User:RobinLeicester/sandbox: Difference between revisions
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|6 || ''[[Laurium (fort)]]'' || [[Woerden]]-Centrum || Auxiliary fort, largely undisturbed beneath the modern town. Delta conditions mean well-preserved timbers have survived || {{coord|52|5|10|N|4|53|2|E}} || 39 (timber), 150 (stone) to 275 AD || 1975 onwards |
|6 || ''[[Laurium (fort)]]'' || [[Woerden]]-Centrum || Auxiliary fort, largely undisturbed beneath the modern town. Delta conditions mean well-preserved timbers have survived || {{coord|52|5|10|N|4|53|2|E}} || 39 (timber), 150 (stone) to 275 AD || 1975 onwards |
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|7 || || [[Utrecht]] || 2.5km section of the Limes road (a ''via militaris'' which ran along the left bank of the lower Rhine). It including 3 sites with well preserved timbers of watchtowers, river revetments and sunken ships. Two rebuilding phases followed personal inspections by Trajan and Hadrian || {{coord|52|5|10|N|5|0|29|E}}|| c85 AD (refurbished 99+ and 123+)|| 2000 onwards |
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|8 || possibly ''[[Fletio (fort)|Fletio]]'' || [[Utrecht]]-Hoge Woerd || Auxiliary fort with associated settlement, bath house, cemeteries, and rubbish dumps || {{coord|52|5|10|N|5|2|31|E}} || 40s AD to at least late 3rd century || 1940s onwards |
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|9 || || [[Utrecht]]-Groot Zandveld || Watchtower, some 3m (10ft) square, on a low hill with views of the former river channels || {{coord|52|5|42|N|5|3|4|E}} || 40 to 70 AD || 1999, 2003, 2005 |
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7a Utrecht-Limes road | Zandweg NL Utrecht {{coord|4|59|46|E|52|5|28|N}} |
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7b Utrecht-Limes road | Veldhuizen NL Utrecht {{coord|5|0|29|E|52|5|10|N}} |
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7c Utrecht-Limes road | De Balije NL Utrecht {{coord|5|1|19|E|52|4|48|N}} |
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8a Utrecht-Hoge Woerd | Castellum NL Utrecht {{coord|5|2|31|E|52|5|10|N}} |
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8b Utrecht-Hoge Woerd | Langerakbaan NL Utrecht {{coord|5|2|38|E|52|5|17|N}} |
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9 Utrecht-Groot Zandveld NL Utrecht {{coord|5|3|4|E|52|5|42|N}} |
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11a Bunnik-Vechten | Marsdijk NL Bunnik {{coord|5|9|58|E|52|3|29|N}} |
11a Bunnik-Vechten | Marsdijk NL Bunnik {{coord|5|9|58|E|52|3|29|N}} |
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11b Bunnik-Vechten | Provincialeweg NL Bunnik {{coord|5|10|26|E|52|3|47|N}} |
11b Bunnik-Vechten | Provincialeweg NL Bunnik {{coord|5|10|26|E|52|3|47|N}} |
Revision as of 17:11, 12 October 2024
Lower Germanic Limes
Netherlands
Frontiers of the Roman Empire – The Lower German Limes Nomination File for Inscription on the UNESCO World Heritage List Part II A – Annex 1 | Catalogue of Component Parts | Netherlands 2021
Site | Roman Name | Modern-day Location | Feature | Coordinates | Occupation time period | Investigated |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | possibly Pretorium Agrippine | Valkenburg-Centrum | Auxilliary fort. The list notes 4 excavated areas within the fort and adds a larger 'buffer zone' covering the whole fort and areas towards the vicus | 52°10′48″N 4°25′59″E / 52.18000°N 4.43306°E | AD 40 to late 3rd century | 1946-51 plus 1962-80 |
2 | Valkenburg-De Woerd | Military vicus (civil settlement, although this is a puzzling 1km away from the fort) | 52°10′19″N 4°26′17″E / 52.17194°N 4.43806°E | 50 to 250 AD | 1920s, 40s, 1972, 2019 | |
3 | Forum Hadriani, also known as Municipium Aelium Cananefatium (MAEC) | Voorburg-Arentsburg | Civil settlement in the Rhine-Meuse delta, with harbour frontage to access Corbulo's Canal | 52°3′36″N 4°21′0″E / 52.06000°N 4.35000°E | c15 AD origins. Expansion under Hadrian (2nd century). Occupied to at least 400 | 1827-34, 1908-15, 1984-88, 2005-08. |
