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Vindobona

Vindobona (Latin pronunciation: [wɪnˈdɔbɔna]; from Gaulish windo- "white" and bona "base/bottom") was a Roman military camp (or castra) in the province of Pannonia, located on the site of the modern city of Vienna in Austria. The settlement area took on a new name in the 13th century, being changed to Berghof, or now simply known as Alter Berghof (the Old Berghof).[2]

Vindobona
Vienna in Austria
The excavated ruins of Vindobona on the Michaelerplatz
Map of the Roman castrum of Vindobona in 250–300
Vindobona
Vindobona
Coordinates48°12′39″N 16°22′13″E / 48.21083°N 16.37028°E / 48.21083; 16.37028
TypeRoman fortification
Site history
Builtc. 100 (100)
In use103–433 (433)[1]
FateAbandoned to the Huns
Garrison information
GarrisonX Gemina

Around 1 AD the kingdom of Noricum was included in the Roman Empire. Henceforth, the Danube marked the border of the empire, and the Romans built fortifications and settlements on the banks of the Danube, including Vindobona with an estimated population of 15,000 to 20,000.[3][4]

History edit

 
Head of a genius found during excavations of Vindobona
 
Silver plate, part of a larger find found around Kärntner Straße in 1945

Early references to Vindobona are made by the geographer Ptolemy in his Geographica and the historian Aurelius Victor, who recounts that emperor Marcus Aurelius died in Vindobona on 17 March 180 from an unknown illness while on a military campaign against invading Germanic tribes. Today, there is a Marc-Aurelstraße (English: Marcus Aurelius street) near the Hoher Markt in Vienna.

It is possible that Vindobona as a legionary fortress was built around the year of 100, because from the archeological records there are no building inscriptions dating earlier than the year of 103.[5]

Vindobona was part of the Roman province Pannonia, of which the regional administrative centre was Carnuntum. Vindobona was a military camp with an attached civilian city (Canabae). The military complex covered an area of some 20 hectares, housing about 6000 men where Vienna's first district now stands. The Danube marked the border of the Roman Empire, and Vindobona was part of a defensive network including the camps of Carnuntum, Brigetio and Aquincum. By the time of Emperor Commodus, four legions (X Gemina, XIV Gemina Martia Victrix, I Adiutrix and II Adiutrix) were stationed in Pannonia.[6]

Vindobona was provisioned by the surrounding Roman country estates (Villae rusticae). A centre of trade with a developed infrastructure as well as agriculture and forestry developed around Vindobona. Civic communities developed outside the fortifications (canabae legionis), as well another community that was independent of the military authorities in today's third district.[citation needed] It has also been proven that a Germanic settlement with a large marketplace existed on the far side of the Danube from the second century onwards.[citation needed]

The asymmetrical layout of the military camp, which was unusual for the otherwise standardised Roman encampments, is still recognisable in Vienna's street plan: Graben, Naglergasse, Tiefer Graben, Salzgries, Rabensteig, Rotenturmstraße. The oblique camp border along today's street Salzgries was probably caused by a tremendous flood of the River Danube that occurred during the 3rd century and eroded a considerable part of the camp.[7] The name “Graben” (English: ditch) is believed to hark back to the defensive ditches of the military camp. It is thought that at least parts of the walls still stood in the Middle Ages, when these streets were laid out, and thus determined their routes. The Berghof was later erected in one corner of the camp.

Rebuilt after Germanic invasions in the second century, the town remained a seat of Roman government through the third and fourth centuries.[8][9] The population fled after the Huns invaded Pannonia in the 430s and the settlement was abandoned for several centuries.[10][11]

Evidence for the Roman presence in Vindobona edit

Archaeological remains edit

 
Remains of the Roman outpost at Michaelerplatz
 
Roman stones from the thermae, at Sterngasse
 
Remains of a hypocaust, found below Hoher Markt

Remains of the Roman military camp have been found at many sites in the centre of Vienna. The centre of the Michaelerplatz has been widely investigated by archaeologists. Here, traces of a Roman legionary outpost (canabae legionis) and of a crossroad have been found.[12] The centrepiece of the current design of the square is a rectangular opening that evokes the archaeological excavations at the site and shows wall remains that have been preserved from different epochs.

