Turicum Explained

Turicum
Alternate Name:Turegum, Turico
Map Type:Switzerland
Coordinates:47.3728°N 8.5406°W
Location:LindenhofSihlbühlMünsterhof-Weinplatz-Limmatquai
Region:former Germania Superior, present city of Zürich, Canton of Zürich, Switzerland
Type:Vicus
Part Of:Lindenhof hill respectively Oppidum Zürich-Lindenhof
Length:about 500m (1,600feet) SihlbühlBürkliplatz, Grosser Hafner island excluded
Width:about 200m (700feet) AugustinergasseLimmatquai
Material:stone and wood
Built:Probably around 15 BC
Abandoned:Around 401 AD by the Roman army, settlement continued by Gallo-Roman inhabitants
Epochs:Roman Republic to Roman Empire
Cultures:Helvetii and Gallo-Roman
Excavations:1906, 1937, 1989, 1997, 1998-2001, 2004, 2007, 2008 and 2014 at Lindenhof hill, Münsterhof, Weinplatz (Thermengasse), Rennweg, Augustinergasse, St. Peterhofstatt, Münzplatz, Schipfe (Limmat) and Grosser Hafner
Archaeologists:Margrit Balmer, Dölf Wild
Condition:aeaorchological access
Ownership:City of Zürich
Management:City of Zürich
Public Access:Thermengasse and so-called Lindenhofkeller showing the Celtii, Gallo-Roman and Carolinum walls.[1] [2]

Turicum was a Gallo-Roman settlement at the lower end of Lake Zurich, and precursor of the city of Zürich. It was situated within the Roman province of Germania Superior) and near the border to the province of Raetia; there was a tax-collecting point for goods traffic on the waterway WalenseeObersee-ZürichseeLimmatAareRhine.

Prehistory and Celtic Oppidum Lindenhof

See main article: Prehistoric pile dwellings around Lake Zurich. Neolithic pile dwellings were located in the then swamp area between Limmat and Lake Zurich around the present Sechseläutenplatz plaza. These were built on piles to protect the inhabitants against occasional flooding by the rivers Sihl, Linth and Jona.[3] Three settlements were located in Enge, a locality of the municipality of Zürich: Zürich–Enge Alpenquai and Kleiner Hafner on then islands or peninsulas on the effluence of the Limmat, and Grosser Hafner,[4] as well as the settlement Kleiner Hafner[5] [6] near the present Sechseläutenplatz plaza on the effluence of the Limmat on Lake Zurich lake shore, all within an area of about 0.2km2 some 500m (1,600feet) away of the core of the Celtic Oppidum respectively the Roman era Vicus.

See main article: Oppidum Zürich-Lindenhof. Probably in the first 1st century BC or even much earlier, the Celts settled on and around the Lindenhof hill. For the 1st century BC La Tène culture, archaeologists excavated individual and aerial finds of the Celtic Oppidum whose remains were discovered in archaeological campaigns in the years 1989, 1997, 2004 and 2007,[7] and also the 1900s and 1930s finds which mistakenly were identified as Roman objects. Extraordinary are the single finds of 1890 at the Prehistoric pile dwelling settlement Alpenquai – the so-called Potin lumps whose largest weights 59.2kg (130.5lb) consist of about 18,000 of used Celtic coins which date to around 100 BC. Initially prejudged just as melt coins, the present scientific research assumes that the melting down of the lump was not completed, therefore the aim was to form cultic offerings. The site of the find was at that time around 50m (160feet) from the present Bürkliplatz plaza in the Lake Zurich.[8] [9] Grosser Hafner was also an island sanctuary of the Helvetii in connection with the settlement at the preceding Oppidi Uetliberg and Lindenhof.

