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Omgeving:

GebäudeBrunnenRomischwe keller in Antikenmuseum BaselWehrturmLate roman burgus on Rhine river in 374 AD.infographic panel of murus galicus from Bselmurus gallicus near rittergassereconstruction of murus gallicus from BaselCeltic fortified settlement in 80 BCTemple of Pfaffenlohweg, RiehenSchautafelWohngebäude

Locatie:

  • Zwitserland, Basel
  • geo:47.556511,7.59041
  • Locatie precies

Period or year:

  • 300 / unknown

Classificatie:

  • Vicus of canabae
  • Zichtbaar

Identifiers:

  • vici:place=61625

Annotaties

Er zijn nog geen Nederlandstalige annotaties. Hier volgen annotaties in het Engels.

Late Roman period of Basel

From about 250 AD, a period of domestic political crises followed. In addition, there were threats from outside. Germanic peoples, such as the Alemanni, penetrated into the rich Roman provinces and attacked the population. The border of the Empire was transferred back to the Rhine. Around 270/280 AD, the Münster hill was fortified with a perimeter wall. The residences in the forecourt were abandoned, their inhabitants either moved behind the fort or emigrated. There, where Murus Gallicus used to stand, a new wall of moats was erected. For the construction parts of broken, partially representative buildings and even grave stones were used, indicating an acute threat situation.

In the 4th century, the fortification on the cathedral hill was part of the sophisticated border security system along the Rhine. In connection with this last great Roman fortress building program the name Basel is mentioned for the first time: According to the Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus emperor Valentinian stored with his troops with Basilia in the year 374. 

After the Visigoth invasions in Italy in the winter of 401/402, Rome withdrew a large part of the troop contingents from the northern provinces. Thus began the end of Roman rule. The Romans, the descendants of the Gallo-Roman population, were now largely left to their own devices. The securing of the borders got partly Alemanni and Franks as federated Rome.

The military power of the Romans ended around 454 north of the Alps with the death of the Roman army commander Aetius. A part of the Romansh population migrated, but many stayed here and arranged with the new Germanic neighbors.

Source: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basel

Late Roman period of Basel

From about 250 AD, a period of domestic political crises followed. In addition, there were threats from outside. Germanic peoples, such as the Alemanni, penetrated into the rich Roman provinces and attacked the population. The border of the Empire was transferred back to the Rhine. Around 270/280 AD, the Münster hill was fortified with a perimeter wall. The residences in the forecourt were abandoned, their inhabitants either moved behind the fort or emigrated. There, where Murus Gallicus used to stand, a new wall of moats was erected. For the construction parts of broken, partially representative buildings and even grave stones were used, indicating an acute threat situation.

In the 4th century, the fortification on the cathedral hill was part of the sophisticated border security system along the Rhine. In connection with this last great Roman fortress building program the name Basel is mentioned for the first time: According to the Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus emperor Valentinian stored with his troops with Basilia in the year 374. 

After the Visigoth invasions in Italy in the winter of 401/402, Rome withdrew a large part of the troop contingents from the northern provinces. Thus began the end of Roman rule. The Romans, the descendants of the Gallo-Roman population, were now largely left to their own devices. The securing of the borders got partly Alemanni and Franks as federated Rome.

The military power of the Romans ended around 454 north of the Alps with the death of the Roman army commander Aetius. A part of the Romansh population migrated, but many stayed here and arranged with the new Germanic neighbors.

Source: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basel

Fundamentreste und 3 als Spolien eingemauerte Grabsteine.

Der Eingang zur unterirdischen Stätte befindet sich unter der Laube am Westrand des Hofes des Schulhauses zur Mücke. Schlüssel erhältlich beim Kiosk im Münster.


In de buurt

Gebäude

Gebäude – Basilia – Basel – BS – Schweiz

Sodbrunnen

Brunnen – Basilia – Basel – BS – Schweiz

Antikenmuseum Basel

Antikenmuseum


Dit object is toegevoegd door simon op 2019-07-05. Laatst bewerkt door Werner Doenni op 2022-09-05. Persistent URI: http://vici.org/vici/61625 . Download als RDF/XML, GeoJSON, KML.
Annotatie beschikbaar onder de Creative Commons Naamsvermelding-GelijkDelen 3.0 Unported-licentie. Metadata beschikbaar onder de Creative Commons Publiek Domein Verklaring, tenzij expliciet anders aangegeven.

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