Hadrian's Wall
Fill the gaps with the correct tenses (active or passive voice).
- In the year 122 AD, the Roman Emperor Hadrian visited his provinces in Britain.
- On his visit, the Roman soldiers told him that Pictish tribes from Britain's north had attacked them.
- So Hadrian gave the order to build a protective wall across one of the narrowest parts of the country.
- After 6 years of hard work, the Wall was finished in 128.
- It was 117 kilometres long and about 4 metres high.
- The Wall was guarded by 15,000 Roman soldiers.
- Every 8 kilometres there was a large fort in which up to 1,000 soldiers found shelter.
- The soldiers watched over the frontier to the north and checked the people who wanted to enter or leave Roman Britain.
- In order to pass through the Wall, people had to go to one of the small forts that served as gateways.
- Those forts were called milecastles because the distance from one fort to another was one Roman mile (about 1,500 metres).
- Between the milecastles there were two turrets from which the soldiers guarded the Wall.
- If the Wall was attacked by enemies, the soldiers at the turrets ran to the nearest milecastle for help or lit a fire that could be seen by the soldiers in the milecastle.
- In 383 Hadrian's Wall was abandoned .
- Today Hadrian's Wall is the most popular tourist attraction in northern England.
- In 1987, it became a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
No comments:
Post a Comment