The Semois ( French pronunciation: [səmwa] ; Simwès in Walloon , often under elided form Smwès ; Semoy , Sesbach in German , Setzbaach in Luxembourgish of Arlon ; and known as the Semoy in France) is a river flowing from the Ardennes uplands of Belgium and France towards the Meuse , of which it is a right tributary .
68-801: The source of the Semois is in Arlon , Wallonia , in the Belgian province of Luxembourg , close to the border with the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg . Flowing in a roughly westerly direction, it enters France after passing through the Belgian village of Bohan-sur-Semois and forms about 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) of the Belgian–French border . It joins the Meuse 24 kilometres (15 mi) further downstream in Monthermé . The total length of
136-551: A census in 27 BCE for purposes of taxation. The Romans built a new road from Trier to Reims via Mamer , to the north, and Arlon , thus by-passing by 25 kilometres the Titelberg and the older Celtic route, and the capital was displaced to Augusta Treverorum ( Trier ) with no signs of conflict. The vicinity of Trier had been inhabited by isolated farms and hamlets before the Romans, but there had been no urban settlement here. Following
204-661: A century after Caesar, Pomponius Mela identifies the Treveri as the "most renowned" of the Belgae (not to be confounded with the modern-day Belgians ). According to the Roman consul Aulus Hirtius in the 1st century BCE, the Treveri differed little from Germanic peoples in their manner of life and "savage" behaviour. The Treveri boasted of their Germanic origin, according to Tacitus , in order to distance themselves from "Gallic laziness" ( inertia Gallorum ). But Tacitus does not include them with
272-707: A key role in the Gaulish revolt during the Year of the Four Emperors . On the other hand, the Treveri supplied the Roman army with some of its most famous cavalry, and the city of Augusta Treverorum was home for a time to the family of Germanicus , including the future emperor Gaius (Caligula) . During the Crisis of the Third Century , the territory of the Treveri was overrun by Germanic Alamanni and Franks and later formed part of
340-407: A monumental sanctuary situated just outside the civitas capital of Trier . The cult of Lenus Mars was probably registered as a public cult in the official calendar of the civitas Treverorum . Three important pagan sanctuaries in the immediate vicinity of Trier alone are well-known: the extensive Altbachtal temple complex, the nearby temple Am Herrenbrünnchen, and the important Lenus Mars Temple on
408-515: A senate of the Treveri including about a hundred decurions, of which the executive was formed by two duoviri . More serious was the revolt that began with Civilis ' Batavian insurrection during the Year of the Four Emperors . In 70, the Treveri under Julius Classicus and Julius Tutor and the Lingones under Julius Sabinus joined the Batavian rebellion and declared Sabinus as Caesar. The revolt
476-482: A suffix trē - (earlier *trei - 'through, across'; cf. Lat. trāns, Skt tiráh ) attached to - uer- ('water, river'; cf. Skt vār , ON vari 'water'), This etymology is reinforced by the Old Irish cognate treóir (from *trē-uori- ), meaning 'ford, place to cross a river'. The Treveri also had a special goddess called Ritona , which either means 'that of the ford' (from the stem ritu- 'ford') or 'that of
544-755: A variety of tobacco grown in the area. This Belgian Luxembourg location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This Ardennes geographical article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article related to a river in Belgium is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article related to a river in France is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Arlon Arlon ( French pronunciation: [aʁlɔ̃] ; Walloon : Årlon ; Dutch : Aarlen [ˈaːrlə(n)] ; Luxembourgish : Arel [ˈaːʀəl] )
612-869: Is a city and municipality of Wallonia , and the capital of the province of Luxembourg in the Ardennes , Belgium . With a population of just over 28,000, it is the smallest provincial capital in Belgium. Arlon is also the capital of its cultural region: the Arelerland (Land of Arlon in Luxembourgish ). The municipality consists of the following sub-municipalities : Arlon proper, Autelbas , Bonnert , Guirsch , Heinsch , and Toernich . Other population centers include: Autelhaut, Clairefontaine, Fouches , Frassem, Freylange, Hachy , Heckbous, Rosenberg, Sampont, Schoppach, Sesselich, Seymerich, Stehnen, Sterpenich, Stockem, Udange , Viville, Waltzing, Weyler, and Wolberg. Before
