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Haltern


Wooden face, found at Haltern. Westfälisches Römermuseum, Haltern. Photo Marco Prins.
Face, made of bone, found at Haltern. Westfälisches
Römermuseum, Haltern
Haltern: modern name of the site of a large Roman fortress, evacuated after the battle in the Teutoburg Forest.

In 16-13, the Roman prince Drusus reorganized the Rhine frontier and in 12, he invaded the country on the east bank. His main objective was the conquest of the Sugambri in the valley of the Lippe, close to the Roman stronghold at Xanten. The invasion was partly meant as a retaliation for a Sugambrian invasion that had culminated in a Roman defeat (the clades Lolliana), but at the same time, the fertile Lippe valley, rich in corn, was meant to remain Roman. In the autumn of 11, Drusus felt secure enough to build a large military legionary base at Oberaden, as the crow flies 60 kilometers east of the Rhine. Two years later, the young general died and was succeeded by his brother Tiberius (the future emperor). He deported the Sugambri to Xanten -they accepted the new name of Cugerni- and transferred the soldiers of Oberaden to a new and better camp at Haltern.

Edge of Empire. The book Arjen Bosman and I wrote about Rome's Lower Rhine Frontier.
Edge of Empire. The book Arjen Bosman and I wrote about Rome's Lower Rhine Frontier (order; review)
The Lippe near Haltern. Photo Jona Lendering.
The Lippe near Haltern

Like the legionary fortress at Oberaden, and other military settlements in the neighborhood, Haltern was situated on the banks of the Lippe. In Antiquity, river transport was a lot cheaper and easier than transport by road, and therefore, the presence of a river was necessary for an important settlement that was to be used by thousands of soldiers. The river port and the main fortress have been excavated and is usually dated to 5 BCE. After more than a century of archaeological research -started in 1899- the site belongs to the best-known Roman settlements in northern Europe.

Model of the fortress at Haltern. Westfälisches Römermuseum, Haltern. Photo Marco Prins.
Model of the "Hauptlager". Westfälisches Römermuseum

The oldest camp at Haltern (the Feldlager) was built on the slopes of the Silverberg ("silver mountain"). Nothing of it can be seen today, but archaeologists have found out that it measured about 34½ hectares and was surrounded by a simple ditch angd wall. No constructions were found inside the square surrounded by these walls, so we can be confident that the soldiers of two legions (about 11,000 men)  in the Feldlager resided in their tents, not buildings. Therefore, it must have been a temporary camp and the remains can be interpreted as a summer base during one of the campaigns of either Drusus or Tiberius.

The ditch of Haltern, restored. Photo Marco Prins.
The ditch of Haltern, restored.
 
Later, in 5 BCE, the main camp (the Hauptlager) was built on more or less the same site. The new fortress had a size of 19 hectare: enough for one legion, or 5300 soldiers and some auxiliaries. (Cf. the size of Anreppen and Neuss, 23 and 24 hectare.) It was probably occupied by the Nineteenth legion, because the presence of this unit is attested by a lead ingot. On the other hand, the Lippe valley was a war zone and troops were sometimes relocated.

The Hauptlager was surrounded by a double ditch and a wall that was fortified by masonry. Unlike the Feldlager, which was meant to be temporary, the new base was built as a more or less permanent settlement, like Waldgirmes, Neuss, Xanten (residence of the Eighteenth legion), and Nijmegen. Almost two thirds of the Hauptlager have been systematically excavated (entire generations of German archaeologists learned their craft in Haltern), and it seems that the entire area was occupied.



Map of the Haltern excavations
From T. Bechert & W. Willems,
Die römische Reichsgrenze
zwischen Mosel und Nordseeküste (1995) (©!!!)
Lacquer profile of the ditch at Haltern. Westfälisches Römermuseum, Haltern. Photo Marco Prins.
Lacquer profile of the ditch.
Westfälisches Römermuseum

The legionaries, which had been recruited in the towns of Etruria and the plains of the Po (if the Nineteenth was the main occupant of Haltern), must have complained about the cold and wet climate of Germania. (The Roman historian Tacitus remarks in his book on the Country and Customs of the Germans that no one would willingly move to Germania.) So, the Roman authorities did their best to make the fortress at Haltern just as comfortable as a Mediterranean city. To give an example, the streets had small sewers. Like all Roman fortresses, it was a clean and healthy place.

Coin of the Fourth legion Macedonica, found in Haltern. Photo Marco Prins.
Coin of IIII Macedonica.
Westfälisches Römermuseum

One of the most puzzling finds at Haltern was a coin of the Fourth legion Macedonica. The problem is that to the best of our knowledge, this unit never belonged to the army of Germania Inferior. It was in Hispania and took part in the Cantabrian wars. Later, it was moved to Germania Superior and stayed in Mainz, but this was not earlier than 41 or 43. This coin is, therefore, simply not supposed to be in Haltern, unless we accept that it was brought from Hispania to the Lippe valley by a soldier serving in one of the Spanish legions that was transferred to the Rhine: I Germanica and V Alaudae. In other words, the presence of a coin of the fourth legion suggests that soldiers of the First or Fifth were at Haltern. However, other explanations are possible.

