Adsilanum

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The original page for this article is in French here. Many of the links have no translation in the English Wikipedia, and so are linked back to the original French language versions.

Adsilanum, a lost Roman way station in the in the French region of Aubrac

Contents

[edit] History

Initially, Adsilanum was a way station on the Roman road between Narbonne, in North Gaul and Aquitane, ] during the Roman Empire, then later acted as a frontier post between Gallia Narbonensis(Braccata) and the free zone of Arvernes. During the uprising of Vercingetorix the goal was to prevent insurgent incursions into the pacified territories of Narbonensis, the after the defeat of Alesia, they were used as expeditionary posts to pursue and eliminate rebels.

[edit] Rediscovery

[edit] The 17th Century

All trace of the station was lost, then later rediscovered during the 17th Century, from analysis of the Tabula Peutingeriana, which although topographically incorrect, showed the positions of the Roman roads with great accuracy. Cartographers of the era overlayed the roads on more topographically accurate maps and included the place names, thus pointing later historians to the location of Adsilanum

[edit] The 19th Century

[edit] Analysis

[edit] The local Roman presence

[edit] External links

[edit] English Language

[edit] French Language

Languages