680-549: Is shown long and stressed (Trēverī) in Latin dictionaries, thus giving the Classical Latin pronunciation [ˈtreːwɛriː] . The ethnonym Trēverī is a latinized form of Gaulish *Trēueroi ( sing. Trēueros ). It is generally viewed as referring to 'crossing a river' or to a 'flowing river'. Linguists Rudolf Thurneysen and Xavier Delamarre have proposed to interpret the name as trē-uer- ('ferrymen'), composed of
748-578: The nomen Julius . During the reigns of Augustus, Tiberius and Claudius , and particularly when Drusus and Germanicus were active in Gaul, Augusta Treverorum rose to considerable importance as a base and supply centre for campaigns in Germany. The city was endowed with an amphitheatre, baths, and other amenities, and for a while Germanicus' family lived in the city. Pliny the Elder reports that Germanicus' son,
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#1732856018353816-628: The Caeroesi and Paemani . The 4th-century poet Ausonius lived in Trier under the Gratian 's patronage; he is most famous for his poem Mosella, evoking life and scenery along the Treveri's arterial river. Caesar is not explicit in De Bello Gallico about whether the Treveri are to be considered to belong to Gallia Celtica or Gallia Belgica, although the former hypothesis enjoys some favour. Writing about
884-514: The Crisis of the Third Century , the city served as the capital of the Gallic Empire under the emperors Tetricus I and II from 271 to 274. The Treveri suffered further devastation from the Alamanni in 275, following which, according to Jeannot Metzler, "The great majority of agricultural domains lay waste and would never be rebuilt". It is unclear whether Augusta Treverorum itself fell victim to
952-522: The Diocese of Trier . In addition to this area which is formed mainly by the northern part of the Moselle river valley and the neighbouring Eifel region, the Treveri populated also the area of the present-day Grand Duchy of Luxembourg and the major part of the adjacent Belgian Province of Luxembourg . The Rhine valley was removed from Treveran authority with the formation of the province of Germania Superior in
1020-465: The Gallic Empire . Under Constantine and his 4th-century successors, Augusta Treverorum became a large, favoured, rich and influential city that served as one of the capitals of the Roman Empire (together with Nicomedia (present-day İzmit , Turkey), Eboracum (present-day York , England), Mediolanum (present-day Milan , Italy) and Sirmium ). During this period, Christianity began to succeed
1088-539: The Gallic Wars would provide Julius Caesar with his best cavalry. Under their leader Cingetorix , the Treveri served as Roman auxiliaries. However, their loyalties began to change in 54 BCE under the influence of Cingetorix' rival Indutiomarus . According to Caesar, Indutiomarus instigated the revolt of the Eburones under Ambiorix that year and led the Treveri in joining the revolt and enticing Germanic tribes to attack
1156-533: The Martberg by Pommern , the temple and theatre of Mars Smertrius and Ancamna at Möhn , and a mother-goddess sanctuary at Dhronecken. Under Roman influence, a variety of new cults were introduced: Mithras had a temple in the Altbachtal, Cybele and Attis were worshipped there and at Dhronecken, and inscriptions and artwork attest to other Oriental deities such as Sabazius , Isis and Serapis . Besides
1224-543: The Roman conquests of Gaul , the territory of Arlon and a vast area to the southeast were settled by the Treveri , a Celtic tribe. The local population adapted relatively easily to Roman culture. The number and quality of sculpted stones and monuments that have been unearthed in the area demonstrate that the vicus of Orolaunum quickly became a commercial and administrative centre of Roman civilization. The Germanic invasions of
1292-460: The Vangiones , Triboci or Nemetes as "tribes unquestionably German". The presence of hall villas of the same type as found in indisputably Germanic territory in northern Germany, alongside Celtic types of villas, corroborates the idea that they had both Celtic and Germanic affinities. Strabo says that their Nervian and Tribocan neighbours were Germanic peoples who by that point had settled on
