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Rough
Castle plays the fame game Rough
Castle, outside Bonnybridge is possibly the least known
castle in Scotland , if not the world . However its
historical significance can not be denied . At Rough Castle,
where the sixth Cohort of Nervians, auxiliaries from the
north of France, once gazed out on the Caledonian tribes to
the north and doubtless wished themselves elsewhere, there
is little to suggest the massive building operation involved
in imposing this barrier and symbol of Roman imperial
might. A grassy
rampart and ditch and the pits and mounds of a one-time
frontier fortress constitute the best-preserved remaining
stretch of the Antonine Wall. It is a
pleasant spot, but it takes some imagination to visualise it
as it was during the reign of Antoninus Pius, when it was
the northernmost frontier of the mighty Roman empire.
However,
historians and tourism leaders now anticipate a new lease of
life for Scotland's Roman wall. Earlier this year, it was
announced the edifice was to be nominated as a UNESCO World
Heritage Site. Built in about 140 AD, the 37 mile Antonine
Wall - the remains of which still intermittently shape the
landscape from Carriden on the Forth to Old Kilpatrick on
the Clyde - is Scotland's largest historic monument, but it
has a lower profile in the public imagination than the north
of England's much more visible - and visited - Hadrian's
Wall. Hadrian's,
which is already a World Heritage Site, is consolidating its
status as a major attraction with the opening of the 84 mile
Hadrian's Wall Path. Dr Elaine
Murray, a deputy minister for culture, tourism and sport,
announced in February moves to nominate the Antonine Wall
for recognition as a World Heritage Site, which would
endorse it as one of the world's most significant historical
places, on a par with the Taj Mahal, the Great Wall of China
and, in Scotland, New Lanark, St Kilda and Edinburgh's Old
and New Towns. UNESCO,
the United Nations agency responsible for cultural
protection, is considering a proposal to label a number of
sites as "European frontiers of the Roman Empire".
But can
the Antonine Wall, its remains in the care of Historic
Scotland, compete with its southerly counterpart? Last week
saw the final section of a £25,000 bridge at Gilsland,
near Haltwhistle, lowered into place, allowing walkers
unimpeded progress along the entire Hadrian's Wall
Path. It is 20
years since the path was first mooted - the Romans built the
wall in half that time. Expectations for spin-off into the
local economy are high, however, with 20,000 walkers
expected to use the path each year. The
winding stone rampart of Hadrian's Wall, dipping and rising
over the crags of Northumberland and Cumbria, is a far more
imposing landmark than the Antonine Wall, largely because it
was built of stone. The Antonine Wall, made of turf and
timber on a stone base, has merged with the landscape,and is
visible for only two thirds of its original length.
One of the
wall's most clearly visible structures is the Roman
bathhouse at Bearsden, the foundations of its hot and cold
rooms now overlooked rudely by a block of flats.
A
spokesman for VisitScotland said: "There are lessons to be
learned from the promotion of Hadrian's Wall and we should
be able to build on that success. "The
Antonine Wall played a big part in Scottish history and it's
all about using location to tell that story. Whether
interpretative centres or tour guides, there are plenty of
ways in which this could be done within the guidelines set
out for World Heritage Sites." He added
that the Culloden battlefield was popular with visitors even
though "you don't really see very much apart from the odd
headstone where the clansmen lie. It's the atmosphere people
want to experience, and the story behind it." Bill
Hanson, a professor of Roman archaeology at the University
of Glasgow, said it was unfair to compare the two walls
because of their different construction and states of
preservation. He added: "Also, the Antonine was occupied
only for about 25 years, whereas Hadrian's was occupied,
abandoned and re-occupied and remained the frontier for
hundreds of years." But, he
said, the Scottish wall was still important. "Given that
there are very few surviving Roman linear frontiers in the
world, it seems to me that it is worth it in its own right."
As an
archaeologist would he object to the encroachment of the
heritage industry on these fragmented but significant
remains? "On the contrary, if it does anything to improve
public understanding of our past, I'm all for it.
"A lot of
people don't even understand that the Romans got this far."
More than
a decade ago, Prof Hanson was involved in a bid to establish
a visitor centre at the remains of one of the wall forts at
Balmuildy, Bishopbriggs , just north of Glasgow, but the
scheme fell through for financial reasons. "I'm not an
academic who says this should be kept for academics rather
than the general public," he said. "I believe people should
be made aware of their heritage, but it is more difficult to
do that for things like the Antonine Wall." He added
that the Romans' short tenure at the wall had nothing to do
with the strength of the locals. "There are
various theories, but the most likely is that political
circumstances within the empire changed," he said.
"There was
a reconsideration of military expenditure and requirements,
perhaps linked to problems elsewhere in the empire, but it
was as much to do with political change as anything else."
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