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Rome's Floating Frontiers - Printable Version

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Rome's Floating Frontiers - Simplex - 10-10-2021

...Oops ..... I forgot that one !
Nordrhein-Westfalen is holding a sizeable exhibition at 5 different (!) places with different emphasizes to each place.
1) 24.09.2021—27.02.2022  at DETMOLD/Lippe
2) 30.09.2021—16.10.2022  at XANTEN
3) 25.11.2021—29.05.2022  at BONN
4) 25.03.2022—30.10.2022  at HALTERN AM SEE
5) 29.04.2022—09.10.2022  at COLOGNE/KÖLN
Catalogue (In German only ?!) available.
More informations (English)  https://www.roemer.nrw/en/node/194
In het Nederlands   https://www.roemer.nrw/nb/node/194
In Deutsch  https://www.roemer.nrw/roms-fliessende-grenzen
Most informations , however are kept in German. (A couple of folders and leaflets)

Up and at it.  Shy

Greez

Siggi


RE: Rome's Floating Frontiers - Robert Vermaat - 10-11-2021

Thanks Siggi! I mean to go to the one in Xanten at least this year.


RE: Rome's Floating Frontiers - Simplex - 10-11-2021

(10-11-2021, 07:14 PM)Robert Vermaat Wrote: Thanks Siggi! I mean to go to the one in Xanten at least this year.

Hi Robert,
....  hopefully they can tell more about the camp in the "Southern Quarter".
Insulae 7,14 and small stripes of insulae 6 and 13.
E.g..
https://doi.org/10.11588/bjb.2017.1.79286
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:16-bjb-707249

Greez

Siggi


RE: Rome's Floating Frontiers - Robert Vermaat - 10-15-2021

I'm with those who previously guessed it was a camp for the soldiers who tore down the old colonia, to build the Constantinian fort.


RE: Rome's Floating Frontiers - Simplex - 10-15-2021

(10-15-2021, 03:36 PM)Robert Vermaat Wrote: I'm with those who previously guessed it was a camp for the soldiers who tore down the old colonia, to build the Constantinian fort.

Hi Robert,
      I just got the catalogue, so I've had no time for more than a short peep into it.
As they have touched the subject, I would just (grossly)  summarize that they’d rather attribute that
building complex to the times of the Imperium Galliarum (260-274AD) or shortly thereafter.
Since there is „Work In Progress“ you may be able to get more recent findings when visiting the
place during that exhibition, as they have research facilities „on site“.
And, yes, they still have no exact clue about the exact date of the end of Vetera 2.
The book seems to be what I would call a "good buy".

Greez

Siggi


RE: Rome's Floating Frontiers - Robert Vermaat - 10-17-2021

Thanks!
It would not be the first occasion in which a 'Constantinian' building or monument was actually started by a predecessor, and later 'attributed' to the usurper because of his later fame.


RE: Rome's Floating Frontiers - Simplex - 10-26-2022

Not directly related to the subject, but, in a way , "pushing the envelope" .

BR-TV (In German)  : Rätselhafte Grenze -- Wissenschaft am Donaulimes ( Enigmatic Frontier -- Research On the Danube-Limes)
Building and testing the "Danuvina Alacris"  -- Research on the legionary camp of Enns, its vicus and its military and economic networks.
The roman burying sites at Augsburg. In all : Recent finds and findings.

https://www.br.de/mediathek/video/gut-zu-wissen-doku-raetselhafte-grenze-wissenschaft-am-donaulimes-av:6315e87e6f6a1d0008fb70d9

Enjoy.

Siggi