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A commanding position

Two raised expansions, which can still be seen attached to the south face of the Antonine Wall rampart, may have been used for signalling beacons. 

Croy Hill is an ideal lookout spot: at about 120m above sea level, it’s one of the highest spots on the Antonine Wall, and features excellent views of the surrounding countryside.  

Grassy area with trees in background and information panel in foreground, faint rainbow in distance

The fort that was

Historians investigating Croy Hill in the 1700s noted that traces of the fort were either indistinct or totally levelled, and a hamlet was flourishing on the site.

Excavations in the 1920s and 1930s uncovered much of the plan of the fort, revealing it enclosed an area of an acre and a half. The fort featured a headquarters building, a granary, a stone-built well and an altar to the nymphs.

Other Roman finds included coins depicting emperors Trajan and Domitian, a bronze arm purse and fragments of a face mask 

Discover more on trove.scot

See archive photographs of Croy Hill, plus archaeology notes and more on trove.scot. 

Croy Hill on trove.scot

Frontier of an empire

The Antonine Wall was the Roman Empire’s north-western frontier. Built on the orders of Emperor Antoninus Pius in the years following AD 140, it ran for 37 miles (60km) across Scotland’s central belt, from modern Bo’ness on the Firth of Forth to Old Kilpatrick on the River Clyde.

Rather than a stone wall, the Antonine Wall consisted of a turf rampart 3–4 metres high on a stone base, possibly topped with a timber palisade. It was fronted by a wide and deep ditch, much of which is still visible today. Forts along the wall provided accommodation for the troops and acted as secure crossing points. All forts were linked by a road called the Military Way, which ran behind the rampart.

When it was completed, the Antonine Wall was the most complex frontier ever built by the Roman Army. It was the Romans’ last linear frontier, and was only occupied for about 20 years before it was abandoned in the AD 160s.

Large roman head sculpture beside a path surrounded by grass and trees
A replica distance stone and a Roman head sculpture called Silvanus were recently installed just east of Croy Hill at Nethercroy.

Statement of Significance

You can find out more about the Antonine Wall by downloading our Statement of Significance.

Read more
A stonemason in HES-branded clothing using a selection of hand tools to work on a piece of carved stone.

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