- Flavia Solva
Flavia Solva was a
municipium in theancient Roman province ofNoricum . It was situated on the western banks of the Mur river, close to the modern city ofLeibnitz in the southern parts of the Austrian province ofStyria . It is the only Roman city in modern Styria.Foundation and layout
The Celto-Roman dwelling on the banks of the Mur river that should later become Flavia Solva was founded around
15 A.D. while Noricum was still a Roman protectorate. This precursor consisted of a small cluster of wooden buildings, and did not follow a grand layout plan. It is believed that the Celtic element in its population came from the hill settlement on the nearby "Frauenberg" which had a tradition tracing back to neolithic ages. Very few remains from this phase have been found.Shortly after the annexation of Noricum as a Roman province, the place was made a "municipium" around
70 A.D. by emperorVespasian who added the name of hisFlavian dynasty to the local name "Solva" which might have referred to the Frauenberg settlement (which remained important as a worship site for "Isis Noreia", a local adapation of theIsis cult), or to the nearby river Sulm. The construction activity that followed resulted in an almost entirely new city of stone buildings, with a layout that approximated the ideal of a Roman provincial municipium: rectangularinsulae (sized about 60 by 70 meters) within a grid of broad (ca. 6 m) gravel-paved streets. Some of the apartment houses in these blocks hadhypocaust heating, similar to what is known from comparable Roman cities; however, Flavia Solva had neither anaqueduct nor canalization. The 80 x 35 m ellipsoidamphitheatre (apparently the only one in Noricum) consisted of wooden benches on stone foundations.The city was situated at the crossings of a Roman road connecting Poetovia (the modern
Ptuj inSlovenia ) to Ovilava (the modernWels ) and theDanube inUpper Austria with a minor trade route connecting the administrative center atVirunum in the Carinthian basin across theKoralpe and through the Sulm valley toPannonia . However, the wealth of Flavia Solva seems to have been derived more from agriculture than from trade, and was relatively modest. In the Roman sources known to today's historians the city is mentioned only once, inPliny the Elder 's "Naturalis historia " (Vol. 3, chapter 24).Role in Roman administration
The administrative district of Flavia Solva covered much of what today is central
Styria . Its approximate borders probably were theEisenerz mountains in the North, theKoralpe in the West, the river Drau in the South, and the riverLafnitz in the East. In spite of its important local role, the city was never fortified.Destructions, decline, and rediscovery
Flavia Solva and its surroundings had developed a modest degree of provincial luxury, with the
villa rustica as the typical form of aristocratic countryside residence and agricultural cultivation, when its peaceful development was ended by its first destruction in166 . At this time theMarcomanni breached the DanubeLimes between the fortifications ofVindobona (modernVienna ) andCarnuntum , penetrated northwesternPannonia and easternNoricum using the Roman road system tracing the ancientAmber Road along the eastern fringe of the Alps, and could be stopped by emperorMarcus Aurelius 's hastily assembled militia only shortly before reachingAquileia .Flavia Solva was rebuilt (though originally much smaller) under Marcus Aurelius's son and successor
Commodus , and flourished again a few decades later. By the early 3rd century AD, the city had a well-organized public fire brigade as evidenced by the "Tabula Centonariorum" membership list dating from205 .Flavia Solva lost much of its importance during the late 4th century when the region suffered more incursions. The city was destroyed again in
405 (most probably during the Germanic invasion of Italy byRadagaisus ), but some isolated finds referring to emperorMarcian suggest that a residual settlement must have remained at least until the 450s. At this time, most of the remaining population had moved back uphill to the "Frauenberg" where they established a new fortified settlement. The associated cemetery, which was identified only in the 1990s, is the largest from this latest Roman times known to exist in the eastern Alpine region.The ruins of Flavia Solva were still a landmark during the Middle Ages although its origins were long forgotten, and they served the population as convenient quarries for construction material. The
Renaissance period, and later onRomanticism , precipitated renewed interest in Roman history. During the 19th century, many gravestones and a considerable amount of stone artwork was incorporated in the nearby castle ofSeggau where they can still be seen. However, it was not until1845 that Richard Knabl, a local parish priest and amateur historian, identified the site near the modern city ofLeibnitz as the remains of Flavia Solva.Modern excavations
Flavia Solva has been a major focus for Austrian archaeology since the early 20th century; unfortunately (but typically) because construction activity constantly precipitated emergency digs. Road construction, the expansion of nearby
Wagna , and a sewage trench that was dug across the site in the 1970s have caused much irretrievable damage. Over the decades, an area of 650 x 600 m (comprising about 40 insulae) has been excavated to some degree, although much of the finds are not visible today because the areas were reclaimed for agriculture or buried under modern buildings. A considerable piece of land which geoprospection has shown to harbor ruins has been placed under government protection. However, the full extent of the ancient city is still unknown.A bone
flute with three finger holes, presumably a shepherd's instrument, was excavated in such a well-preserved state that it can be [http://aeiou.iicm.tugraz.at/aeiou.music.data.2.020101/020101am.wav played today] .The Styrian exhibition of
2004 had its focus on Flavia Solva. The museum atWagna maintains a constant exhibition.External links
[http://www.wagna.at/english/sites/history-wagna.html From Flavia Solva to Wagna]
[http://www.wagna.at/flaviasolva/sites/flavia2.html Noricum, its cities and traffic routes in the 2nd century]
[http://www.oeai.at/eng/inland/solva.html Overlay of Flavia Solva excavations on satellite image and geoprospection results]
[http://event.ua.pt/eegs_es/abstracts/ORAL/PAG097.PDF Scientific paper on Flavia Solva geoprospection]
References
* Pleyel P, Das römische Österreich. Geschichte Österreichs, Band I. Pichler Verlag, Wien (2002). ISBN 3-85431-293-8
* Hesch O, Wanderwege in die Antike. Auf Spurensuche in und um Flavia Solva. Styria Verlag, Wien (2004). ISBN 3-222-13141-4
* Pelzl B (ed.), Die Römer 2004. Interessantus est: Bilder einer Ausstellung. Manumedia Schnider Verlag, Graz (2004). ISBN 3-902020-27-X
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