Stanegate (Acomb; Newbrough and Fourstones; Henshaw; Bardon Mill; Greenhead; Haltwhistle; Melkridge; Sandhoe; Warden; Thirlwall; Haydon; Wall; Corbridge)
Excavation undertaken near Homer's Lane, Warden parish, recorded the line and construction of the road. The line of the road was established by trenching to reveal a single layer of sandstone cobbles remaining below the topsoil of the field. The subsoil below does not appear to have been mounded up to form an agger, with a few kerb stones remaining on both the north and south sides of the road. No agger, underlying road surfaces, gutters or definite Roman drains were uncovered. It is possible that the line established by the excavation continues as a cropmark in an adjacent field. (1)
Small cuttings around the area of Causeway House, in Henshaw parish, monitored by A T Welfare in 1990 recorded the presence of the Stanegate Roman road to survive north of the current road to the west of Vindolanda fort and settlement. The road appears to have had no ditches alongside the routeway (as recorded elsewhere along the Stanegate in descending from Barcombe to the Bradley Burn by R P Wright in the 1930s). The road-line may have drifted from south to north, and the shallow depth of excavations required to reveal the metalling perhaps implies that the road originally had a well-developed agger. (2)
A watching brief in November 2020, near Settlingstones, revealed cobbled surfaces over a stony levelling layer, or agger. They are similar in form and composition to previously identified Roman road surfaces identified elsewhere and tentatively interpreted as remains of the Stanegate Roman road. (3)
RR 85a/b. Stanegate, an east-west lateral road was built during the governorship of Agricola, to connect Corbridge and Carlisle (Stanwix) through some intermediate forts, which later became a useful route to the rear of Hadrian's Wall.
It has been traced as continuing the line of the principal east-west street of Corbridge fort (NY 96 SE 20) westward as far as Cor Burn. Here it turned south to negotiate the steep-sided valley by terraceways, which in several cut sections showed its structure to be eloborate and heavily built. Near the fort the road was 22 feet wide, with stone-covered gutters, built upon a foundation of cobbles with a cambered layer of gravel above. Beyond the crossing it turned west again along the bank of another stream and a route partly used by the later Carlegate (circa NY 973 650) but the course of the Roman road is not yet known for the next five miles until a point on the west bank of the North Tyne opposite Wall village (NY 910 685).
The road is then found in the fields on the west side of Homer's Lane and along the base of Warden Hill, where its structure was examined and found to be a foundation layer of sandstone blocks, the gravel surfacing of which had been lost through ploughing. Towards Fourstones, there are visible traces on the hillside and a stone fence marks it. Excavation has proved it in the fields north-west of the village. Then the present road follows the line through Newbrough for many miles which still shows the agger, about 27 feet wide, as it runs in short straight lengths, gradually bearing more to the south. Approaching the deep valley of the Brackies Burn, the modern road bears southward and the Roman agger is traceable across the fields to the stream crossing. The construction of the road was examined in this area comprising a bottom layer of large stones, then a cambered bank of clay, and a compact well-cambered layer of small sandstones forming the metalled surface.
At the stream crossing is the fort of Vindolanda (NY 76 NE 16) and across the stream the road continues straight, deeply sunken at first, but soon raised as an agger. It becomes a farm road to Seatside, and the the course lies across rough ground, where traces of agger can be generally seen. The course takes it diagonally across the main road near the Mare and Foal, where it turns more westward, parallel to the road, and is visible as a terrace on the hillside to the north.
At Haltwhistle Burn the road was examined in detail and found to be a rough surface of cobbles and gravel bedded in clay, with a second road surface above it. Here the agger is clear and the descent to the burn crossing. Traces continue through the fields roughly parallel with he main road, passing just behind Fell End Farm and leading to the fort of Carvoran (NY 66 NE 12).
The course of the road has been ascertained between Carvoran and Gilsland, but there is little now to be seen. the agger is visible just after it crosses the Greenhead - Gilsland road. and then is marked by fences towards Gap, roughly parallel with the Vallum (LINEAR 178). It appears again for half a mile to the east of Upper Denton, first marked as a terraceway, and then as a low but distinct agger cutting across a field towards Upper Denton, after which the present road probably follows it as far as Chapelburn. there is no trace until Naworth Park; here a series of deep cuttings amd embankments run down to the River Irthing to ease the crossing. These mark the course of the road at intervals as far as Boothby, west of the park.