Part of a Roman canal system is underneath the fire station am Hof.[13]

Directly under the Hoher Markt are the remains of two buildings unearthed during the canalisation works of 1948/49 and made accessible to the public. After further excavation, a showroom was opened in 1961. For this purpose some of the original walls had to be removed; white marks on the floor show the spots where.[citation needed] The buildings, which are separated from one another by a road, housed an officer and his family.[citation needed] In 2008 this Roman ruins exhibit was expanded into the Museum of the Romans.[14] Only a small portion can today be seen, for the majority of the remains are still located underneath the square and south of it.

The remains of the walls date from different phases from the 1st to the 5th century AD. The houses were typical Roman villas, with living quarters and space for working set around a middle courtyard with columned halls.[15]

During drillings for the U5 underground line, new brick kiln and metal smelting sites were discovered that revealed further reaching suburbs of the ancient roman settlement.[16]

Evidence for the Roman military presence edit

 
Dedication stone with inscriptions mentioning the Legio XIII Gemina

Over 3,000 stamped bricks, several stone monuments and written sources prove that several legions, cavalry units and marines were stationed in Vindobona. Around 97 AD, Legio XIII Gemina was responsible for construction of the legionary camps. Because of the wars in Dacia, they were pulled out and redeployed in 101 AD. A decade later, Legio XIIII Gemina Martia Victrix followed. Legio X Gemina from Aquincum arrived in 114 AD and remained in Vindobona until the 5th century.[citation needed]

About 6,000 soldiers were stationed in the Roman camp.[citation needed] Many of them were free from active duty during peaceful times and had other jobs.[citation needed] These so-called immunes were needed for the supply of goods and for the production and maintenance of weapons and commodities. They also extracted stone from quarries and wood from forests, produced bricks, and maintained the streets, bridges and the water system. Administrating the camp and ensuring its security required additional manpower.

Roman canals edit

 
Manhole cover. Proper water supply and sanitation was vital for the functioning of the city

The Romans provided their cities, including Vindobona, with clean potable water through an elaborate systems of Roman aqueducts, canals, and large subterranean pipes. Excavations have revealed that Vindobona received its supply through a 17 km long water pipeline.[citation needed] The source is in the Vienna Woods around today's Kalksburg. Wells, latrines and the thermae were supplied with water. Central buildings such as the commander's office and the hospital had their own supplies, as did the settlement outside the camp, where households had their own groundwater wells.[citation needed]

Archaeological excavations done over the last 100 years have discovered the following Roman water supply fragment locations:

  • In the Zemlinskygasse: at numbers 2-4 - (23rd district, found in 1924)
  • In the Breitenfurter Straße: at number 422 - (23rd district, in 1959)
  • In the Rudolf Zeller-Gasse/Anton-Krieger-Gasse - (23rd district, 1992)
  • In Atzgersdorf - (23rd district, 1902–1907)
  • In the Tullnertalgasse: at number 76 - (23rd district, 1973)
  • In the Lainergasse: at number 1 - (23rd district, 1958)
  • In the Wundtgasse - (12th district, 1951)
  • In the Rosenhügelstraße: at number 88 - (12th district, 1926)
  • In the Fasangartenstraße: at number 49 - (12th district, 1916)
  • In the Pacassistraße - (13th district, 1928)
  • In the Sechshauserstraße: at number 7 - (15th district, 1879 - leading towards the first district)

Waste from the Roman camp was transported through an elaborate subterranean sewerage system that was planned from the beginning. The sewers were lined with brick walls and plates and ran beneath the main roads. Gradients were used in such a way that the waste water descended through the canals into the River Danube. Since the canals were up to two meters deep, they could be cleaned out regularly. Large waste was probably deposed at the slope of the river. In the civilian settlement, waste was deposed in former water wells and dumps.[citation needed]

Legacies in today's streets edit

 
The Cygnus-Relief was probably part of a larger public building
 
Small bronze statuettes of gods

The layout of a Roman camp (castra) was normally standardised. This has helped archaeologists to reconstruct what the camp must have looked like, despite the heavy rebuilding that has taken place in Vienna throughout the centuries. The basic contours of the camp, which was surrounded by a mighty wall with towers and three moats (today the Tiefer Graben, Naglergasse, Graben, and Rotenturmstraße) are identifiable. Along these axes, main roads connected the gates with one other. The main buildings were the commander's headquarters, the Palace of the Legate, the houses of the staff officers, and the thermae. At right angles to these, the soldiers' accommodation, a hospital, workshops, and mews (stables) were constructed.[citation needed]

