

Buy Hadrian's Wall Illustrated by Goldsworthy, Adrian (ISBN: 9781541644427) from desertcart's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders. Review: Concise but comprehensive overview and tour of “The Wall” - This is a short but easy to read and quite comprehensive introduction and a handy little guide to Hadrian’s Wall which is targeted at the general public. The main text makes up about 150 pages divided into an introduction and 10 chapters although each of these also contains photos and illustrations explaining how the Wall was built and showing some of the types of auxiliary troops that occupied it. While the approach is roughly chronological, the book also contains dedicated chapters on “building and manning the Wall”, on the interactions between the Wall and the towns and soldiers and civilians and on Life on the Wall. The author also brings together in a seamless way the narrative sources, the findings of multiple excavations of various parts of Hadrian’s Wall (and, to a lesser extent, Antonin’s Wall) over more than a century and a half. He also throws in some literary references and bedtime tales - Kipling’s Puck of Pook’s Hills and the Roman centurion of the 30th legion. These might arise some childhood memories (and not only the author’s by the way) even if – as the author shows in the rest of this little booklet - the Wall was garrisoned by auxiliaries as opposed to legionaries, and if the 30th never seems to have served in Britannia. This impressive little book ends with a tenth chapter that contains the core information that you need to know to visit the main sites of the Wall and its main museums. IT is completed with a short but extremely useful list of “suggestions for further reading”. Five stars with no hesitation for a remarkable little piece that is small enough to fit in your pocket when visiting. Review: Great guide to what is there - Short and to the point: scholarly and informative. Great guide to what is there.
| Best Sellers Rank | 2,623,155 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 866 in History (Books) 268,232 in Arts & Photography (Books) |
| Customer reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (252) |
| Dimensions | 13.65 x 1.91 x 20 cm |
| Edition | Illustrated |
| ISBN-10 | 1541644425 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1541644427 |
| Item weight | 1.05 kg |
| Language | English |
| Part of series | The Landmark Library |
| Print length | 192 pages |
| Publication date | 10 April 2018 |
| Publisher | Basic Books |
J**S
Concise but comprehensive overview and tour of “The Wall”
This is a short but easy to read and quite comprehensive introduction and a handy little guide to Hadrian’s Wall which is targeted at the general public. The main text makes up about 150 pages divided into an introduction and 10 chapters although each of these also contains photos and illustrations explaining how the Wall was built and showing some of the types of auxiliary troops that occupied it. While the approach is roughly chronological, the book also contains dedicated chapters on “building and manning the Wall”, on the interactions between the Wall and the towns and soldiers and civilians and on Life on the Wall. The author also brings together in a seamless way the narrative sources, the findings of multiple excavations of various parts of Hadrian’s Wall (and, to a lesser extent, Antonin’s Wall) over more than a century and a half. He also throws in some literary references and bedtime tales - Kipling’s Puck of Pook’s Hills and the Roman centurion of the 30th legion. These might arise some childhood memories (and not only the author’s by the way) even if – as the author shows in the rest of this little booklet - the Wall was garrisoned by auxiliaries as opposed to legionaries, and if the 30th never seems to have served in Britannia. This impressive little book ends with a tenth chapter that contains the core information that you need to know to visit the main sites of the Wall and its main museums. IT is completed with a short but extremely useful list of “suggestions for further reading”. Five stars with no hesitation for a remarkable little piece that is small enough to fit in your pocket when visiting.
P**L
Great guide to what is there
Short and to the point: scholarly and informative. Great guide to what is there.
D**N
Excellent book!
Excellent book. Nicely bound, we’ll written. A very informative account from a very knowledgeable author.
P**E
Recommended
An excellent succinct book that complements his other more detailed works - recommended.
G**Y
Outstanding
A superb read by a superb historian
R**L
Book review
OK book - easily read - a bit too superficial for me. (I'm a history buff!)
S**0
Excellent
A must for the history buff.
C**N
Four Stars
bought as a gift.
E**O
This is a departure from Goldworthy's titles that I have read in the past. His triumphs with books like "Pax Romana" and "Augustus" are dense, brilliant, and hundreds of pages long. "Hadrian's Wall" is different. First, it is less than 200 pages in length, inclusive of front and end matter. Next it has pictures and maps throughout that usually appear at the most convenient location in text. Brevity aside, Goldworthy's writing is always superb, and he does not disappoint here. The work is very accessible and readable, yet it provides great detail on the wall, the Roman Army, and Roman Britain as a whole. Moreover, there is no scholar better qualified to discuss the Roman Army than Mr. Goldworthy. The book was a quick and pleasant read that leaves one wanting to visit the wall.
F**R
Quite a thin book with not many pages for the price. I am very disappointed with this book. I expected something with more depth regarding Hadrian's Wall.
M**T
As stated by other reviewers, a quick and pleasant read; I would recommend for a weekend beach trip or a long flight. Topic may be a bit dull for some readers of Roman history as Adrian relays descriptions of the wall and its ancillary structures. "Hadrian's Wall" is not nearly as actioned packed as “Punic Wars” and “Cannae” (no fault of his own!), which is to be expected. However, if you are into reading lengths of foundations, heights of walls, and depths of pits, this is your book (luckily, I am). All in all, I would recommend!
S**T
What a short but great read. A perfect description of a wonderful landmark. Another good glimpse into history!
R**L
4 stars simply because it's the best mouse in a horse show. It's obvious from the lack of books available on the subject that there is not anything like a major interest regarding the subject; no one willing to spend the time and effort to do a really good effort on the subject finds it profitable to do so. When we went to the visitors’ center near Gilsland, my wife was probably not alone in wondering why we had ‘wasted the time’ to get here; I touched the stones placed by the Legionnaires some 2,000 years ago and was pleased. We had a good lunch in Carlisle soon after, so all was well. Graphically, the book is a total failure. On pg. 16, there is what purports to be a map of the Wall. Obviously, any map of a lengthy wall requires a landscape vs. a portrait orientation. In this case, the landscape format is jammed crosswise into the portrait page in a small format. By actual measure, the initial caps on the city/fort names measure some .035” (.09mm) in height. The features noted on the map (rivers, etc) did not get such a generous allotment. This is inexcusable. If a map is intended to convey information, it must be sized to do so. I don’t propose to be an editor, but the author through the publisher ought to be embarrassed to have their names attached to such a pathetic effort. The remainder of the photos and illustrations are such as to be an embarrassment to a 1925 National Geographic magazine issue; I have some, I know. This is the 21st century; The text makes it barely worth the price; Goldsworthy presents what we know about the wall clearly. Equally, he clearly presents what we assume about the wall, and never confuses the two. We’re left with impressions and what we can hope to be knowledge of how it was built and why, how it was used, how it was altered, bypassed and then again modified and employed. All within the social, military and commercial contexts of the time(s). Wonderful work on the text; the books suffers from what should be easily corrected graphic mistakes. This is the 21st century; manipulating graphics is within the skill set of your 15 year old nephew, for pete’s sake.
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