Akeman Street is the name given to a Roman road in eastern England that runs from Cambridgeshire to the north coast of Norfolk. It is approximately 75 miles (120 km) long and runs roughly north-northeast. The road was constructed on top of an earlier trackway some time in the 2nd Century CE, or later, and it has been speculated that it was part of the creation of an imperial estate under Hadrian.
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| - Akeman Street (Cambridgeshire) (en)
- Rua Akeman (Cambridgeshire) (pt)
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| - Akeman Street is the name given to a Roman road in eastern England that runs from Cambridgeshire to the north coast of Norfolk. It is approximately 75 miles (120 km) long and runs roughly north-northeast. The road was constructed on top of an earlier trackway some time in the 2nd Century CE, or later, and it has been speculated that it was part of the creation of an imperial estate under Hadrian. (en)
- A rua Akeman é o nome dado a uma estrada romana no leste da Inglaterra que vai de Cambridgeshire até à costa norte de Norfolk. Tem aproximadamente 75 mi (121 km) de comprimento e estende-se aproximadamente de norte a nordeste. A estrada foi construída por cima de um caminho anterior em algum momento do século II d.C., ou até mais tarde, e especulou-se que era parte da criação de uma propriedade imperial sob o governo de Adriano. (pt)
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| - Akeman Street is the name given to a Roman road in eastern England that runs from Cambridgeshire to the north coast of Norfolk. It is approximately 75 miles (120 km) long and runs roughly north-northeast. Akeman Street joined Ermine Street near Wimpole Hall, then ran northeast to the settlement at Durolipons (now Cambridge), where it crossed a Roman road now known as the Via Devana. Within north Cambridge, the road followed the present-day Stretten Avenue, Carlton Way and Mere Way running northeast past Landbeach before joining the present A10 and on towards Ely and The Fens. It then reached Denver and the coast at Brancaster. The road was constructed on top of an earlier trackway some time in the 2nd Century CE, or later, and it has been speculated that it was part of the creation of an imperial estate under Hadrian. (en)
- A rua Akeman é o nome dado a uma estrada romana no leste da Inglaterra que vai de Cambridgeshire até à costa norte de Norfolk. Tem aproximadamente 75 mi (121 km) de comprimento e estende-se aproximadamente de norte a nordeste. A rua Akeman juntou-se à rua Ermine perto de Wimpole Hall e depois segue para o nordeste até ao assentamento em Durolipons (hoje Cambridge), onde cruzou uma estrada romana agora conhecida como Via Devana. No norte de Cambridge, a estrada seguia a actual Stretten Avenue, Carlton Way e Mere Way, passando a nordeste por Landbeach antes de se juntar à actual A10 e seguir em direcção a Ely e The Fens. De seguida, chegava a Denver e à costa em Brancaster. A estrada foi construída por cima de um caminho anterior em algum momento do século II d.C., ou até mais tarde, e especulou-se que era parte da criação de uma propriedade imperial sob o governo de Adriano. (pt)
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