In popular culture edit

  • In the American film Gladiator (2000), Maximus (Russell Crowe) fights in the battle of Vindobona under the order of Marcus Aurelius (Richard Harris).[17][18] There are also two lines that make reference to Vindobona. In one, the lead character's servant, Cicero, trying to get the attention of Lucilla, states, "I served your father at Vindobona!"[19] In the other, the lead character asks if anyone in his group of gladiators has served in the army, to which an anonymous fighter responds, "I served with you at Vindobona."
  • The historical novel Votan by Welsh writer John James begins in "Vindabonum" and imagines 2nd century C.E. life there.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Humphreys, Rob (1997). Vienna: The Rough Guide. Pensylvannia State University Press. p. 313. ISBN 978-1-85828-244-2.
  2. ^ The Older Berghof in Vienna 2017-09-18 at the Wayback Machine (German). Today, the site is more commonly associated with Hoher Markt and Wiener Neustädter Hof, a building in today's Sterngasse 3. Berghof was the name of the mansion, which had evolved from the initial settlement with the walls of the Roman baths. It was originally the only building in Vienna to be built by a certain pagan, presumably an Avaricum dignitary, eventually becoming a fortified town. The place is mentioned in Jans Enikel's "Fürstenbuch" (around 1270) (vide: Jeff Bernhard / Dieter Bietak: The Wiener Neustädter Hof alias Berghof - a probe into the Year Zero, Frankfurt am Main/Berlin/Bern 1997, p. 247).
  3. ^ Bowman, Alan; Wilson, Andrew (2011-12-22). Settlement, Urbanization, and Population. OUP Oxford. ISBN 9780199602353.
  4. ^ Ziak, Karl (1964). "Unvergängliches Wien: Ein Gang durch die Geschichte von der Urzeit bis zur Gegenwart".
  5. ^ Móscy, András (1974). Pannonia and Upper Moesia: A History of the Middle Danube Provinces of the Roman Empire. London; Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul. p. 88. ISBN 978-1-315-79767-0.
  6. ^ Stephen Dando-Collins (2012). . Quercus Publishing. ISBN 9781849167918. Archived from the original on 2 October 2019. Retrieved 2 October 2019. '...at the start of AD 193...On 13 April, the legions of Pannonia - the 10th Gemina and 14th Gemina Martia Victrix in his own province, and the 1st and 2nd Adiutrix legions from neighbouring Lower Pannonia...'
  7. ^ Reconstruction of the ancient relief of downtown Vienna (in German)
  8. ^ Southern Germany and Austria, Including the Eastern Alps: Handbook for Travellers. Karl Baedeker. 1873. p. 177. Retrieved 2 October 2019. 'By the end of the third century Vindobona had become a municipal town, and being the seat of the Roman civil and military government, continued to flourish until the invasion of the Huns in the 5th century.'
  9. ^ J. Sydney Jones (2014). . Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 9781466865907. Archived from the original on 2 October 2019. Retrieved 2 October 2019. 'Vindobona was destroyed suring the Germanic invasions of the latter part of the second century and was rebuilt after those invasions were finally repelled, but the Roman era had had its peak....by 180...Roman order was restored to Pannonia. But it was a tenuous order, holding doggedly on for another two centuries until the final withdrawal of the Roman troops and destruction of Vindobona in the early fifth century.'
  10. ^ Southern Germany and Austria, Including the Eastern Alps: Handbook for Travellers. Karl Baedeker. 1873. p. 177. Retrieved 2 October 2019. 'Vindobona ... continued to flourish until the invasion of the Huns in the 5th century. From that date the Roman Vindobona disappears from the history until the year 791.'
  11. ^ Rob Collins, Matt Symonds, Meike Weber (2015). . Oxbow Books. ISBN 9781782979913. Archived from the original on 2 October 2019. Retrieved 2 October 2019. '...Consequently, Vindobona became increasingly depopulated over the course of the first half of the 5th century. The present state of research indicated that the definite end of the settlement within the old fortress occurred during the 430s AD, when the Huns finally seized control of the province of Pannonia...The intramural area of Vindobona has provided no evidence of settlement activity from the mid 5th century through until at least the 9th century.'{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. ^ Wien Museum | Archäologisches Grabungsfeld Michaelerplatz(in German)
  13. ^ Wien Museum | Römische Baureste Am Hof, Vienna Museum (in German)
  14. ^ "Die Römer kommen nach Wien" 2011-07-25 at the Wayback Machine, ORF 10 May 2008 (in German)
  15. ^ Wien Museum | Römische Ruinen Hoher Markt(in German)
  16. ^ "Überraschungsfunde für die Archäologie dank Wiener U-Bahn-Ausbau". DER STANDARD (in Austrian German). Retrieved 2022-08-04.
  17. ^ Villapalos Salas, Gustavo; San Miguel Pérez, Enrique (September 1, 2014). Lecciones de Historia del Derecho Español. Editorial Universitaria Ramon Areces. p. 38. ISBN 9788499611785.
  18. ^ Gilliland, Charles (November 14, 2016). The Gospel of Matthew Through the Eyes of a Cop: A Devotional for Law Enforcement Officers. WestBow Press. p. 162. ISBN 9781490898377.
  19. ^ Cyrino, Monica Silveira (February 9, 2009). Big Screen Rome. John Wiley & Sons. p. 209. ISBN 9781405150323.

