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Roman Victory statue, Chesters Roman Fort Museum, Northumberland, England
Roman stone statue of the winged goddess Victory, found at the East gateway to Housesteads Roman Fort in 1852, at Chesters Roman Fort Museum, at Chesters Roman Fort or Cilurnum, managed by English Heritage, Northumberland, England. Hadrian's Wall was built 73 miles across Britannia, now England, 122-128 AD, under the reign of Emperor Hadrian, ruled 117-138, to mark the Northern extent of the Roman Empire and guard against barbarian attacks from the Picts to the North. The wall was fortified with milecastles with 2 turrets in between, and a fort about every 5 Roman miles. The Hadrian's Wall Path, an 84-mile coast to coast long distance footpath, runs alongside it at his point. Picture by Manuel Cohen
Unique Identifier
AR9185526
Type
Image
Purpose
Public
Size
4115px × 5906px
Photo Credit
Manuel Cohen / Art Resource, NY
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Tags
ARCHAEOLOGICAL
Archaeology
ARCHEOLOGICAL
archeology
Border
BOUNDARY
Britain
Britannia
British
Collection
color
Costume
England
English
english heritage
FIGURE
FOOTPATH
FORT
Goddess
Great Britain
HADRIAN
Hadrian's Wall
HERITAGE
History
IMAGE
INDOORS
INSIDE
interior
LIMIT
MC
MUSEUM
MYTHOLOGICAL
MYTHOLOGY
Niche
Northumberland
Path
Roman
Roman Britain
Roman Empire
ROMAN WALL
Sculpture
SITE
Statue
Stone
TOURISM
Tourist Attraction
Travel
UK
UNESCO
UNESCO WORLD HERITAGE SITE
United Kingdom
VERTICAL
victory
Wall
WINGED