Castlehill was a Castra on the Antonine Wall in Scotland.
It's sometimes hard to see the exact line of the Antonine Wall at the location but there is some existing signage.
In the 1900s several historians gave their own idiosyncratic descriptions of the site.
The first, badly weathered, slab has four rosettes between the shields and the inscription. It was found in 1803 on Low Millochan farm. The farm, later called East Millichen, is near Summerston. It was built into a dovecote and records the building of 3666.5 paces of wall by the Sixth Legion. MacDonald describes the work as course and relates that some of the abbreviations are unusual. He suggests that it stood side-by-side with what he calls no. 6 (RIB 2193) at Summerston. On the similar Castlehill slab (RIB 2196) he suggests the stone-cutter has blundered and made a letter P where he should have a letter F (for Fidelis) on the fourth line. The Castlehill slab also records 3666.5 paces although the units used are a matter of ongoing research.
Another was found by a neighbouring farmer in 1826.
A Roman altar was found in the same year.
Many Roman forts along the wall held garrisons of around 500 men. Larger forts like Castlecary and Blatobulgium 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.
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