Hadrian's Wall 1,900th anniversary events unveiled
- Published
Events for a year-long festival to mark the 1,900th anniversary of the building of Hadrian's Wall have been unveiled.
The 73-mile (118km) wall from Tyneside to the Solway Firth, the northern boundary of the Roman empire, was constructed between AD122 and AD130.
A festival will run from 24 January 2022, Emperor Hadrian's birthday, until 23 December, which was the ancient Roman holiday of Saturnalia.
Walks, exhibitions, re-enactments and talks will be part of the celebrations.
More than 150 events, including a Roman-themed city of light and travelling Saturnalia celebrations, are just some of the things that will await visitors over the next year, with more to be added, external in the coming months.
The celebrations are being co-ordinated by Hadrian's Wall Partnership - a voluntary body made up of organisations responsible for the wall's Unesco World Heritage Site status - in collaboration with local organisations, communities and individuals.
Chair of the partnership, Lady Jane Gibson, said: "After many months of planning and consultation, it is a great pleasure to be announcing more information about the festival.
"It has been fantastic to see how the Wall has provided so much inspiration to people and how activity organisers have found new and exciting ways to tell its stories."
Follow BBC North East & Cumbria on Twitter, external, Facebook, external and Instagram, external. Send your story ideas to northeastandcumbria@bbc.co.uk, external.
Related topics
- Published7 November 2021