1360-477: The pagus Teucorias the southern region around Tholey . Wightman considers it uncertain whether the Aresaces and Cairacates may originally have been pagi of the Treveri, but asserts that their territory – lying around Mogontiacum ( Mainz ) – "always showed particularly close cultural connections with Treveran territory". External to the Treveri, but subject to them as clients, were the Eburones and perhaps also
1428-572: The 17th century, Capuchin friars built a convent on the ruins of the castle and the French strengthened the defensive walls according to Vauban 's designs. An accidental fire destroyed a large part of the city again in 1785. On 9 June 1793 the French Revolutionary troops opposed the Austrians just outside Arlon. The French emerged victorious and took over the city from Austrian rule. They expelled
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#17328560183531496-416: The 3rd century CE. Along with the neighbouring Remi , the Treveri can be credited with a significant innovation in Roman technology : the vallus , a machine drawn by horses or mules to reap wheat. The vallus is known from funerary reliefs and literary descriptions. The many individual Treveri attested epigraphically in other civitates may attest to the development of a Treveran commercial network within
1564-549: The 3rd century destroyed most of these early advances, despite the defensive walls that had been built on the Knipchen hill to protect the vicus . During most of the Middle Ages , the population still used the earlier buildings such as the thermae . In 1060, Waleran I of Limburg , Count of Arlon , built a castle on the Knipchen hill in the centre of the town. A dynasty of counts of Arlon began with Waleran I, Duke of Limburg. On
1632-673: The 4th century, while Ambrose was born there. In the time of Gratian , the Altbachtal complex was "not so much given up as deliberately destroyed"; cult statues were smashed, and some temples were secularized and made into homes. In 384, the Christian heresiarch Priscillian was executed in Augusta Treverorum on the orders of Magnus Maximus , the Emperor in Britain and Gaul, nominally on charges of sorcery. The Gallic Chronicle of 452 describes
1700-512: The 80s CE. The valley of the Ahr would have marked their northern boundary. Colonia Augusta Treverorum (now Trier , Germany), established under Augustus ca. 17 BCE to guard a crossing of the Moselle, was the capital of their civitas under the Empire. There is strong evidence that the recently excavated oppidum on the Titelberg plateau in the extreme southwest of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg
1768-501: The Aedui in revolt. The Romans quickly re-established cordial relations with the Treveri under Indus, who promised obedience to Rome; in contrast, they completely annihilated the Aedui who had sided with Sacrovir. Perhaps under Claudius , the Treveri obtained the status of colonia and probably the Latin Right without actually being colonized by Roman veterans. Under Roman rule, there was
1836-518: The Alamannic invasion. From 285 to 395, Augusta Treverorum was one of the residences of the western Roman Emperor , including Maximian , Constantine the Great , Constantius II , Valentinian I , Magnus Maximus , and Theodosius I ; from 318 to 407, it served as the seat of the praetorian prefecture of Gaul . By the mid-4th century, the city was counted in a Roman manuscript as one of the four capitals of
1904-629: The Capuchin friars and used their convent as a hospital. In June 1815, after the defeat of Napoleon in the Battle of Waterloo , Arlon went back to government of the Grand Duchy. By the Treaty of London in 1839, the Grand Duchy became fully sovereign and in turn geographically larger western part of the duchy, i.e. the province de Luxembourg including Arlon city was given to newly created Kingdom of Belgium. Arlon
1972-467: The Martberg. Inscriptions from the Roman imperial period indicate that the civitas was divided into at least four pagi : the pagus Vilcias , the pagus Teucorias , the pagus Carucum extending north of Bitburg , and the pagus Ac[...] or Ag[...] (the inscription is incomplete). Wightman tentatively suggests that the pagus Vilcias might have been the western region around Arlon and Longuyon , and
