Bibracte, a Gallic oppidum (fortified settlement), was the capital of the Aedui and one of the most important hillforts in Gaul. It was located near modern Autun in Burgundy, France. The material culture of the Aedui corresponded to the Late Iron Age La Tène culture.
Alternative name | Mont Beuvray |
---|---|
Location | Near Autun, France |
Region | Gaul |
Coordinates | 46°55′23″N 4°02′15″E / 46.92306°N 4.03750°E |
Type | Oppidum |
History | |
Periods | Iron Age Europe |
Cultures | Aedui |
In 58 BC, at the Battle of Bibracte, Julius Caesar's armies defeated the Helvetii 16 miles south of the fort. In 52 BC, Vercingetorix was proclaimed head of the Gaulish coalition at Bibracte. A few decades after the Roman conquest of Gaul, Bibracte was abandoned in favour of Autun, 25 kilometres away. Once abandoned, Bibracte remained undisturbed and unexamined until discovered by modern archaeology.
Jacques-Gabriel Bulliot initiated the first excavations at the site between 1867 and 1895. His nephew Joseph Déchelette, author of a famous Manuel d'Archéologie, continued the excavations between 1897 and 1907.
The modern site, known as Mont Beuvray, is generally identified as ancient Bibracte. The site straddles the borders of the French départements of Nièvre and Saône-et-Loire in Burgundy. The site is an archaeological park at the centre of a protected forest. It is the focus of cooperative European archaeological efforts, a training ground for young archaeologists, and a centre for interpreting Gaulish culture for a popular audience. Important international excavations have been undertaken at Mont Beuvray by teams from the universities of Sheffield, Kiel, Budapest, Vienna and Leipzig.
On December 12, 2007, the site of Bibracte received the "Great Site of France" designation.
Before the Roman conquest in 52 BC the great Celtic city of Bibracte had more than thirty thousand inhabitants,[1] protected by a huge stone wall of the Murus Gallicus type which enclosed an area of 135 hectares.[2]
Etymology
editThe origin of the word Bibracte is still poorly understood. The term may have come from the Celtic *bibro- / *bebro- (beaver) followed by the collective suffix -akti (cf. Irish, Gallic aktā)[3] or from the Latin biffractrus (twice fortified).[4] The latter version, however, is thought questionable from a strategic view,[5] since it is very difficult to protect a battlement over a long distance, a problem which a double battlement would only have exacerbated. Moreover, the stone facing of the outer surrounding wall was reused for the construction of the second wall, meaning it is unlikely that Bibracte was surrounded by two walls at the same time.
Three inscriptions dedicated to the goddess Bibracte which were found at Autun in the 17th century provide another explanation for the name, but two of the inscriptions carved into the stone have disappeared and the authenticity of the third, engraved on a brass medallion, has been the object of debate. Some scholars of the era have cited other evidence to justify placing the Aeduian oppidum on the site of Autun (the former Augustodunum), which was effectively the capital of the Aedui in the first century.[6]
Discovery of Bibracte
editBibracte is mentioned only twice in Roman sources. The first mention is found in Julius Caesar's Commentaries on the Gallic War in the year 58 BC. It was mentioned again in 52 BCE, when he was questioning the intentions of his Aedui allies, who had joined the revolt and crowned Vercingetorix king of the Gauls at Bibracte. Inscriptions from the era announced that the capital of the Aedui received the name Augustodunum (the citadel of Augustus) during the reign of Augustus, which gave rise to the current Autun.
Starting in the 16th century, a passion for local history arose among scholars, aristocrats, and clergy, which led to the question of the location of Bibracte.[7] One theory placed Bibracte at Autun: the Gallic city at the site of the Gallo-Roman city. Another placed it at Beaune and was defended by the scholar Hugues de Salins . A third located the city on the slopes of Beuvrect or Bevrect, today known as Mont Beuvray. This last theory was based on three major arguments. First, there is a connection between the names Bibracte and Beuvrect. Second, medieval chronicles situated the city at Beuvrect. This was reinforced by the existence of an annual fair on the first Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday of May, the age of which is attested to in texts from the 13th century. Finally, the discovery of pottery, coins, and the observations of the priest of Saint-Léger-sous-Beuvray in 1725 supported it.[7]
Generally, the Autun hypothesis received the greatest approval at first. Moreover, Autun was renamed Bibracte after the French Revolution and remained so for some time.[7] Only the research of Jacques Gabriel Bulliot in the 19th century shifted scholarly opinion in favor of Mont Beuvray. In 1851, Bulliot communicated with the Congress of the French Society of Archeology about an ancient chapel (the Saint Martin chapel on Mont Beuvray) established to Christianize the Aedui.[6] He also returned to Mont Beuvray to take more notes. He discovered what he thought was the embankment of a Roman camp (actually a nemeton) at the summit of Mont Beuvray next to the chapel. He documented it and considered placing Bibracte at Mont Beuvray instead of Autun, contrary to the unanimous opinion of the Aedui Society. The publication of his Essay on the Roman System of Defense in the Aedui country between the Saône and the Loire, in which he revealed his convictions, was not taken seriously by the members of the Society of Archeology.
