Curated Itinerary
Frontiers of the Roman Empire: the Limes Route
The Limes left to right: Tyneside forts, Hadrian’s and Antonine Walls, Xanten’s re-raised town, the Saalburg reconstruction and the Danube capitals of the frontier.
This itinerary follows the Frontiers of the Roman Empire, the UNESCO family of listings that began with Hadrian’s Wall in 1987 and now runs from Britain to the Danube. Eleven stops read the north-west frontier left to right: the Tyne forts and Hadrian’s Wall, Scotland’s short-lived Antonine line, the rebuilt Roman town at Xanten, the reconstructed Saalburg fort, Biriciana on the Raetian overland limes, and the Danube pair of Carnuntum and Gerulata.
The connecting idea is the frontier as a single machine — wall, road, fort, port and river working together — and the route deliberately mixes earthworks with the museums and reconstructions that make them speak, from Vindolanda’s wooden letters to Carnuntum’s working Roman baths.
Treat it as three trips: a week on the Wall from Newcastle or Carlisle, the German stops paired with Cologne, Frankfurt and Nuremberg, and a Vienna day for the Danube gate. Walk one stretch of wall path in honest bad weather — it is the most authentic exhibit on the route.
Before you go
A word from your host
Alternate earthworks with museums or the grass all blurs: Vindolanda's letters, the Hunterian's distance slabs and Carnuntum's rebuilt baths carry the human half of the story. The wall path in bad weather is the honest exhibit.
Getting around
Newcastle and Carlisle bracket the British week, with the wall path and the AD122 bus between them. Xanten, Saalburg and Weißenburg pair with Cologne, Frankfurt and Nuremberg; Carnuntum and Gerulata are one day from Vienna or Bratislava.
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