4 | Fossa Corbulonis (Corbulo's canal) | Voorschoten and Leidschendam-Voorburg | Canal linking the Meuse and Rhine rivers, constructed by Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo, some 34 kilometres (21 miles) in length. (Six protected sections over an 11km stretch between properties 3 and 5) | 52°6′18″N 4°25′44″E / 52.10500°N 4.42889°E | 47 - 50 AD | 1989 onwards. |
5 | Matilo | Leiden-Roomburg | Auxiliary Fort and civil settlement where Corbulo's Canal meets the Rhine | 52°9′0″N 4°31′1″E / 52.15000°N 4.51694°E | 70 (or before); 103/111; 200 AD | 1962 (channel); 1994–1997 (vicus); 1999, 2009 (stone fort). |
6 | Laurium (fort) | Woerden-Centrum | Auxiliary fort, largely undisturbed beneath the modern town. Delta conditions mean well-preserved timbers have survived | 52°5′10″N 4°53′2″E / 52.08611°N 4.88389°E | 39 (timber), 150 (stone) to 275 AD | 1975 onwards |
7 | Utrecht | 2.5km section of the Limes road (a via militaris which ran along the left bank of the lower Rhine). It including 3 sites with well preserved timbers of watchtowers, river revetments and sunken ships. Two rebuilding phases followed personal inspections by Trajan and Hadrian | 52°5′10″N 5°0′29″E / 52.08611°N 5.00806°E | c85 AD (refurbished 99+ and 123+) | 2000 onwards | |
8 | possibly Fletio | Utrecht-Hoge Woerd | Auxiliary fort with associated settlement, bath house, cemeteries, and rubbish dumps | 52°5′10″N 5°2′31″E / 52.08611°N 5.04194°E | 40s AD to at least late 3rd century | 1940s onwards |
9 | Utrecht-Groot Zandveld | Watchtower, some 3m (10ft) square, on a low hill with views of the former river channels | 52°5′42″N 5°3′4″E / 52.09500°N 5.05111°E | 40 to 70 AD | 1999, 2003, 2005 | |
10 | Traiectum | Utrecht-Domplein | Auxiliary fort | 52°5′28″N 5°7′19″E / 52.09111°N 5.12194°E |
11a Bunnik-Vechten | Marsdijk NL Bunnik 52°3′29″N 5°9′58″E / 52.05806°N 5.16611°E 11b Bunnik-Vechten | Provincialeweg NL Bunnik 52°3′47″N 5°10′26″E / 52.06306°N 5.17389°E 12 Arnhem-Meinerswijk NL Arnhem 51°58′16″N 5°52′26″E / 51.97111°N 5.87389°E 13 Elst-Grote Kerk NL Overbetuwe 51°55′12″N 5°50′56″E / 51.92000°N 5.84889°E 14a Nijmegen-Valkhof area | Valkhofpark NL Nijmegen 51°50′53″N 5°52′12″E / 51.84806°N 5.87000°E 14b Nijmegen-Valkhof area | Hunnerpark NL Nijmegen 51°50′49″N 5°52′19″E / 51.84694°N 5.87194°E 15 Nijmegen-Hunerberg NL Nijmegen 51°50′24″N 5°53′2″E / 51.84000°N 5.88389°E 16a Nijmegen-Kops Plateau | West NL Nijmegen 51°50′17″N 5°53′31″E / 51.83806°N 5.89194°E 16b Nijmegen-Kops Plateau | North NL Berg en Dal 51°50′20″N 5°53′42″E / 51.83889°N 5.89500°E 16c Nijmegen-Kops Plateau | East NL Nijmegen 51°50′10″N 5°53′42″E / 51.83611°N 5.89500°E 16d Nijmegen-Kops Plateau | Kopse Hof North NL Nijmegen 51°50′10″N 5°53′46″E / 51.83611°N 5.89611°E 16e Nijmegen-Kops Plateau | Kopse Hof South NL Nijmegen 51°50′6″N 5°53′46″E / 51.83500°N 5.89611°E 17a Berg en Dal-aqueduct | Mariënboom NL Nijmegen 51°49′34″N 5°53′17″E / 51.82611°N 5.88806°E 17b Berg en Dal-aqueduct | Swartendijk NL Berg en Dal/Nijmegen 51°49′23″N 5°53′28″E / 51.82306°N 5.89111°E 17c Berg en Dal-aqueduct | Cortendijk NL Berg en Dal 51°49′12″N 5°53′24″E / 51.82000°N 5.89000°E 17d Berg en Dal-aqueduct | Louisedal NL Berg en Dal 51°49′5″N 5°54′0″E / 51.81806°N 5.90000°E 17e Berg en Dal-aqueduct | Kerstendal NL Berg en Dal 51°49′1″N 5°54′50″E / 51.81694°N 5.91389°E 18a Berg en Dal-De Holdeurn | North NL Berg en Dal 51°49′1″N 5°55′59″E / 51.81694°N 5.93306°E 18b Berg en Dal-De Holdeurn | South NL Berg en Dal 51°48′58″N 5°55′55″E / 51.81611°N 5.93194°E 19 Herwen-De Bijland NL Zevenaar 51°52′52″N 6°5′56″E / 51.88111°N 6.09889°E
Germany - NRW
Frontiers of the Roman Empire – The Lower German Limes Nomination File for Inscription on the UNESCO World Heritage List Part II B – Annex 1 | Catalogue of Component Parts | Germany 2021