Emperor Napoleon III took an interest in the battles of the Gallic Wars and an officer named Stoffel, charged by the Emperor with conducting investigations of the Roman victory over the Helvetii, visited Bulliot, who shared with him his opinions about the location of Bibracte. Stoffel was not interested, but he commissioned Xavier Garenne, another member of the Aedui Society, to make a survey of Mont Beavray.[6] At the same time, the Viscount of Aboville, the owner of the land, conducted research and shared it with the Archbishop of Reims, who was a member of the Aedui Society and a friend of Bulliot, though he did not share Bulliot's theory about the location of Bibracte. Interested by these investigations, the Archbishop shared the various findings with the Emperor who, in 1867, assigned Bulliot to do research at Mont Beavray and funded his work.[6]
Bulliot excavated the site from 1867 to 1905, removing all doubt about the location of Bibracte. His nephew Joseph Déchelette, whom he introduced to excavation, continued the work until 1907, comparing Bibracte to other sites in Europe such as Stradonice in Bohemia, the Manching in Germany and Velem-Zenst-Vid in Hungary, which were precursors of the cultural unification of the Celtic world and of the civilization of oppida.[8]
History of the oppidum
editChronology of the population of Beuvray
editDuring the excavations of the gate, five artifacts were discovered, the oldest of which demonstrated human habitation on Mont Beuvray in the Neolithic Era.[9] Dating techniques have shown that the oppidum was founded at end of the 3rd century BCE, on an area of 200 hectares protected by the exterior rampart. An interior rampart was built later, for reasons unknown.[10]
Because the Aedui had the status of "friend of the Roman people," contacts with Roman merchants were probable before the conquest of Gaul by Julius Caesar. This privileged status prevented Bibracte from suffering much from conflict: in 58 BCE, at Montmort 25 kilometers south of the site, Julius Caesar's armies defeated the Helvetii,[11] forcing them to return to Switzerland and gradually be incorporated into what became the Roman Empire. In 52 BCE, an assembly of Gallic peoples at Bibracte gave Vercingetorix supreme command of the Gallic armies.[12][13] Despite this insurrection, Caesar treated the city mercifully after his victory at Alesia. He stayed there during the winter of 52-51 BCE[14] to write his Commentaries on the Gallic War. These mentioned the names of certain notables of the Aedui aristocracy such as Dumnorix, vergobret of the Aedui, and his brother Diviciacus, the druid. The city's industry boomed in the decades following the war.
Strabo the geographer, writing a generation later than Caesar, identified Bibracte as again an Aedui stronghold.[15]
After the founding of Autun (Augustodunum) 25 kilometers away c. 15 BCE, during the reign of Augustus, Bibracte was gradually abandoned by its inhabitants. However, cults continued to practise their rites in its temples and its fountains and its aristocratic residences were maintained. Two main hypotheses have been advanced concerning the abandonment of the site over several decades. Migration could have been caused by economic reasons or by a desire to integrate with the Roman model; a part of the dominant Aedui class, already pro-Roman during the Gallic War, definitely realized the strategic importance of the new city located on the principal axes of communication and wanted to conform to the Roman model of flatland cities, while a more traditional population remained for a time on the Bibracte site.[16]
It is known from 13th century texts that a festival every first Monday of May survived.[7] In the 15th and 16th centuries, a Franciscan convent was established on Mont Beuvray.[13] It was abandoned, but the festival continued.
Influence and power
editThe power of the Aedui capital was related in the Commentaries on the Gallic War, which underlined the many alliances held by the Aedui with neighboring peoples. Julius Caesar also mentioned the wars that set the Aedui against the Arverni and the Sequani for hegemony over a large part of Gaul. These references were not impartial, since Rome had been allied with the Aedui, "our blood brothers",[17] since at least the 2nd century BCE. Moreover, they maintained commercial links and military alliances: Rome helped the Aedui in the 2nd century to defeat an Arverni army and rose to their defense against the invasion of the Helvetii that precipitated the Gallic War.
Gabriel de Mortillet, in his classification of ancient peoples, included the site's residents under the name "Beavraisian", a category abandoned by modern scholars.[18]
In addition to this powerful alliance with Rome, the Aedui were part of a confederation of Celtic tribes that included:
- The Ambarri (in Ain)
- The Brannovices
- The Bellovaci
- The Bituriges (in Berry)
- The Parisii
- The Segusiavi (Forez, adjacent to the Arverni)
- The Senones (Sens region)
Whose influence extended across a large part of Gaul.
Commerce
editIn his History of Gaul, the historian Camille Jullian writes these lines about the Aedui: "Bibracte, I am sure, was the source and the guarantee of their power. Around Bibracte were very good roads, uniting the three biggest basins of France."[19]
So, the Roman products traveling up the Rhône (the waterways were the fastest means of travel at the time) and taking after that the Saône, the Loire or the Allier, passed through Aedui territory before joining the basins of the Loire and Seine. The Aedui were located at a commercial crossroads between the Celtic world and Rome. They allowed the diffusion of Roman products through Gaul as early as the 2nd century BCE, allowing their allies to benefit from their commerce with Rome and definitely with Greek colonies such as Massilia. These exchanges are confirmed by the large quantities of amphoras and ceramics from Italy found in waste tanks and in the paving of houses.
In addition, the Aedui installed a system of customs that taxed products passing through their territory to increase their wealth, as attested in the texts of Julius Caesar: "It was typical of Dumnorix: the man was audacious, his generosity made him popular, and he wanted political change. For years, he has had the control of the customs and all the other taxes of the Aedui, because when he bid, no one dared bid against him."[20] The Aedui and the Sequani fought each other to control the Arar (now the Saône) because controlling the river allowed taxation of Roman and Celtic products traveling north.
In the centre of the oppidum many cellars and certain public buildings that stored large quantities of cereals and wine imported from the southern countries have been found.[21] One of these wooden cellars has recently been reconstructed. Without a doubt, it was in these buildings that the Aedui centralized their harvests and imports.