Geography and area of the Roman settlement

The core of the Helvetic and Roman settlement was the Lindenhof hill in the present Altstadt of the modern city of Zürich. The moraine hill was the site of the prehistoric settlements where the modern city has developed. The hilltop area dominates the city of Zürich alongside the eastern Limmat riverbank, and its northern slope called Sihlbühl towards the former Sihl delta marked the northern boundary of the Helvetic and Roman settlement – where the structures of the medieval Oetenbach Nunnery, Waisenhaus Zürich and later the Urania Sternwarte were erected at the present Uraniastrasse, and therefore important historical archaeological excavations never were done. To the south, at the St. Peter church hill, there was another cultic construction towards Münsterhof, and in the west the settlement was bounded by the present Rennweg–Bahnhofstrasse lanes and the Münzplatz plaza.

The largely flattened Lindenhof area elevates at 428m (1,404feet) above sea level, and rises about 25m (82feet) above the level of the Limmat at the SchipfeLimmatquai area in the west; probably some Roman buildings were built at the site of the Zunfthaus zur Zimmerleuten on the other riverbank, and the Roman settlement may stretched towards the present Münsterbrücke which is crossing the Limmat between Grossmünster (remains of graves) and Wasserkirche, and the Münsterhof plaza.

Roman Vicus

Founding

The earliest record of the town's name is preserved on the 2nd-century tombstone found in 1747 AD on the Lindenhof hill, referring to the Roman Vicus as "STA(tio) TUR(i)CEN(sis)" as customs station for goods going to and coming from Italy at the same location as the Celtic Oppidum. The Vicus was founded probably around 15 BC, but there are no written sources. The Roman settlement first belonged to the province of Gallia Belgica, and to Germania Superior from AD 90. Roman Turicum was not fortified in the beginning, but there was a small garrison at the tax-collecting point, downstream of the lake respectively Limmat nearby the Münsterhof plaza where the goods were loaded between small river boats on the Limmat and larger ships on Lake Zurich for the transport on the water route.

1st to late 4th century

Commercial and residential buildings were erected in the vicinity of the Lindenhof hill, in later times, Villae rusticae were established in the present suburban districts. At the present Zunfthaus zur Zimmerleuten at Limmatquai opposite of the Lindenhof hill, the area was stabilized with embankments; some of these mounds date back to the Roman settlement era.[10] Due to its location on Lake Zurich lake shore at the effluence of the Limmat, where the goods had to be reloaded onto riverboats, and although Turicum was not situated alongside an important Roman main road, the water route was essential for the Roman army in the present Western and Northeastern Switzerland. Not yet archaeologically proven but suggested by historians, the very first construction of the present Münsterbrücke Limmat crossing was built in the Roman era, when the present Weinplatz square was the former civilian harbour of the Celtic-Roman Turicum, and so the term Weinplatz (literally wine plaza) has an ancient meaning.

As a Vicus, Turicum was not secured by town walls, but the buildings grouped around the customs station (Quadragesima Galliarum) where the clearance of goods and travelers prior to transfer between the provinces of Gallia Belgica and Raetia took place, mainly on the water route (from and to the Roman heartland over the mountain passes of the Swiss Alps) Walensee-Obersee-Zürichsee passing Centum Prata (Kempraten) towards the Limmat, Aare and Rhine. Goods and travelers, probably also towards Vitudurum (Winterthur), were handled at the Vicus before crossing the Roman provinces of Gallia Belgica and Germania Superior, and transferred on the Roman road between Vindonissa (Windisch) probably via Irgenhausen Castrum and Curia Raetorum (Chur). In Turicum a duty of 2.5% (Quadragesima Galliarum) was levied.

In 70/75 AD a harbor district rose on the newly acquired lands on the Limmat riverbank at the foot of Lindenhof (SchipfeWeinplatz), and the settlement area was extended on the right bank of the Limmat at the present Limmatquai. Public buildings made of stone and paved roads were built.[11] In addition to the fire bed tombs from the 1st century AD at Münsterhof (Poststrasse), west of the Fraumünster church, also a round pit from the 2nd/3rd century was discovered, with numerous shards mainly of drinking cups and bowls, northeast of the church.

