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Aventicum

46°52′48″N 7°02′56″E / 46.880°N 7.049°E / 46.880; 7.049 (Aventicum)

Switzerland during the Roman era, showing Aventicum and the Helvetii region
Carved limestone objects from Aventicum

Aventicum was the largest town and capital of Roman Switzerland (Helvetia or Civitas Helvetiorum). Its remains are beside the modern town of Avenches.

The city was probably created ex nihilo in the early 1st century AD, as the capital of the recently conquered territory of the Helvetii, across the road that connected Italy to Britain, built under Claudius. Under the rule of Emperor Vespasian, who grew up there, Aventicum was raised to the status of a colonia in 72 AD, whereupon it entered its golden age. The town wall was 5.6 km (3.5 mi) long but was impracticable for defensive purposes and was doubtless intended as a display of the status of the city.

In the Christian era Aventicum was the seat of a bishopric. The most famous of its bishops was Marius Aventicensis. His terse chronicle, spanning the years 455 to 581, is one of the few sources for the 6th-century Burgundians. Shortly after the Council of Macon, in 585, Marius moved the seat from Aventicum, due to the rapid decline of the city, to Lausanne.

Prehistoric Aventicum edit

The area around Aventicum was occupied before the Romans founded the city. There have been numerous lake-dwellings discovered within the adjoining Lake Murten, with at least 16 stilt house settlements having been found.[1] In the largest site, the piles extend over an area of 460 square metres (5,000 sq ft) thus forming a large station or village. A great number of objects have been found buried in the mud amongst the piles, consisting of implements of stone and bone, such as hatchets, chisels, needles, awls, besides a vast quantity of the bones of animals. The pottery is a coarse, dark red kind of earthenware containing numerous grains of quartz, and there are 12 or 15 varieties.[2]

Migration of the Helvetii edit

 
Die Helvetier zwingen die Römer unter dem Joch hindurch (The Helvetians force the Romans to pass under the yoke). Romantic painting by Charles Gleyre (19th century) celebrating the Helvetian victory over the Romans at Agen (107 BC) under Divico's command.

The Helvetii probably reached southern Germany around the year 111 BC and soon invaded Gaul. During their invasion of the Roman province Gallia Narbonensis, they defeated a Roman army under L. Cassius Longinus near Agendicum in 107 BC and killed the consul. They continued to march into Spain, Gaul, Noricum, and northern Italy. Suffering defeats in the year 102–101 BC the surviving Helvetii retreated across the Alps.

In 58 BC, the nobleman Orgetorix instigated a new Helvetian migration, in which the entire tribe was to leave their territory (which is now described as corresponding more or less to the Swiss plateau) and establish supremacy over all of Gaul. They marched from their villages, but were stalled by Julius Caesar on the banks of the Rhône. The Helvetii then marched around and across the Jura Mountains, to an area near the Aeduan oppidum Bibracte. There Caesar caught up and defeated the Helvetii in the Battle of Bibracte. This resulted in the Helvetii's retreat and the capture of most of their baggage by the Romans. Following their surrender, the Helvetii became foederati,[3] an allied civitas required to provide soldiers, but not granted Roman citizenship.

The Helvetii likely lost their status as foederati six years later, when they supported Vercingetorix in 52 BC. Sometime between 50 and 45 BC, the Romans founded Colonia Iulia Equestris at the site of the Helvetian settlement Noviodunum (modern Nyon). This colony was most likely established as a means for controlling one of the two important military access routes between the Helvetian territory and the rest of Gaul, blocking passage through the Rhône valley and the Sundgau.

During the following half century, the Helvetii would become increasingly romanized. During this time, there were two settlements near where Aventicum would be founded. The first was the oppidum on Mont Vully between Lake Murten and Lake Neuchatel, which was given up in the 1st century BC. The second was the Bois de Châtel, which was fortified in the second half of the 1st century BC.[4] The Bois de Châtel would be destroyed early in the 1st century AD and the population moved to Aventicum.

Foundation of Aventicum edit

In the course of Augustus’ reign (27 BC – 14 AD), Roman dominance became more concrete. Some of the traditional Celtic oppida were now used as legionary garrisons, or relocated. While the exact date of the founding of Aventicum is not exact, it was likely established during or shortly after Augustus' reign.

By 5 AD there was a dock on the shore of Lake Murten, which is the first evidence of a settlement at Aventicum.[4] A grave has also been discovered in the city that dates to 15 AD. During that time there was a small settlement built, in the north east corner of modern Avenches, in the Roman square style. However, this site can only be dated to the reign of Tiberius (14–37 AD).[4] Aventicum would have grown in 16-17 AD as the Roman legion camp Vindonissa was built (today in Windisch, Aargau). Aventicum was a major location on the Roman road from Lausanne to Vindonissa.

During the reign of Claudius (41–54 AD), a trade route was completed spanning from Italy to the recently conquered province of Britannia over the Gotthard Pass. This route passed through Aventicum allowing the city to expand.

It later became part of Germania Superior and then part of the Diocletian province of Maxima Sequanorum. The former territories of the Helvetii and their inhabitants were, by this time, as romanised as the rest of Gaul.