2040-581: The Priscillianists as " Manichaeans ", a different Gnostic heresy already outlawed under Diocletian , and states that the emperor had them "caught and exterminated with the greatest zeal" from among the Treveri. The territory of the Treveri had formed part of the Hunsrück-Eifel culture , covering the Hallstatt D and La Tène A-B periods (from 600 to 250 BCE). During the century from 250 to 150 BCE,
2108-771: The Rhine from them lived the Ubii . Caesar mentions that the Segni and the Condrusi lived between the Treveri and the Eburones , and that the Condrusii and Eburones were clients of the Treveri. Caesar bridged the Rhine in the territory of the Treveri. They were bordered on the northwest by the Belgic Tungri (living where the Germani cisrhenani had lived in the time of Caesar and, according to Tacitus,
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2176-539: The Roman conquest many of their gods were identified with Roman equivalents or coupled with Roman gods. Among the most important gods worshipped in Treveran territory were Mercury and Rosmerta , Lenus Mars and Ancamna , Jupiter Optimus Maximus , Apollo , Intarabus , and Minerva . Among the deities unique to the Treveri were Intarabus, Ritona , Inciona and Veraudunus , and the Xulsigiae . J.-J. Hatt considers that
2244-549: The Roman occupation of the Titelberg in 30 BCE. As early as 21 CE, according to Greg Woolf , "the Treveri and the Aedui [were] arguably those tribes which had undergone the greatest cultural change since the conquest". The Romans introduced viticulture to the Moselle valley (see Moselle wine ). In general, the archaeological record attests to ongoing rural development and prosperity into
2312-504: The Romans. The Romans under Titus Labienus killed Indutiomarus and then put down the Treveran revolt; afterwards, Indutiomarus' relatives crossed the Rhine to settle among the Germanic tribes. The Treveri remained neutral during the revolt of Vercingetorix , and were attacked again by Labienus after it. On the whole, the Treveri were more successful than most Gallic tribes in cooperating with
2380-511: The Romans. They probably emerged from the Gallic Wars with the status of a free civitas exempt from tribute. In 30–29 BCE, a revolt of the Treveri was suppressed by Marcus Nonius Gallus, and the Titelberg was occupied by a garrison of the Roman army. Agrippa and Augustus undertook the organization of Roman administration in Gaul, laying out an extensive series of roads beginning with Agrippa's governorship of Gaul in 39 BCE, and imposing
2448-455: The Third Century . Frankish and Alamannic invasions during the 250s led to significant destruction, particularly in rural areas; given the failure of the Roman military to defend effectively against Germanic invasion, country dwellers improvised their own fortifications, often using the stones from tombs and mausoleums. Meanwhile, Augusta Treverorum was becoming an urban centre of the first importance, overtaking even Lugdunum ( Lyon ). During
2516-439: The Titelberg experienced an upsurge of growth which made it "the central oppidum of the Treveri". A large open space in the central square of the Titelberg which would have been used for public meetings of a religious or political nature during the 1st century BCE. By the time of Caesar's invasion , the Treveri seemed to have adopted an oligarchic system of government. The Treveri had a strong cavalry and infantry, and during
2584-399: The Treveri give their name. Celtic in language, according to Tacitus they claimed Germanic descent. They contained both Gallic and Germanic influences. Although early adopters of Roman material culture , the Treveri had a chequered relationship with Roman power. Their leader Indutiomarus led them in revolt against Julius Caesar during the Gallic Wars ; much later, they played
2652-493: The Treveri had developed trade, agriculture and metal-working. They had adopted a money-based economy based upon silver coins, aligned with the Roman denarius , along with cheaper bronze or bronze-lead coins. Trade goods made their way to the Treveri from Etruria and the Greek world; monetary evidence suggests strong trade links with the neighbouring Remi . Iron ore deposits in Treveran territory were heavily worked and formed part of
2720-473: The Treveri, along with their neighbours the Mediomatrici , Leuci , and Triboci , "appeared as pilots in the conservation of native Celtic and pre-Celtic [religious] traditions". During the Roman period, Lenus Mars (or Mars Iovantucarus ) has been deemed "the main god of the Treveri", as evidenced by dedications found across the different sections of civitas Treverorum . They are connected in particular with
