A Tour of Historic Chester's Roman Walls

in Pinmapple2 years ago (edited)

Read this post on TravelFeed.io for the best experience



Chester’s classic medieval timber frame buildings.
Chester's classic medieval timber frame buildings.

History, Sunny Walks and Roman Gardens

Chester on a Sunny afternoon is one of the best cities in the North West of England to take a wander around and soak in the atmosphere. Listed highly on things to do in Chester is walking the historical Roman Walls which pass many of Chester's best historical sights and areas of beauty. 

Chester has everything a traveler of leisure might like; quaint cafes, restaurants, and we even discovered an artisan Donut shop.

A view of Chester cathedral from the walls.
A view of Chester cathedral from the walls.

       Around each corner is an ancient door, or medieval church.
               Around each corner is an ancient door, or medieval church.

For a writer like myself who writes fantasy fiction as part of my living, places like this are a godsend. Around each corner is a new sight to inspire and excite, a new source of lore to bend into my fictional creations.

An ominous opening at the junction of Newgate.
An ominous opening at the junction of Newgate.

Chester isn't a cheap destination for a backpacker though, so for the budget traveler, I would suggest a day trip would be enough to take in the sights and soak up the history.

I have written many posts about my home city of Liverpool (which I'll link at the end of this post) and I think for the budget traveler to the North West of England it makes much more sense to stay at one of the many hostels in Liverpool, which is a world-famous travel destination itself, and take a train ride for around £8 day return (without any station changes) to Chester.

A view of the Roman gardens from the walls.
A view of the Roman gardens from the walls.

The Roman Walls

The best way to see most of the historical sites of Chester is to walk along the Roman walls which cross over many gates, but only four of major historical significance, one of which is where the title picture for this blog was taken. 

It is important to mention at this point that we are dealing with layers of history, and although there are significant sections of the ancient walls that originally date back to Roman construction, as time passed, and the city expanded, further defensive constructions were added and parts of the walls rebuilt.

However, Chester has Britain's best-preserved Roman amphitheater and Roman gardens which can both be seen from Newgate.  

The gates of Wolfgate, Peppergate, Eastgate, and Newgate pass over many of Chester's main shopping streets giving unparalleled views of some of the city's medieval architecture.

      Approaching Eastgate’s famous clock tower.
              Approaching Eastgate's famous clock tower.

Eastgate Clock in Chester, Cheshire, England, stand on the site of the original entrance to the Roman fortress of Deva Victrix. It is a prominent landmark in the city of Chester and is said to be the most photographed clock in England after Big Ben. - wikipedia.org

Although Newgate is the most recent gate, having been rebuilt to accommodate increasing traffic by architect Sir Walter Tapper and his son in 1938, the gate was exceptionally well built in the neo-Gothic design to fit in with the rest of the city wall's architecture. 

The earliest gateway is the medieval Peppergate which was first known as Wolfeld's Gate and first recorded in the late 12th century, but archaeologists believe might actually date to before 1066.

By OpenStreetMap CC licence

After crossing Newgate and taking in the views, we descended the steps to take a closer look at both the Roman amphitheatre and burial gardens.

View of the Roman amphitheatre from Newgate.
View of the Roman amphitheatre from Newgate.

View of the Roman amphitheatre from ground level.
View of the Roman amphitheatre from ground level.

Chester's amphitheatre is the biggest known excavated site of its type in the whole of Britain. The Romans were known for their love of entertainment, especially of the gruesome type, and throughout their occupation, two amphitheatres were built on this site.

The first a smaller affair was built soon after AD 80, had stone walls and earthen banks for seating. The second amphitheatre was a much grander affair, built by the early third century the Romans had knocked down the original stone walls and built them up to encompass a large central area.

The amphitheatre was said to hold 7000 citizens at full capacity and had four entrances, one of which was dedicated to the goddess Nemesis (goddess of destiny).

A panoramic picture I took from the centre of the amphitheatre.
A panoramic picture I took from the centre of the amphitheatre.

To give some perspective of what this amphitheatre would have looked like in its heyday I took a picture of one of the plaques that litter the city providing historical facts and pictorial representations.

A pictorial representation of the 2nd build of the Roman amphitheatre.
A pictorial representation of the 2nd build of the Roman amphitheatre.

The Roman gardens were equally as interesting if only for their antiquity. But again, they held an extra fascination for me as a fantasy writer, as you can only grasp certain things from the feeling of a place, from the overall atmosphere, from running your hands over the stones or spending quiet time in meditation to place yourself in the mindset of an ancient people.

A picture of the Roman gardens taken in the shadow of the walls.
A picture of the Roman gardens taken in the shadow of the walls.

The gardens, although peaceful and beautiful today, are something of an enigma. Everything that you see here, some scattered columns, stones that seem to sit forlornly around what is left of a rather impressive fresco originate from other archaeological sites around Chester.

Remnants of a Fresco that was found at Roman bath sites.
Remnants of a Fresco that was found at Roman bath sites.