Creation of the Helvetii capital edit

In the 1st century AD Aventicum and the Helvetii land was incorporated into the Roman province of Gallia Belgica. Tacitus, writing about 69 AD, speaks of the Helvetians as originally a Gallic people, renowned for their valour and exploits in war, and he designates Aventicum Caput gentis,[5] or capital of Helvetia. It acquired this title most probably on account of its comparatively advanced state of civilization and its conspicuous position on the main route between Italy and Germany. It was also the centre of a network of well used military roads. Aventicum and Nyon (Colonia Equestris) located on the shores of Lake Geneva were the starting points for all mile-stones in Helvetia.

During the first three-quarters of the 1st century AD, Aventicum became a center of the Imperial cult in the Civitas Helvetiorum. However, the Helvetii came into conflict once more with Rome shortly after the death of emperor Nero in 68 AD. Like the other Gallic tribes, the Helvetii were organised as a civitas and enjoyed a certain inner autonomy, including the defence of certain strongholds by their own troops. In the civil war and Year of Four Emperors which followed Nero's death, the civitas Helvetiorum supported Galba; unaware of his death, they refused to accept the authority of his rival, Vitellius. The Legio XXI Rapax, stationed in Vindonissa and favouring Vitellius, stole the pay of a Helvetian garrison, which prompted the Helvetians to intercept the messengers and detain a Roman detachment. Aulus Caecina Alienus, a former supporter of Galba who was now at the head of a Vitellian invasion of Italy, launched a massive punitive campaign, crushing the Helvetii at Mount Vocetius, killing and enslaving thousands. Aventicum was then besieged and quickly surrendered. The city was nearly ordered destroyed by the Romans, but owing to the pleas of one Claudius Cossus, a Helvetian envoy to Vitellius, and, as Tacitus puts it, "of well-known eloquence"[6] the city was spared.

Raised to a Colonia edit

During the Year of Four Emperors (69 AD) Vitellius, who nearly ordered Aventicum destroyed, was the third. The fourth, Vespasian, had a much more positive influence on Aventicum. While he was born in Falacrina, in the Sabine country near Reate. His father, Titus Flavius Sabinus, was a banker on a small scale in Aventicum, where Vespasian lived for some time. About two years after Vespasian was declared emperor, he raised Aventicum to the status of a colonia, granting exceptional civic status. A colonia was a town that was a specific residential location for legionaries who upon retirement were granted land and became citizens. This encouraged land development and stability and not least the extension of Roman culture. Previously, Aventicum had been the capital of a non-citizen nation. The increased prestige that being a colonia brought ushered in a golden age for Aventicum. During this time Aventicum was known as Pia Flavia Constans Emerita.[7]

Destruction and rediscovery edit

The Alemanni sacked the city in the 280s, and neither Aventicum nor its hinterland recovered from both the impact of the attack and the subsequent changes of the Roman frontier which no longer granted security to the area. By the collapse of Rome in the 5th century, this area was already fully under the control of Germanic tribes, whose dialects became the basis for Swiss German. In the 6th century some Christian life continued in the acropolis of the Roman town: the amphitheatre became a fortress as did the theatre. By the 7th century, however, the focus of the church had moved to Lausanne, Aventicum is only mentioned as an old ruined city[8] though it had fallen into ruins previously. Over the following centuries it is mentioned but always as ruins.

In 1710, Marquard Wild was the first to argue that Aveticum had been the capital of Helvetia, and not Antre as was formerly believed.[9] In 1783–86 the Marquess of Northampton led an archaeological expedition to Aventicum and in 1788 he put his discoveries on display. His discoveries encouraged many treasure seekers to travel to Aventicum to search for artefacts. In response to the finds, the Musée Vespasien was opened in 1824. In 1838, it was taken over by the Canton of Vaud, renamed the Roman Museum, and installed in the tower of the Amphitheatre.

In 1884, the association Pro Aventico was founded with a goal of discovering and preserving the ruins.[10] Aventicum was a well-known location in the Grand Tour and J. M. W. Turner made a drawing of Avenches: the Roman Column,'Le Cicognier' in 1802, which shows the old town behind.[11] Archaeology benefited curiously from the First and Second World Wars when foreigners interned in Switzerland, and local unemployed, were engaged to excavate the main buildings of the Roman city and to renovate and open to the public the theatre, "Cigognier" and the gates and one tower of the wall. With the advent of the national highway scheme in the late 1960s a programme of rescue archaeology was set up under the association Pro Aventico under the remarkably capable direction of Professor Hans Bogli, after whom the Roman museum has since been named. Early work uncovered the Forum and associated temple area including a possible "Capitolium".

In 1985, during the construction of the A1 highway, further portions of the Roman town were discovered. In 1987 the road was moved to avoid the site.[8] Further and extensive work over the succeeding decades opened up much of the insulae – the rectangular street system of the focus of the Roman town. Much of the area within the walls was not a densely occupied city at all, but rather, like Rome itself, was occupied by "urban villas', large houses surrounded by substantial tracts of garden and small-holdings. The more recent work also uncovered a remarkable palace building, much of the centre of the Roman town, and outside the walls a canal and roadway leading from the nearby lake, doubtless assisting in the transport of stone from the Jura by lake and canal, and cemeteries and aqueducts outside the line of the Roman walls. Pro Aventico is also responsible for the constant round of restoration of the buildings opened up in the early part of the 20th century, including sections of the wall and the original Roman tower-raised and protected through its use as a mediaeval watch tower, and the northern gate.

