Most people have heard of Hadrian's Wall which was built on
the orders of Emperor Hadrian across northern England and completed around the
year AD 128. The Emperor had decided that there was a limit as to how far north
the Empire could be extended, and this was it. Although he was happy for trade
to continue with the people living north of the Wall, he saw no point in
imposing Roman rule on them and undertaking the expense of so doing.
However, his successor as Emperor had other ideas. This was Antoninus Pius, who ruled from 138 to 161. He believed that the Empire could
include the whole of what is now Northumberland and southern Scotland, and so
he ordered the building of a new wall to link the Firth of Clyde to the Firth
of Forth. This marks the ‘waist’ of Scotland and is therefore a distance of
only 37 miles as opposed to the 73 miles of Hadrian’s Wall.
Despite the much shorter distance and inferior structure – turf-faced
earth ramparts as opposed to solid stone – the new wall took longer to
complete, namely twelve years from 142 to 154. Antoninus was, however,
confident that he had gone one better than his predecessor and Hadrian’s Wall
was allowed to fall into disrepair as the border moved to its new location.
The Emperor’s confidence was not shared by his own
successor, namely Marcus Aurelius. This was mainly because the reign of
Antoninus was remarkably peaceful and he faced no serious threats from north of
his wall, or anywhere else for that matter. Marcus Aurelius was not so lucky
and he therefore decided that Hadrian’s Wall was preferable to Antoninus’s as a defensible
position. The Antonine Wall was therefore abandoned.
Finding the Antonine Wall
This is not at all easy, for the reasons mentioned above.
Without constant maintenance an earth rampart is always going to be subject to
erosion, especially in a country that is subject to as much wind and rain as
Scotland!
Another problem is that whereas Hadrian’s Wall strode for
the most part across barren open countryside and made use of dramatic natural
features such as the Great Whin Sill, the territory crossed by the Antonine
Wall has been used for many other purposes in the years since its abandonment,
such as the construction of towns and the links between them. The western part
of the route is today covered by the urban sprawl of Glasgow and its
surrounding communities.
The Wall might never have been re-discovered, and partly
preserved, had it not been for the work of William Roy, a surveyor and
antiquarian who located and mapped as much of it as he could find in 1764.
Walking the Way
The fact is that you cannot ‘walk the Wall’ in the same way
that you can at Hadrian’s Wall. However, there are a number of short walks you
can undertake from which you can view what remains of the Wall at various
points along its length. Here are some suggestions, from east to west:
Falkirk
There is a well-defined section of Wall in the grounds of
Callendar House, on the southern edge of Falkirk.
Further west is a section at Tamfourhill, to the south of
Camelon (a suburb of Falkirk). A walk here can take you along the Forth and
Clyde Canal and you should not forego the opportunity to visit the amazing
Falkirk Wheel that lifts boats between the Forth and Clyde and Union Canals.
Rough Castle (near Bonnybridge)
This is the best preserved fortification to be seen on the
Antonine Wall, with its ramparts and ditches clearly visible. There is a
half-mile length of the wall that you can walk along here in open countryside,
with views to both north and south (see photo above).
Other sections
Short sections of the Wall can also be seen at Polmont Wood
(near Grangemouth at the eastern end) and Seabegs Wood (parallel to the Forth
and Clyde Canal, west of Bonnybridge)
© John Welford