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También es conocida por los siguientes nombres: Bardon Mill
Only the stump remains and before it was broken up in 1815 to make gate posts the inscription RIB 2308 was noted by Horsley in 1725. Three parts (two re-used as gateposts) supposedly lie 145m to the west. ...ver el mapa.
Traditional route ...ver el mapa.
Traditional course ...ver el mapa.
The Roman road lies under or immediately next to the modern road and the mile is marked by standing milestones at either end. This is one of the few Roman measured miles in Britain. ...ver el mapa.
From Milecastle 32 (Carraw) to Milecastle 33 (Shield-on-the-Wall) ...ver el mapa.
From Milecastle 41 (Melkridge) to Milecastle 42 (Cawfields) ...ver el mapa.
From Milecastle 34 (Grindon) to Milecastle 35 (Sewingshields) ...ver el mapa.
From Milecastle 35 (Sewingshields) to Milecastle 36 (King's Hill) ...ver el mapa.
From Milecastle 37 (Housesteads) to Milecastle 38 (Hotbank) ...ver el mapa.
Milecastle 39 (Castle Nick) to Milecastle 40 (Winshields) ...ver el mapa.
From Milecastle 38 (Hotbank) to Milecastle 39 (Castle Nick).Handbook pp.255–7 ...ver el mapa.
The Roman inscriptions on stone from Hadrian's Wall. Follow the Twitter feed on @perlineamvalli and the blog at perlineamvalli.wordpress.comMarkers are colour-coded: green (location certain), yellow (location approximate), and red (precise location uncertain). Click on a marker for details about an inscription.Conventions used are as follows:[...] = missing portions[[...]] = deliberate erasure/ = ... ...ver el mapa.
The Roman inscriptions on stone from Hadrian's Wall. Follow the Twitter feed on @perlineamvalli and the blog at perlineamvalli.wordpress.comMarkers are colour-coded: green (location certain), yellow (location approximate), and red (precise location uncertain). Click on a marker for details about an inscription.Conventions used are as follows:[...] = missing portions[[...]] = deliberate erasure/ = ... ...ver el mapa.
In 1801, William Hutton set out from Birmingham to the walk the whole of Hadrian's Wall. Upon his return, he wrote an account of the east-to-west component of the journey (he actually walked it both ways!).This is his account mapped onto the modern landscape of North England. ...ver el mapa.
This is the old route as suggested by the Ordnance Survey and followed by Margary (ed.3 p.445) but there is no guarantee that this is not a short-cut westwards to the Stanegate from a road heading down to the Tyne crossing from Chesters.The only fixed points we have from which to work are the 'M.P.XIIII' at Crindledykes (which is always assumed to be measured from Corbridge, although it is not spe... ...ver el mapa.