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Managed by North East Museums on behalf of North Tyneside Council
This February half term, make your own Sentius Tectonicus
Who is Sentius Tectonicus?
Sentius was the name of the centurion responsible for supervising the section of Hadrian’s Wall near Segedunum.
A stone inscribed with his name was found near the fort.
Tectonicus refers to the sculpture’s design as an architectural man, with the centurion’s torso emerging from a Roman four storey building.
Did you know...?
Sentius Tectonicus is sculpture of a Roman centurion soldier marking the eastern end of Hadrian's Wall.
The sculpture is eight and a half feet (2.8m) high.
He was created by artist John O’Rourke.
The sculpture links Segedunum’s Roman heritage and the site’s more recent industrial past.
Sentius is made from corten steel, the same material as Anthony Gormley’s ‘Angel of the North’.
You could use:
Recycled materials, such as cardboard boxes, straws, cartons.
Modelling clay, plasticine or playdoh.
If you’re out on a walk or in the garden, you could use natural materials like sticks and leaves.
You could use building blocks or Lego.
If you prefer drawing or painting, then you could create a picture of Sentius instead.
Imagine if Sentius could come to life...
How would he move? How would he sound?
Would he be friendly or frightening?