Vindolanda

AWiL Video Series: Illuminating Hadrian's Wall at the Edge of the Roman Empire

It's been 1,600 years since the Romans left Britain, and to commemorate, beacons and torches were lit along Hadrian's Wall. Click the image to skip to the video.What's 84 miles long, 1,888 years old and marked the edge of Roman rule in Britain? Hadrian's Wall of course - and the landmark got a spectacular makeover this weekend with a line of beacons stretching its entirety. The event, named 'Illuminating Hadrian's Wall', marked the 1,600th anniversary of the end of the Roman occupation in Britain, and needed no fewer than 1,100 hardy volunteers to brave the harsh winds of northern England to make it happen.

Illuminating Hadrian's Wall - Heritage Key's visit to the Light Up!

Photographs Hadrian's Wall Light UpI'm sitting on the 15.49 to London Euston from Carlisle. It's boiling hot, the Cumbrian countryside is disappearing behind me and my jumper smells like yesterday's paper. But I'm happy, because we've just hah a hell of a week at the Hadrian's Wall illuminations. I've seen it on the news from my hotel, but I guarantee you it was even better in the flesh: and that's what we'll be recreating in our next Ancient World in London video.

First off, we're all well aware that Hadrian's Wall, just a few minutes from the Scottish border, is not very near London. At all. But there are a number of very good reasons, I think, that make this trip worthwhile for the series.

Local Info: Tips For Taking Part in Illuminating Hadrian's Wall

Birdoswald by Jaon ThirlawayOn March 13, Hadrian's Wall – all of it – will be lit by gas beacons, a once-in-a-lifetime event called Illuminating Hadrian's Wall. From Wallsend in the east, to Bowness on Solway, approximately 500 beacons spaced every 250 metres will cover the 84 miles of the Hadrian's Wall.

The first beacon will be lit at Wallsend at approximately 5.35pm (sunset is at 6.11pm), and lighting will progress in sequence east to west with a six-second delay between each beacon firing up; 50 minutes later, the last beacon in Bowness should be lit.

Vindolanda: A Roman Frontier Fort on Hadrian's Wall

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Robin Birley was formerly the Director of Excavations at the Roman site of Vindolanda; he set out to excavate the fort of Vindolanda and its civilian settlements in 1970, taking over from his father Eric Birley. He has over 50 years of excavation experience on the site, over 30 of which have been as Director of the Vindolanda Trust. He now heads the Vindolanda Research Committee. This is, therefore, a book written by someone who knows the site very well.

About The AuthorJoan Thirlaway
Joan Thirlaway is retired and enjoying every minute. She's lucky enough to live in one of the most beautiful parts of Northumberland; the grandeur of Hadrian's Wall, amazing landscapes and history you can touch are on her doorstep. She's also within 10 miles of the North Pennines, designated an Area of Outstanding…

Grunts From the Front: From Roman Tablets to Army Blogs

Humans have always fought each other, but the written narrative of warfare begins about 6,000 years ago with documents detailing a conflict between Elam and Sumer (modern-day Iran and Iraq). Since then military history has been dominated by the official story of leaders and their strategic political and military decisions. Wars have rarely been narrated by the ordinary foot soldier, pilot or sailor.

John Pearce

John Pearce
Lecturer in archaeology

Dr John Pearce is a lecturer in archaeology at King's College London. He is interested in archaeology of the Roman empire, the archaeology of documents and literacy, as well as Roman and pre-Roman landscapes.

He has three main areas of research. One is death and burial in the Roman world. Dr Pearce wrote his doctoral thesis on the evidence for Romano-British society found in funerary data, including epigraphs and archaeological evidence.

Before taking his lectureship at King's College, Dr Pearce did some research on the Vindolanda writing tablets, found at Vindolanda in Northumberland, near Hadrian's Wall in the 1970s. He worked as a research assistant on the third volume of the Vindolanda Tablets at the Centre for the Study of Ancient Documents.

Dr Pearce has also initiated a field survey project with researchers from Oxford and Durham, in the Marche region of Italy – in an area known as the upper Esino Valley, where there are Iron Age tombs and a network of Roman towns.

Current position

Lecturer in Archaeology, King's College London

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Preview: Top 10 Artefacts Coming to the New Vindolanda Museum in 2011

Earlier this month the Vindolanda Trust won funding of £4 million towards the cost of refurbishing their two existing museums at the fort of Vindolanda on Hadrian's Wall. The new extended museum space will enable the trust to secure a loan of the Vindolanda Tablets from the British Museum – but it will also allow it to put many other objects on display, some of them on public view for the first time.

Samian Dinner Service at Vindolanda

Also on display is a crate-full of unused Samian pottery, part of a complete dinner service. This came out of one of the fort ditches in beautiful condition and is presumed to have arrived at Vindolanda broken in transit and was then thrown into the ditch.

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Tablets to Return to Vindolanda in Spring 2011 Thanks to £4 Million Heritage Lottery Funding

A date has now been set for the return of some of the Vindolanda Tablets to the museum at Vindolanda in Northumberland, following an announcement this week that the UK's Heritage Lottery Fund is to donate £4 million towards the costs. The date now set for some of the tablets to be housed at the Vindolanda museum is spring 2011 – they will come on loan from the British Museum for a period of five years, after which the loan can be renewed.

The tablets – a collection of 1,600 documents etched on thin wooden boards – represent the earliest forms of written language in Britain. The Latin incriptions were found at the Roman fort of Vindolanda in 1973 and include records of the Roman army's expenses as well as personal letters.

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