2788-545: The area between the Rhine and the Meuse underwent a drastic population restructuring as some crisis forced most signs of inhabitation onto the heights of the Hunsrück . Following this crisis, population returned to the lowlands and it is possible to speak with confidence of the Treveri by name. Much of the Treveran countryside seems to have been organized into rural settlements by the end of the 2nd century BCE, and this organization persisted into Roman times. Even before Roman times,
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2856-539: The basis for the area's wealth. Before and for some time after the Roman conquest, Treveran nobles were buried in chamber tombs which were covered with tumuli and filled with sumptuous goods including imported amphorae , weaponry and andirons . By the 2nd century CE, wealthy Treveri were building elaborate funerary monuments such as the World Heritage -listed Igel Column, or the sculpted grave-stones found at Arlon , Neumagen and Buzenol , all of which depict
2924-524: The border with the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg , Arlon has continued to expand with new residential areas and commercial development zones, and many people cross the border everyday to work in the Grand Duchy. All international express trains make a stop in Arlon, as it is the last station on the main Brussels—Luxembourg City railway line. The town of Arlon is the most populated of the municipalities in
2992-430: The bridge over the Moselle . The Altbachtal complex has yielded a wealth of inscriptions and the remains of a theatre and over a dozen temples or shrines, mostly Romano-Celtic fana dedicated to native, Roman, and Oriental deities. Outside of the city, many sacred sites are known; they are typically enclosed by a wall. Among these may be mentioned the temple of Apollo and Sirona at Hochscheid , that of Lenus Mars on
3060-447: The construction of Agrippa 's road linking Trier with Reims which bypassed the Titelberg. During the Roman period, Trier became a Roman colony (in 16 BCE), and the provincial capital of Belgica itself. It was the frequent residence of a number of emperors. Archaeological evidence suggests that the Treveri were divided into five cantons centred respectively on the pre-Roman oppida of the Titelberg, Wallendorf, Kastel, Otzenhausen and
3128-452: The course' (from the homonym ritu- , rito- 'course'), and a temple dedicated to Uorioni Deo ('goddess of the watercourse'). The city of Trier , attested 1st c. AD as Treueris Augusta and on inscriptions as Augusta Trēvērorum ( Treuiris in 1065), is named after the tribe. In the time of Julius Caesar their territory extended as far as the Rhine north of the Triboci ; across
3196-627: The death of Duke Waleran III in 1226, Arlon passed to his son from the second marriage, Henry V the Fair, Count of Luxembourg, and became part of the county of Luxembourg. Thus, in the Tournament of Chauvency, his son Henry the Lion bore the title of Marquis of Arlon. In the 13th century, the only women's Cistercian abbey known to date was built in Clairefontaine . The Duchy of Luxembourg itself, of which Arlon
3264-627: The deceased's livelihood and/or interests during life. As cremation had become more common under Roman rule, gravestones often had special niches to receive urns of ashes as well as grave-goods. Roman-era grave-goods included the remains of animals used as food (particularly pigs and birds), coins, amphorae, pottery, glassware, jewellery and scissors. Burial replaced cremation again in the late 3rd century. The Treveri adapted readily to Roman civilization, adopting certain Mediterranean practices in cuisine, clothing, and decorative arts starting as early as
3332-525: The diffusion of Christianity. The present-day cathedral has its origins in a 4th-century double church built close to the imperial palace, probably around 321 and perhaps thanks to a donation from Helena Augusta . Approximately four times larger than today's cathedral, this church was one of Constantine's great imperial foundations, ranking with other major churches at Rome, Constantinople , Jerusalem , and Bethlehem . Jerome , Athanasius of Alexandria and Martin of Tours all lived and worked in Trier during
