image for article on Hadrian's Wall

Emperor Hadrian orders construction of a wall across northern Britain

When the Roman emperor Hadrian stepped off his ship onto British soil in 122 C.E., he carried an imperial ambition: to draw a hard line between the Roman world and everything beyond it. Within that same year, construction likely began on what would become the most famous frontier in Roman history — a stone and turf barrier stretching 73 miles from coast to coast across the narrowest part of northern Britain.

Key facts about Hadrian’s Wall

  • Hadrian’s Wall: Built on the orders of Emperor Hadrian, the wall ran from Wallsend on the River Tyne in the east to Bowness-on-Solway in the west — roughly 80 Roman miles, or about 73 modern miles.
  • Roman frontier construction: The project took at least six years to complete and involved three full Roman legions, each around 5,000 heavily armed infantrymen, assisted by auxiliary units and even the British fleet.
  • Milecastle fortifications: Every Roman mile, a guarded gate called a milecastle was built into the wall, with two observation turrets between each pair — creating a surveillance point roughly every third of a mile along the entire length.

Why Hadrian built the wall

Hadrian was not a general bent on expanding Rome’s reach. He was a consolidator. By the early 2nd century C.E., the Roman Empire had stretched itself thin across Europe, North Africa, and the Near East. Hadrian’s policy was to define and defend existing borders rather than push them further.

Britain posed a particular challenge. Roman armies had occupied much of the island since the invasion of 43 C.E., but the far north resisted. A network of forts along the Tyne–Solway isthmus, connected by a road called the Stanegate, already marked the rough edge of Roman-controlled territory. Hadrian’s Wall was built just north of that line — carefully surveyed to use the natural landscape, including dramatic basalt crags, to maximum defensive advantage.

A biography written about 200 years after his visit describes Hadrian as the first to “build a wall 80 miles long from sea to sea to separate the barbarians from the Romans.” The language reveals as much about Roman ideology as it does about military strategy. The wall was both a physical barrier and a statement of identity: this is where Rome ends.

How the wall was built — and by whom

The original design called for a stone wall about 10 Roman feet (3 meters) wide and up to 15 feet (4.6 meters) tall, with a wide ditch to the north. The western 30 miles were initially built in turf, twice as wide but easier to construct quickly. Before the first phase was finished, the plan changed significantly: 14 forts were added directly to the wall line, and a massive earthwork called the Vallum was constructed to the south, creating a protected military zone.

After the forts were added, the wall’s width was narrowed and the pace of construction accelerated. Speed mattered.

The troops who built Hadrian’s Wall were also the ones who would eventually man it — auxiliaries recruited largely from the north-western provinces of the Roman Empire, though some came from much farther afield. These were not Roman citizens in the classical sense. They were soldiers from across the empire’s vast and diverse population, stationed at the edge of the known world. Camp followers — traders, families, craftspeople — gradually settled around the forts, forming small towns that geophysical surveys have shown extending well beyond the fort walls.

An early English Heritage account of the wall notes that it was likely known in its own time as the vallum Aelii — Aelius being Hadrian’s family name — based on an inscription found on a 2nd-century souvenir pan discovered in Staffordshire in 2003 C.E.

Lasting impact

Hadrian’s Wall served as the northwestern frontier of the Roman Empire for nearly 300 years. It was briefly abandoned in the 140s C.E. when Emperor Antoninus Pius pushed the frontier north to the Forth–Clyde line and built the Antonine Wall, but that shorter barrier lasted only about 20 years before Rome returned to Hadrian’s line.

The wall shaped the physical and political geography of northern Britain in ways that lasted long after Rome withdrew in the early 5th century C.E. The communities along its length — Roman, British, and mixed — laid early foundations for towns and settlements that still exist. Historic England recognizes the wall as one of the best-preserved examples of Roman military infrastructure anywhere in the world.

In 1987 C.E., UNESCO designated Hadrian’s Wall a World Heritage Site, later expanded into the broader Frontiers of the Roman Empire designation. The wall remains one of Britain’s most visited ancient sites and a primary source of evidence for understanding how Rome organized, supplied, and defended its most distant territories.

For historians and archaeologists, the wall is also a remarkably rich record of multicultural Roman military life. Inscriptions, altars, and artifacts reveal soldiers worshipping gods from Syria, North Africa, and the Germanic provinces alongside Roman deities — a reminder that the edge of empire was never a monoculture.

Blindspots and limits

The wall’s construction and long occupation came at real cost to the peoples already living in northern Britain, whose lands, movements, and communities were reshaped — sometimes violently — by Roman military presence. The sources that survive are almost entirely Roman, written by or for the empire, which means the perspective of the Britons on either side of the wall is largely lost to history.

Archaeological work continues to reveal new details — geophysical surveys have uncovered the scale of civilian settlements around forts — but large stretches of the wall and its associated infrastructure remain unexcavated, and many questions about daily life, governance, and the wall’s actual operational effectiveness are still being debated. Smithsonian Magazine has noted that scholars continue to argue about the wall’s primary purpose: was it a hard military barrier, a customs checkpoint, or something more symbolic? The answer may be all three — or none of them cleanly.

What is not in dispute is the sheer scale of the undertaking. Moving stone, turf, timber, and supplies across 73 miles of rugged northern terrain, while managing a workforce of tens of thousands, represents one of the most ambitious engineering projects of the ancient world. The British Museum holds artifacts from the wall’s long occupation — coins, weapons, inscriptions — that continue to inform our understanding of life at this extraordinary edge of empire.

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For more on this story, see: English Heritage — Hadrian’s Wall history

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