Site | Roman Name | Modern-day Location | Feature | Coordinates | Occupation time period | Investigated |
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20 | Kleve-Keeken | Double-ditched marching fort (between 4 and 8 ha) | 51°50′28″N 6°4′41″E / 51.84111°N 6.07806°E | unknown | 2016. | |
21 | Kleve-Reichswald | 2 sections of Roman Limes Road (over c1.5km) | 51°47′28″N 6°5′35″E / 51.79111°N 6.09306°E | Probably in use throughout the Roman occupation | 2015 excavation. | |
22 | Arenacum / Arenatium | Till (Bedburg-Hau) | Legionary fortress, fort, camps. | 51°46′37″N 6°14′20″E / 51.77694°N 6.23889°E | AD 70-180 | 2010. 2015 excavation trench. |
23 | Kalkar-Kalkarberg | Sanctuary/Temple to the Germanic war goddess Vagdavercustis | 51°43′44″N 6°17′6″E / 51.72889°N 6.28500°E | c12 BC to c AD 400 | 1980. 2000-2009 excavations. | |
24 | Burginatium | Kalkar-Bornsches Feld | Auxiliary Fort, civil settlement, cemetery, limes road, fort (fleet base?) | 51°42′50″N 6°19′8″E / 51.71389°N 6.31889°E | 1st to 3rd centuries | 2005 and 2015 geophysical survey. |
25 | Uedem-Hochwald | A cluster of 13 individual marching camps, ranging from 0.5 to 2.5 ha (covers 15 properties) now in woodland | 51°41′31″N 6°21′7″E / 51.69194°N 6.35194°E | unknown | 2012 laserscan. | |
26 | Wesel-Flüren | 4 marching camps from a cluster of at least 8, (size 1.2 to 2.5 ha), now in woodland on the east bank of the Rhine | 51°40′55″N 6°33′32″E / 51.68194°N 6.55889°E | unknown | 2012 laserscan. | |
27 | Colonia Ulpia Traiana ('CUT') and Tricensima | Xanten | Walled city, accorded Colonia (city) status, founded by Trajan next to the double legionary fortress of Vetera. A 4th century defensible fortress of Tricensima was built within the older city. The whole 90ha city area is now an open-air Archaeological Park | 51°40′1″N 6°26′38″E / 51.66694°N 6.44389°E | AD 100 (under Trajan (renamed in 110 by Marcus Ulpius Traianus), 4th century rebuilding | Excavation of City walls: 19th century; amphitheatre:1930s; Buildings within the archaeological park: from 1977. |
28 | Vetera Castra | Xanten-Fürstenberg | Vetera I was Lower Germany's largest legionary fortresses (c57ha), with space for two legions plus amphitheatre. After AD 70 This was replaced by a single-legion fortress (Vetera II) nearer the river, and the establishment of the Colonia to the north | 51°38′35″N 6°28′12″E / 51.64306°N 6.47000°E | Vetera I: 10 BC to AD 40; Rebuilt in stone: AD 40 to 70; Vetera II: AD 70 to at least 260 |
Antiquarians. 19th century. 1905-1930 (small trenches); 1960s onwards, aerial/Geophys surveying. Vetera II: 1955-58 underwater investigations. |
29 | Alpen-Drüpt | Two overlapping large temporary camps and an Auxilliary fort | 51°35′13″N 6°32′46″E / 51.58694°N 6.54611°E | Unknown | Camps: 1960s aerial photos. Fort: 2015 surveys and geophys. | |
30 | Asciburgium | Moers-Asberg | Auxilliary Cavalry Camps, tented followed by timber fortress. Later stone Burgus tower. | 51°25′55″N 6°40′12″E / 51.43194°N 6.67000°E | 16 BC to AD 85. Late 4th century Burgus. | 1956–1981 excavations |
31 | Duisburg-Werthausen | Fortlet (0.3ha) formerly on the right bank of the Rhine. (Oxbow has since cut through, so on the modern left bank) | 51°25′19″N 6°42′40″E / 51.42194°N 6.71111°E | After AD 85 to 3rd century | 1891, 1924 excavations | |
32 | Gelduba | Krefeld-Gellep | Site of AD 70 battle of Gelduba, in the Batavian Revolt. An Auxilliary fort was built on the battlefield. | 51°19′59″N 6°40′55″E / 51.33306°N 6.68194°E | AD 70 to 5th century | Earliest excavations in 1934. Fort in 1964-68. Vicus 1977 and 2017. |
33 | Novaesium | Neuss | Successive legionary camps including the 'Koenenlager' - the first fully excavated Legionary Fortress (28.5ha) - and a later Auxilliary fort built within the abandoned fortress. | 51°10′55″N 6°43′26″E / 51.18194°N 6.72389°E | 16 BC earliest camp. 43 AD: 'Koenen's Camp'. 2nd century Auxilliary fort. | 1897-1900: Koenen's excavations. 1950s onwards: excavations at earlier camps. |