Near to the line of the Roman walls, and benefiting from reuse of stone from the walls is the small Romanesque church in Donatyre, which possesses excellent early 12th century fresco paintings.

Remains edit

Amphitheatre edit

 
The amphitheatre could hold up to 16,000 people

The Amphitheatre, as was common in the Roman Empire, was used for gladiator and animal combat as well as staged hunts. It served political, social and religious purposes and was a central feature of most Roman towns. As the capital city, the amphitheatre in Aventicum was quite large.

 
Entering the arena floor from the monumental east entrance

It was built in two stages, first about 130 AD then expanded around 165 AD. The first amphitheatre was built when the hillside was terraced. The arena floor was laid out and flattened. This first structure had 24 rows of seats built mostly of wood rising up the hillside. The stairs, the wall around the arena floor, the upper walls, and the entrances were built of stone. The outer walls of the amphitheatre measured 98.85 by 85.94 metres (324.3 ft × 282.0 ft) and the arena floor was 51.63 by 38.40 metres (169.4 ft × 126.0 ft). The first amphitheatre could hold about 9,000 people.[12]

The second phase expanded the amphitheatre considerably. A total of 31 rows of stone seats were built, which increased the capacity to about 16,000. The walls were expanded and alcoves were added. On the east side a monumental main portal was built out of massive stone cubes. The expanded amphitheatre was (without the outer courtyard or the east main portal) 105.01 by 92.11 metres (344.5 ft × 302.2 ft), while the arena floor remained the same size. The outer walls were 18 metres (59 ft) high.[12]

During the 4th century the amphitheater was abandoned and much of the structure was removed and used as construction material. In the 11th century the Bishop of Lausanne had a tower house built over the east entrance, starting at about the 20th row of benches. This tower is now the home of the Roman Museum.

Theatre edit

 
The Theatre of Aventicum

The theatre was built during the early 2nd century in an area that was previously occupied by scattered houses. It was rebuilt and renovated numerous times, though details are unclear. In the last third of the 3rd century it was rebuilt as a fortified refuge and a moat was added. It was used for this purpose until the middle of the 4th century.[13]

 
The Theatre with the modern town of Avenches in the background

The theatre is built in the style of a classical Roman theatre, but does have some Gallo-Roman modifications. Both the orchestra and the cavea (spectator seating) are nearly horseshoe shaped. The actual stage is a simple wooden platform. The scaenae frons or background wall had three doors leading to the relatively small (10 by 7 metres (33 ft × 23 ft)) stage building (postscaenium) which is built projecting out behind the wall. The scaenae frons was built with a gap in the wall which showed the Cigognier Temple to the audience.[14] The theatre was used for comedies and tragedies, but there is also a "cult niche" at the foot of the audience's section with the stage forming an altar. This indicates that the theatre may have also been used for "dedicating plays" for religious ceremonies.[13]

The theatre is 106.25 metres (348.6 ft) wide and 66.4 metres (218 ft) deep. The orchestra area is 17.75 metres (58.2 ft) across and 21 metres (69 ft) deep. The capacity of the theatre was about 12,000 people, with over 50 rows for seating. It was entered through 11 vomitoria (covered entrances) which each had two arched passageways. At the bottom of the spectators seating there was a 1.6 metres (5.2 ft) wide box for the nobility.[13]

Cigognier Temple edit

 
Cigognier Temple pillars

The name of the temple (Cigognier) comes from a stork's nest that had occupied the top of a pillar since at least 1642.[15] The nest was removed during a restoration in 1978, but the name has remained.

The Cigognier Temple was built as a massive and impressive temple and may have been the chief temple of the Imperial cult in the entire civitas Helvetiorum state. At the temple the Roman Empire, symbolized by the divine Emperor, would be worshipped by the citizens and inhabitants of the state. Supporting this theory, a gold bust of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius was found hidden in drains on the site of the temple. Additionally, the temple was laid out in the same manner as the Temple of Peace in Rome. Finally, the temple was built near the Theatre, which also may have had a role in the worship of the Emperor.[15]

The temple was started in 98 AD, the first year of the reign of Emperor Trajan, according to dendrochronological analysis of the numerous oak posts that support the walls. It appears that the temple wasn't part of the original plan of Aventicum and so it may have been added under the direction of Trajan. Trajan had served with the Roman army along the Rhine, and after his ascension to the throne may have had the temple built to represent his power over the northern reaches of the Empire.[15]

The temple was built with a wide inner courtyard with an avenue running along the long axis. The eight pillared portico of the temple rose high above the north courtyard. The actual temple was built on a high podium with a neighbouring seating area hall, with three rows of seats. A wall surrounded the entire complex except toward the south which formed the outer courtyard. The wall had a gate that connected the temple to the Theatre and the new, main east–west road in the city.

