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How did 2nd century Romans decide where to build Hadrian's wall? It is located exactly at the narrowest east-west section of the island. They had no laser theodolites, lenses, aerial observation methods, or map stores.

Amazingly enough, they built a second more northerly wall at another narrows, so coincidence has to be ruled out.

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    It's only about 75 miles across, and the inlet of Solway Firth would fix the western end. Seems somewhat obvious to be honest. Jan 21, 2016 at 11:34
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    Yes, the location of Antonine's wall is at a location only 39 miles wide compared to the 73 of Hadrian's. But the point is really to understand how, for both walls, the Romans could find these two narrow points. It is obvious if you have a 20th century map or arial recon. But the Romans had to have known the width of the island for a considerable north/south distance to have been able to locate the walls so optimally.
    – jjhman
    Jan 23, 2016 at 1:26
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    If you stand on a hill, you can see how the coast goes. It isn't that hard.
    – Oldcat
    Jan 25, 2016 at 23:14
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    Finding the narrowest distance hardly sounds like a challenge for the brilliance of Roman architects.
    – turinsbane
    Feb 20, 2016 at 2:55
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    Also (going by memory of having biked along much of it, some years ago), a lot of it is built at the top of a steep north-facing slope, making it harder to attack.
    – jamesqf
    Feb 20, 2016 at 19:38

5 Answers 5

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The Romans were good surveyors. Vitruvius described surveying tools and methods in a book that was still used in the Middle Ages, hundreds of years after it was written.

By laying out stakes at fixed distances and using a plumb with simple sighting rods, it is very easy to lay out squares, lines, triangles, etc., and to measure the distances between different points. The Romans divided huge tracts of land into very precise squares and in many places in Italy and France, those plots of land still exist and are used as property boundaries today.

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    I remember being told at school, that to get their roads straight (and they are still the straightest roads in Britain) that they used bonfires on calm days. But Ermine Sreet which runs from London to Lincoln, is about 150 miles long. Quite remarkable.
    – WS2
    Jan 21, 2016 at 11:11
  • But all that is of nothing to the question as to how the Ancient Egyptians built the pyramids. And they pre-dated the Romans by as much as the Romans pre-date us!
    – WS2
    Jan 21, 2016 at 11:24
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    @WS2 We're pretty sure how the Egyptians built the pyramids. The amazing part is how people think you can't get big stuff done without computers and lasers and bulldozers.
    – Schwern
    Jan 24, 2016 at 0:40
  • @Schwern And cranes?
    – WS2
    Jan 24, 2016 at 10:37
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The technology to determine the narrowest point in northern England is as nothing compared to that necessary for supplying Roman towns with running water and baths, as with the Nimes Aqueduct in Southern France, shown here at the Pont du Gard crossing of Gardon River.

enter image description here

The Fontaine d'Eure, at 76 m (249 ft) above sea level, is only 17 m (56 ft) higher than the repartition basin in Nîmes, but this provided a sufficient gradient to sustain a steady flow of water to the 50,000 inhabitants of the Roman city. The aqueduct's average gradient is only 1 in 3,000. It varies widely along its course, but is as little as 1 in 20,000 in some sections.

Those sections where the gradient is only 1:20,000, or 1m in 20km, are deliberate not accidental, designed to allow the Pont du Gard section to be considerably lower, and easier to build, than would have been required by an even gradient.

Further note that while the isthmus of Hadrian's Wall is only 118km long, contemporaneously Roman Engineers were undertaking the building of a 170km tunnel aqueduct, the Gadra Aqueduct, to supply the city of Gadra in Jordan with water.

In summary, the Romans were excellent engineers and knew well how to design and survey large tracts and structures. It is faulty reasoning to assume that the absence of modern technology made such feats impossible.

Note also, from this outline of ancient measuring devices:

It is evident from his description that the dioptra differs from the modern theodolite in only two important respects. It lacks the added convenience of two inventions not available to Hero - the compass and the telescope.

Update:

It's worth noting that a drop of 1:20,000 equates to only 50 cm over 10 km. In that same 10 km stretch the earth curves by about 10m, or 20 times as much.

d = (10 km / 10,000 km) * 10 km = 100 km / 10,000 = 100,000 m / 10,000 = 10 m

One can only engineer such a slight grade with a very accurate value for the Earth's radius - and they performed all those calculations in Roman numerals!