3400-497: The future emperor Gaius (Caligula) , was born "among the Treveri, at the village of Ambiatinus, above Confluentes ( Koblenz )", but Suetonius notes that this birthplace was disputed by other sources. A faction of Treveri, led by Julius Florus and allied with the Aeduan Julius Sacrovir , led a rebellion of Gaulish debtors against the Romans in 21 CE. Florus was defeated by his rival Julius Indus , while Sacrovir led
3468-586: The imperial cult and the worship of Roman and Celtic deities as the favoured religion of the city. Such Christian luminaries as Ambrose , Jerome , Martin of Tours and Athanasius of Alexandria spent time in Augusta Treverorum. Among the surviving legacies of the ancient Treveri are Moselle wine from Luxembourg and Germany (introduced during Roman times) and the many Roman monuments of Trier and its surroundings, including neighbouring Luxembourg. Three Roman roads, very important for their role in transregional trade and military deployment capability, went through
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#17328560183533536-399: The left bank of the Moselle. Inscriptions attest to the existence of a Treveran cult to Rome and Augustus, but the location of the temple is uncertain. Wightman suggests that the wholly classical and well-endowed temple Am Herrenbrünnchen would be a possibility, while Metzger argues that it can only have been a poorly known fourth temple in the city – the so-called Asclepius Temple not far from
3604-604: The left bank of the Rhine, while the Treveri are implied to be Gaulish. Jerome states that as of the 4th century their language was similar to that of the Celts of Asia Minor (the Galatians ). Jerome probably had first-hand knowledge of these Celtic languages , as he had visited both Augusta Treverorum and Galatia . Very few personal names among the Treveri are of Germanic origin; instead, they are generally Celtic or Latin. Certain distinctively Treveran names are apparently none of
3672-412: The lower valley of the Moselle in modern day Germany from around 150 BCE, if not earlier, until their displacement by the Franks . Their domain lay within the southern fringes of the Silva Arduenna ( Ardennes Forest), a part of the vast Silva Carbonaria , in what are now Luxembourg , southeastern Belgium and western Germany; its centre was the city of Trier ( Augusta Treverorum ), to which
3740-404: The perennially loyal Remi , at the expense of the Treveri. By the 2nd and 3rd centuries, representatives of the old élite bearing the nomen Julius had practically disappeared, and a new élite arose to take their place; these would have originated mainly from the indigenous middle class, according to Wightman. The Treveri suffered from their proximity to the Rhine frontier during the Crisis of
3808-411: The province of Luxembourg, ahead of Marche-en-Famenne and Aubange. On the other hand, it is the least populated of the country's ten provinces. On 31 December 2019, the city of Arlon had a total population of 30,047 inhabitants. List of mayors : Arlon is twinned with: Treveri The Treveri ( Gaulish : * Treweroi ) were a Germanic or Celtic tribe of the Belgae group who inhabited
3876-405: The reorganisation of the Roman provinces in Germany in 16 BCE, Augustus decided that the Treveri should become part of the province of Belgica . At an unknown date, the capital of Belgica was moved from Durocortorum Remorum ( Reims ) to Augusta Treverorum. A significant layer of the Treveran élite seems to have been granted Roman citizenship under Caesar and/or Augustus, by whom they were given
3944-538: The river is 210 kilometres (130 mi). Other places on the banks of the Semois are Chiny , Florenville , Herbeumont , Bouillon (including the localities of Dohan and Poupehan ), and Vresse-sur-Semois (all in Belgium). The earliest documentation of the name, as SESMARA , is dated from the 2nd century AD. That was before that region was influenced by significant Germanic immigration. Medieval forms include Sesomirs (664), Sesmarus (950), Sesmoys (1104), and Semoir (1244). The river has given its name to
4012-419: The same people), on the southwest by the Remi , and on the north, beyond the Ardennes and Eifel , by the Eburones. To the south their neighbours were the Mediomatrici Later the Vangiones and Nemetes , whom ancient sources identify as Germanic, would settle to the east of the Treveri along the Rhine; thereafter, Treveran territory in present-day Germany was probably similar to that which afterwards became