34 | Neuss-Reckberg | Small fort and nearby Watchtower which would have commanded views of the River, Limes Road and surrounding areas | 51°10′34″N 6°45′58″E / 51.17611°N 6.76611°E | 1st to 2nd centuries | 1885 excavation by Koenen | |
35 | Monheim am Rhein | Late-Roman Fort. Substantial brickwork walls, corner towers and 8 interval towers, enclosing 2.5ha. Some walls remain to 4m, incorporated into a medieval Manor House, Haus Bürgel, open as a museum. | 51°7′44″N 6°52′23″E / 51.12889°N 6.87306°E | Early 4th to 5th centuries | Various excavations from 1953 onwards. | |
36 | Durnomagus | Dormagen | Auxilliary fort (3.3ha) for some 500 cavalry soldiers. A later Burgus made use of a corner section of wall. | 51°5′35″N 6°50′24″E / 51.09306°N 6.84000°E | 80s AD wooden fort rebuilt in stone by 150, bunt down in 161. Burgus in 3rd to 4th centuries | 1963–1977 excavations |
37 | Praetorium at Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium | Cologne | Palace of the Governor of Lower Germania province. It was the largest Roman building on the Lower Rhine, and is now amongst the best studied Roman buildings anywhere. An Underground museum of the foundations has been incorporated into the MiQua permanent exhibition under the Rathausplatz. | 50°56′17″N 6°57′32″E / 50.93806°N 6.95889°E | Early 1st century Legionary HQ, and the name continued for the Governor's palace of 80 AD, and rebuilds in 185 and mid-4th century. The building was in use until possibly 8th century. | Post-war reconstruction uncovered the foundations, with multiple subsequent discoveries over 65 years to the 2007-2018 museum excavations. |
38 | Castrum Divitia | Deutz, Cologne | 4th century fort inaugurated by Constantine I to control a new Rhine Bridge to Colonia. The only fort on the Lower Rhine right bank. Standing remains were incoporated into a 9th century Church, and then in 1003, into Deutz Abbey. | 50°56′17″N 6°58′12″E / 50.93806°N 6.97000°E | AD 309-315 until mid 5th century | 1879–1882, 1927–1938, 1967, 1976–1979, 2010–2015 excavations |
39 | Alteburg, Cologne | Fort fronting the Rhine, providing the permanent base for the Classis Germanica, the Roman fleet on the Rhine, 3km south of the Colonia | 50°54′18″N 6°58′37″E / 50.90500°N 6.97694°E | 10 AD to 3rd century | 1870-99 and multiple excavations through 20th century | |
40 | Kottenforst Nord | Manoeuvring areas for training activities in the vicinity of Bonn legionary fortress. The walls of 12 separate training camps are preserved up to 0.5 m high. | 50°43′1″N 6°58′41″E / 50.71694°N 6.97806°E | 1st and 2nd centuries | Laser scanning from 2008 | |
41 | Castra Bonnensis | Bonn | Legionary Fortress (27.8 ha) remaining on the same footprint over its 400 years in use. Base for Legio I Minervia. Bonn's streets still reflect the walls and roads of the fortress. | 50°44′42″N 7°6′0″E / 50.74500°N 7.10000°E | AD 35 to 430 | First discovery and excavations in 1818, further excavations in 1903–1905; 1958/59; 2013–2014. |
42 | Kottenforst Süd | Manoeuvring area similar to that north of Bonn, with 10 separate training camps with areas ranging from 0.5 to 1.9ha and earth walls 0.5 m high. | 50°39′32″N 7°5′38″E / 50.65889°N 7.09389°E | 1st and 2nd centuries | Laser scanning from 2008. | |
43 | Iversheim | Limekilns to supply military construction for use along the whole lower Rhine area, via the river Erft. Six kilns of which three are now displayed in an exhibition building. | 50°35′17″N 6°46′26″E / 50.58806°N 6.77389°E | 1st to 3rd centuries | excavated 1966-68. | |
44 | Rigomagus | Remagen | Auxiliary fort (1.47 ha) in use from 1st to 4th centuries. Later (270 AD onwards) construction re-used the older wall foundations. some of which survive in the modern town. | 50°34′48″N 7°13′41″E / 50.58000°N 7.22806°E | 1st to 4th centuries | Excavations from 19th century onwards. |