Politics
editThe political system of the Aedui was essentially structured according to indications in the Commentaries on the Gallic War. At the head of the Aedui state sat a senate comprising one member of each Aedui aristocratic family. What is today called executive power was held by the vergobret, the supreme magistrate, who exercised his functions over the course of a year. He was forbidden from leaving the borders of the territory during this period, which prevented him from commanding the army outside the borders.[22] This measure, along with that which authorized only one voice per aristocratic family in the senate, aimed to prevent any individual or their family from monopolizing the reins of power. The vergobret was publicly elected by a council directed by the druids. Among the Aedui, it seems like the vergobret also exercised a judiciary role, since Caesar reports that he had "the right to life and death over his fellow citizens". Finally, it is thought that the vergobret was responsible for the administration of the territory.[22]
Furthermore, it is known that the druids held high functions since Diviciacus came to Rome to plead the case of the Aedui during the Germanic invasion led by Ariovistus on the account of the Sequani;[23] he also directed the Aedui cavalry during the Gallic War after the death of his brother Dumnorix. Therefore, it is thought that some druids held high military positions.
Archeological research on Mont Beuvray
editFrom 1865 to 1895, Gabriel Bulliot identified Bibracte in 1867 and began excavations there (notably the Celtic artisanal neighborhood surrounding the Rebout gate), with the aid of funds allocated by Napoleon III.[6] In fact, having a passion for history, the emperor set off vast campaigns of excavations to uncover sites of the Gallic War in order to write his History of Julius Caesar. Joseph Déchelette, the nephew of Bulliot, took up his work again from 1895 to 1907. He was killed during World War I and the excavations fell into neglect. In 1984, the excavations began again under the impetus of François Mitterrand, who proclaimed Bibracte a site of national interest in 1985.[13] This term, invented for the occasion, allowed the site to be subsidized. The label of "national interest" was created afterward in order to designate exhibitions or sites which benefit from a program of diffusion and enlargement of the public by the Minister of Culture. This gives the necessary impetus to a project of excavations of European scope. Thus, in 1989, the European Archeological Center of Mont Beuvray was created, which includes the site, the museum, and the research center of Glux-en-Glenne. It was inaugurated in 1995. The excavations were conducted by Vincent Guichard and put into practice by many French and foreign teams; the excavations notably concentrated on the Gallic neighborhood of Rebout, on the vast Gallo-Roman ensemble of the Pasture of the Convent and the Roman residence of the Horse Park.
Specialists, researchers, professors and students from all over Europe come together on the site every summer to excavate different parts of the site.[24] These have included, among others:
- Austria: University of Vienna
- Belgium: Université Libre de Bruxelles
- Czech Republic: Masaryk University
- France: University of Franche-Comté, University of Burgundy, University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne, Pierre and Marie Curie University, François Rabelais University
- Germany: University of Kiel, University of Leipzig, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, University of Mainz
- Hungary: Eötvös Loránd University
- Italy: University of Bologna
- Poland: Rzeszów University
- Slovenia: University of Ljubljana
- Spain: University of Madrid and University of Zaragoza
- Switzerland: University of Lausanne
- United Kingdom: University of Edinburgh
Each university excavates the site as part of tri-annual projects consisting of several weeks of work on the terrain followed by a detailed study of the excavation and of the objects discovered, which are then stored at the site's research center.
Archeological prospecting on Mont Beuvray
editThe early prospecting technique used by Bulliot was rudimentary. It consisted of observing the irregularities in the landscape, since the mountain was practically unchanged since the period under study. This allowed him to recreate a plan of the battlements with nearly no excavation. He used this technique to make a scale plan with the help of army topographers, who made a series of topographical recreations of the landscape. However, only the recreation of the Porrey neighborhood still exists to this day.[25]
In recent years, the same technique has been used in the Porrey neighborhood with more precise tools, such as theodolites and GPS. Aerial and electromagnetic prospecting is made impossible by the forest and vegetation on the mountain since the end of grazing and the excavations of Joseph Déchelette, as well as the nature of the subsoil.[25] One costly but faster technique, tested in 2007, is LIDAR, the use of airborne laser scanners, which are unhindered by the vegetation and can recreate in minutes what usually takes weeks to do on the ground. This will be done in order to attempt to make a complete map of the city and to archive the topography of the location.
Organization
editThe research done by Bulliot and Déchelette at the end of the 19th century and at the beginning of the 20th century recreated an organization of the site into neighborhoods, with construction mostly following a central road from the Gate of Rebout to the Great Gates. This organization differs from that of oppida like Manching, where there is a regular urban framework; this is explained by the relief of the terrain, as the battlements encircle three summits with some relatively steep slopes.
Since 1984, the excavations have seemed to confirm Déchelette's and Bulliot's hypotheses in broad terms, while nevertheless contributing certain nuances.
Battlements
editBibracte was protected by strong Murus Gallicus style battlements, which excavations have been able to reconstruct. The city had a progression of two different surrounding walls and at least five restorations of the inner surrounding wall, revealed, among other things, by the study of the Rebout gate.[10] Surprisingly, the inner encircling wall was constructed after the outer wall. The city, therefore, shrank in area from 200 to 135 hectares (494 to 334 acres).
The internal wall, discovered by Bulliot, is a Murus Gallicus that delimits an area of 135 hectares for a length of 5 kilometers (3.1 mi) per battlement. It is estimated that construction of the wall required more than 10,000 cubic meters of wood, between 10,000 and 20,000 cubic meters of earth and about thirty tons of iron.[26]
The outer wall encircles an area of 200 hectares and was the subject of research beginning in 1992 for initial probing. This archeological research revealed that the battlement originally had a height between four and five meters (13 and 16 feet) without its yet-unknown top (e.g., palisades or towers) and an identical depth, and was preceded by a ditch between 2 and 4 metres (6.6 and 13.1 ft) deep and between 6 and 10 metres (20 and 33 ft) wide. A study was conducted between 1995 and 2002 with many probes along with those by the University of Vienna. The researchers were able to ascertain that this battlement was a Murus Gallicus that had been dismantled in order to construct the inner wall. The dating, however, remains imprecise, and places this event during the 2nd century.[10]
The battlement is punctuated by about fifteen gates, including the famous Gate of Rebout (20 meters (66 feet) in width and 40 meters (131 feet) in depth). The gate of Rebout was the first location excavated by Bulliot, where he worked for nine weeks, and was the first site for new excavations from 1984 to 1986 which also studied the ditches adjoining the battlements.[27] These excavations revealed five levels of different restorations, including a palisade from the Neolithic Era (dated with carbon-14). The latter has been the object of a reconstruction since 1996 which currently marks the entry into the old oppidum. At the present time, research has not been able to detect a trace of a method for locking the gate or a defensive device for it. Some hypotheses have advanced the idea of a double gate surmounted by a wooden guard tower like that of the Manching oppidum, but nothing has yet confirmed this.