4080-420: The temple of Rome and Augustus mentioned above, the imperial cult is also evidenced by numerous religious inscriptions "in honour of the divine house" (i.e. the imperial family). In the 4th century, Christianity rose to prominence in Augusta Treverorum. The city became the seat of a Christian archbishopric during the second half of the 3rd century, and under Constantine I , it became an important centre for
4148-634: The territory of the Treveri: They are mentioned as Treveri by Caesar (mid-1st c. BC), Pliny (1st c. AD) and Tacitus (early 2nd c. AD), Trēoúēroi (Τρηούηροι) by Strabo (early 1st c. AD), Tríbēroi (Τρίβηροι) by Ptolemy (2nd c. AD), Trēouḗrōn (Τρηουήρων) by Cassius Dio (3rd c. AD), Treuerorum (gen.) by Orosius (early 5th c. AD), and as Triberorum in the Notitia Dignitatum (5th c. AD). The variant Treberi also appears in Pliny , and few highly deviant variant forms are also attested as Trēoũsgroi (Τρηου̃σγροι) in Strabo or Triḗrōn (Τριήρων) in Cassius Dio. The first syllable
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#17328560183534216-418: The three and may represent a pre-Celtic stratum, according to Wightman (she gives Ibliomarus, Cletussto and Argaippo as examples). After the Roman conquest, Latin was used extensively by the Treveri for public and official purposes. Originally the oppida of the Titelberg , Wallendorf , Kastel, Otzenhausen and the Martberg were roughly equal in significance; however, sometime between 100 and 80 BCE,
4284-492: The western parts of the Empire. During the early 2nd century CE, Augusta Treverorum was an important centre for the production of samian ware (along with Lezoux and Rheinzabern ), supplying the Rhineland with high-quality glossy red pottery which was often elaborately decorated with moulded designs. Treveran villa architecture shows both coexistence and mixture of typically Gallic and Germanic traits. In some villas, such as at Otrang and Echternach , small rooms opened onto
4352-425: The world, alongside Rome, Alexandria , and Constantinople . New defensive structures, including fortresses at Neumagen , Bitburg and Arlon , were constructed to defend against Germanic invasion. After a Vandal invasion in 406, however, the imperial residence was moved to Mediolanum ( Milan ) while the praetorian guard was withdrawn to Arelate ( Arles ). The Treveri were originally polytheists , and following
4420-429: Was dependent, became part of the Burgundian Netherlands under Philip the Good in 1441. After Charles V 's abdication of his empire to his son Philip II of Spain in 1556, a troubled period started for the whole region with continuous wars involving France, Spain and the Southern Netherlands . In 1558, nearly half of the city, including its castle, was destroyed by the French troops of Francis, Duke of Guise . In
4488-414: Was one of the first victims of the German invasion in 1914 as 121 inhabitants were executed on 26 August, on the orders of Colonel Richard Karl von Tessmar . Its territory was again among the first to be invaded at the onset of World War II . Allies moved into Belgium on 10 May 1940 and Arlon was defended by French troops, but they were not able to stop the German invasion. Being situated very close to
4556-448: Was quashed, and more than a hundred rebel Treveran noblemen fled across the Rhine to join their Germanic allies; in the assessment of historian Jeannot Metzler, this event marks the end of aristocratic Treveran cavalry service in the Roman army, the rise of the local bourgeoisie, and the beginnings of "a second thrust of Romanization". Camille Jullian attributes to this rebellion the promotion of Durocortorum Remorum ( Reims ), capital of
4624-736: Was the Treveran capital during the 1st century BCE. An important secondary centre was Orolaunum (now Arlon , capital of the Belgian Province of Luxembourg ), which, in Edith Wightman's assessment, "became a kind of regional capital for the western Treveri", attaining "a degree of prosperity only otherwise reached by civitas capitals". The site of La Tranchée des Portes near Étalle , the largest of Belgium by its size (100 hectares) has not still revealed its rank. A recent study shows that it had already human presence around 4000 BCE. Other important pre-Roman centres were located at Martberg , Donnersberg , Wallendorf , Kastel-Staadt , and Otzenhausen . The transfer of their activities to Trier followed
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