- Augusta Praetoria Salassorum
Augusta Praetoria Salassorum (modern name,
Aosta ) is an ancient town inItaly founded byAugustus in about 24 BC on the site of the camp arena ofMarcus Terentius Varro settled by 3000Praetorian guard s. The place had been occupied by theSalassi tribe, whose people perished or were sold into slavery in a great war with the Romans in 25 BC. [ [http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&id=D6QPAAAAYAAJ&dq John Lemprière, Lorenzo DaPonte, & John David Ogilby (1839), "Bibliotheca Classica: Or, A Dictionary of All the Principal Names and Terms"] , (Tenth American Edition), New York: W.E. Dean. "Salassi", p. 281] Pliny called it the last town in north-west Italy. Its position at the confluence of two rivers, at the end of the Great and the Little Saint-Bernard, gave it considerable military importance, which is vouched for by considerable remains of Roman buildings.Description
The ancient town walls of Augusta Praetoria Salassorum are still preserved almost in their entirety, enclosing a rectangle 793 by convert|624|yd. They are convert|21|ft|m high, built of concrete faced with small blocks of stone. At the bottom, the walls are nearly convert|9|ft|m thick, and at the top convert|6|ft|m.
Tower s stand at angles to theenceinte and others are positioned at intervals, with two at each of the four gates, making twenty towers in total. They are roughly convert|32|ft|m square, and project convert|14|ft|m from the wall. The Torre del Pailleron on the south and the Torre del Leproso in the west are especially well preserved.The east and south
gate s exist intact. The latter, a double gate with three arches flanked by two towers known as the Porta Praetoria, is especially fine.The rectangular arrangement of the
street s is modeled on a Roman plan dividing the town into 64 blocks (insulae ). The main road, convert|32|ft|m wide, divides the city into two equal halves, running from east to west. This arrangement makes it clear that guarding the road was the main raison d'etre of the city.Some arcades of the
amphitheatre , the diameters of which are convert|282|ft|m and convert|239|ft|m, and the south wall of the theatre, over convert|70|ft|m high, are preserved. A marketplace some convert|300|ft|m square surrounded by storehouses on three sides with atemple in the centre with two on the open (south) side, as well as athermae , also have been discovered.Outside the town is a handsome triumphal
arch in honour ofAugustus . About convert|5|mi|km to the west is a single-arched Romanbridge , called the "Pondel". It has a closed passage, lighted by windows for foot passengers in winter, and above it an open footpath, both being about convert|32|ft|m in width.There are considerable remains of the ancient road from
Eporedia (modernIvrea ) to Augusta Praetoria into the Valle d'Aosta. The modern railway follows this route, notable for the Pont Saint-Martin, which has a single arch with a span of convert|116|ft|m and a roadway convert|15|ft|m wide; the cutting of Donnaz; and the Roman bridges of Châtillon (Pont Saint-Vincent) and Aosta (Pont-de-pierre).Notes
References
* C. Promis, "Le antichita di Aosta", (Turin, 1862);
* Edouard Bérard, "Atti della Società di Archeologia di Torino", iii. 119 seq.; "Notizie degli Scavi", passim;
* A d'Andrade, "Relazione dell' Ufficio Regionale per la conservazione dei Monumenti del Piemonte e della Liguria" (Turin, 1899), 46 seq.External links
* [http://www.regione.vda.it/cultura/beni_culturali/patrimonio/siti_archeologici/augusta_praetoria/default_i.asp Augusta Praetoria] Site plan & photos from the Aosta Valley Regional Authority, Aosta, Italy.
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