The road appears two miles further on, where a short length is still in use just before the point it must have crossed the Irthing near Crooked Holme. Through Irthington the exact course is not known, but just beyond Red Hills at the end of the village a course has been cut through a small hillock in a meadow named Buckjumping. An aerdrome then obliterates it for a mile, after which hedgerows again mark it for some distance towards High Crosby. Just beyond this in the grounds of Crosby Lodge, alongside the present road,is another long cutting containing a road with substantial matalling. Probably the road continued to Stanwix fort (NY 45 NW 2) at Carlisle close to the course of the present road. (4a-d)
The Stanegate was first built as a strategic road under Agricola or his successors. As such it would normally be provided with forts at one-day marching intervals to protect the movement of troops and supplies. The next stage in development, if correctly interpreted, would mark the transformation into a frontier road by the building of forts in the gaps between the existing forts. It has been assumed for some time that Trajan based a frontier system on Stanegate, but the evidence is inadequate. It seems that at some point during his reign withdrawal to this line had taken place. (4e)
See Linear Archive Files RR 85a and RR 85b for further details. (4f)
Located on the English Heritage map of Hadrian's Wall 2010. (4g)
Is referred to by HER 6051 (Carvoran), HER 6566 (Vindolanda), HER 9002 (Corbridge Roman Town), HER 5968 (Maidens Way).
General association with HER 6052 (Glenwhelt Leazes Roman camp), HER 6053 (Fell End Temporary Roman Camp), HER 6054 (Sunny Rigg 1), HER 6055 (Sunny Rigg 2), HER 6057 (Roman milestone), HER 6567 (Bean Burn 2), HER 6569 (Iron Age settlement and Roman signal station), HER 6570 (Bean Burn 1), HER 6571 (Twice Brewed), HER 6572 (Seatsides 2), HER 6573 (Seatsides 1), HER 6575 (milestones), HER 6469 (Haltwhistle Burn 2), HER 6470 (Haltwhistle Burn 1), HER 6471 (Markham Cottage 1), HER 6472 (Haltwhistle Burn Fortlet), HER 6473 (Markham Cottage 2), HER 6474 (Sunny Rigg 3), HER 6475 (Lees Hall Temporary Roman Camp), HER 6478 (Milestone House Roman Temporary Camp), HER 6490 (milestone), HER 6501 (Haltwhistle Burn 4), HER 6504 (Roman barrows), HER 7553 (Grindon School Roman Temporary Camp), HER 7555 (Grindon Hill), HER 7556 (Roman fortlet), HER 7559 (Roman signal tower), HER 7560 (rejected Roman camp), HER 8998 (Carelgate), HER 32579 (Haltwhistle Burn 3), HER 33628 (boundary bank), HER 24574 (post-medieval quarry), HER 33428 (post-medieval trackways), HER 32234 (post-medieval quarries), HER 33211 (post-medieval trackway), HER 32695 (Stanegate UID 1408254), HER 32378 (enclosure), HER 34110 (part of Dere Street), HER 34111 (Dere Street). (4)
Small cuttings around the area of Causeway House, in Henshaw parish, monitored by A T Welfare in 1990 recorded the presence of the Stanegate Roman road to survive north of the current road to the west of Vindolanda fort and settlement. The road appears to have had no ditches alongside the routeway (as recorded elsewhere along the Stanegate in descending from Barcombe to the Bradley Burn by R P Wright in the 1930s). The road-line may have drifted from south to north, and the shallow depth of excavations required to reveal the metalling perhaps implies that the road originally had a well-developed agger. (2)
A watching brief in November 2020, near Settlingstones, revealed cobbled surfaces over a stony levelling layer, or agger. They are similar in form and composition to previously identified Roman road surfaces identified elsewhere and tentatively interpreted as remains of the Stanegate Roman road. (3)
RR 85a/b. Stanegate, an east-west lateral road was built during the governorship of Agricola, to connect Corbridge and Carlisle (Stanwix) through some intermediate forts, which later became a useful route to the rear of Hadrian's Wall.
It has been traced as continuing the line of the principal east-west street of Corbridge fort (NY 96 SE 20) westward as far as Cor Burn. Here it turned south to negotiate the steep-sided valley by terraceways, which in several cut sections showed its structure to be eloborate and heavily built. Near the fort the road was 22 feet wide, with stone-covered gutters, built upon a foundation of cobbles with a cambered layer of gravel above. Beyond the crossing it turned west again along the bank of another stream and a route partly used by the later Carlegate (circa NY 973 650) but the course of the Roman road is not yet known for the next five miles until a point on the west bank of the North Tyne opposite Wall village (NY 910 685).