The recent research on the battlements, since 2005, has concentrated on a line of fortification downhill from the Gate of Rebout. Dating seems to indicate that this construction took place after that of the gate and therefore constituted an advance fortification. At the same time, some aristocratic tombs have been discovered between the two lines of battlements.[28]
Public buildings
editExcavations conducted between 2012 and 2017 uncovered the remains of a large monumental public building dating to the La Tène period, c. 70 BC. In the first phase of construction (c. 70 BC) a terrace was built, surrounded by a murus gallicus stone wall with a large entrance on the east side. On the terrace a 44-metre-long square building was constructed out of wood, with galleries surrounding a central courtyard. Around 30 BC a monumental building was erected in the central space and the galleries were replaced with a palisade. In c. 15 BC the previous building was levelled and a vast platform was built which was surrounded by stone walls. In the centre the space was possibly occupied by a new central building. Next to this another platform was built, also surrounded by a stone wall, with an internal gallery built from wood. These constructions have been compared to other known public buildings and temples from the La Tène period, though the precise purpose of the buildings at Bibracte is yet to be determined. According to Hantrais et al. (2020) "The characteristics of this monumental construction indicate that it was certainly a public building with original architectural features and techniques. Yet, although this monumental building is very well documented archaeologically, its exact function remains enigmatic."[29]
Artisans' neighborhoods of Côme Chaudron and Champlain
editExcavations in the neighborhoods known as the Côme Cauldron and the Champlain, near the Rebout Gate, have revealed a neighborhood dedicated to metalwork and to artisans' lodging. This metalworking seems to have been very specialized, incorporating blacksmiths, bronzeworkers, and enamellers, whose workshops had already been restored by Bulliot, and probably also involved goldsmiths and minters.[30]
Excavations on the site of Beuvray, in the region of the Champlain, and on the surrounding massifs revealed the existence of mines for the extraction of metals, including gold, iron, and tin ore. This research will continue and will attempt to restore the workshops for the smelting of the metals extracted outside the oppidum. In fact, given the specialization of the workshops in Bibracte, it seems that the metals arrived in bars which were therefore cast outside the oppidum.
Another artisanal neighborhood has been found in the region of one of the summits of the site, at the Rock of the Wyvern, an area which had been little investigated at the time of Bulliot and Déchelette's research. This neighborhood will be the object of future excavations which will attempt to determine the function of the neighborhood.[28]
Housing
editPredominantly made of wood and earth, the Gallic houses used stone only sparingly, which was saved for the ramparts. Little is known of the houses' structure as wood rots and decomposes. There are, however, stone constructions in the horse Park district, probably aristocratic residences and a public building with columns, near the convent's pasture. These were probably constructed soon after the Gallic Wars.[31]
Horse Park
editAt the center of Mont Beuvray, the plateau known as the Horse Park holds several Roman-style stone houses which were excavated in the 19th century. The houses include, in particular, the residence PC1[32] (so named by Bulliot), which is a veritable gold mine for the researchers. In fact, it developed from a wood construction (of Roman inspiration) into a domus with an atrium containing an impluvium, porticos, and thermae heated by hypocaust, along with a system of sewers. In its final stage, the residence measured 55 by 67 meters, covering an area of around 3500 square meters, about four times the size of the domus found on the site of Pompeii. It is estimated that there were about fifteen domus' in this area, such as PC2,[33] a smaller residence that faces PC1 on the other side of the central road. There are also homes of the villa rustica type (the Italian rural residences) like PC33.[34] However, it is still not known whether this was a residential neighborhood reserved for only the elite, since excavations have also revealed the presence of forges near the domus.[31]
Monumental basin
editAt the centre of the main road, in the area of the Pasture of the Monastery, stands a pink granite monumental basin which is thought to have had a sacred function. It could possibly represent a sacred point of the city's founding, or a water shrine. Water left the basin through the northern opening downstream, continuing through a pipe. The supply of water, however, has not yet been discovered. The basin was waterproofed with a coat of red clay, precluding a feed from a spring, and no supply pipe has been found. The manner of granite carving is unusual and shows Mediterranean influences. It has similarities to later Gallo-Roman stone basins and could be considered the oldest known example of this type.[35]
The design of the basin has an astronomical and mathematical significance:
1) The minor axis of the basin is aligned with the winter solstice sunrise and summer solstice sunset.[36][37][35]
2) The basin has a geometric design based on two circles intersecting at 1/5 of their diameter, forming a precise 3:4:5 Pythagorean triangle between the centre of the circles, the centre of the basin and the end of the basin.[35]
3) The basin has a length/breadth/height ratio of 3/1/0.5, equivalent to 36/12/6 units with a value of 30.4cm. A similar unit of measurement has been identified at the oppidum of Manching in Germany and described as a 'Celtic foot'.[35]
Based on these characteristics, it has been suggested that the basin represents a druidic monument.[38][39]
Maumené (2018) suggests that the main axis of the basin is orientated towards a celestial alignment with the constellation of Gemini, reflecting the religious importance of the Dioscuri (Divine Twins) in the Gallic pantheon.[40] The boat-like shape of the basin might be related to the mythology of the solar boat, which is also associated with the Divine Twins.[41][42]