At the site of the present Weinplatz towards St. Peterhofstatt the remains of remarkable 2nd to 4th century AD Thermae were excavated.[12] Christianity may have been introduced in the 3rd century by Felix and Regula, with whom Exuperantius was associated – according to the Christian legend, Felix and Regula and their servant were executed at the location of the Wasserkirche in 286. Using the advantage of topography, the Roman military built a citadel on top of the Lindenhof hill in the years of the Roman emperor Valentinian I (364–375), to defend against migrations from the North by the Alamanni. 4500 m2 large, it was fitted with 10 towers and two meter wide walls. South of the Lindenhof Castrum, at the location of the St. Peter church, there was a temple to Jupiter.

Grosser Hafner island sanctuary

See main article: Grosser Hafner. An island sanctuary of the Helvetii in connection with settlement the preceding Oppidi Lindenhof and the 1st century BC settlement at the Lindenhof hill may have probably go back to the La Tène culture. During the reign of Emperor Hadrian, a round wooden temple as an island sanctuary was built on the Grosser Hafner island, which allows a dendrochronological dating. The building was erected in 122 AD, and consisted of oak piles driven deep into the lake bottom. It was surrounded probably with walls made of perishable materials, which formed a circle of seven meters in diameter. The rotunda is located on the former Neolithic island settlement, about 500m (1,600feet) away from the Roman Vicus. The archaeological material indicates that the facility was used up in the 3rd century AD, even up in the 4th century AD by the Gallo-Roman population. On the one hand, the interpretation as the temple is based on the insularity and the design, on the other hand on finds of coins; the majority of the now nearly 90 coins probably are from a so far not proven predecessor building, probably from the third quarter of the 1st century AD. There are also the fragments of bar tiles of maybe another Roman building. On occasion of diving operations from 1998 to 2001 almost 100kg (200lb) of tile fragments are ensured, and up to 40 coins and several pottery shards, as well as rectangular post hole.[4]

Gallo-Roman era

The Alamanni settled, probably from the 5th century when the Roman military retreated back to Italy, but the Roman castle persisted into the 7th century and was reinforced by the Ottonian dynasty, but was broken around 1218 AD. To date, few archaeological remains of the Roman Zürich could be excavated systematically because the remains of the settlement are hidden under the densely built-up core of the modern city of Zürich. Archaeologically excavated are the remains of public baths (Thermengasse), graves and traces of craft enterprises, residential buildings, as well as everyday objects and jewelry, but also of cult equipment.

Archaeological exploration

Archaeological excavations usually were executed on occasion of renewals of present buildings at Rennweg 5/7 (settlement structures), Fortunagasse 28/Rennweg 38 and Oetenbachgasse 5–9 (Celtic trench and settlement structures), Münzplatz (settlement structures), Lindenhof hill (Celtic, Roman and medieval settlement structures), Rennweg 35 (Celtic spot plates (Tüpfelplatten) and settlement structures), the Limmat (bars) and Bürkliplatz-Bahnhofstrasse (Celtic Potin coins), all representing the Helvetii and early Roman settlement.[13] Focussed on the Gallo-Roman era, archaeological explorations were executed at Weinplatz 3/4/5 and Storchengasse 23 (harbour area and thermae), Storchengasse 13 (cultic building) and neighbored Fortunagasse 28/Rennweg 38 (maybe a hostel) and gold jewellery at the Sihlbühl area, Poststrasse/Zentralhof at Münsterhof (probably early medieval graves), and the island sanctuary (Rundtempel) on the former Grosser Hafner island.[11]

Some of the finds are shown in situ at the Thermengasse lane (Weinplatz towards St. Peterhofstatt), and in the so-called Lindenhofkeller on the Lindenhof hill where the Celtii, Gallo-Roman and Carolinum walls are shown and explained by information boards by personal demand at Baugeschichtliches Archiv der Stadt Zürich opposite of the Grimmenturm respectively Theater Neumarkt buildings (Neumarkt).[2]

