian’s Wall cuts through the northern English countrysid­e, near Birdoswald Fort, Cumbria. Large parts of it remain today.

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