Almagro-Gorbea (2017) suggests that the Bibracte basin "seems to be correlated to the druid Diviciacus, an expert in the philosophy of nature",[38] in reference to Cicero's statement that “there are indeed Druids in Gaul — for I knew one of them myself, Divitiacus, the Aeduan ... He claimed to have that knowledge of nature which the Greeks call 'physiologia'".[43]
Various classical authors referred to the druids as philosophers, who possessed a knowledge of astronomy and adhered to Pythagorean beliefs and practices.[44][45][46][47][48][49] Hippolytus of Rome stated that the druids "investigated to the very highest point the Pythagorean philosophy" and foretold certain events "from calculations and numbers by the Pythagorean art".[50]
Some modern authors have suggested that Bibracte was the site of a druidic school,[51][39] as described by Julius Caesar in the Gallic War:
“The Druids usually hold aloof from war, and do not pay war‑taxes with the rest; they are excused from military service and exempt from all liabilities. Tempted by these great rewards, many young men assemble of their own motion to receive their training; many are sent by parents and relatives. Report says that in the schools of the Druids they learn by heart a great number of verses, and therefore some persons remain twenty years under training. [...] The cardinal doctrine which they seek to teach is that souls do not die, but after death pass from one to another; and this belief, as the fear of death is thereby cast aside, they hold to be the greatest incentive to valour. Besides this, they have many discussions as touching the stars and their movement, the size of the universe and of the earth, the order of nature, the strength and the powers of the immortal gods, and hand down their lore to the young men.”[52]
The later Aeduan capital of Augustodunum was the location of the Menian schools, which were dedicated to the study of liberal arts and law.[53] The schools are mentioned by Tacitus in his account of the Revolt of Sacrovir:
"Augustodunum had been seized by armed cohorts of Sacrovir, whose intention was to enlist those cadets of the great Gallic families who were receiving a liberal education at the city-schools"[54]
Places of worship
editThe oppidum of Bibracte has about ten springs and five fountains dating from the Gallic or Gallo-Roman periods. The Saint Pierre Fountain was a place of worship and pilgrimage, in which coins and votive offerings were found.[31] At the summit of the mountain, a Celtic place of worship (nemeton) a hectare large has been exhumed, surrounded by a palisade and concentric ditches.[55] Under the current chapel from the 19th century, the 1988 excavations discovered a Gallo-Roman temple.[56]
Necropolis
editLocated below the present-day museum parking lot, the necropolis underwent archaeological excavations, with the aim of saving it, when the museum was created and the route départementale was diverted. Over a surface area of 1.5 hectares, 70 funeral enclosures, used following incineration, were found, each having an eastern entry. The crematorium was found further south. Other funerary urns were discovered at the foot of the Rebout Gate, possibly the remains of a local aristocratic family.[57] More cemeteries are presumably situated on the former site access paths, as was often the case at the time, but have not yet been excavated.
Basilica
editIn the area of the Convent Pasture the excavations revealed, under a large domus of the Augustan era, the presence of an exceptional public monument, which was at the time unique in Gaul: a Roman basilica with three naves and an internal peristyle with a peripheral ambulatory, displaying four rows of eight columns or eight pilasters. It was connected on the east with a small square, 22 meters on a side, bordered to the north and south with porticos which were extensions of the walls of the annexes of the basilica. On the west it was connected to the main road of Bibracte with another square, 17 meters on the side. Some architectural elements have been found that attest the presence of limestone columns with Attic bases and Doric and Corinthian capitals. These elements formed a monumental urban project of the greatest importance. These public buildings date to the period between 50 and 40 BCE and between 35 and 25 BCE. At this date, the basilica and the square were carefully leveled and replaced by a large private residence, doubtless in connection with the move of the Aedui capital to Autun. The basilica of Bibracte confirms the exceptional importance of the site and revealed that the Romanization of the Aedui was considerably more rapid than previously believed. The basilica of Bibracte is currently the oldest representation of Roman monumental stone architecture in non-Mediterranean Europe.[58][59][60][61]
A window to the Celtic world
editMuseum of Celtic Civilization
editThe site hosts the Museum of Celtic Civilization, designed by Pierre-Louis Faloci and opened to the public in 1996. Pierre-Louis Faloci is also the architect of Bibracte's Center of European Archeological Research, which was opened in 1994. The architectural design corresponds to the evolution of the ages of humanities: it has a base of carved stone, walls of polished stone, and a metal roof. One of the facades, which are large picture windows, is hidden by a wall of stone (on the valley side), while that which faces the site allows free view to the visitors. The museum has few proper collections, as many of those exhibited are loaned from other museums. The Coligny calendar and the Gundestrup cauldron have both been exhibited there.
Permanent exhibits
editThe 2000 square meters of the exhibit in the museum are laid out over two stages. The first stage (and the first in the tour) recounts the discovery of the site and the place of Bibracte in the global context of the European Celtic culture. The majority of the following subjects are covered: war, the age of the oppida, Mediterranean commerce, and agriculture. The ground floor, which consists of several alcoves, recounts the life of the Aedui at Bibracte. Objects of daily life, jewelry, funereal urns, and artisanal workshops are reconstructed or exhibited there.
