THE inspiration for The Wall in the best-selling books and TV series "Game of Thrones" was Hadrian's Wall, author George RR Martin has revealed.
The author says that seeing Hadrian’s Wall planted the seeds of inspiration back in the 1980s for his popular fantasy tale.
In an interview with American magazine Rolling Stone, George RR Martin said it was the landmark in northern England which first got him thinking about the plot and inspired The Wall, an integral part of the series.
"I was in England visiting a friend, and as we approached the border of England and Scotland, we stopped to see Hadrian's Wall," Martin says.
"I stood up there and I tried to imagine what it was like to be a Roman legionary, standing on this wall, looking at these distant hills."
He adds, "It was a very profound feeling. For the Romans at that time, this was the end of civilization; it was the end of the world. We know that there were Scots beyond the hills, but they didn't know that," he says.
"It could have been any kind of monster. It was the sense of this barrier against dark forces – it planted something in me," the author recalls.
"But when you write fantasy, everything is bigger and more colorful, so I took the Wall and made it three times as long and 700 feet high, and made it out of ice."
In the TV show, The Wall is a massive fortification which stretches for 300 miles along the northern border of the Seven Kingdoms, defending the realm from the wildlings who live beyond.
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