The
Devil's Causeway passes the village less than to the west. The causeway is a
Roman road which starts at
Portgate on
Hadrian's Wall, north of
Corbridge, and extends northwards across Northumberland to the mouth of the
River Tweed at
Berwick-upon-Tweed. A hoard of Roman coins discovered by metal-detecting enthusiasts on a farm near Longhorsley, Northumberland, could be evidence that entrepreneurial native Northumbrian settlers were recycling old bronze coins and making trinkets to sell back to soldiers in the Roman army, according to experts. The hoard of 70 Roman coins – 61
sestercii and 9
dupondii — dates from the reign of Emperor
Vespasian to the reign of Emperor
Marcus Aurelius (AD69–180). For part of this period, during the reign of
Antoninus Pius, the
Antonine Wall, built between
Glasgow and
Edinburgh, and not Hadrian's Wall, marked the northern frontier of the
Roman Empire in
Britain, and for a short period, Northumberland, which had until then been barbarian territory, became part of the Roman Empire. The hoard was found close to the route of the Devil's Causeway, the main Roman road which ran north through Northumberland. Roman expert
Lindsay Allason-Jones, Director of Archaeological Museums at
Newcastle University, where the coins were put on display, said: "What makes this find unusual is that it dates from a period when there was no Roman fort close to Longhorsley, although there were a number of native settlement sites in the area". Linden Hall was built in 1812 for
Charles William Bigge, a member of one of Northumberland's most notable merchant and banking families. He had acquired the estate from the
Earl of Carlisle, whose family had held it since the time of
Henry I. His close friend, Sir
Charles Monck, designed the mansion, which consisted of six large rooms on each floor, a sweeping staircase with a domed lantern above, and a basement in the main hall. In addition there were kitchens, servants' quarters, a schoolroom, a brew house, a slaughterhouse and stables. In 1861 it passed from the Bigge family into the hands of the Ames, who held it until 1904, when they moved to Ghyllheugh, their Victorian baronial-style house nearby. Linden Hall then passed to the
Adamson family, until 1963. The Hall was purchased in 1978 from John Liddell and opened as a first class hotel three years later. ==Religious sites==