The Cigognier Temple is the largest temple in Aventicum.[15] The outer dimensions were 111.58 by 118.80 metres (366.1 ft × 389.8 ft). The temple was 42.17 by 27.36 metres (138.4 ft × 89.8 ft), the height of the roof peak was 23.1 metres (76 ft) of which 2.4 metres (7.9 ft) is the height of the podium. The hall for the seating area was 64 by 83.35 metres (210.0 ft × 273.5 ft) and the roof height was 19.50 metres (64.0 ft), also with a 2.4 metres (7.9 ft) podium. The outer courtyard was 15.14 by 104.58 metres (49.7 ft × 343.1 ft).[15]

The Temple of the Grange-des-Dîmes (2nd century AD) edit

The Roman Temple of the Grange-des-Dîmes dates from the end of the 1st or the early 2nd century. It was built on the site of an earlier 1st-century gallic chapel. The temple is built in a typical Roman fashion, however the cella is nearly square instead of a more rectangular shape. The Temple is raised above the ground on a podium. The cella was surrounded by pillars and the entrance was crowned with a pediment. Inside the temple there was an altar, a fountain and four pillars that supported a canopy over a statue.

The temple was, most likely, dedicated to the Gallo-Roman god Mercurius Cissonius, a syncretic combination of Mercury and the gallic god Cissonius. The temple worships Mercury as the god of travellers and trade and being located on the main street through the city would have been visited by both. Its close proximity to the Cigognier Temple, the center of worship for the Imperial Cult, indicates that this temple was also an important one.[16]

The temple is partly restored. A section of the foundation of the south wall of the cella, originally 10.8 by 9.4 metres (35 ft × 31 ft), and part of the podium, originally 20.2 by 20.4 metres (66 ft × 67 ft), are visible today. While the stairs leading up the podium are gone, the location of the altar and the fountain as well as the partially reconstructed canopy are also visible on the podium. The rear of the podium is on the north side of the Avenue Jomini. The rest of the temple site is covered by the Avenue, though the floor plan of the temple is laid out in stones embedded in the road. Based on reconstructions, many of the dimensions of the temple are known. The podium was 1.8 metres (5.9 ft) high, with a cella that was about 20 metres (66 ft) high and covered with a four sided roof. The cella is surrounded by a narrow colonnaded portico facade with pillars that are .51 metres (1.7 ft) in diameter, 4.5 metres (15 ft) high and the trusses above the pillars were 1.16 metres (3.8 ft) thick. The entrance to the temple was set off with 4 pillars (.89 metres (2.9 ft) in diameter).[16]

 
Roman city wall and east gate

City wall and gates edit

The main road through Aventicum ran from east to west. The east gate was built during the reign of Vespasian. The gate was built to protect and control the road before the city walls were built.[17]

Baths edit

The Baths (known as Thermen von En Perruet or Baths at the Forum) were located directly east of the Forum of Aventicum. They were built during the expansion to a colony, sometime after 77 AD. They were financed by a wealthy romanized Helvetii family known as the Camilli.[18]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Miles, E. J. (Mar–Aug 1888). "AVENTICUM, THE ROMAN METROPOLIS OF HELVETIA". Archaeological Review. 1. D. Nutt: 414. Retrieved 2009-01-24.
  2. ^ Miles (Mar-Aug 1888) 415
  3. ^ The Helvetii-From the Gallic Wars to the Battle of Bibracte in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  4. ^ a b c Aventicum-History of a Capital City in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  5. ^ Miles (Mar-Aug 1888), 415 Quotes from Tacitus, Hist. 08
  6. ^ Tacitus Hist. 1.67-69.
  7. ^ Smith, William (1854). Dictionary of Greek and Roman geography. Little, Brown & Co. p. 350. Retrieved 19 May 2009.
  8. ^ a b Aventicum-from ruins to rediscovery in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  9. ^ Wild, Marquard; Johann Heinrich Huber; Eugène Olivier; Carl Howald (1710). Apologie pour la vieille cité d'Avenche ou Aventicum en Suisse, au canton de Berne... s.n.
  10. ^ Avenches L’Association Pro Aventico January 31, 2009, at the Wayback Machine (in French) accessed 22 January 2009
  11. ^ J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours
  12. ^ a b Avenches-Amphitheatre (in French) September 26, 2008, at the Wayback Machine (in German) February 25, 2008, at the Wayback Machine accessed 22 January 2009
  13. ^ a b c Avenches-Theatre (in French) November 9, 2008, at the Wayback Machine (in German) February 25, 2008, at the Wayback Machine accessed 22 January 2009
  14. ^ Sear, Frank (2006). Roman Theatres: An Architectural Study (illustrated ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 465. ISBN 0-19-814469-5.
  15. ^ a b c d e Avenches-Cigognier Temple (in French) September 26, 2008, at the Wayback Machine (in German) February 25, 2008, at the Wayback Machine accessed 23 January 2009
  16. ^ a b Avenches-Temple of the Grange-des-Dîmes (in French) November 9, 2008, at the Wayback Machine (in German) February 26, 2008, at the Wayback Machine accessed 23 January 2009
  17. ^ Avenches-East Gate (in French) November 9, 2008, at the Wayback Machine (in German) February 25, 2008, at the Wayback Machine accessed 23 January 2009
  18. ^ Avenches-Baths at the Forum (in French) November 9, 2008, at the Wayback Machine (in German) February 26, 2008, at the Wayback Machine accessed 23 January 2009

