Preface
Introduction
1: A Living Wall
2: Hadrian's Wall
Part One: Picts' Wall
3: Heavenfield: Christian Inspirations
4: Lanercost Priory: The Wall and the English Border
5: Ellenborough (Maryport): Recognizing Roman Civility in the
border landscape
Part Two: the Roman Wall
6: Castlesteads: Reviving Interest in the Wall
7: Newcastle and Carlisle: Reconstructing the Roman Wall
8: The Mithraeum at Borcovicium (Housesteads): Reasons to be
Cheerful?
9: Wallington Hall: Native Troops on the Wall
10: The Clayton Wall: 'A New Era of Antiquarian Research'
Part Three: Hadrian's Wall
11: The Roman Gate at Hunnum (Halton Chesters): Ethnographic
Time
12: Birdoswald: Scientific Archaeology
13: Whin Sill: Defending Ancient Springs
14: The Gateway at South Shields: the Romanization of Tyneside
15: The Hadrian's Wall Path National Trail: the Inclusive
Monument
16: Conclusions: The Archaeological Imagination
Appendix 1: Published accounts of the Wall
Table 1: Hadrian's Wall: A timeline
Bibliography
Index
Richard Hingley is Professor of Roman Archaeology at the University of Durham. He is author of a number of books that address the Roman Empire and Roman Britain, including works on the character of the Roman Empire and the significance of Roman models in modern society. He is Director of the Centre for Roman Culture at Durham University and was in charge of the 'Tales of the Frontier' project, a major initiative from which this book is derived.
`[a] lively and richly comprehensive account of the way the Wall
has been perceived.'
Christopher Catling, Times Literary Supplement
`This is a rich and fascinating book, essential as much to students
of the Wall as to those interested in the history of our enquiry
into the past.'
Professor Michael Fulford, Archaeological Journal
`This is a magisterial volume ... and the author is to be
congratulated on his achievement.'
Professor Roger Ling, Antiquaries Journal
`Hingley has been remarkably successful in transforming years of
exhaustive research into a pleasurable and informative book that
can appeal to a wide ranging audience.'
Sara Sieteski, Bryn Mawr Classical Review
`Hingley has written the historiographical account of Hadrian's
Wall for this generation and, I suspect, beyond: it is one of the
most important books ever to have been written on Hadrian's
Wall.'
Professor David Breeze, Britannia
`Hingley's book is nothing short of a will to relevance for Roman
archaeology, for its living spirit to be resurrected in research
that animates past with present. This is a book with a story, a
playful joining of analytical and narrative forms that should be
emulated. It is a book to be read tucked up in bed after a day of
trekking along the Wall, or in preparation or remembrance of a
visit.'
Professor Katheryn Lafrez Samuels
`This is the culmination of a project funded by the Arts and
Humanities Research Council, and all interested in Roman Britain
and the Roman frontier should be grateful to that body for helping
create this thoughtful, challenging and well-written book.'
Professor David Breeze, British Archaeology
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