Archaeological site

Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium

Germany Germania Inferior part of UNESCO World Heritage Site
Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium
Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium · Wikipedia

About

Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium was the Roman colony in the Rhineland from which the city of Cologne, now in Germany, developed. It was usually called Colonia (colony) and was the capital of the Roman province of Germania Inferior and the headquarters of the military in the region. With administrative reforms under Diocletian it became the capital of Germania Secunda. During the second and mid-third centuries, around 20,000 people lived in the city. Many artefacts from the ancient city survive, including the arch of the former city gate with the inscription "CCAA", which is today housed in the Romano-Germanic Museum.

Oppidum Ubiorum (Latin city of Ubii), Ara Ubiorum and Apud Aram Ubiorum

A Germanic tribe known as the Eburones had originally inhabited the present-day Cologne Lowland. But they were wiped out in a war of reprisal carried out by Julius Caesar. In 38 BC, the Germanic tribe known as the Ubii, who inhabited the right bank of the Rhine, were resettled by the Roman General Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa in the lands in the Cologne Lowland vacated by the Eburones. This brought the Ubii within Roman-occupied territory.

The Ubii chose an island in the Rhine as the central location of their settlement area. The island was a natural rise that was protected from flooding. The location of the settlement no longer exists today but it roughly comprises the area between the areas of the Heumarkt and the Alter Markt sections of the old city of Cologne. The settlement can be dated by archeological finds to the first half of the 1st century AD. By this time the typical Roman grid-style street plan was already in use. The settlement's assumed name is probably Oppidum Ubiorum (Settlement of the Ubii). The Roman epoch of the history of the city of Cologne begins with this oppidum.

During the rule of Augustus (30 BC to AD 14), the Ara Ubiorum (Altar of the Ubii) was constructed within the city limits. This altar was possibly foreseen as the central place of worship for a greater Germanic province, which would comprise lands across the Rhine, which remained unconquered at this point. The noble Segimundus is mentioned as the priest of the Ara in the year AD 9. He was from the family of Arminius, leader of the Cherusci. After Arminius' victory over Publius Quinctilius Varus in the same year at the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest, the plans for a greater German province were largely set aside. However, the altar itself retained some of its importance as the city is mentioned as “Ara Ubiorum” in many inscriptions.

Between 9 and AD 30 the area of present-day Cologne was mainly a garrison. Legio I Germanica and the Legio XX Valeria Victrix were stationed nearby. The place of the initial Roman Castra was known as Apud Aram Ubiorum (At the Altar of the Ubii).

The headquarters of Germanicus were located in Cologne from AD 13 to 17, when he was recalled by Tiberius. After the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest, Germanicus made efforts to stabilize the border region and to plan and carry out new offensives against the Germanic tribes located on the right bank of the Rhine. With the death of Augustus in AD 14 the legions garrisoned in Cologne mutinied with the aim of establishing Germanicus as emperor. These legions probably united in mutiny with those from Vetera stationed at their summer garrison in Castrum Novasium. Germanicus however remained loyal to Tiberius, who was heir to the throne. He dissuaded the legions from declaring him emperor and at the same time placated the mutineers through generous concessions.

Legio I was later stationed in Bonna (present-day Bonn ) and Legio XX garrisoned Castrum Novaesium near present-day Neuss.

Agrippina the younger was born in AD 15 in Cologne. She was the daughter of Germanicus and the wife of the Roman Emperor Claudius. She succeeded in convincing Claudius around 50 AD to elevate her birthplace to a colonia named Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium (Colony of Claudius and Altar of the Agrippinians) − where the name of the emperor stands for the rights granted to a colonia, that of the empress for the inhabitants, her compatriots, who she had named Agrippinenses after her, and even the altar at the central sanctuary (on the forum ) was mentioned, the Ara Ubiorum, where, in addition to the emperor, the Ubiian gods were worshiped. The elevation gave the previous oppidum the status of "city" under Roman law and a Roman colony had many more imperial rights than an oppidum. At this time the city became the administrative capital of Germania Inferior. Before this time the area was not an official province, but an occupied area controlled and administered initially by the military (exercitus Germaniae inferioris) and later temporarily defined as a tentative "Germania provincia".

From AD 70 on the city had a strong city wall that was c. 8 meters in height and 2.5 meters wide. However, the remains of the Roman city wall that can still be seen today are from the 3rd century AD. The unwalled portions of the city were equal to a square kilometer. Its most important steles and grave goods are preserved in the Romano-Germanic Museum.