Further reading edit

  • Michaela Kronberger: Siedlungschronologische Forschungen zu den canabae legionis von Vindobona. Die Gräberfelder (Monographien der Stadtarchäologie Wien Band 1). Phoibos Verlag, Wien 2005. (in German)
  • Christine Ranseder e.a., Michaelerplatz. Die archäologischen Ausgrabungen. Wien Archäologisch 1, Wien 2006. ISBN 3-901232-72-9. (in German)
  • Vindobona. Die Reise in das antike Wien. DVD-Rom, 2004. (in German)
  • Vindobona II. Wassertechnik des antiken Wiens. DVD-Rom, 2005. (in German)

External links edit

  Media related to Vindobona at Wikimedia Commons

  • (in German)
  • Forschungsgesellschaft Wiener Stadtarchäologie | Legionslager Vindobona (in German)
  • Animationsfilme zu vindobona (in German)
  • Seite mit sehenswerter Rekonstruktion des Lagertores (in German)
  • Livius.org: Vindobona (Vienna)
  • Austrian Mint Coin Features Vindobona
  • Bursche, A., L. Pitts, P. Kaczanowski, E. Krekovič, R. Madyda‑Legutko, R. Talbert, T. Elliott, S. Gillies (20 June 2013). "Places: 128537 (Vindobona)". Pleiades. Retrieved March 8, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