Protection

The hillside area of the Lindenhof hill is listed as in the Swiss inventory of cultural property of national and regional significance – including the remains of its prehistoric, Roman and medieval settlements respectively structures – as a Class A object of national importance.[14] Hence, the area is provided as a historical site under federal protection, within the meaning of the Swiss Federal Act on the nature and cultural heritage (German: Bundesgesetz über den Natur- und Heimatschutz NHG) of 1 July 1966. Unauthorised researching and purposeful gathering of findings represent a criminal offence according to Art. 24.[15]

Name

The ancient name Turicum, along with the indication of a Roman customhouse, is first attested in the epitaph for Lucius Aelius Urbicus, an infant son of the, ‘head of the toll-station at Zurich’,[16] that was found on Lindenhof hill in 1747 and dates from 185/200 AD.[17]

The place name reappears in the Early Middle Ages as Turicum, Turico, Doricum, Torico, Turigo, Turegum, and in its Old High German forms Ziurichi, Zurih,[18] with regularly shifted consonants; it is unanimously seen as a Gaulish formation, *Turikon, though vowel quantities and accentuation have been a matter of debate: Stress on the second syllable in Rumantsch Turitg, Turi, as well as in the partially reshaped Italian form Zurigo, have been taken as evidence establishing originally long -ī-, that would have drawn the accent to the penult in Latin pronunciation; the constituting elements of the toponym have been identified as a Celtic personal name Tūros and a suffix -īko- forming relational adjectives.[19] [20] This analysis has been contested by arguing that the spelling Turegum, widely attested in documents from the 9th century onward, seems to reflect lenition of the intervocalic stop consonant, as well as lowering of short Latin ĭ to ĕ, both common to most Western Romance languages, and that numerous other place names of Celtic origin, as Autricum, Avaricum or Aventicum, are undoubtedly formed with a suffix -ĭko-, and are usually derived from a hydronym; thus the basis of Turicum supposedly being Turos or Tura, should rather be an ancient name of one of the watercourses around Lindenhof hill, either a distributary of the Sihl river, or possibly the Limmat river. The Romansh and Italian forms may likely have been taken from medieval written records, with the accent determined by analogy within the borrowing languages, e. g. Turitg after amitg, ‘friend’, which bears its stress on the second syllable, too.[21] [22] [23] The diverging evolution of several place names of Gaulish origin, as Bourges < Bitúriges, Berry < Bituríges; Condes < Cóndate, Condé < Condáte, suggests that shifting accent and unsettled vowel quantity may not have been exceptional.[24]

