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Iuliacum (Jülich)

Detail of map of Germania Inferior. Design Jona Lendering.
The location of Iuliacum,
west of Cologne (number 41)
 (©**)
Germania inferior: small province of the Roman empire, situated along the Lower Rhine. This webpage is part of a series of short descriptions of villages in Germania inferior. An overview can be found here.

Iuliacum was a small town along the main road from Tongeren, the capital of the Tungri, to Cologne, the capital of Germania Inferior. The element -acum indicates that the town was already occupied when one of the first Roman governors organized the province in tax districts: this was the district of someone named Julius. This early occupation is logical, because the loess is fertile and archaeologists have shown that there were many large farms.

The town, now called Jülich, was situated east of the crossing of a small river, the Rur (which is not to be confused with the Ruhr), and there must have been a bridge. A tile from Sixth legion Victrix proves that soldiers guarded the river crossing. The inscription can be dated after the arrival of this unit to suppress the Batavian revolt (in 70) and before 121, when it was transferred to Britain.

Statue of Jupiter from Jülich. Rheinisches Landesmuseum, Bonn (Germany). Photo Marco Prins.
Statue of Jupiter from Jülich
(Rheinisches Landesmuseum,
Bonn)

Iuliacum is mentioned on the Peutinger map, which means that it was a settlement of some significance in the fourth century. This is confirmed by the archaeological record, which shows that at the beginning of the fourth century, Iuliacum was fortified with a mighty, fourteen-sided wall. According to the Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus, the castle was still in use in 357, and it may have been used for an additional half century.

Among the archaeological finds from ancient Iuliacum is a fine statue of Jupiter, seated on his throne, made of sandstone. Stylistically, it can be dated to the first quarter of the third century. Once, it must have graced a column in the court of a villa.

A satellite photo can be seen here.

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