User:Sam.roebuck/Willowford Bridge

Willowford Bridge
Cumbria, England, UK
Willowford Bridge
The remains of Willowford Roman Bridge
Willowford Bridge is located in Cumbria
Willowford Bridge
Willowford Bridge
Location in Cumbria
Coordinates54°59′29″N 2°35′31″W / 54.991347°N 2.591916°W / 54.991347; -2.591916
Grid referenceNY622664

The Willowford Crossing was a sequence of three bridges (each built on the site of the previous one) built to carry Hadrian's Wall, and latterly the Military Way across the River Irthing.

Current Site edit

The current site consists of the remains of the foundations of the bridge abutment, exposed on the east bank only. (The river is believed to have flowed immediately west of the abutment in a rocky gorge, but the course has now moved several metres further west.)


Excavations and investigations edit

  • 1924 - Findings.
  • 1940 - Findings.
  • 1985 - Findings: Finds included:.
    • Item 1
    • Item 2
  • 1986 - Findings: Finds included:.
    • Item 1
    • Item 2

Excavations were carried out on the site in 1924, 1940 and between 1985 and 1986. These uncovered a large tower and splayed abutment foundation, which represented the first phase of the original narrow bridge design. A wider bridge was later built with a massive projecting pier positioned further west. The sequence of development is mirrored where the Wall crosses the North Tyne at Chesters Roman Fort. The bridge was constructed of stonework bonded with dovetail cramps. The foundations of two further bridge piers lie 3 metres below the surface of the present riverbank. The river is believed to have flowed immediately west of the abutment in a rocky gorge). ).[1]

The first bridge edit

Milecastle XYX was a long/short-axis milecastle with Type XX gateways. Such milecastles were thought to have been constructed by the legio II Augusta/VI Victrix/XX Valeria Victrix who were based in Isca Augusta/Eboracum/Deva Victrix (Caerleon/York/Chester).[2] Ref to other similar MCs where appropriate.

The milecastle had internal/external dimensions of . . . . (other dimension details - gateways, wall thicknesses, rounded corners, etc.) Construction materials and methods. Other interesting construction facts. Internal structure details.

Excavations and investigations edit

  • Year 1 - Findings.
  • Year 2 - Findings.
  • Year 3 - Findings: Finds included:.
    • Item 1
    • Item 2
    • Item 3
  • Year 4 - Findings

The first bridge edit

Each milecastle on Hadrian's Wall had two associated turret structures. These turrets were positioned approximately one-third and two-thirds of a Roman mile to the west of the Milecastle, and would probably have been manned by part of the milecastle's garrison. The turrets associated with Milecastle XYX are known as Turret XYXA and Turret XYXB.

 
The site of Turret XYXA

Turret XYXA edit

Turret XYXA (Turret Name) is (description of position and update coordinates). (Construction details: door position, platform position, masonry, etc). (Description of current remains). (Excavation and investigation).[3]

(Other comments).

Location on Ordnance Survey 1:25 000 map: 54°59′37″N 1°44′12″W / 54.993672°N 1.736733°W / 54.993672; -1.736733 (Turret XYXA) (Ordnance Survey National Grid Coordinates: NY 8127 7043)[3]

 
The site of Turret XYXB

Turret XYXB edit

Turret XYXB (Turret Name) is (description of position and update coordinates). (Construction details: door position, platform position, masonry, etc). (Description of current remains). (Excavation and investigation).[4]

(Other comments).

Location on Ordnance Survey 1:25 000 map: 54°59′37″N 1°44′12″W / 54.993672°N 1.736733°W / 54.993672; -1.736733 (Turret XYXB) (Ordnance Survey National Grid Coordinates: NY 8127 7043)[4]

Monument Records edit

Monument Monument Number National Monuments Record Number
Milecastle XYX 22662 NZ 16 NE 5
Turret XYXA 22667 NZ 16 NE 6
Turret XYXB 22670 NZ 16 NE 7

Public Access edit

Only worth adding this section if there are extant remains. Access to Milefortlet and turrets.

References edit

  1. ^ "Willowford Bridge". Pastscape. English Heritage. Retrieved 31 Mar 2014.
  2. ^ David J Breeze and Brian Dobson (1976). Hadrian's Wall. Allen Lane. pp. 14–15. ISBN 0140271821.
  3. ^ a b "Turret XYXA". Pastscape. English Heritage. Retrieved XX May 2010. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  4. ^ a b "Turret XYXB". Pastscape. English Heritage. Retrieved XX May 2010. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)

Bibliography edit