External links edit

  • Catholic Encyclopedia : St. Marius Aventicus
  • (Avenches Tourisme)

aventicum, switzerland, during, roman, showing, helvetii, regioncarved, limestone, objects, from, largest, town, capital, roman, switzerland, helvetia, civitas, helvetiorum, remains, beside, modern, town, avenches, city, probably, created, nihilo, early, centu. 46 52 48 N 7 02 56 E 46 880 N 7 049 E 46 880 7 049 Aventicum Switzerland during the Roman era showing Aventicum and the Helvetii regionCarved limestone objects from AventicumAventicum was the largest town and capital of Roman Switzerland Helvetia or Civitas Helvetiorum Its remains are beside the modern town of Avenches The city was probably created ex nihilo in the early 1st century AD as the capital of the recently conquered territory of the Helvetii across the road that connected Italy to Britain built under Claudius Under the rule of Emperor Vespasian who grew up there Aventicum was raised to the status of a colonia in 72 AD whereupon it entered its golden age The town wall was 5 6 km 3 5 mi long but was impracticable for defensive purposes and was doubtless intended as a display of the status of the city In the Christian era Aventicum was the seat of a bishopric The most famous of its bishops was Marius Aventicensis His terse chronicle spanning the years 455 to 581 is one of the few sources for the 6th century Burgundians Shortly after the Council of Macon in 585 Marius moved the seat from Aventicum due to the rapid decline of the city to Lausanne Contents 1 Prehistoric Aventicum 2 Migration of the Helvetii 3 Foundation of Aventicum 4 Creation of the Helvetii capital 5 Raised to a Colonia 6 Destruction and rediscovery 7 Remains 7 1 Amphitheatre 7 2 Theatre 7 3 Cigognier Temple 7 4 The Temple of the Grange des Dimes 2nd century AD 7 5 City wall and gates 7 6 Baths 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksPrehistoric Aventicum editThe area around Aventicum was occupied before the Romans founded the city There have been numerous lake dwellings discovered within the adjoining Lake Murten with at least 16 stilt house settlements having been found 1 In the largest site the piles extend over an area of 460 square metres 5 000 sq ft thus forming a large station or village A great number of objects have been found buried in the mud amongst the piles consisting of implements of stone and bone such as hatchets chisels needles awls besides a vast quantity of the bones of animals The pottery is a coarse dark red kind of earthenware containing numerous grains of quartz and there are 12 or 15 varieties 2 Migration of the Helvetii edit nbsp Die Helvetier zwingen die Romer unter dem Joch hindurch The Helvetians force the Romans to pass under the yoke Romantic painting by Charles Gleyre 19th century celebrating the Helvetian victory over the Romans at Agen 107 BC under Divico s command The Helvetii probably reached southern Germany around the year 111 BC and soon invaded Gaul During their invasion of the Roman province Gallia Narbonensis they defeated a Roman army under L Cassius Longinus near Agendicum in 107 BC and killed the consul They continued to march into Spain Gaul Noricum and northern Italy Suffering defeats in the year 102 101 BC the surviving Helvetii retreated across the Alps In 58 BC the nobleman Orgetorix instigated a new Helvetian migration in which the entire tribe was to leave their territory which is now described as corresponding more or less to the Swiss plateau and establish supremacy over all of Gaul They marched from their villages but were stalled by Julius Caesar on the banks of the Rhone The Helvetii then marched around and across the Jura Mountains to an area near the Aeduan oppidum Bibracte There Caesar caught up and defeated the Helvetii in the Battle of Bibracte This resulted in the Helvetii s retreat and the capture of most of their baggage by the Romans Following their surrender the Helvetii became foederati 3 an allied civitas required to provide soldiers but not granted Roman citizenship The Helvetii likely lost their status as foederati six years later when they supported Vercingetorix in 52 BC Sometime between 50 and 45 BC the Romans founded Colonia Iulia Equestris at the site of the Helvetian settlement Noviodunum modern Nyon This colony was most likely established as a means for controlling one of the two important military access routes between the Helvetian territory and the rest of Gaul blocking passage through the Rhone valley and the Sundgau During the following half century the Helvetii would become increasingly romanized During this time there were two settlements near where Aventicum would be founded The first was the oppidum on Mont Vully between Lake Murten and Lake Neuchatel which was given up in the 1st century BC The second was the Bois de Chatel which was fortified in the second half of the 1st century BC 4 The Bois de Chatel would be destroyed early in the 1st century AD and the population moved to Aventicum Foundation of Aventicum editIn the course of Augustus reign 27 BC 14 AD Roman dominance became more concrete Some of the traditional Celtic oppida were now used as legionary garrisons or relocated While the exact date of the founding of Aventicum is not exact it was likely established during or shortly after Augustus reign By 5 AD there was a dock on the shore of Lake Murten which is the first evidence of a settlement at Aventicum 4 A grave has also been discovered in the city that dates to 15 AD During that time there was a small settlement built in the north east corner of modern Avenches in the Roman square style However this site can only be dated to the reign of Tiberius 14 37 AD 4 Aventicum would have grown in 16 17 AD as the Roman legion camp Vindonissa was built today in Windisch Aargau Aventicum was a major location on the Roman road from Lausanne to Vindonissa During the reign of Claudius 41 54 AD a trade route was completed spanning from