The road is then found in the fields on the west side of Homer's Lane and along the base of Warden Hill, where its structure was examined and found to be a foundation layer of sandstone blocks, the gravel surfacing of which had been lost through ploughing. Towards Fourstones, there are visible traces on the hillside and a stone fence marks it. Excavation has proved it in the fields north-west of the village. Then the present road follows the line through Newbrough for many miles which still shows the agger, about 27 feet wide, as it runs in short straight lengths, gradually bearing more to the south. Approaching the deep valley of the Brackies Burn, the modern road bears southward and the Roman agger is traceable across the fields to the stream crossing. The construction of the road was examined in this area comprising a bottom layer of large stones, then a cambered bank of clay, and a compact well-cambered layer of small sandstones forming the metalled surface.
At the stream crossing is the fort of Vindolanda (NY 76 NE 16) and across the stream the road continues straight, deeply sunken at first, but soon raised as an agger. It becomes a farm road to Seatside, and the the course lies across rough ground, where traces of agger can be generally seen. The course takes it diagonally across the main road near the Mare and Foal, where it turns more westward, parallel to the road, and is visible as a terrace on the hillside to the north.
At Haltwhistle Burn the road was examined in detail and found to be a rough surface of cobbles and gravel bedded in clay, with a second road surface above it. Here the agger is clear and the descent to the burn crossing. Traces continue through the fields roughly parallel with he main road, passing just behind Fell End Farm and leading to the fort of Carvoran (NY 66 NE 12).
The course of the road has been ascertained between Carvoran and Gilsland, but there is little now to be seen. the agger is visible just after it crosses the Greenhead - Gilsland road. and then is marked by fences towards Gap, roughly parallel with the Vallum (LINEAR 178). It appears again for half a mile to the east of Upper Denton, first marked as a terraceway, and then as a low but distinct agger cutting across a field towards Upper Denton, after which the present road probably follows it as far as Chapelburn. there is no trace until Naworth Park; here a series of deep cuttings amd embankments run down to the River Irthing to ease the crossing. These mark the course of the road at intervals as far as Boothby, west of the park.
The road appears two miles further on, where a short length is still in use just before the point it must have crossed the Irthing near Crooked Holme. Through Irthington the exact course is not known, but just beyond Red Hills at the end of the village a course has been cut through a small hillock in a meadow named Buckjumping. An aerdrome then obliterates it for a mile, after which hedgerows again mark it for some distance towards High Crosby. Just beyond this in the grounds of Crosby Lodge, alongside the present road,is another long cutting containing a road with substantial matalling. Probably the road continued to Stanwix fort (NY 45 NW 2) at Carlisle close to the course of the present road. (4a-d)
The Stanegate was first built as a strategic road under Agricola or his successors. As such it would normally be provided with forts at one-day marching intervals to protect the movement of troops and supplies. The next stage in development, if correctly interpreted, would mark the transformation into a frontier road by the building of forts in the gaps between the existing forts. It has been assumed for some time that Trajan based a frontier system on Stanegate, but the evidence is inadequate. It seems that at some point during his reign withdrawal to this line had taken place. (4e)
See Linear Archive Files RR 85a and RR 85b for further details. (4f)
Located on the English Heritage map of Hadrian's Wall 2010. (4g)
Is referred to by HER 6051 (Carvoran), HER 6566 (Vindolanda), HER 9002 (Corbridge Roman Town), HER 5968 (Maidens Way).
