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Northumberland Genealogy Resources & Parish Registers. Direct link to this description.

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NORTHUMBERLAND, the most northern of the comities of England, is a maritime shire, being bounded on the east by the North Sea or German Ocean, on the west by the county of Cumberland and Roxburghshire in Scotland, on the north by the lowlands of Scotland, from which it is separated by the river Tweed, and on the south by Durham, from which it is separated by the rivers Tyne and Derwent; its length from north to south is about 6. Berwickshire it becomes nearly a point: the districts of Norhamshire and Islandshire in the north, adjoining Berwick and Bedlingtonshire in the south- east, and formerly belonging to Durham, were annexed to Northumberland by the Acts 2 and 3 William IV. Vic. cap. 6. 1. Holy Island, near Berwick- on- Tweed, belongs to Northumberland, with which it is connected by a narrow isthmus about two miles in length, which is left almost dry at the ebb of the tide: the island is about six miles in circumference, and contains 3,3. Farne Islands, which are farther from the coast, also belong to this county. The area of the county is 1,2. England- Yorkshire, Lincolnshire, Norfolk and Devon being larger: it is, however, not so thickly populated as several other counties, and ranks eighteenth in number of inhabitants. The population at the several censuses has been as follows: 1.

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Of this number there were 2. The number of houses were: -inhabited, 7. The population is chiefly descended from the Northumbrian English of Northumberland, Durham, and the Lowlands, with very few South and Middle English. There are a few Scotch and Irish.

The early history of Northumberland, which, as its name imports, originally comprised within its limits all that district lying north of the Humber, is obscure. Beyond the names of a few rivers, as the Tyne and the Tweed, in which an Iberian etymology is to be recognized, we have no traces of the people who held it before the Celts, who were there found and subdued by the Romans, who, about A. D. 8. 0 had traversed Northumberland, and reached the Tay, and gradually mingling with the native population, left upon them the impress of their habits and refinement. The Romans occupied the county very thickly, as is attested not only by the remains that have been found from time to time, but by the names given by their English successors to their garrisons, towns, fortified camps, roads and other settlements, among the most interesting of which is the great wall of Hadrian, constructed as a protection against the maraudings of the North Britons. The Roman Wall.- The great Roman wall, extending from Wallsend on the Tyne to Bowness on the Solway Firth, a distance of about 7. A stone wall, with a ditch on its northern side.

A continuous earthwork, always to the south of this wall, but at varying distances, according to the nature of the country, and consisting of three ramparts of unequal size and a ditch between the two northernmost. Stations, castles and watch towers, generally placed between the two lines of fortifications, but not unfrequently south of them, and sometimes to the north of the stone wall; and there were also roads communicating between all these and extending at certain points to the north and south. Whether these several parts constitute a single work, reared by one person, or whether they represent distinct works, constructed by different builders, has been much disputed, some writers attributing the earthwork or “vallum” to Julius Agricola and Hadrian, and assigning the stone wall wholly to Severus; while others, admitting that Severus may have repaired the wall, assert that the fortifications as a whole were planned and executed by Hadrian alone; the latter view is that adopted by the best authorities on the subject, and it may therefore be concluded that the wall was begun about A. D. 1. 19, the year in which Hadrian arrived in Britain, and it was completed after his departure, probably in about two years, by his legate and propraetor, Aulus Platorius Nepos. The course taken by the wall, though generally in a straight line, rises gradually on leaving Newcastle for about one- half of its entire length, and then falls, though less gradually, to Carlisle; and where, at different stages, its course becomes irregular, these deviations have been caused by the necessity of seizing upon the highest points as often as they fell in the way.

No part of the stone wall is now perfect, and its original height is therefore a matter of some conjecture, but it is estimated to hare reached an elevation, including the battlements, of from 1. The ditch protecting the wall on the north was excavated with great labour, sometimes through masses of rock, and its dimensions are still considerable, being in places from 3.

The ramparts of the “vallum,” or second wall, though composed principally of earth, also contain stone in large quantities, and are now at their highest points about 7 feet in height; the ditch between them is somewhat smaller than that described above, and the two principal ramparts run at a distance of about 2. The stations (Castra stativa) were permanent camps, established at intervals, averaging 4 miles each, along the line of the wall, and occupied by bodies of troops, either alas or cohortes, under the command of prefects and tribunes.

The number of these stations, as given in the " Notitia Dignitatum et Administrationum a species of Roman army list, compiled at the beginning of the 5th century, appears to have been 2. With the assistance of this list and the evidence afforded by the wall and the stations themselves, the ancient sites and designations of 1.

These, beginning from the mouth of the Tyne westwards, are as follows: -1. Segedunum (Wallsend); 3. Pons AElii (Newcastle- on- Tyne); 3. Condereum (Benwell); 4. Vindobala (Rudchester, near Wylam- on- Tyne); 5. Hunnum (Halton Chesters, near Corbridge); 6. Cilurnum (Chesters, near Hexham); 7.

Procolitia (Carrawburgh, near Hexham); 8. Borcovicus (Housesteads, in Thorngrafton, Haltwhistle); 9. Vindolana (Chesterholm, at Wall Town, Haltwhistle); 1. AEsica (Great Chesters, also at Wall Town, Haltwhistle); 1.

Magna (Carvoran, at Thirlwall, Haltwhistle); 1. Watch Man Up Online Idigitaltimes more. Amboglanna (Birdoswald).

The last of these is in Cumberland, and the remaining six stations, up to Bowness, the assumed site of Tunnocelum, have not yet been certainly determined. Watch Breakin` Online Forbes.

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