Italy to the recently conquered province of Britannia over the Gotthard Pass This route passed through Aventicum allowing the city to expand It later became part of Germania Superior and then part of the Diocletian province of Maxima Sequanorum The former territories of the Helvetii and their inhabitants were by this time as romanised as the rest of Gaul Creation of the Helvetii capital editIn the 1st century AD Aventicum and the Helvetii land was incorporated into the Roman province of Gallia Belgica Tacitus writing about 69 AD speaks of the Helvetians as originally a Gallic people renowned for their valour and exploits in war and he designates Aventicum Caput gentis 5 or capital of Helvetia It acquired this title most probably on account of its comparatively advanced state of civilization and its conspicuous position on the main route between Italy and Germany It was also the centre of a network of well used military roads Aventicum and Nyon Colonia Equestris located on the shores of Lake Geneva were the starting points for all mile stones in Helvetia During the first three quarters of the 1st century AD Aventicum became a center of the Imperial cult in the Civitas Helvetiorum However the Helvetii came into conflict once more with Rome shortly after the death of emperor Nero in 68 AD Like the other Gallic tribes the Helvetii were organised as a civitas and enjoyed a certain inner autonomy including the defence of certain strongholds by their own troops In the civil war and Year of Four Emperors which followed Nero s death the civitas Helvetiorum supported Galba unaware of his death they refused to accept the authority of his rival Vitellius The Legio XXI Rapax stationed in Vindonissa and favouring Vitellius stole the pay of a Helvetian garrison which prompted the Helvetians to intercept the messengers and detain a Roman detachment Aulus Caecina Alienus a former supporter of Galba who was now at the head of a Vitellian invasion of Italy launched a massive punitive campaign crushing the Helvetii at Mount Vocetius killing and enslaving thousands Aventicum was then besieged and quickly surrendered The city was nearly ordered destroyed by the Romans but owing to the pleas of one Claudius Cossus a Helvetian envoy to Vitellius and as Tacitus puts it of well known eloquence 6 the city was spared Raised to a Colonia editDuring the Year of Four Emperors 69 AD Vitellius who nearly ordered Aventicum destroyed was the third The fourth Vespasian had a much more positive influence on Aventicum While he was born in Falacrina in the Sabine country near Reate His father Titus Flavius Sabinus was a banker on a small scale in Aventicum where Vespasian lived for some time About two years after Vespasian was declared emperor he raised Aventicum to the status of a colonia granting exceptional civic status A colonia was a town that was a specific residential location for legionaries who upon retirement were granted land and became citizens This encouraged land development and stability and not least the extension of Roman culture Previously Aventicum had been the capital of a non citizen nation The increased prestige that being a colonia brought ushered in a golden age for Aventicum During this time Aventicum was known as Pia Flavia Constans Emerita 7 Destruction and rediscovery editThe Alemanni sacked the city in the 280s and neither Aventicum nor its hinterland recovered from both the impact of the attack and the subsequent changes of the Roman frontier which no longer granted security to the area By the collapse of Rome in the 5th century this area was already fully under the control of Germanic tribes whose dialects became the basis for Swiss German In the 6th century some Christian life continued in the acropolis of the Roman town the amphitheatre became a fortress as did the theatre By the 7th century however the focus of the church had moved to Lausanne Aventicum is only mentioned as an old ruined city 8 though it had fallen into ruins previously Over the following centuries it is mentioned but always as ruins In 1710 Marquard Wild was the first to argue that Aveticum had been the capital of Helvetia and not Antre as was formerly believed 9 In 1783 86 the Marquess of Northampton led an archaeological expedition to Aventicum and in 1788 he put his discoveries on display His discoveries encouraged many treasure seekers to travel to Aventicum to search for artefacts In response to the finds the Musee Vespasien was opened in 1824 In 1838 it was taken over by the Canton of Vaud renamed the Roman Museum and installed in the tower of the Amphitheatre In 1884 the association Pro Aventico was founded with a goal of discovering and preserving the ruins 10 Aventicum was a well known location in the Grand Tour and J M W Turner made a drawing of Avenches the Roman Column Le Cicognier in 1802 which shows the old town behind 11 Archaeology benefited curiously from the First and Second World Wars when foreigners interned in Switzerland and local unemployed were engaged to excavate the main buildings of the Roman city and to renovate and open to the public the theatre Cigognier and the gates and one tower of the wall With the advent of the national highway scheme in the late 1960s a programme of rescue archaeology was set up under the association Pro Aventico under the remarkably capable direction of Professor Hans Bogli after whom the Roman museum has since been named Early work uncovered the Forum and associated temple area including a possible Capitolium In 1985 during the construction of the A1 highway further portions of the Roman town were discovered In 1987 the road was moved to avoid the site 8 Further and extensive work over the succeeding decades opened up much of the insulae the rectangular street system of the focus of the Roman town Much of the area within the walls was not a densely occupied city at all but rather like Rome itself was occupied by urban villas large houses