The year of four emperors and Batavian revolt

- Main articles: Batavian rebellion and Year of Four Emperors In AD 68, the death of Emperor Nero caused a succession crisis in Rome. This led to a civil war throughout the empire. The Roman Senate installed Servius Sulpicius Galba as emperor, but he was quickly murdered by another contender for the throne, Marcus Salvius Otho, who had the backing of the Praetorian Guard. Meanwhile, the legions stationed in Colonia called for their commander Aulus Vitellius to be crowned as emperor. Vitellius marched on Italy at the head of the better part of the Rhine legions, and defeated Otho's troops at the First Battle of Bedriacum, in which Otho himself was killed.

A power vacuum occurred on the now undefended Rhine border. The Batavians rose and advanced on the empire from the Northeast of Germania Inferior. The majority of the inhabitants of Colonia remained Ubii, as they had not been fully romanised. They quickly sided with the Batavians. However, when the Batavians demanded that the city wall be torn down, the inhabitants of Colonia again sided with the Roman Empire.

Vitellius was overthrown eight months later by Titus Flavius Vespasianus, whose troops feared reprisals for having previously recognized Otho as emperor. Vitellius was killed and his body thrown into the Tiber.

Capital of the province Germania Inferior

With the founding of the province of Germania Inferior under Domitian in AD 89, the commander of the Legions of Lower Germania Colonia became the provincial governor, based in Colonia. In AD 80 a water supply was built, the Eifel Aqueduct, one of the longest aqueducts of the Roman Empire, which delivered 20,000 cubic metres of water to the city every day. Ten years later, the colonia became the capital of the Roman province of Lower Germany, Germania Inferior, with a total population of 20,000 people with around 15,000 of them inside and around 5,000 outside the city walls. (For comparison: at the same time there were some 5,000 inhabitants in Lutetia (Paris), also around 20,000 inhabitants in Augusta Treverorum (Trier), around 30,000–50,000 or more in Narbo Martius ( Narbonne ), between 30,000 and 60,000 people in Londinium (London), 50,000 to 100,000, and possibly up to 200,000 in Lugdunum (Lyon), and between half a million and one million in ancient Rome.)

The Rhine fleet (part of the Classis Germanica ) was stationed south of the city at Alteburg. The Alteburg naval fort was a camp measuring around twelve hectares, surrounded by a vicus, a civilian settlement, just three and a half kilometers south of the ancient city, in the eastern area of today's Marienburg district of Cologne. The fortress was destroyed in attacks by the Franks in AD 276. This area was later named Alte Burg, from which come the present day names " Alteburger Wall " and " Alteburger Platz ". With the elevation to provincial capital, Colonia was no longer a military base. The legions of the province were stationed in Vetera II near Colonia Ulpia Traiana (near present-day Xanten), Novaesium and Bonna. The name of the city varied in usage over time. In the 4th century AD it was known as Colonia Agrippina, which was shortened to Colonia sometime after the 5th century.

The Praetorium served as the residence as well as the administrative building of the governor of the province of Germania inferior. The governor combined in his person the military command over the Lower Germanic army (Exercitus Germaniae Inferioris) and the civil command over the province. His civil power encompassed both the judiciary and the executive and - in a regional context - the legislative power. The governor of a province, as Legatus Augusti pro praetore ("envoy of the emperor with the rank of praetor "), was always a former Roman consul. He only answered directly to the emperor. In order to carry out his tasks, an extensive administrative apparatus as well as an infantry cohort and a cavalry cohort were directly subordinate to him.

The praetorium of the CCAA was located in the ancient city directly on the eastern city wall, northeast of the forum district. It is the only administrative building of this type in the entire Roman Empire in which the name praetorium as such is preserved in an inscription. The foundation walls can be viewed under the "Spanish Building" of the Cologne City Hall. Essentially, the building, which has seen repeated new construction and extensions throughout its history, can be differentiated into four different construction phases:

- The origins of the Praetorium may date back to 14 AD. The first building could arise from the principia of the Legio XX camp or from the praetorium (in the sense of commander's apartment) of Germanicus, who stayed in Cologne between the years 13 and 17 AD. From this period, two parallel trachyte walls, 4.20 meters apart, with a length of 148 and 173 m respectively, have been identified. The façade facing the Rhine was divided by pilasters. A little south of it, the apse of an unidentifiable part of the building, approximately eight meters in diameter, was excavated.