The various columns, cornices and architrave blocks displayed in the gardens came from the tops of walls spanning spaces between columns, and other remnants from Corinthian columns that might have been plundered from a monument or tomb.  

Similarly, the Fresco and a seated area seem to have come from one of the many Roman bathing halls often comprising of three rooms; frigidarium (cold room), tepidarium (warm room) and caldarium (hot room). Each room would be supplied with different temperature plunge baths of differing temperatures, providing the ancient world's version of a luxury spa and sauna.

After checking out the gardens and amphitheatre we walked along the walls towards Bridgegate checking out the amazing views of the River Dee and the weir that was built at the point where the estuary changes fully from saltwater to fresh.

Panoramic picture of the weir on the River Dee.
Panoramic picture of the weir on the River Dee.

Where a lone Heron fished diving for sprats and other small fish. I watched it for a time, waiting patiently on one leg before diving for at least a minute often emerging with nothing. The Wim Hof of the bird world! 

I was very lucky to be visiting relatives from the States who were staying in Chester in an AirBnB that was right in the heart of the old town, which had a spare room.

Our road and the view from my bedroom window.
Our road and the view from my bedroom window.

I am usually a budget traveler though, and as mentioned at the beginning of this blog I think that a day trip to Chester is easily enough to see the majority of the sights. 

Chester does of course have great nightlife and fantastic restaurants, so I would fully recommend longer stays in the city to those travelers who aren't budget orientated.

My bedroom in our townhouse.
My bedroom in our townhouse.

Even though I stayed two days in Chester, we ended up traveling out of the city the second day to visit an amazing hill fort called Beeston Castle which I will write about in another blog.

Which is part of why I recommend Chester as such a great day-trip destination. The station is central... you can literally walk two minutes to the Roman walls, or 3-4 minutes to the main shopping roads from Chester's central station.

Many thanks for joining me on my journey through historic Chester.

Please find my other postcard travel posts on the links below.

A Postcard from Liverpool - Cathedral Art and Wildflower Meadows

A Postcard from Liverpool - The Waterfront, City Sites, Zip Lines and Street Art

A Summer Postcard - Walking the River Dee

A Postcard from Liverpool - Speke Hall and River Views (Enhanced Smartphone Pics)


All pictures in this post are my own property taken by me in Chester

Footer_raj808.png

Click banner to visit the community page

Find us on twitter by clicking the banner above.

Interested in trading, buying or selling crypto?

Sign up to Bittrex here.
Sign up to Coinbase here.
Sign up to Swissborg app to instantly buy crypto here.
Use my referral link to sign up for Crypto.com and we both get $25 USD.

If You Have Found Value From this Post and Want to tip extra, Crypto Donations Are Welcomed:
►Donate Ether and ERC20 Tokens: 0x32321615174AF3Da6074Cf79DED8269cA7a8eB24
►Donate Bitcoin: bc1q8wutj8u6ush7s8mucphfxf7gzrexeywmuqm8g3
►Donate Bitcoin Cash: qzt7c0czw0q988h93jvcz2rq5gy0s3h9pg2pk700ev
►Donate Litecoin: Lfsnz3pbT5V9N6WWGRaBsgKs9EvFeqzcPm
►Donate BNB: bnb1xeu94exteel9w3g8g44e6g595kvrqlgzm0crq4
►Donate Monero: 49PovXGcM9Y7JYeRJ35W9xZGrdivvLaMbVtGc3WDv6amCm5wqA854SvJNWxaEqjTz18K5YVPj5D6619C3bvNHsrG7oD1whb
►Donate Tezos: tz1SJUkpeznKE6bEhbX81YFdUQS5BprA4ot8
►Donate XRP: r35quYTThThN7yNvkJxyhLFAPyju3tsT35


View this post on TravelFeed for the best experience.
Sort:  

I love the sentence:

from running your hands over the stones or spending quiet time in meditation to place yourself in the mindset of an ancient people.

It is just what I do when visiting the historical sight. I am amazed at how luxurious the ancient Roman bathing hall could be. I have also learned 3 new words: frigidarium (cold room), tepidarium (warm room) and caldarium (hot room).
Thank you for allowing me to join your journey through historic Chester, it is the first time for me to hear of this name though. I'm looking forword to reading your next blog about it.

Hi @kaixin

I'm glad I could help guide you through the historic city of Chester.

It is just what I do when visiting the historical sight. I am amazed at how luxurious the ancient Roman bathing hall could be.

I know what you mean, it is important to feel a place properly... my uncle who I was visiting kept getting embarrassed and calling me a Hippie... but no one was bothered other than him 😂 Yes, it is amazing how advanced the Romans were in many regards... but they were also the most ruthless and brutal force in the world at the time. The dichotomy of humankind.

I have also learned 3 new words: frigidarium (cold room), tepidarium (warm room), and caldarium (hot room).