surrounded by substantial tracts of garden and small holdings The more recent work also uncovered a remarkable palace building much of the centre of the Roman town and outside the walls a canal and roadway leading from the nearby lake doubtless assisting in the transport of stone from the Jura by lake and canal and cemeteries and aqueducts outside the line of the Roman walls Pro Aventico is also responsible for the constant round of restoration of the buildings opened up in the early part of the 20th century including sections of the wall and the original Roman tower raised and protected through its use as a mediaeval watch tower and the northern gate Near to the line of the Roman walls and benefiting from reuse of stone from the walls is the small Romanesque church in Donatyre which possesses excellent early 12th century fresco paintings Remains editAmphitheatre edit nbsp The amphitheatre could hold up to 16 000 peopleThe Amphitheatre as was common in the Roman Empire was used for gladiator and animal combat as well as staged hunts It served political social and religious purposes and was a central feature of most Roman towns As the capital city the amphitheatre in Aventicum was quite large nbsp Entering the arena floor from the monumental east entranceIt was built in two stages first about 130 AD then expanded around 165 AD The first amphitheatre was built when the hillside was terraced The arena floor was laid out and flattened This first structure had 24 rows of seats built mostly of wood rising up the hillside The stairs the wall around the arena floor the upper walls and the entrances were built of stone The outer walls of the amphitheatre measured 98 85 by 85 94 metres 324 3 ft 282 0 ft and the arena floor was 51 63 by 38 40 metres 169 4 ft 126 0 ft The first amphitheatre could hold about 9 000 people 12 The second phase expanded the amphitheatre considerably A total of 31 rows of stone seats were built which increased the capacity to about 16 000 The walls were expanded and alcoves were added On the east side a monumental main portal was built out of massive stone cubes The expanded amphitheatre was without the outer courtyard or the east main portal 105 01 by 92 11 metres 344 5 ft 302 2 ft while the arena floor remained the same size The outer walls were 18 metres 59 ft high 12 During the 4th century the amphitheater was abandoned and much of the structure was removed and used as construction material In the 11th century the Bishop of Lausanne had a tower house built over the east entrance starting at about the 20th row of benches This tower is now the home of the Roman Museum Theatre edit nbsp The Theatre of AventicumThe theatre was built during the early 2nd century in an area that was previously occupied by scattered houses It was rebuilt and renovated numerous times though details are unclear In the last third of the 3rd century it was rebuilt as a fortified refuge and a moat was added It was used for this purpose until the middle of the 4th century 13 nbsp The Theatre with the modern town of Avenches in the backgroundThe theatre is built in the style of a classical Roman theatre but does have some Gallo Roman modifications Both the orchestra and the cavea spectator seating are nearly horseshoe shaped The actual stage is a simple wooden platform The scaenae frons or background wall had three doors leading to the relatively small 10 by 7 metres 33 ft 23 ft stage building postscaenium which is built projecting out behind the wall The scaenae frons was built with a gap in the wall which showed the Cigognier Temple to the audience 14 The theatre was used for comedies and tragedies but there is also a cult niche at the foot of the audience s section with the stage forming an altar This indicates that the theatre may have also been used for dedicating plays for religious ceremonies 13 The theatre is 106 25 metres 348 6 ft wide and 66 4 metres 218 ft deep The orchestra area is 17 75 metres 58 2 ft across and 21 metres 69 ft deep The capacity of the theatre was about 12 000 people with over 50 rows for seating It was entered through 11 vomitoria covered entrances which each had two arched passageways At the bottom of the spectators seating there was a 1 6 metres 5 2 ft wide box for the nobility 13 Cigognier Temple edit nbsp Cigognier Temple pillarsThe name of the temple Cigognier comes from a stork s nest that had occupied the top of a pillar since at least 1642 15 The nest was removed during a restoration in 1978 but the name has remained The Cigognier Temple was built as a massive and impressive temple and may have been the chief temple of the Imperial cult in the entire civitas Helvetiorum state At the temple the Roman Empire symbolized by the divine Emperor would be worshipped by the citizens and inhabitants of the state Supporting this theory a gold bust of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius was found hidden in drains on the site of the temple Additionally the temple was laid out in the same manner as the Temple of Peace in Rome Finally the temple was built near the Theatre which also may have had a role in the worship of the Emperor 15 The temple was started in 98 AD the first year of the reign of Emperor Trajan according to dendrochronological analysis of the numerous oak posts that support the walls It appears that the temple wasn t part of the original plan of Aventicum and so it may have been added under the direction of Trajan Trajan had served with the Roman army along the Rhine and after his ascension to the throne may have had the temple built to represent his power over the northern reaches of the Empire 15 The temple was built with a wide inner courtyard with an avenue running along the long axis The eight pillared portico of the temple rose high above the north courtyard The actual temple was built on a high podium with a neighbouring seating area hall with three rows of seats A wall surrounded the entire complex except