One of Britain’s most famous landmarks makes for an epic walk back in time
ALTHOUGH no one’s completely clear why Emperor Hadrian decided to build a wall across northern England, he’s said to have visited this bleak extremity of his empire in AD122, leaving instructions to that effect. Perhaps it was to deter barbarians, perhaps simply to exert his authority—in any case, this dramatic barrier serves as a reminder that quality workmanship lasts.
My mother grew up in Haydon Bridge, a few miles south of the wall, and my father moved there as a teenager. He was involved, thrillingly, in the excavation of the Mithraic temple at Carrawburgh in 1950—a feat he reminded us girls of rather frequently— so it’s familiar stamping ground. However, I’d never walked the whole thing and so, in July, I persuaded my husband and .brotherin-law, plus our dog Lucy, to join me
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