vindobona, other, uses, disambiguation, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, german, november, 2021, click, show, important, translation, instructions, machine, translation, like, deepl, google, translate, useful, . For other uses see Vindobona disambiguation You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German November 2021 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 8 925 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at de Vindobona see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated de Vindobona to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Vindobona Latin pronunciation wɪnˈdɔbɔna from Gaulish windo white and bona base bottom was a Roman military camp or castra in the province of Pannonia located on the site of the modern city of Vienna in Austria The settlement area took on a new name in the 13th century being changed to Berghof or now simply known as Alter Berghof the Old Berghof 2 VindobonaVienna in AustriaThe excavated ruins of Vindobona on the MichaelerplatzMap of the Roman castrum of Vindobona in 250 300VindobonaShow map of ViennaVindobonaShow map of AustriaCoordinates48 12 39 N 16 22 13 E 48 21083 N 16 37028 E 48 21083 16 37028TypeRoman fortificationSite historyBuiltc 100 100 In use103 433 433 1 FateAbandoned to the HunsGarrison informationGarrisonX GeminaAround 1 AD the kingdom of Noricum was included in the Roman Empire Henceforth the Danube marked the border of the empire and the Romans built fortifications and settlements on the banks of the Danube including Vindobona with an estimated population of 15 000 to 20 000 3 4 Contents 1 History 2 Evidence for the Roman presence in Vindobona 2 1 Archaeological remains 2 2 Evidence for the Roman military presence 2 3 Roman canals 2 4 Legacies in today s streets 3 In popular culture 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory edit nbsp Head of a genius found during excavations of Vindobona nbsp Silver plate part of a larger find found around Karntner Strasse in 1945Early references to Vindobona are made by the geographer Ptolemy in his Geographica and the historian Aurelius Victor who recounts that emperor Marcus Aurelius died in Vindobona on 17 March 180 from an unknown illness while on a military campaign against invading Germanic tribes Today there is a Marc Aurelstrasse English Marcus Aurelius street near the Hoher Markt in Vienna It is possible that Vindobona as a legionary fortress was built around the year of 100 because from the archeological records there are no building inscriptions dating earlier than the year of 103 5 Vindobona was part of the Roman province Pannonia of which the regional administrative centre was Carnuntum Vindobona was a military camp with an attached civilian city Canabae The military complex covered an area of some 20 hectares housing about 6000 men where Vienna s first district now stands The Danube marked the border of the Roman Empire and Vindobona was part of a defensive network including the camps of Carnuntum Brigetio and Aquincum By the time of Emperor Commodus four legions X Gemina XIV Gemina Martia Victrix I Adiutrix and II Adiutrix were stationed in Pannonia 6 Vindobona was provisioned by the surrounding Roman country estates Villae rusticae A centre of trade with a developed infrastructure as well as agriculture and forestry developed around Vindobona Civic communities developed outside the fortifications canabae legionis as well another community that was independent of the military authorities in today s third district citation needed It has also been proven that a Germanic settlement with a large marketplace existed on the far side of the Danube from the second century onwards citation needed The asymmetrical layout of the military camp which was unusual for the otherwise standardised Roman encampments is still recognisable in Vienna s street plan Graben Naglergasse Tiefer Graben Salzgries Rabensteig Rotenturmstrasse The oblique camp border along today s street Salzgries was probably caused by a tremendous flood of the River Danube that occurred during the 3rd century and eroded a considerable part of the camp 7 The name Graben English ditch is believed to hark back to the defensive ditches of the military camp It is thought that at least parts of the walls still stood in the Middle Ages when these streets were laid out and thus determined their routes The Berghof was later erected in one corner of the camp Rebuilt after Germanic invasions in the second century the town remained a seat of Roman government through the third and fourth centuries 8 9 The population fled after the Huns invaded Pannonia in the 430s and the settlement was abandoned for several centuries 10 11 Evidence for the Roman presence in Vindobona editArchaeological remains edit nbsp Remains of the Roman outpost at Michaelerplatz nbsp Roman stones from the thermae at Sterngasse nbsp Remains of a hypocaust found below Hoher MarktRemains of the Roman military camp have been found at many sites in the centre of Vienna The centre of the Michaelerplatz has been widely investigated by archaeologists Here traces of a Roman legionary outpost canabae legionis and of a crossroad have been found 12 The centrepiece of the current design of the square is a rectangular opening that evokes the archaeological excavations at the site and shows wall remains that have been preserved from different epochs Part of a Roman canal system is underneath the fire station am Hof 13 Directly under the Hoher Markt are the remains of two buildings unearthed during the canalisation works