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Antoninus Pius was the man who gave his name to the Antonine Wall of 142 AD, which runs between the the Rivers Clyde and Forth, extending Roman Britannia north from Hadrian's Wall.
Ancient Romans used blood red, bright yellow and stunning white paints to illustrate dire warnings on the wall that separated them from the rebellious tribespeople of Scotland, a new study shows.
Hadrian's Wall may be older, bigger, stronger and better known, but the Unesco-listed Antonine Wall was the real final frontier of the Roman Empire. Hadrian’s Wall, the ancient marvel that ...
ONE of Scotland's most impressive ancient structures is to receive its biggest make-over for more than 18 centuries. The crumbling remains of the Antonine Wall, built by the Romans to subdue the ...
The stone will be placed at Cow Wynd in Falkirk close to the line of the Antonine Wall, which was built from around 140 AD and spanned 37 miles between the Firth of Forth and the Firth of Clyde ...
The wall spans 37 miles across central Scotland Opposition politicians have criticised the Scottish government for failing to spend more on developing the potential of the Antonine Wall.
DESPITE its fascinating history and enviable position at the heart of Scotland, not to mention the key role it played in the industrial revolution,… ...
The Antonine Wall runs 37 miles from Bo'ness, near Falkirk, to Old Kilpatrick in West Dunbartonshire. The support signing ceremony was witnessed by archaeologists from several European countries who ...
Hadrian's Wall may be older, bigger, stronger and better known, but the Unesco-listed Antonine Wall was the real final frontier of the Roman Empire. Hadrian’s Wall, the ancient marvel that ...
Carved stone slabs placed along a Roman wall in Scotland were once brightly painted with violent ... discovered in 1868 near the town of Falkirk, at the eastern end of the Antonine Wall. ...