They are interesting ancient Latin words (frigidarium/tepidarium/caldarium), but definitely not common English words in usage today, just so you know 😉

Thanks for visiting my travel blog, I have not been writing much poetry recently and what I have been writing is being saved for submission to mainstream journals. I did put up a performance piece the other day in case you're interested, it is me performing two poems at a local poetry night. But they are very political poems, and that might not be your cuppa tea as we say here 😂

Here is a YouTube version in case you want to hear the voice behind the words, I thought they might censor it but it seems they don't care about people with 13 followers on YouTube 😂:

Hi @raj808,
Thank you for participating in the #teamuk curated tag. We have upvoted your quality content.
For more information visit our discord https://discord.gg/8CVx2Am

Congratulations, your post has been added to Pinmapple! 🎉🥳🍍

Did you know you have your own profile map?
And every post has their own map too!

Want to have your post on the map too?

  • Go to Pinmapple
  • Click the get code button
  • Click on the map where your post should be (zoom in if needed)
  • Copy and paste the generated code in your post (Hive only)
  • Congrats, your post is now on the map!

Ahhhh, that is amazing @pinmapple
Thank you for including me in the publication as well.
I will be doing a follow-up post to this soon about beeston castle near to Chester and shall be sure to include a pin to pineapple so that others can find and enjoy that place.

If anything it was even more impressive than Chester city.

Congratulations @raj808! You have completed the following achievement on the Hive blockchain and have been rewarded with new badge(s):

You received more than 170000 upvotes.
Your next target is to reach 180000 upvotes.

You can view your badges on your board and compare yourself to others in the Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word STOP

Check out the last post from @hivebuzz:

We have finished upgrading our website
Support the HiveBuzz project. Vote for our proposal!

Amazing my friend, thanks for sharing this was a really nice post to experience have the best day
@raj808 !ALIVE !CTP 😎

I'm so glad you enjoyed joining me on the hostoric tour of Chester @benthomaswwd
I always think that's what a good travel post should do, sorta put you in the head of the person writing it and the experience they had.

Have a great day yourself m8

!LUV

@raj808 well you did a great job my friend have a wonderful one
!ALIVE !CTP 😎

What a great day you must have had walking around that quaint village. Great photos to go with the post. Thanks for sharing.

It was a blast @rcaine and a real eye-opener with all the ancient history of the city 🙂

Hiya, @ybanezkim26 here, just swinging by to let you know that this post made it into our Top 3 in Daily Travel Digest #1553.

Your post has been manually curated by the @pinmapple team. If you like what we're doing, please drop by to check out all the rest of today's great posts and consider supporting other authors like yourself and us so we can keep the project going!

Become part of our travel community:

Ahhhh, that is amazing @pinmapple
Thank you for including me in the publication as well @ybanezkim26.
I will be doing a follow-up post to this soon about beeston castle near Chester and shall be sure to include a pin to pineapple and check out your app as well, so that others can find and enjoy that place.

If anything Beeston Castle was even more impressive than Chester city.

Looks like a really nice visit you had. Beautiful buildings and architecture especially the ruins. Nice walk along the river.
Have a great day today 😁

Hi @littlebee4

Sry I couldn't reply yesterday, bit of a mad day.
I agree Chester's main attraction is the ancient architecture and ruins, to be honest, if it wasn't for the history evident all around you in the city it would be just another town.

I'm glad you enjoyed joining me on my explorations 🙂

Hi @raj808 👋🏻
No worries, I understand.
You are welcome, I love seeing new interesting places, especially with loads to see like architecture, ruins etc.
Have a wonderful evening! 😎

Wow!!!! Very beautiful.

I had a great trip to Chester 🙂

Simply gorgeous if it wasn´t for the weather I would love to live there. Thanks for the share on Listnerds !CTP

Cheers whywhy.

Yes, Chester is a lovely place to visit, but as you say the weather in the UK is often grey and rainy. Even in some of those pics the clouds had rolled in 😂
But it was a generally sunny day that day.

Congratulations @raj808! You received the biggest smile and some love from TravelFeed! Keep up the amazing blog. 😍 Your post was also chosen as top pick of the day and is now featured on the TravelFeed.io front page.

Thanks for using TravelFeed!
@smeralda (TravelFeed team)

PS: You can now search for your travels on-the-go with our Android App. Download it on Google Play

Thank you for for the honor of top pick of the day on travelfeed @smeralda

Although, I guess I earned it, but thank you for letting me know it has made my day 😃

I will be doing a follow-up post to this soon about Beeston castle near Chester, if anything Beeston Castle was even more impressive than Chester city.

I shall be sure to publish via travelfeed as your inbuilt SEO tools and readability tools are very good. The second I don't usually need to use much, but the SEO I can always use help with :)

awesome, I really want to visit Chester myself. The wall reminds me of the wall still in the town of Derry, NI.

This was an amazing journey indeed ... I have seen many of the homes in Chester on postcards, but never understood them in context!

Yes, it is a beautiful city and the buildings are so old. There is a long tract of history in Chester, and I like it there a lot. Been about 4 or 5 times in my life :-)

What a privilege to be able to go there!