Carrawburgh Roman Fort and Temple of Mithras - Hadrian's Wall

  • Description

    Visitor information and a section on it's history. "Carrawburgh Roman Fort is one of 16 forts along the 73-mile long Hadrian’s Wall, which was begun around AD 122. Carrawburgh housed a garrison of about 500 soldiers – first from south-west France, later from southern Belgium – responsible for defending the frontier of the Roman Empire. Occupying a slightly raised natural terrace, overlooking the Northumberland National Park, it sits between the Roman cavalry fort at Chesters and the infantry fortress at Housesteads. Nearby stands the fascinating temple to the god Mithras, built by the soldiers of Carrawburgh. Mithraism was a Roman religion inspired by a god originally worshipped in the eastern Empire. According to legend, Mithras captured and killed a sacred bull in a cave, which Mithraic temples were intended to evoke. The temple was probably built by soldiers at the fort around AD 200 and destroyed about AD 350....."
  • Owner

    English Heritage
  • Source

    Local (Co-Curate)
  • License

    What does this mean? Unknown license check permission to reuse
  • Further information

    Link: https://www.english-heritage.org.uk/visit/places/temple-of-mithras-carrawburgh-hadrians-wall/
    Resource type: Text/Website
    Added by: Simon Cotterill
    Last modified: 2 hours, 5 minutes ago
    Viewed: 9 times
    Picture Taken: Unknown
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Co-Curate is a project which brings together online collections, museums, universities, schools and community groups to make and re-make stories and images from North East England and Cumbria. Co-Curate is a trans-disciplinary project that will open up 'official' museum and 'un-officia'l co-created community-based collections and archives through innovative collaborative approaches using social media and open archives/data.

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