Temporary exhibits
editSeveral summer exhibits have been featured at the museum, each addressing a precise subject of the Celtic world:[62]
- 1995: Celtic Europe at the time of Bibracte
- 1996: History seen from above
- 1997: A look at the Celts in Slovenia
- 1998: At the border of East and West[63]
- 1999: The tombs of the last Celtic aristocrats
- 2000: The Gallic druids[64]
- 2001: The time of the Gauls in the provinces
- 2002: On Caesar's trail
- 2003: Blacksmiths and metal merchants
- 2004: The white gold of Hallstatt
- 2005: Wine, the nectar of the Gods
- 2006: The treasures of women
- 2007: A round trip between Bibracte and Kathmandu
- 2008: Situlae, images of a vanished world
- 2009: La Tène
- 2010: The Gauls do the head
Research center
editLocated four kilometers from Mont Beuvray, in the commune of Glux-en-Glenne (Nièvre), is one of the most important libraries on the Celtic world. There is also an archeological depot there, the administration of the archeological park, several technical establishments, a lecture hall, and, in the village, a dining hall and several gîtes. In this center, archeologists, students, and researchers congregate from all over Europe to excavate the site of Bibracte. The research center also accommodates the regional center for preservation of relics and archeological collections, becoming the reference center of Burgundy in this field.
Gallery
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Celtic house interior reconstruction
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Celtic house interior reconstruction
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Celtic house interior reconstruction
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Weaving and crafts
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Construction of a murus gallicus
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Excavations on Mont Beuvray
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Excavations on Mont Beuvray
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View from Mont Beuvray
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Maschner, H.D.G.; Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. Center for Archaeological Investigations (1996). New Methods, Old Problems: Geographic Information Systems in Modern Archaeological Research. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. ISBN 9780881040791. Retrieved 2015-06-27.
- ^ McIntosh, J. (2009). Handbook to Life in Prehistoric Europe. Oxford University Press. p. 158. ISBN 9780195384765. Retrieved 2015-06-27.
- ^ Pierre-Yves Lambert, La langue gauloise, éditions errance 1994.
- ^ Christian Goudineau et Christian Peyre, Bibracte et les Éduens, À la découverte d'un peuple gaulois, éditions errance, 1993, p15
- ^ D'un point de vue phonétique également, Biffractus aurait donné *Beffray et non pas Beuvray.
- ^ a b c d e Christian Goudineau et Christian Peyre, Bibracte et les Éduens, À la découverte d'un peuple gaulois, éditions Errance, pp 1–6 1993
- ^ a b c d Christian Goudineau, Regards sur la Gaule, éditions Errance, 1998, pp. 65–82
- ^ Stephan Fichtl, La ville celtique, Les oppida de 150 av. J.-C. à 15 ap. J.-C., éditions Errance, 2005, p. 17
- ^ Christian Goudineau et Christian Peyre, Bibracte et les Éduens, À la découverte d'un peuple gaulois, éditions Errance, 1993, p27
- ^ a b c Anne-Marie Romero, Bibracte Archéologie d'une ville gauloise, Bibracte-Centre archéologique européen, 2006, p.60
- ^ Julius Caesar, Commentaries on the Gallic War, Book I, 23
- ^ Julius Caesar, Commentaries on the Gallic War, Book VII, 63
- ^ a b c Anne-Marie Romero, Bibracte Archéologie d'une ville gauloise, Bibracte-Centre archéologique européen, 2006, p16
- ^ Julius Caesar, Commentaries on the Gallic War, Book VII, 90, Book VIII, 2
- ^ Strabo, Geography, Book IV, 3, 2
- ^ Stephan Fichtl, La ville celtique, Les oppida de 150 av. J.-C. à 15 ap. J.-C., éditions Errance, 2005, pp 191–198
- ^ Julius Caesar, Commentaries on the Gallic War, Book I, 33
- ^ Modélisation des connaissances temporelles en archéologie (page 5)
- ^ Histoire de la Gaule, 8 vol, Camille Jullian
- ^ Julius Caesar, Commentaries on the Gallic War, Book I, 18
- ^ Anne-Marie Romero, Bibracte Archéologie d'une ville gauloise : Des graines carbonisées ont été retrouvées dans une cave qui a brûlé.
- ^ a b Christian Goudineau et Christian Peyre, Bibracte et les Éduens, À la découverte d'un peuple gaulois, éditions Errance, 1993, pp 81–83
- ^ Julius Caesar, Commentaries on the Gallic War, Book I
- ^ Anne-Marie Romero, Bibracte Archéologie d'une ville gaulois, Bibracte-Centre archéologique européen, 2006, pp 63–64
- ^ a b Anne-Marie Romero, Bibracte Archéologie d'une ville gauloise, Bibracte-Centre archéologique européen, 2006, pp 98–99
- ^ Stephan Fichtl, La ville celtique, Les oppida de 150 av. J.-C. à 15 ap. J.-C., éditions Errance, 2005, pp. 62–63 (évaluation réalisée d'après les calculs de Déchelette et rectifiés par les données fournies lors de la reconstruction du rempart à la porte du Rebout).
- ^ Anne-Marie Romero, Bibracte Archéologie d'une ville gauloise, Bibracte-Centre archéologique européen, 2006, pp 56–57
- ^ a b Ideal Productions. "parc archéologique et centre de recherche – Bibracte en Bourgogne (Mont Beuvray) : archéologie gauloise / celtique, fouilles, musée". bibracte.fr. Archived from the original on 2005-02-06. Retrieved 2015-06-27.
- ^ Hantrais, Juliette; Barral, Philippe; Nouvel, Pierre; Thivet, Matthieu; Joly, Martine (2020). "The PC15 Building: a Wood-Built Public Place at the Center of the Oppidum of Bibracte (France)". Chronika. 10: 44–53.
- ^ Anne-Marie Romero, Bibracte Archéologie d'une ville gauloise, Bibracte-Centre archéologique européen, 2006, pp 67–69
- ^ a b c (in French) Anne-Marie Romero, Bibracte Archéologie d'une ville gauloise, Bibracte-Centre archéologique européen, 2006, pp 87–89
- ^ PC1, for Parc aux Chevaux 1. Bulliot gave designations to the excavations by indicating the initials of the place of discovery, then giving a number for each building in an individual location
- ^ Parc au Chevaux 2
- ^ Parc aux Chevaux 33
- ^ a b c d Almagro-Gorbea, Martin; Gran-Aymerich, Jean (January 1991). "Summary". In Almagro-Gorbea, Martin; Gran-Aymerich, Jean (eds.). El Estanque Monumentale de Bibracte. pp. 239–240.