toward the south which formed the outer courtyard The wall had a gate that connected the temple to the Theatre and the new main east west road in the city The Cigognier Temple is the largest temple in Aventicum 15 The outer dimensions were 111 58 by 118 80 metres 366 1 ft 389 8 ft The temple was 42 17 by 27 36 metres 138 4 ft 89 8 ft the height of the roof peak was 23 1 metres 76 ft of which 2 4 metres 7 9 ft is the height of the podium The hall for the seating area was 64 by 83 35 metres 210 0 ft 273 5 ft and the roof height was 19 50 metres 64 0 ft also with a 2 4 metres 7 9 ft podium The outer courtyard was 15 14 by 104 58 metres 49 7 ft 343 1 ft 15 The Temple of the Grange des Dimes 2nd century AD edit The Roman Temple of the Grange des Dimes dates from the end of the 1st or the early 2nd century It was built on the site of an earlier 1st century gallic chapel The temple is built in a typical Roman fashion however the cella is nearly square instead of a more rectangular shape The Temple is raised above the ground on a podium The cella was surrounded by pillars and the entrance was crowned with a pediment Inside the temple there was an altar a fountain and four pillars that supported a canopy over a statue The temple was most likely dedicated to the Gallo Roman god Mercurius Cissonius a syncretic combination of Mercury and the gallic god Cissonius The temple worships Mercury as the god of travellers and trade and being located on the main street through the city would have been visited by both Its close proximity to the Cigognier Temple the center of worship for the Imperial Cult indicates that this temple was also an important one 16 The temple is partly restored A section of the foundation of the south wall of the cella originally 10 8 by 9 4 metres 35 ft 31 ft and part of the podium originally 20 2 by 20 4 metres 66 ft 67 ft are visible today While the stairs leading up the podium are gone the location of the altar and the fountain as well as the partially reconstructed canopy are also visible on the podium The rear of the podium is on the north side of the Avenue Jomini The rest of the temple site is covered by the Avenue though the floor plan of the temple is laid out in stones embedded in the road Based on reconstructions many of the dimensions of the temple are known The podium was 1 8 metres 5 9 ft high with a cella that was about 20 metres 66 ft high and covered with a four sided roof The cella is surrounded by a narrow colonnaded portico facade with pillars that are 51 metres 1 7 ft in diameter 4 5 metres 15 ft high and the trusses above the pillars were 1 16 metres 3 8 ft thick The entrance to the temple was set off with 4 pillars 89 metres 2 9 ft in diameter 16 nbsp Roman city wall and east gateCity wall and gates edit The main road through Aventicum ran from east to west The east gate was built during the reign of Vespasian The gate was built to protect and control the road before the city walls were built 17 Baths edit The Baths known as Thermen von En Perruet or Baths at the Forum were located directly east of the Forum of Aventicum They were built during the expansion to a colony sometime after 77 AD They were financed by a wealthy romanized Helvetii family known as the Camilli 18 See also editSwitzerland in the Roman era List of cities founded by the RomansReferences edit Miles E J Mar Aug 1888 AVENTICUM THE ROMAN METROPOLIS OF HELVETIA Archaeological Review 1 D Nutt 414 Retrieved 2009 01 24 Miles Mar Aug 1888 415 The Helvetii From the Gallic Wars to the Battle of Bibracte in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland a b c Aventicum History of a Capital City in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland Miles Mar Aug 1888 415 Quotes from Tacitus Hist 08 Tacitus Hist 1 67 69 Smith William 1854 Dictionary of Greek and Roman geography Little Brown amp Co p 350 Retrieved 19 May 2009 a b Aventicum from ruins to rediscovery in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland Wild Marquard Johann Heinrich Huber Eugene Olivier Carl Howald 1710 Apologie pour la vieille cite d Avenche ou Aventicum en Suisse au canton de Berne s n Avenches L Association Pro Aventico Archived January 31 2009 at the Wayback Machine in French accessed 22 January 2009 J M W Turner Sketchbooks Drawings and Watercolours a b Avenches Amphitheatre in French Archived September 26 2008 at the Wayback Machine in German Archived February 25 2008 at the Wayback Machine accessed 22 January 2009 a b c Avenches Theatre in French Archived November 9 2008 at the Wayback Machine in German Archived February 25 2008 at the Wayback Machine accessed 22 January 2009 Sear Frank 2006 Roman Theatres An Architectural Study illustrated ed Oxford University Press p 465 ISBN 0 19 814469 5 a b c d e Avenches Cigognier Temple in French Archived September 26 2008 at the Wayback Machine in German Archived February 25 2008 at the Wayback Machine accessed 23 January 2009 a b Avenches Temple of the Grange des Dimes in French Archived November 9 2008 at the Wayback Machine in German Archived February 26 2008 at the Wayback Machine accessed 23 January 2009 Avenches East Gate in French Archived November 9 2008 at the Wayback Machine in German Archived February 25 2008 at the Wayback Machine accessed 23 January 2009 Avenches Baths at the Forum in French Archived November 9 2008 at the Wayback Machine in German Archived February 26 2008 at the Wayback Machine accessed 23 January 2009External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aventicum Catholic Encyclopedia St Marius Aventicus Roman Museum Aventicum Roman Museum Aventicum in French in German Avenches Tourisme Musee Romain Avenches in French in German Map of the city of Aventicum Portals nbsp History nbsp Switzerland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aventicum amp oldid 1175083474, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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