Brick stamps in Roman Trier – building material for an ancient metropolis

FacebookXLinkedInWeChatBlueskyMessageWhatsAppEmailTrier flourished in the 4th century AD, when Roman emperors resided in the city. Monumental buildings such as the Imperial Baths and the Basilica of Constantine still bear witness to this era. The construction materials included fired bricks of various formats, used for walls, roofs, and heating systems. Approximately 4,000 stamped bricks from the Roman period are stored in the depots of Generaldirektion Kulturelles Erbe’s (GDKE) Rheinisches Landesmuseum Trier. Excavated since the early 20th century, this collection is among the largest from the northern Roman provinces. However, only a small portion has been studied to date. A team of researchers from the museum, Goethe University Frankfurt, and LEIZA now aims to systematically analyze them. Their goal is to gain insights into brick production as a key economic sector in the expansion of ancient Trier. “We assume that most of the stamped bricks date from Late Antiquity. This allows us to conduct a comprehensive analysis of how building ceramics were produced and used during this period,” says Dr. Thomas Schmidts, a private lecturer at Goethe University and conservator in the “Roman Archaeology” area of competence at LEIZA in Mainz. “Brick stamps are also key to understanding the economic and social structures of Late Antiquity,” he adds.A key project focus is the spatial distribution of the bricks, which will help researchers trace the architectural development of Augusta Treverorum, the Roman Trier, which became known as Treveris in Late Antiquity. The study may reveal previously unknown state and public construction projects. Additionally, the researchers plan to quantify the efforts involved in late antique brick production, transportation, and construction. For the first time, archaeometric analyses will be conducted on Trier’s bricks, examining their material composition – specifically, the chemical composition of the clay – to determine the raw materials used. This will allow researchers to identify or confirm the existence of specific workshops.“We are very pleased that our joint proposal was successful in the competitive DFG process. A broad methodological spectrum is not just typical of LEIZA, it also is increasingly important to gaining groundbreaking new insights,” emphasizes Prof. Dr. Alexandra W. Busch, General Director of LEIZA. “The project’s findings will not only expand our knowledge of late antique building ceramics but also serve as a model study that integrates archaeological and archaeometric methodologies, helping us reconstruct Trier’s historical development.”

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Curse tablet written in Gaulish found in ancient burial in Orléans

Twenty-one lead curse tablets have been discovered in the graves of an Gallo-Roman era cemetery in Orléans, France. One grave dating to the second half of the 2nd century was particularly notable for having a curse written in Gaulish. The language was used for centuries after the Roman conquest, but very few written examples of … Read the full post →”Curse tablet written in Gaulish found in ancient burial in Orléans”

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Roman iron knife with bronze inlay found in Germany

A Roman iron knife and intaglio gemstone have been discovered under an outbuilding of an ancient farmstead in the town of Delbrück, northwestern Germany. The artifacts and farmstead date to the 1st century A.D., providing a unique opportunity for archaeologists to explore the relationship between the Roman army and local inhabitants fully 90 miles from … Read the full post →”Roman iron knife with bronze inlay found in Germany”

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Views of the Afterlife in Roman Tombstone Inscriptions

Ancient views of the afterlife are reflected in literature, tomb inscriptions, and grave goods. Then, as now, a belief in another stage of existence after death was a shared belief by all ancient societies. Initially, the Greco-Roman Hades contained all the dead. Over time, the dead became distinguished by the virtuous and the wicked and were assigned different areas in the land of the dead…

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In Ancient Rome, Gladiators Rarely Fought to the Death

While the bloodshed on film and TV adaptations might persuade us otherwise, leading speaker on gladiatorial life and historical consultant Alexander Mariotti insists that death in the ancient Roman arena was “an absolute rarity”. Joining Tristan Hughes on The Ancients, the consultant on Ridley Scott’s Gladiator and Amazon Prime’s Those About to Die (in which … Continued

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Puzzle Over These Ancient Greek Paradoxes

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Ancient Greek philosophers used paradoxes for all sorts of reasons, from sharpening their dialectical skills and showing philosophical opponents were talking nonsense to serious philosophical inquiry – but also for fun. Some paradoxes were lethal. Philetas of Cos’s epitaph tells us he died … Continued

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Where to Find the World’s Oldest Map of the Biblical Middle East

The town of Madaba in Jordan is home to the early Byzantine Saint George’s Church, which itself houses something quite incredible. In History Hit documentary The Jordan: A River Through Time, historian Dan Snow visits a site which has long been associated with early Christianity and the making of mosaics. It is still possible to … Continued

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At Kalkriese, Archaeology Reveals Evidence of Rome’s Most Famous Defeat

2000 years ago, deep in the forests of Germany, a Roman army walked into a trap. It had been set by the Germanic warlord Arminius, a man they thought was their friend, and resulted in a catastrophic Roman defeat remembered as the Battle of Teutoburg Forest. In History Hit documentary Rome’s Disaster, Tristan Hughes heads … Continued

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