- ^ White, Raymond (January 1991). "Determining the orientation of Le Bassin Monumentale de Bibracte". In Almagro-Gorbea, Martin; Gran-Aymerich, Jean (eds.). El Estanque Monumentale de Bibracte. pp. 275–277.
- ^ Almagro-Gorbea, Martin (January 1991). "La orientación topoastronómica". In Almagro-Gorbea, Martin; Gran-Aymerich, Jean (eds.). El Estanque Monumentale de Bibracte. pp. 283–286.
- ^ a b Almagro-Gorbea, Martin (January 1991). "Founding rituals and myths in the Keltike". In Krausse, Dirk; Fernández-Götz, Manuel (eds.). Eurasia at the Dawn of History. Cambridge University Press. pp. 336–350. ISBN 9781316943175.
- ^ a b Robb, Graham (January 2013). The Ancient Paths. Pan Macmillan. pp. 124–125. ISBN 9780330531504.
- ^ Maumené, Claude (2018). "The Monumental Basin of Mont Beuvray and its Possible Orientation towards the Constellation of Gemini". Journal of Skyscape Archaeology. 4 (2): 229–245. doi:10.1558/jsa.36228.
- ^ Mallory, James P.; Adams, Douglas Q. (1997). Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture. London: Routledge. p. 161. ISBN 978-1-884964-98-5.
- ^ Kelly, Eamonn P (2019). "Defenders of the Sun: The "Divine Twins" in Irish Mythology". Irish Lives Remembered. 47: 34–41.
- ^ "M. Tullius Cicero, Divination, Book 1, Section 90". www.perseus.tufts.edu/. Retrieved 16 April 2022.
- ^ "Diodorus Siculus, Library of History, Book 5". penelope.uchicago.edu/. Retrieved 16 April 2022.
Philosophers, as we may call them, and men learned in religious affairs are unusually honoured among them and are called by them Druids. [...] the belief of Pythagoras prevails among them, that the souls of men are immortal and that after a prescribed number of years they commence upon a new life, the soul entering into another body.
- ^ "Strabo, Geography, Book 4, chapter 4, section 4". penelope.uchicago.edu/. Retrieved 16 April 2022.
Among all the Gallic peoples, generally speaking, there are three sets of men who are held in exceptional honour; the Bards, the Vates and the Druids. The Bards are singers and poets; the Vates, diviners and natural philosophers; while the Druids, in addition to natural philosophy, study also moral philosophy. ... not only the Druids, but others as well, say that men's souls, and also the universe, are indestructible, although both fire and water will at some time or other prevail over them.
- ^ "Diogenes Laertius, Lives of Eminent Philosophers". perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 16 April 2022.
There are some who say that the study of philosophy had its beginning among the barbarians. They urge that the Persians have had their Magi, the Babylonians or Assyrians their Chaldaeans, and the Indians their Gymnosophists; and among the Celts and Gauls there are the people called Druids or Holy Ones, for which they cite as authorities the Magicus of Aristotle and Sotion in the twenty-third book of his Succession of Philosophers. [...] As to the Gymnosophists and Druids we are told that they uttered their philosophy in riddles, bidding men to reverence the gods, to abstain from wrongdoing, and to practise courage.
- ^ "Pomponius Mela, The Situation of the World, 3.2.18-19". Retrieved 16 April 2022.
they have their own eloquence and wise men called Druids. They claim to know the size of the earth and cosmos, the movements of the heavens and stars, and the will of the gods. They teach, in caves or hidden groves, many things to the nobles in a course of instruction lasting up to twenty years. One of their doctrines has become commonly known to the populace so that warriors might fight more bravely, that the spirit is eternal and another life awaits the spirits of the dead.
- ^ "Julius Caesar, The Gallic War, Book 6, chapter 14". penelope.uchicago.edu/. Retrieved 16 April 2022.
The Druids usually hold aloof from war, and do not pay war‑taxes with the rest; they are excused from military service and exempt from all liabilities. Tempted by these great rewards, many young men assemble of their own motion to receive their training; many are sent by parents and relatives. Report says that in the schools of the Druids they learn by heart a great number of verses, and therefore some persons remain twenty years under training. And they do not think it proper to commit these utterances to writing, although in almost all other matters, and in their public and private accounts, they make use of Greek letters. ... The cardinal doctrine which they seek to teach is that souls do not die, but after death pass from one to another; and this belief, as the fear of death is thereby cast aside, they hold to be the greatest incentive to valour. Besides this, they have many discussions as touching the stars and their movement, the size of the universe and of the earth, the order of nature, the strength and the powers of the immortal gods, and hand down their lore to the young men.
- ^ "Ammianus Marcellinus, Roman Antiquities, Book 15, chapter 9". penelope.uchicago.edu/. Retrieved 16 April 2022.
I think now a suitable time to describe the regions and situation of the Gauls [...] Throughout these regions men gradually grew civilised and the study of the liberal arts flourished, initiated by the Bards, the Euhages and the Druids. Now, the Bards sang to the sweet strains of the lyre the valorous deeds of famous men composed in heroic verse, but the Euhages, investigating the sublime, attempted to explain the secret laws of nature. The Druids, being loftier than the rest in intellect, and bound together in fraternal organisations, as the authority of Pythagoras determined, were elevated by their investigation of obscure and profound subjects, and scorning all things human, pronounced the soul immortal.
- ^ "Hippolytus, The Refutation of All Heresies, XXII". Retrieved 16 April 2022.