of 1948 49 and made accessible to the public After further excavation a showroom was opened in 1961 For this purpose some of the original walls had to be removed white marks on the floor show the spots where citation needed The buildings which are separated from one another by a road housed an officer and his family citation needed In 2008 this Roman ruins exhibit was expanded into the Museum of the Romans 14 Only a small portion can today be seen for the majority of the remains are still located underneath the square and south of it The remains of the walls date from different phases from the 1st to the 5th century AD The houses were typical Roman villas with living quarters and space for working set around a middle courtyard with columned halls 15 During drillings for the U5 underground line new brick kiln and metal smelting sites were discovered that revealed further reaching suburbs of the ancient roman settlement 16 Evidence for the Roman military presence edit nbsp Dedication stone with inscriptions mentioning the Legio XIII GeminaOver 3 000 stamped bricks several stone monuments and written sources prove that several legions cavalry units and marines were stationed in Vindobona Around 97 AD Legio XIII Gemina was responsible for construction of the legionary camps Because of the wars in Dacia they were pulled out and redeployed in 101 AD A decade later Legio XIIII Gemina Martia Victrix followed Legio X Gemina from Aquincum arrived in 114 AD and remained in Vindobona until the 5th century citation needed About 6 000 soldiers were stationed in the Roman camp citation needed Many of them were free from active duty during peaceful times and had other jobs citation needed These so called immunes were needed for the supply of goods and for the production and maintenance of weapons and commodities They also extracted stone from quarries and wood from forests produced bricks and maintained the streets bridges and the water system Administrating the camp and ensuring its security required additional manpower Roman canals edit nbsp Manhole cover Proper water supply and sanitation was vital for the functioning of the cityThe Romans provided their cities including Vindobona with clean potable water through an elaborate systems of Roman aqueducts canals and large subterranean pipes Excavations have revealed that Vindobona received its supply through a 17 km long water pipeline citation needed The source is in the Vienna Woods around today s Kalksburg Wells latrines and the thermae were supplied with water Central buildings such as the commander s office and the hospital had their own supplies as did the settlement outside the camp where households had their own groundwater wells citation needed Archaeological excavations done over the last 100 years have discovered the following Roman water supply fragment locations In the Zemlinskygasse at numbers 2 4 23rd district found in 1924 In the Breitenfurter Strasse at number 422 23rd district in 1959 In the Rudolf Zeller Gasse Anton Krieger Gasse 23rd district 1992 In Atzgersdorf 23rd district 1902 1907 In the Tullnertalgasse at number 76 23rd district 1973 In the Lainergasse at number 1 23rd district 1958 In the Wundtgasse 12th district 1951 In the Rosenhugelstrasse at number 88 12th district 1926 In the Fasangartenstrasse at number 49 12th district 1916 In the Pacassistrasse 13th district 1928 In the Sechshauserstrasse at number 7 15th district 1879 leading towards the first district Waste from the Roman camp was transported through an elaborate subterranean sewerage system that was planned from the beginning The sewers were lined with brick walls and plates and ran beneath the main roads Gradients were used in such a way that the waste water descended through the canals into the River Danube Since the canals were up to two meters deep they could be cleaned out regularly Large waste was probably deposed at the slope of the river In the civilian settlement waste was deposed in former water wells and dumps citation needed Legacies in today s streets edit nbsp The Cygnus Relief was probably part of a larger public building nbsp Small bronze statuettes of godsThe layout of a Roman camp castra was normally standardised This has helped archaeologists to reconstruct what the camp must have looked like despite the heavy rebuilding that has taken place in Vienna throughout the centuries The basic contours of the camp which was surrounded by a mighty wall with towers and three moats today the Tiefer Graben Naglergasse Graben and Rotenturmstrasse are identifiable Along these axes main roads connected the gates with one other The main buildings were the commander s headquarters the Palace of the Legate the houses of the staff officers and the thermae At right angles to these the soldiers accommodation a hospital workshops and mews stables were constructed citation needed In popular culture editIn the American film Gladiator 2000 Maximus Russell Crowe fights in the battle of Vindobona under the order of Marcus Aurelius Richard Harris 17 18 There are also two lines that make reference to Vindobona In one the lead character s servant Cicero trying to get the attention of Lucilla states I served your father at Vindobona 19 In the other the lead character asks if anyone in his group of gladiators has served in the army to which an anonymous fighter responds I served with you at Vindobona The historical novel Votan by Welsh writer John James begins in Vindabonum and imagines 2nd century C E life there See also editList of aqueducts in the Roman EmpireReferences edit Humphreys Rob 