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  • Aosta, Via Roma (area pre-collinare)
  • Aosta
  •  
  • Italy
  • Aosta Valley
  • Valle d'Aosta
  • Saint-Christophe

Credits

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  • AIAC_logo logo

Monuments

Periods

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Chronology

  • 50 BC - 500 AD

Season

    • During the course of work relating to new road construction above Aosta’s northern ring-road, the edge of a small rock cut room emerged. It had a rectangular plan with the entrance facing downhill. Inside, a raised hearth had been built in a corner, delimited by stones. Amongst the blackened patches consistent with combustion residue identified on the floor and amongst the cobbles around the base of the hearth, two coins were recovered. In a bad state of preservation they were identified as a late Republican as (2nd-1st century B.C.) and a _quadrans_ (1st century B.C.). The occupation and abandonment levels produced a large quantity of finds of which a high percentage was local impasto pottery, cooking jars and three-legged cooking dishes, associated with fragments of black glaze ware of Padovan production, body sherds and stoppers from _amphorae_ and thin-walled ware beakers. The abundance of pottery would seem to attest the commercial contact between the local population and the Romans in a period just before the foundation of _Augusta Prætoria_. Wide parallel rock cut grooves, uncovered near the “hut” can probably be linked to a pathway which climbed the left bank of the Buthier. In the late Roman period this was overlain by a paved road. Traces of Iron Age settlement are frequent in the area of the torrent’s alluvial fan and may attest a connecting pathway at the foot of the hill. Traces of walled structures outside the “hut” were associated with late Imperial pottery. Together with a burial without grave goods, delimited by and covered with stones found along the cobbled road, they indicate continuous occupation and/or organised life in the central Roman period and beyond. (Patrizia Framarin – Alessandra Armirotti)

Bibliography

    • S. Finocchi, 1959, Note di protostoria valdostana, in La Valle d’Aosta. Relazioni e comunicazioni presentate al XXXI Congresso storico subalpino, (Aosta 1956), vol. I: 54-61.
    • P. Framarin, 2003-2004, Scavi in via Prés-Fossés: nuovi dati dal suburbio orientale di Augusta Prætoria, in Bollettino della Soprintendenza per i Beni Culturali 1: 154.
    • P. Framarin, A. Armirotti, 2007, Tracce di frequentazione indigena nei pressi del Buthier, in Bollettino della Soprintendenza per i Beni e le Attività Culturali 3-2006: 110-118.
    • P. Framarin, F. Mezzana, 2007, Nuovi dati sulla presenza indigena dagli scavi nell’areale urbano di augusta Prætoria Salassorum, Atti del Convegno Forme e tempi dell’urbanizzazione nella Cisalpina (II sec. a.C. – I sec. a.C.), c.s.
    • R. Mollo Mezzana, 1982, Augusta Prætoria. Aggiornamento sulle conoscenze archeologiche della città e del suo territorio, in Atti del Congresso sul Bimillenario della città di Aosta, Bordighera-Aosta: 205-315.
    • R. Mollo Mezzana, 1994, Il celtismo in Valle d’Aosta: documentazione archeologica e aspetti culturali, in Numismatica e archeologia del celtismo padano, Aosta: 143-192.
    • R. Mollo Mezzena, 1997, L’età del Bronzo e l’età del Ferro in Valle d’Aosta, in Atti della XXXI Riunione scientifica. La Valle d’Aosta nel quadro della preistoria e protostoria dell’arco alpino centro-occidentale, Courmayeur 1994: 139-223.
    • R. Mollo Mezzana, 2000, L’organizzazione del suburbio di Augusta Prætoria (Aosta) e le trasformazioni successive, in M. Antico Gallina (a cura di), Dal suburbium al faubourg: evoluzione di una realtà urbana, Milano: 149-199.
    • R. Mollo Mezzana, 2004, Augusta Prætoria (Aosta) e l’utilizzazione delle risorse idriche - Città e suburbio, in M. Antico Gallina (a cura di), Acque per l’utilitas, per la salubritas, per l’amoenitas, Itinera 4-5, Milano: 59-137.