See also

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Access by personal demand at Baugeschichtliches Archiv der Stadt Zürich at the Grimmenturm building, Neumarkt (Zürich).
  2. Web site: Baugeschichtliches Archiv. Hochbaudepartement der Stadt Zürich. de. 2015-08-21.
  3. Web site: Zürcher City unter Wasser. Interaktion zwischen Natur und Mensch in der Frühzeit Zürichs. Hochdepartement der Stadt Zürich. Dölf Wild. de. 2008-09-25. 2015-01-15.
  4. Beat Eberschweiler: Schädelreste, Kopeken und Radar: Vielfältige Aufgaben für die Zürcher Tauchequipe IV. In: NAU 8/2001. Amt für Städtebau der Stadt Zürich, Denkmalpflege und Archäologie Unterwasserarchäologie / Labor für Dendrochronologie. Zürich 2001.
  5. Web site: Prehistoric Pile Dwellings in Switzerland. Swiss Coordination Group UNESCO Palafittes (palafittes.org). 2014-12-07. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20141007220441/http://www.palafittes.org/en/unesco-world-heritage/sites-switzerland/index.html. 2014-10-07.
  6. Web site: World Heritage. palafittes.org. 2014-12-07. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20141209212026/http://www.palafittes.org/en/unesco-world-heritage/world-heritage/index.html. 2014-12-09.
  7. Web site: Aufsehenerregender Keltenfund in Zürich: Die keltische Siedlung am Lindenhof war bedeutender als bisher angenommen. Neue Zürcher Zeitung NZZ. de. 2007-10-18. 2015-08-24.
  8. Web site: Der Potinklumpen – ein spektakulärer keltischer Geldfund. Stadt Zürich, Archäologie & Denkmalpflege. 2015-08-24.
  9. Web site: 75 kilogrammes of Celtic small coin - Recent research on the "Potinklumpen" from Zürich. Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte, España. Michael Nick. 2014-12-12.
  10. Web site: Spektakuläre Funde in der Brandruine. Tages-Anzeiger. Simone Rau. de. 2009-02-12. 2015-08-21.
  11. Web site: Turicum II. Hochbaudepartement Stadt Zürich. de. 2015-01-07.
  12. Web site: Informationsblatt Thermengasse, die römischen Bäder von Turicum. Stadt Zürich, Abteilung für Städtebau. de. 2015-08-21.
  13. Web site: Turicum I: Vom keltischen Oppidum zum frühkaiserzeitlichen Vicus. Stadt Zürich, Hochbaudepartement, Archäologie & Denkmalpflege. de. 2015-08-22.
  14. Web site: A-Objekte KGS-Inventar. Schweizerische Eidgenossenschaft, Amt für Bevölkerungsschutz. 2015-01-01. 2015-09-13. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20151001193946/http://www.bevoelkerungsschutz.admin.ch/internet/bs/de/home/themen/kgs/kgs_inventar/a-objekte.parsys.000108.DownloadFile.tmp/zh2015.pdf. 2015-10-01.
  15. Web site: Bundesgesetz über den Natur- und Heimatschutz (NHG). Hochbaudepartement Stadt Zürich. de. 2014-10-12. 2015-08-21.
  16. Web site: Belegstelle: CIL 13, 05244 = D 01562 = RISch-02, 00193; EDCS-ID: EDCS-10800649; Provinz: Germania superior; Ort: Zürich / Turicum. Epigraphik-Datenbank Clauss/Slaby EDCS unter Mitarbeit von Anne Kolb. de. 2015-08-22.
  17. [Regula Frei-Stolba]
  18. ortsnamen.ch s. v. Zürich.
  19. Andres Kristol, Zürich = Tūrḗgum ou Tū́rĕgum ?, in: Nouvelle revue d’onomastique 47–48 (2007), p. 223 ff.
  20. Andres Kristol (ed.), Dictionnaire toponymique des communes suisses DTS – Lexikon der schweizerischen Gemeindenamen LSG – Dizionario toponomastico dei comuni svizzeri DTS, Frauenfeld/Stuttgart/Wien 2005,, and Éditions Payot, Lausanne 2005,, p. 992 f.
  21. Wulf Müller, Túricum – Turegum – Zürich, in: Albrecht Greule/Stefan Hackl (edd.), Der Südwesten im Spiegel der Namen. Gedenkschrift für Lutz Reichardt, Stuttgart 2011, p. 185 ff.
  22. Wulf Müller, Turegum = Zürich, in: Nouvelle revue d’onomastique 47–48 (2007), p. 221 f.
  23. Manfred Niemeyer (ed.), Deutsches Ortsnamenbuch, Berlin/Boston 2012, p. 719.
  24. Pierre-Yves Lambert, La langue Gauloise. Description linguistique, commentaire d’inscriptions choisies, Paris 1994, p. 46.
  25. Web site: Ur- und frühgeschichtliche Verkehrswege über den Zürichsee: Erste Ergebnisse aus den Taucharchäologischen Untersuchungen beim Seedamm. ETH Bibliothek. Beat Eberschweiler. de. 2004. 2014-12-08.
  26. Web site: Kleine Zürcher Verfassungsgeschichte 1218–2000. Staatsarchiv Zürich. de. 2014-12-20.