1997 Vienna The Rough Guide Pensylvannia State University Press p 313 ISBN 978 1 85828 244 2 The Older Berghof in Vienna Archived 2017 09 18 at the Wayback Machine German Today the site is more commonly associated with Hoher Markt and Wiener Neustadter Hof a building in today s Sterngasse 3 Berghof was the name of the mansion which had evolved from the initial settlement with the walls of the Roman baths It was originally the only building in Vienna to be built by a certain pagan presumably an Avaricum dignitary eventually becoming a fortified town The place is mentioned in Jans Enikel s Furstenbuch around 1270 vide Jeff Bernhard Dieter Bietak The Wiener Neustadter Hof alias Berghof a probe into the Year Zero Frankfurt am Main Berlin Bern 1997 p 247 Bowman Alan Wilson Andrew 2011 12 22 Settlement Urbanization and Population OUP Oxford ISBN 9780199602353 Ziak Karl 1964 Unvergangliches Wien Ein Gang durch die Geschichte von der Urzeit bis zur Gegenwart Moscy Andras 1974 Pannonia and Upper Moesia A History of the Middle Danube Provinces of the Roman Empire London Boston Routledge amp Kegan Paul p 88 ISBN 978 1 315 79767 0 Stephen Dando Collins 2012 Legions of Rome The definitive history of every Roman legion Quercus Publishing ISBN 9781849167918 Archived from the original on 2 October 2019 Retrieved 2 October 2019 at the start of AD 193 On 13 April the legions of Pannonia the 10th Gemina and 14th Gemina Martia Victrix in his own province and the 1st and 2nd Adiutrix legions from neighbouring Lower Pannonia Reconstruction of the ancient relief of downtown Vienna in German Southern Germany and Austria Including the Eastern Alps Handbook for Travellers Karl Baedeker 1873 p 177 Retrieved 2 October 2019 By the end of the third century Vindobona had become a municipal town and being the seat of the Roman civil and military government continued to flourish until the invasion of the Huns in the 5th century J Sydney Jones 2014 Viennawalks Four Intimate Walking Tours of Vienna s Most Historic and Enchanting Neighborhoods Henry Holt and Company ISBN 9781466865907 Archived from the original on 2 October 2019 Retrieved 2 October 2019 Vindobona was destroyed suring the Germanic invasions of the latter part of the second century and was rebuilt after those invasions were finally repelled but the Roman era had had its peak by 180 Roman order was restored to Pannonia But it was a tenuous order holding doggedly on for another two centuries until the final withdrawal of the Roman troops and destruction of Vindobona in the early fifth century Southern Germany and Austria Including the Eastern Alps Handbook for Travellers Karl Baedeker 1873 p 177 Retrieved 2 October 2019 Vindobona continued to flourish until the invasion of the Huns in the 5th century From that date the Roman Vindobona disappears from the history until the year 791 Rob Collins Matt Symonds Meike Weber 2015 Roman Military Architecture on the Frontiers Armies and Their Architecture in Late Antiquity Oxbow Books ISBN 9781782979913 Archived from the original on 2 October 2019 Retrieved 2 October 2019 Consequently Vindobona became increasingly depopulated over the course of the first half of the 5th century The present state of research indicated that the definite end of the settlement within the old fortress occurred during the 430s AD when the Huns finally seized control of the province of Pannonia The intramural area of Vindobona has provided no evidence of settlement activity from the mid 5th century through until at least the 9th century a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Wien Museum Archaologisches Grabungsfeld Michaelerplatz in German Wien Museum Romische Baureste Am Hof Vienna Museum in German Die Romer kommen nach Wien Archived 2011 07 25 at the Wayback Machine ORF 10 May 2008 in German Wien Museum Romische Ruinen Hoher Markt in German Uberraschungsfunde fur die Archaologie dank Wiener U Bahn Ausbau DER STANDARD in Austrian German Retrieved 2022 08 04 Villapalos Salas Gustavo San Miguel Perez Enrique September 1 2014 Lecciones de Historia del Derecho Espanol Editorial Universitaria Ramon Areces p 38 ISBN 9788499611785 Gilliland Charles November 14 2016 The Gospel of Matthew Through the Eyes of a Cop A Devotional for Law Enforcement Officers WestBow Press p 162 ISBN 9781490898377 Cyrino Monica Silveira February 9 2009 Big Screen Rome John Wiley amp Sons p 209 ISBN 9781405150323 Further reading editMichaela Kronberger Siedlungschronologische Forschungen zu den canabae legionis von Vindobona Die Graberfelder Monographien der Stadtarchaologie Wien Band 1 Phoibos Verlag Wien 2005 in German Christine Ranseder e a Michaelerplatz Die archaologischen Ausgrabungen Wien Archaologisch 1 Wien 2006 ISBN 3 901232 72 9 in German Vindobona Die Reise in das antike Wien DVD Rom 2004 in German Vindobona II Wassertechnik des antiken Wiens DVD Rom 2005 in German External links edit nbsp Media related to Vindobona at Wikimedia Commons Wien Museum Ausgrabungsstatten in German Forschungsgesellschaft Wiener Stadtarchaologie Legionslager Vindobona in German Animationsfilme zu vindobona in German Seite mit sehenswerter Rekonstruktion des Lagertores in German Livius org Vindobona Vienna Austrian Mint Coin Features Vindobona Bursche A L Pitts P Kaczanowski E Krekovic R Madyda Legutko R Talbert T Elliott S Gillies 20 June 2013 Places 128537 Vindobona Pleiades Retrieved March 8 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vindobona amp oldid 1183314253, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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