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    When I was last there my then teenage children wanted me to walk across the top section - which they and many other people did. There is no wall and a direct drop on both sides, though rather wider than it looks. But it was far too potentially vertigo-inducing for me.
    – WS2
    Jan 24, 2016 at 10:40
  • It goes without saying that the Romans did some really great engineering. Even the Egyptians were great surveyors. However no one has answered the question as far as I can see. The questions is not were they good surveyors, did they have instruments. The question is: how did they know, on an island measuring nearly 500 miles, north to south, where the two most narrow latitudes were? They would either have had to know the width of the island at every latitude or had some other method of analysis. Just because they had surveyors doesn't mean they had the time to measure the entire island.
    – jjhman
    Jan 25, 2016 at 3:03
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    @jjhman: Yes, they had a dioptra, which is essentially the same device as a theodolite but without modern optics or a magnetic compass. Labour was cheap - Caesar could build 25 miles of entrenched 20 foot high fortifications in roughly 6 weeks at ALesia, because 50,000 labourers is a lot of labourers. Jan 25, 2016 at 4:52
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Measuring, surveying, and map making are ancient practices by the Greeks, Romans, Egyptians, Druids, Chinese... pretty much everyone knew how to trace and measure lines and angles over a long distance.

Surveying is based on geometry, in particular triangles, and that was all well known at the time. By the time Hadrian's Wall was begun (122 AD), Euclid's Elements and Apollonius's Conics had been around for centuries, and Ptolemy was working out how large the Earth was and the distance to the Moon.

The basic tools are things like sticks, string, chains and weights. Distances can be measured by driving a stick of known height into the ground, and then measuring its apparent height from some distance away. If you can see two known points, you can use triangulation to measure where you are. Straight lines can be achieved by making sure several sticks line up, known as "range poles". Leveling can be done with a plumb bob (a weight on a string). For longer distances where accuracy wasn't important, the Romans even had a basic odometer that could be wheeled along.

You may be interested in the book Roman Surveying by Isaac Moreno Gallo which covers the technology, instruments and techniques in detail.

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Hadrian's Wall runs along the top of the Whin Sill, a geological feature that presents people approaching from the north with a sheer cliff. So the Wall's height was boosted in many places by a natural feature. The Roman's didn't just take advantage of the relative narrowness of the island there -- they used the geography to make the Wall more defensible.

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The Romans knew where to build Hadrian's Wall because they knew where they needed or wanted to have a wall.

Nobody knows exactly why Hadrian's Wall was built. But the Romans ruled the lands of the Brigantes and other tribes to the south, and it is not known how much control they had over the tribes to the north of the Wall. In any case the Wall made it easy to control who traveled north and south, and for what reasons, in that area, which may or may not have been the imperial border at the time.

If you go with the most simple theory, that the Wall marked the border of direct imperial control at that time, then if the Romans wanted to build a wall at the border they either had to build the wall where the border was, or conquer land to the north, or give up control of land to the south.

So you could say that the Romans built the wall where it was because that was where they wanted to have a frontier at that time.

As for knowing where the narrow parts of the Island of Great Britain were, the Romans already had various surveys done in their province of Britain to lay out various Roman roads, and had a good idea of how wide Britain was at various latitudes within the province.

To find out how wide Britain was to the north of the Province of Britain, the Romans could maybe ASK people who came from north of the border to trade, perhaps PAYING traders from the north for information.

The Roman armies had also marched deep into Scotland, far to the north of Hadrian's Wall, or even the Antonine Wall, long before Hadrian's Wall was built, and left remains of forts far to the north of the two later walls, so the Romans had probably had done a lot of surveying of the parts of Scotland they marched through and built forts in.

After the Battle of Mons Graupius in 84 AD Governor Agricola ordered his fleet to sail around Scotland to prove that Britain was an island and to receive the submission of the Orkney Islands. No doubt the fleet would have made maps of their journey and noted the latitudes of peninsulas and bays that affected the width of Britain.

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