Fanum d'Aron explained

Fanum d'Aron
Map Type:France
Relief:Yes
Altitude M:639
Coordinates:44.9198°N 2.4356°W
Abandoned:3rd century CE
Type:Fanum (Romano-Celtic Temple)
Diameter:approx. 18m (59feet)[1]
Condition:Ruined
Ownership:Private
Excavations:1977 - 1978
Built:1st century CE
Designation1:Monument historique
Designation1 Date:20 November 1980
Location:Aurillac, Cantal, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, France

Fanum d'Aron is a fanum, or Romano-Celtic temple, located in Aurillac, a French commune in the Auvergne region.[2]

Site and status

Discovered in 1970 in the southwest of Aurillac, the temple was excavated from May 1977 through the end of 1978 and added to the monuments historiques registry in 1980. It is situated in what is now a small municipal garden, between a pavilion and the Lescudilier industrial zone (cadastre BE n°360).[2] [3]

History

Salvage excavations have recovered rich materials from the site, including lapidary pieces, glass and metallic artifacts, coins, eight column capitals (four of which feature sculpted trachyte heads representing the Sun and Moon), a fluted column barrel fragment, and ceramics as well as terracotta antefixes.[3] [4] These objects establish that the temple would have been in use from the 1st to 3rd centuries CE.[1] [3]

Some artifacts and architectural elements from the site are kept on display at the Aurillac Museum of Art and Archeology,[4] along with a model reconstruction of the fanum.

Architecture

The fanum is a circular chamber (cella) surrounded by a sixteen-sided polygonal ambulatory or gallery, which opens onto the Cère and Jordanne River valleys. The angles of the polygon are marked by the bases of fluted columns (eight of which are found in-place) bearing acanthus-leafed Corinthian capitals. Terracotta antefixes found at the site give some indication of the roofing materials and design. The complex appears to have had a courtyard encircled by a perimeter wall that was discovered through sondage, towards the northwest. The wall is 55m (180feet) from the fanum, with a northwest-northeast orientation erected over a length of 84m (276feet). There are also vestiges of a partially exposed square enclosure with paved ground southeast of the fanum, whose sides are 29m (95feet) long. The structure is speculated to perhaps have been an annex of the sanctuary, a shelter for receiving pilgrims, or even another fanum.[1] [3] [4]

Fanum d'Aron appears uncommon in Arverni and Vellavi territory for having a polygonal rather than quadrangular ambulatory, and unique for the ambulatory being of sixteen sides. Another fanum found at Mauriac (Cantal) can be compared for appearing to have had a round cella and decagonal ambulatory. This uncommon round cella with polygonal ambulatory plan seems to be more typical of Western Gaul than elsewhere, as it is also found in examples at Saint-Gervais (Vendée) and Chassenon (Charente).[3]

Related sites

A prospection of the Cantal département made by Alphonse Vinatié (1924–2005), a local archaeologist, made it possible to identify three other ancient sanctuaries in Landeyrat and Allanche,[5] as well as possible sites in Celles, Charmensac, and Mauriac Vernols.[1]

Further reading

See also

Notes and References

  1. Mitton. Claire. The Arverni and Vellavi's sanctuaries outside the capitals, from the 1st Century BC to the 4th Century AD: a typological and a spatial approach.. Revue archéologique du Centre de la France. Tome 45-46. 2006-2007. OpenEdition Journals. 8 April 2008. 25 April 2020.
  2. Web site: Temple gallo-romain de type fanum. 25 April 2020. Ministère de la Culture.
  3. Poursat. Jean-Claude. Circonscription d'Auvergne. Gallia. Tome 37. fascicule 2. 472–474. 1979. 25 April 2020.
  4. Web site: Tête de Méduse / Archéologie . Musée d'Aurillac . musees.aurillac.fr . 29 April 2020 .
  5. Calbris. Maxime. Changes in Places of Worship in the Ancient Urban Zone at Mathonière, in Allanche (Cantal): An Analysis of Pedestrian, Arial, and Geophysical Surveys. Siècles (en ligne). 48. 2020. OpenEdition Journals. 24 February 2020. 25 April 2020.