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πŸ›‘οΈ Frontiers of the Roman Empire

Archaeology - Ancient Rome United Kingdom Europe

πŸ›‘οΈ Frontiers of the Roman Empire
Roman aqueduct to Great Chesters from the Cawburn


🕐 3 min read · Updated 2 Apr 2026 at 12:56

UNESCOUNESCO World Heritage Site

πŸ“‹ Fast Facts
  • Located near Great Chesters Fort (Aesica) on Hadrian's Wall, Northumberland, England
  • Supplied water to the auxiliary garrison from the Cawburn valley via engineered channel
  • Part of the Frontiers of the Roman Empire UNESCO World Heritage Site, inscribed 1987
  • Survives as subtle earthworks and channel traces in moorland landscape

This stretch of aqueduct sits within the rugged landscape north of Hadrian's Wall, carrying the legacy of Roman engineering into the hills that once marked the Empire's frontier. It served a practical purpose for the fort at Great Chesters, also known as Aesica, ensuring a steady and dependable flow of water to a garrison that lived and worked on the edge of imperial territory. Its remains preserve a quiet record of how Rome supported daily life in a remote corner of Britannia, where soldiers ...

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