Croy Hill was a Roman fort, fortlet, and probable temporary camp on the Antonine Wall, near Croy, to the north east of the village in Scotland. Two communication platforms known as ‘expansions’ can be seen to the west of the fortlet. Alexander Park excavated the site in 1890-1891. Sir George Macdonald wrote about his excavation of the site which occurred in 1920, 1931, and 1935. At Croy Hill, the ditch in front of the rampart was not excavated by the Romans. It is likely that hard basalt and dolerite of the hill was virtually impossible to shape with Roman tools. This is the only place along the Wall where the ditch wasn't dug. There is a bath house just outside one fort. A video reconstruction of the site has been produced. At Croy Hill three religious objects have been found: one, as fragments of a relief of Jupiter Dolichenus; a second, an altar dedicated to Nymphs; and a third, identified as an altar to Mars. Other artefacts found include a bronze arm purse, a storage jar filled with ashes, and a fragment of "face mask" jar. These items are now kept in the Hunterian Museum, Glasgow along with others like the altar found at Castlecary. Only four coins have been discovered near the fort and an axe was also found near the hill. A gravestone was discovered; it shows a soldier with other men, perhaps his sons, at his side. It has been scanned and a video produced.

Croy hill's neighbouring forts were Barr Hill to the west and Westerwood to the east. The larger Roman forts of which this was not one had a nominal cohort of 1000 men but probably sheltered women and children as well although the troops were not allowed to marry. There is likely too to have been large communities of civilians around the site.

Lieux à Proximité Voir Menu
Location Image
895 m

Dullatur

Dullatur est un village situé dans le North Lanarkshire, en Écosse.
Location Image
1.0 km

Croy (North Lanarkshire)

Croy est un village situé dans le North Lanarkshire, en Écosse. En 2020, le village compte une population estimée de 1890 habitants. Croy est une ancienne communauté minière, située au sud de Kilsyth et au nord de Cumbernauld, à environ 21 km de Glasgow et 60 km d'Édimbourg, sur la principale ligne ferroviaire reliant les deux villes.
Location Image
2.3 km

Mur d'Antonin

Le mur d’Antonin est une muraille que l'empereur romain Antonin le Pieux fit construire vers 140 en Bretagne (Grande-Bretagne) par Quintus Lollius Urbicus entre le Firth of Forth et la Clyde (Écosse) et qui « doublait » au Nord la fortification (mur d'Hadrien) déjà édifiée par son père adoptif Hadrien. Ouvrage d'une longueur d'environ 63 kilomètres, il fut submergé par les invasions barbares pictes (territoire de l'Écosse actuelle) à la fin du IIe siècle.
Location Image
2.3 km

Broadwood Stadium

Le Broadwood Stadium (couramment appelé Broadwood) est un stade multifonction construit en 1994 et situé à Cumbernauld. D'une capacité de 8 029 places toutes assises, il accueille depuis sa création les matches à domicile du Clyde FC, club du championnat écossais, mais aussi, plus récemment, des Cumbernauld Colts (en), équipe de Lowland Football League, ainsi que de la Scottish Rugby Academy, West (en).
Location Image
2.5 km

Kilsyth

Kilsyth (Cill Saidhe en gaélique écossais) est une ville d'Écosse. Elle se situe à une vingtaine de kilomètres au nord de Glasgow.