Model of barracks. Westfälisches Römermuseum, Haltern. Photo Marco Prins.
Model of barracks. Westfälisches Römermuseum

As always, in the center of the camp were the principia, or headquarters. If the parallel with Waldgirmes is valid, there must have been a statue of the emperor Augustus, as is shown on the picture above. The commander of the legion lived in the nearby praetorium, which was excavated to the northwest of the principia. Six large houses were identified in the vicinity of the principia and praetorium, and it is likely that they were built for the tribunes, the main officers - typically the sons of Roman senators or knights who had to serve one year in the legions as first step in their career, the cursus honorum.

Model of barracks. Westfälisches Römermuseum, Haltern. Photo Marco Prins.
Model of barracks. Westfälisches Römermuseum

Immediately north and south of the principia, there were two other houses in the center of the fortress, larger than the mansions of the tribunes but smaller than the commander's residence. The easy explanation would be that one of these belonged to the prefect of the camp and the other to the man who was responsible for the two river ports of Haltern, but -frankly- this is just a hypothesis without any supporting evidence. We simply cannot identify the officers that resided in these houses. Anyhow, they must have been important men, belonging to the upper tiers of Roman society.

Model of barracks. Westfälisches Römermuseum, Haltern. Photo Marco Prins.
Model of barracks. Westfälisches Römermuseum

No military base would be complete without the houses of the craftsmen (the fabrica), the kilns of the potters, the ovens of the baker's, temples for Roman and local deities, a small sanctuary for the legion's eagle standard, and a hospital (valetudinarium). The Roman author Pliny the Elder, who knew Germania Inferior very well, tells us that the doctors of the Rhine army discovered the medicinal use of the radix britannica, which helped against scurvy. It may well have been discovered in the hospital of Haltern.

Model of Haltern's river port. Westfälisches Römermuseum, Haltern. Photo Marco Prins.
Model of Haltern's river port. Westfälisches Römermuseum

The naval base of Haltern was at the place that is now called Auf der Hofestatt. The excavated shipsheds are almost unique in the northern part of the Roman empire. The only parallels north of the Alps are (to the best of the present author's knowledge) at Köln-Alteburgand at Velsen in Holland, which is a decade younger than Haltern. A bit to the west of the Hofestatt, at the site known as Am Wiegel, a second port was discovered, which was meant for other than military purposes. However, the Roman remains Am Wiegel were damaged by the river and are hard to interpret.

Model of a tomb Westfälisches Römermuseum, Haltern. Photo Marco Prins.
Model of a tomb.
Westfälisches Römermuseum

That the Romans believed that the country along the river Lippe was a safe possession of their empire, is suggested by the fact that they built tombs in this area. It is possible that Haltern played an important role in the administration of the subjected territories, because the camp has too many large houses. It is likely that at least some civil servants, responsible for taxes and similar activities, lived in Haltern.

Helmet. Westfälisches Römermuseum, Haltern. Photo Marco Prins.
Helmet. Westfälisches Römermuseum

Yet, it remained in the first place a military stronghold. If the reconstruction of the final stage of the defeat of Roman general Publius Quinctilius Varus in the Teutoburg Forest (in September 9 CE) as offered here, is correct, survivors of the massacre near Osnabrück must have reached Haltern. Immediately after this defeat, the fortress was left (the same happened at Anreppen). Perhaps, the area was recovered by prince Germanicus, the son Drusus, but essentially, the Roman possessions in the Lippe valley were lost after 9.

To the southwest of the main settlement and the two ports was another, triangle-shaped camp on the Annaberg, with a size of about seven hectares. The remains are very hard to identify, especially since the objects discovered over here -only a few- are now lost. A more recent discovery is the Ostlager, the eastern camp, which at the moment cannot be dated.


Oil lamp. Westfälisches Römermuseum, Haltern. Photo Marco Prins.
Oil lamp. Westfälisches Römermuseum

Today, almost nothing can be seen of the legionary base, except for a ditch that has been cleared (see picture above). However, modern Haltern boasts the Westfälisches Römermuseum, a nice, modern hall with a splendid collection of ancient artifacts (satellite photo). In the neighborhood are three similar museums: the Kalkriese Museum at the site of the battle in the Teutoburg Forest (slightly disappointing), the reconstructed Roman city at Xanten (the Archäologische Park) and the Römisch-Germanisches Museum at Cologne.




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