General association with HER 6052 (Glenwhelt Leazes Roman camp), HER 6053 (Fell End Temporary Roman Camp), HER 6054 (Sunny Rigg 1), HER 6055 (Sunny Rigg 2), HER 6057 (Roman milestone), HER 6567 (Bean Burn 2), HER 6569 (Iron Age settlement and Roman signal station), HER 6570 (Bean Burn 1), HER 6571 (Twice Brewed), HER 6572 (Seatsides 2), HER 6573 (Seatsides 1), HER 6575 (milestones), HER 6469 (Haltwhistle Burn 2), HER 6470 (Haltwhistle Burn 1), HER 6471 (Markham Cottage 1), HER 6472 (Haltwhistle Burn Fortlet), HER 6473 (Markham Cottage 2), HER 6474 (Sunny Rigg 3), HER 6475 (Lees Hall Temporary Roman Camp), HER 6478 (Milestone House Roman Temporary Camp), HER 6490 (milestone), HER 6501 (Haltwhistle Burn 4), HER 6504 (Roman barrows), HER 7553 (Grindon School Roman Temporary Camp), HER 7555 (Grindon Hill), HER 7556 (Roman fortlet), HER 7559 (Roman signal tower), HER 7560 (rejected Roman camp), HER 8998 (Carelgate), HER 32579 (Haltwhistle Burn 3), HER 33628 (boundary bank), HER 24574 (post-medieval quarry), HER 33428 (post-medieval trackways), HER 32234 (post-medieval quarries), HER 33211 (post-medieval trackway), HER 32695 (Stanegate UID 1408254), HER 32378 (enclosure), HER 34110 (part of Dere Street), HER 34111 (Dere Street). (4)
N12391
EXCAVATION, Haltwhistle Burn (Stanegate) 1908; Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle
EXCAVATION, Stanegate west of Homer's Lane 1970
WATCHING BRIEF, A Brief Report on the Observations made during a Programme of Landscaping at Causeway House, Chesterholme, Northumberland 1990
WATCHING BRIEF, B6319, Fourstones 1994
TRIAL TRENCH, Football Field, Gilsland 2004; Oxford Archaeology (North)
TRIAL TRENCH, Moorfield to Huntercrook and Page Croft to Wall Service Reservoirs 2006; Tyne and Wear Museums
WATCHING BRIEF, Moorfield to Huntercrook and Page Croft to Wall Service Reservoirs 2006; Tyne and Wear Museums
WATCHING BRIEF, Haltwhistle Water Mains Improvement 2008; Tyne and Wear Museums
WATCHING BRIEF, Whinney Hill, Fourstones 2011; Gerry Martin Associates Ltd
WATCHING BRIEF, Stanegate at Viindolanda 2014; Alan Williams Archaeology
WATCHING BRIEF, Stanegate, near Settlingstones ; Archaeological Research Services
EXCAVATION, Stanegate south of Cilurnum
EXCAVATION, CORBRIDGE (STANEGATE) ; Durham Excavation Committee
EXCAVATION, STANEGATE, EAST OF CHESTERHOLM ; Durham Excavation Committee
EXCAVATION, Stanegate west of Homer's Lane 1970
WATCHING BRIEF, A Brief Report on the Observations made during a Programme of Landscaping at Causeway House, Chesterholme, Northumberland 1990
WATCHING BRIEF, B6319, Fourstones 1994
TRIAL TRENCH, Football Field, Gilsland 2004; Oxford Archaeology (North)
TRIAL TRENCH, Moorfield to Huntercrook and Page Croft to Wall Service Reservoirs 2006; Tyne and Wear Museums
WATCHING BRIEF, Moorfield to Huntercrook and Page Croft to Wall Service Reservoirs 2006; Tyne and Wear Museums
WATCHING BRIEF, Haltwhistle Water Mains Improvement 2008; Tyne and Wear Museums
WATCHING BRIEF, Whinney Hill, Fourstones 2011; Gerry Martin Associates Ltd
WATCHING BRIEF, Stanegate at Viindolanda 2014; Alan Williams Archaeology
WATCHING BRIEF, Stanegate, near Settlingstones ; Archaeological Research Services
EXCAVATION, Stanegate south of Cilurnum
EXCAVATION, CORBRIDGE (STANEGATE) ; Durham Excavation Committee
EXCAVATION, STANEGATE, EAST OF CHESTERHOLM ; Durham Excavation Committee
Source of Reference
Local History of Acomb
Local History of Haydon
Local History of Newbrough and Fourstones
Local History of Greenhead
Local History of Haltwhistle
Local History of Melkridge
Local History of Bardon Mill
Local History of Sandhoe
Local History of Wall
Local History of Henshaw
Local History of Warden
Local History of Corbridge
Local History of Thirlwall
Local History of Acomb
Local History of Haydon
Local History of Newbrough and Fourstones
Local History of Greenhead
Local History of Haltwhistle
Local History of Melkridge
Local History of Bardon Mill
Local History of Sandhoe
Local History of Wall
Local History of Henshaw
Local History of Warden
Local History of Corbridge
Local History of Thirlwall
Disclaimer -
Please note that this information has been compiled from a number of different sources. Durham County Council and Northumberland County Council can accept no responsibility for any inaccuracy contained therein. If you wish to use/copy any of the images, please ensure that you read the Copyright information provided.