Large parts of Hadrian's Wall have never been lost - parts of Housesteads Fort, in a fairly remote central section, was as late as the C17th a bandit fort. It has also long been used as a quarry for the facing stones - wall is in fact a rubble and concrete core faced with squared, rectangular quarried stone hich were subsequently looted and from which many local farm buildings are constructed.
There was also no re-use of the site after around 400AD, so no build up of rubbish, no additional layers, no "burial". Hence where it still exists at all, it is reasonably close to the suface. At "Vindolanda" parts of the old civilan settlement outside the fort walls are waterlogged and created a perfect anaerobic environment - so they have found leather tent fragments (unique) lots of shoes and sandals (caligae in the military sense) and most famously, the Vindolanda tablets.
These are the first examples to be found and read of Roman notebooks and letters made of wood bark and written on in ink (as against the writing tablets using inset wax and a pointed scriber). Over 1,000 fragments have been excavated. So we have fascinating bureaucratic records of sick soldiers, delivery of underpants and socks from home, invitations to birthday parties and a reference to the local tribesmen as "brittunculi" - (little Brits).
Also found are parts of a large prefabricated building which may have been constructed as a "palace" for Hadrian during his visit.
On an urban site which has been re-used, Roman remains can be some 8 feet below the modern ground level. In a cellar under my childhood home in Lincoln, lay pillars from the external portico of the basilica and forum of the Roman town of Lindum Colonia. To the rear, in another garden, stands part of the brick wall of the same complex still standing to a height of some 20 feet. At the end of the street, still spanning the road and navigated by traffic is the north gate of the Roman town, but its footings, visible to one side, are again around 8 feet below the modern surface.
Phil H
There was also no re-use of the site after around 400AD, so no build up of rubbish, no additional layers, no "burial". Hence where it still exists at all, it is reasonably close to the suface. At "Vindolanda" parts of the old civilan settlement outside the fort walls are waterlogged and created a perfect anaerobic environment - so they have found leather tent fragments (unique) lots of shoes and sandals (caligae in the military sense) and most famously, the Vindolanda tablets.
These are the first examples to be found and read of Roman notebooks and letters made of wood bark and written on in ink (as against the writing tablets using inset wax and a pointed scriber). Over 1,000 fragments have been excavated. So we have fascinating bureaucratic records of sick soldiers, delivery of underpants and socks from home, invitations to birthday parties and a reference to the local tribesmen as "brittunculi" - (little Brits).
Also found are parts of a large prefabricated building which may have been constructed as a "palace" for Hadrian during his visit.
On an urban site which has been re-used, Roman remains can be some 8 feet below the modern ground level. In a cellar under my childhood home in Lincoln, lay pillars from the external portico of the basilica and forum of the Roman town of Lindum Colonia. To the rear, in another garden, stands part of the brick wall of the same complex still standing to a height of some 20 feet. At the end of the street, still spanning the road and navigated by traffic is the north gate of the Roman town, but its footings, visible to one side, are again around 8 feet below the modern surface.
Phil H
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