- ^ Rankin, David (January 1987). "Religion and the Druids". Celts and the Classical World. Routledge. p. 290. ISBN 9781134747214.
- ^ "Julius Caesar, Gallic War, Book VI". penelope.uchicago.edu/. Retrieved 16 April 2022.
- ^ Labaune, Yannick; Louis, Antoine; Brunet-Gaston, Véronique; Delor Ahu, Anne; Garcia, Jean-Pierre; Hostein, Anthony; Kasprzyk, Michel; Boisleve, Julien; Delencre, Florent (2008). "Une schola monumentale découverte boulevard Frédéric-Latouche à Augustodunum / Autun (Saône-et-Loire)". Gallia. 70 (2).
- ^ "Tacitus, Annals, Book III, chapter 43". penelope.uchicago.edu/. Retrieved 16 April 2022.
- ^ Christian Goudineau et Christian Peyre, Bibracte et les Éduens, À la découverte d'un peuple gaulois, éditions Errance, 1993, pp 90–94
- ^ Christian Goudineau et Christian Peyre, Bibracte et les Éduens, À la découverte d'un peuple gaulois, éditions Errance, 1993, pp 84–89
- ^ Bibracte website, archaeological section http://www.bibracte.fr/index.php?langue=en[permanent dead link ]
- ^ M. Szabo, L. Timar, D. Szabo, La basilique de Bibracte: un témoignage de l'architecture romaine en Gaule centrale, Archäologisches Korrespondenzblatt, 2007, 37, 3, pp. 389–408.
- ^ V. Guichard, Chroniques des recherches sur le Mont Beuvray, RAE, 56, 2007, pp. 127–152 lire en ligne
- ^ M. Reddé, La Gaule Chevelue entre César et Auguste, dans M. Christol et D. Darde dir., L'expression du pouvoir au début de l'Empire. Autour de la Maison Carrée à Nîmes. Paris, 2009, pp. 85–96 en particulier p. 91
- ^ Ideal Productions. "parc archéologique et centre de recherche – Bibracte en Bourgogne (Mont Beuvray) | Résumé de la dernière campagne de fouille". bibracte.fr. Archived from the original on 2015-06-30. Retrieved 2015-06-27.
- ^ Anne-Marie Romero, Bibracte Archéologie d'une ville gauloise, Bibracte-Centre archéologique européen, 2006, pp 136–142
- ^ protohistoric art in Hungary in the 1st millennium BCE
- ^ Note that Diviciacos, an Aedui druid, is the only one whose name is known
Bibliography
editReference works
edit- Christian Goudineau and Christian Peyre, Bibracte et les Éduens, À la découverte d'un peuple gaulois, éditions Errance, 1993
- Christian Goudineau, Regards sur la Gaule, éditions Errance, 1998, pp. 65–82
- Anne-Marie Romero, Bibracte. Archéologie d'une ville gauloise, Bibracte-Centre archéologique européen, 2006
- Stephan Fichtl, La ville celtique, Les oppida de 150av. J.-C. à 15ap. J.-C., éditions Errance, 2005
- K. Gruel et D. Vitali, L'oppidum de Bibracte. Un bilan de onze années de recherches (1984–1996), Gallia, 55, 1998, pp. 1–140 Read online
- "Bibracte, capitale des Éduens", L'Archéologue-Archéologie nouvelle, 4, mars 1994, pp. 36–45 et 6, juin 1994, pp. 62–72
Old works
edit- Jacques Gabriel Bulliot, Fouilles du Mont-Beuvray (ancienne Bibracte) de 1867 à 1895, Dejussieu (Autun), 2volumes, 1899
- Joseph Déchelette, Les fouilles du Mont-Beuvray de 1897 à 1901, Picard (Paris), Dejussieu (Autun), 1904
- Joseph Déchelette, L'oppidum de Bibracte. Guide du touriste et de l'archéologue au Mont Beuvray et au Musée de l'Hôtel Rolin, Picard (Paris), Dejussieu (Autun), 1903
- Joseph Déchelette, Manuel d'archéologie préhistorique, celtique et gallo-romaine, éditions Picard, Collection Grands manuels Picard, 2000
Works from the collection Archeological Excavations of Bibracte
edit- Guillaumet J.-P., Szabo M. (under the direction of), Études sur Bibracte, (Studies on Bibracte) Glux-en-Glenne: BIBRACTE, 2005, 313 p.,
- Paunier D., Luginbühl T., Les sites de la maison 1 du Parc aux Chevaux (PC 1). Des origines de l'oppidum au règne de Tibère (The Sites of House 1 of the Horse Park (PC1). The Origins of the Oppidum in the Reign of Tiberius), Glux-en-Glenne : Bibracte, 2004, 472 p.
- Olmer F., Les amphores de Bibracte, 2. Le commerce du vin chez les Eduens d'après les timbres d'amphores, Glux-en-Glenne : Bibracte, 2003, 375 p.
- Buchsenschutz O., Guillaumet J.-P., Ralston I. (sous la direction de), La Porte du Rebout, Glux-en-Glenne : Centre *Archéologique Européen du Mont Beuvray (CAE), 1999, 320 p.
External links
edit- Bibracte website (in English)
- Athena Review article "Bibracte"
- (in French) Bibracte, site archéologique, centre de recherche et musée
- El Estanque Monumentale de Bibracte - Detailed analysis of the Bibracte Basin (in Spanish and English)
- The Monumental Basin of Mont Beuvray and its Possible Orientation towards the Constellation of Gemini (2019)
- Novedades sobre el urbanismo de Bibracte (2005) (in Spanish)
- Gaul by Jean-Claude Golvin Illustrations of Bibracte
- Water management in Bibracte (Saône-et-Loire), before and after the Roman Conquest (Borau 2020)