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Philosophia
January 5th, 2007, 10:13 PM
Ancient Roman road found in Netherlands

AMSTERDAM, Netherlands - Archaeologists in the Netherlands have uncovered what they believe is part of the military road Roman soldiers patrolled nearly 2,000 years ago while guarding against hostile Germanic tribes at the Roman Empire's northern boundary.

Known in Latin as the "limes," the road was in use from roughly A.D. 50 to A.D. 350, before it fell into disrepair and eventually disappeared underground, said archaeologist Wilfried Hessing, who is leading the excavations in Houten, about 30 miles southeast of Amsterdam.

The stretch of road discovered in Houten is believed to have connected two forts — Traiectum, which gives its name to the modern city of Utrecht, and Fectio, modern Vechten. Wooden poles were discovered at the site that were used to protect the roadsides from erosion, and experts hoped to use tree-ring counting techniques to determine the exact date they were cut, Hessing said.

"It was used for trade, but it was first and foremost part of a military strategy to guard the border," he said. With a road "you can respond more quickly, so you need fewer troops, just like today."

The road was discovered by the Dutch train company Prorail during preparations to add extra rail lines in the area. Hessing and Prorail will complete excavations of a short stretch in the coming weeks, then carry out exploratory digs to determine the road's route farther to the east, the city of Houton said in a statement.

From here (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070105/ap_on_sc/netherlands_roman_road).

Another excellent find!

Nantonos
January 6th, 2007, 07:11 AM
Interesting. The Lower german limes tend to be ignored compare to the more strongly fortified Upper german and Rhaetian limes than covered the area between the sources of the Rhine and the danube.

There is a map of the Lower German limes (http://www.livius.org/ga-gh/germania/limes.html) (the road in the article is between forts 11 and 12 on that map), photos of a reconstructed guard tower at Vechten (http://www.fectio.org.uk/groep/vechten.htm) and more background here (http://www.livius.org/a/holland/vechten/fectio.html).

Xentor
January 6th, 2007, 07:34 AM
There's quite a lot of Roman history spread throughout my country. The interesting part is that this history can still be uncovered, in this age of economical "progress", where profit seems more important than culture.