The use of maps to help diagnose the processes by which the Romans may have planned their roads and walls in northern Britain, with particular reference to the Antonine Wall in Scotland
Antonine wall ; Archaeology ; Cartography ; Public works ; Road ; Scotland ; Strategic planning ; United Kingdom
Street between the Vale of York and Newstead in Scotland, the processes of Roman road planning are interpreted and described. The possibility is then examined that these processes may have been applied to the planning of Hadrian’s Wall and the Antonine
Timothy Pont and the freshwater loch settlements of late Memdieval and early modern mainland Scotland
Mapping and antiquities in Scotland
Archéologie ; Crannog ; Histoire du peuplement ; Ile artificielle ; PONT (T.) ; Royaume-Uni ; Scotland ; Siècle 16
Archaeology ; Crannog ; Scotland ; Settlement history ; Sixteenth Century ; United Kingdom
Archaeologists have long been fascinated by the artificial islands, often known as crannogs, in Scotland’s lochs. The tendency has been to regard them as a discrete phenomenon and to focus on their role as prehistoric and early historic settlements