The Angrivarian Wall () was mentioned by the Roman historian, Tacitus ( Annals II, 19–21), in connection with the campaign by the Roman general Germanicus in 16 AD, which included the Battle of the Angrivarian Wall. It was here that the Roman legion of Germanicus and the army of Arminius had their final conflict.
The "wall" refers in this case to a defensive bank of earth or rampart, Wall being German for an embankment, not a wall.
The relevant text in the Annals (II, 19) records:
There are conflicting views today about the purpose of this earthwork. One theory is that it was an early historical border fortification between the Angrivarii and the Cherusci. Similar structures from this period have been found in Denmark, for example the Olgerdige (31 A.D.). It is also conceivable that the Angrivarian Wall was just built during the campaign of Germanicus in order to fulfil a strategic function as part of Arminius' military tactics.
Modern historical research has continued such attempts. Important contributions to the literature about the campaigns of Germanicus have been published by Dieter Timpe (1967; 1968) or Reinhard Wolters (2000; 2008), without going into great detail about the Angrivarian Wall, let alone attempting to locate it.
In the last few years, hobbyists have increasingly become involved in the search, perhaps also because of the increased public interest in Roman-Germanic history after the discovery of the Battlefield of Kalkriese and in the course of the anniversary of the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest in 2009. In terms of method, they are essentially similar to the attempts made in earlier years.
An overview of attempts to find the wall (as well as on other battles of the Germanicus campaigns) is at Google-Maps.
Examples of more recent candidates for the wall are:
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