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Chaussée Brunehaut ("Via Belgica")


Romeinseweg ("Roman Road") near Herderen. Photo Jona Lendering.
Romeinseweg ("Roman Road") near Herderen
Via Belgica: quasi-Latin expression for the Roman road that connected Amiens, Bavay, Tongeren, and Cologne. Earlier scholars called it Chaussée Brunehaut; in Germany, the expression Agrippa-Straße is sometimes used.

When Julius Caesar arrived in northern Gaul in 57 BCE, there were already many ancient roads. One of these ran along the rivers Sambre and Meuse, and connected the territories of the Ambiani, Atrebates, Nervians, Atuatuci, and Eburones to the Rhine. Although the road had not been paved, its course can easily be reconstructed, because since time immemorial people were buried along it. If plotted on a map, Neolithic, Bronze Age, and Iron Age funerary monuments clearly show an almost straight line, which must indicate the course of the prehistoric route. 

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The road between Saulzoir and Bavay. Photo Jona Lendering.
The road between Saulzoir and Bavay.

When Caesar advanced from the Atrebates against the Nervians, he used this road; his enemies could therefore easily decide where to attack the Romans, but were, in spite of their greater knowledge of the terrain, defeated at the river Sabis. Continuing along this route, Caesar reached the Atuatuci, and besieged one of their hill forts, which was situated a bit south of the main road. It has recently been proposed that the Fourteenth legion was (in the winter of 54/53 BC) defeated by Ambiorix at Kanne-Caster, 4½ kilometers south of the place where the road crossed the Meuse, which here turns north.

The road from Cambray to Saulzoir

Among the indications that the Romans merely paved -with small stones, not with big slabs- an already existing road is the fact that they continued to measure distances in leugae (units of 2,223 meters) instead of Roman miles. On the other hand, several towns along the road certainly owed their existence to the Romans, and can be dated to the first half of the reign of the emperor Augustus. Part of the evidence is archaeological; other towns are mentioned on the Peutinger Map, which is based on a world map created by Augustus' friend Agrippa, the founder of Cologne and builder of at least three other roads in Gaul (from Lyon to Bordeaux, to Boulogne, and to Cologne).

The following table mentions the towns on the map. The distances add up to 123 leugae or 273 kilometers for the route from Cambray to Cologne, which fits the real distances exceptionally well.

Milestone, found in Binche; now in the Musée Royale de Mariemont, Morlanwelz (Belgium). Photo Marco Prins.
Milestone, found in Binche; now in the Musée Royale de Mariemont, Morlanwelz.

IMP   CAES   T
AELIO   HAD-
RIANO   AN-
TONINO   AUG
PIO   P.P.   A   BA-
GAC   NER   M.P.   XXII

To emperor Caesar Titus Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Augustus Pius, Father of the Fatherland, to Bagacum of the Nervians, 22 miles.

Modern name Peutinger Map Evidence
Amiens Samarobriva Earliest finds 20-10 BCE
-
Cambray Camaricum
XI leugae
Saulzoir Hermomacum
VIII leugae
Bavay Bagacum Earliest finds 20-15 BCE
XII leugae
Givry Vogdoriacum
XVI leugae
Liberchies Geminiacum
XIIII
Perwez Pernacum
XVI leugae
Tongeren Atuatuca Earliest finds 30 BCE
XVI leugae
Heerlen Coriovallum
XII leugae
Jülich Juliacum Earliest finds Neolithic
XVIII leugae
Cologne Ara Ubiorum Founded 37 or 19 BCE
The Bavay Monument. Photo Jona Lendering.
A monument, erected in 1872, indicating the eight roads beginning in Bavay. The statue represents Brunehild.

Maastricht (Traiectum ad Mosam) can be added to this list. Although it is not mentioned on the Peutinger Map, the crossing of the Meuse must have been an important place. Again, the earliest finds belong to 30-20 BCE, and although the bridge has not yet been in vestigated dendrochronologically, it may well belong to the earliest monuments of this town - in fact, its raison d'être.

There were several other paved streets, and it is interesting to see that Bavay and Tongeren are both the node of several roads. Direct roads connected Bavay
  • to Dinant in the east,
  • to Kester and Asse (a Nervian oppidum) in the northnortheast,
  • to Blicquy and Velzeke (Feliciacum) in the northnorthwest,
  • to Tournai (Tornacum) in the northwest,
  • to Vermand (an opppidum of the Viromandui) in the southwest, 
  • and to Reims (Durocortorum) in the south.
Cross section of the road. Photo Jona Lendering.Cross section of the road
This brings the grand total to eight Roman roads if we add the streets to Cambray and Amiens and to Tongeren and Cologne. Tongeren was a similar node, with roads to Cologne and Bavay, and also
  • to Cuijk (Ceuclum) and Nijmegen in the north,
  • unidentified places in the northwest,
  • Tienen in the west, 
  • Amay, Arlon (Orolaunum), and Metz (Divodurum) in the south 
  • Liège (Leodium) and Trier in the southeast.
The Romeinseweg in Herderen. Photo Jona Lendering.
The "Romeinseweg" in Herderen

One gets the impression of a grand design that consisted of two central nodes, created to develop the valleys of the Sambre and Middle Meuse. Presented like this, the impression is probably wrong, because there is no proof that all these roads were created at the same time. On the other hand, it is reasonably certain that Bavay and Tongeren were from the very beginning central nodes, both being connected to cities in the west and east, and to Reims in the south.

Reconstruction of the inn near the Roman fort at Nijmegen. Archeon, Alphen aan den Rijn (Netherlands). Photo Jona Lendering.
Reconstruction of an inn
(Archeon)


The road from Amiens to Cologne -an almost straight line through the landscape- was of great strategic importance, because the Roman army in Germania Inferior could not be supplied from the Rhineland. The rivers Sambre and Meuse were used to transport wheat and barley, but land transport was always necessary, especially from Maastricht to Cologne.(An interesting inscription illustrating this trade was found in Nijmegen, and mentions a Nervian named Marcus Liberius Victor.)

 It comes as no surprise that archaeologists have found many villas along the road (e.g., Voerendaal). Every measure was taken to make traffic as easy as possible: Heerlen boasted a large bathhouse and Taviers must have had a large inn, as the name its derived from Taberna.

Votive altar of M. Liberius Victor. Museum Valkhof, Nijmegen (Netherlands).
MATRIBUS
MOPATIBUS
M[arcus] LIBERIUS
VICTOR
CIVES
NERVIUS
NEG[otiator] FRU[mentarius]
V[otum] S[olvit] L[ibens] M[erito]
(Museum Valkhof, Nijmegen)

It was not only Julius Caesar who used this street. During the final months of the Batavian Revolt (71), the Fourteenth legion Gemina was summoned from Britain, and used this road. Two centuries later, the emperors of the Gallic Empire protected the road with all kinds of fortifications, essentially creating a half-protected zone between the Rhine and this road. This zone, which was poor, was soon occupied by Franks, who took their language with them; south of the road, on the fertile löss soils, Latin remained in use - the origin of the Language Border that still divides the Low Countries.

In the Middle Ages, the roads beginning in Bavay and Tongeren were called Chaussée Brunehaut ("road of Brunhilda"), a name that is still officially used and can be found in many municipalities in northern France and southern Belgium. This Brunhilda was a Visigothic princess who became queen of the Frankish kingdom of Austrasia, and was one of the most powerful rulers of the late sixth and early seventh century. She became the heroine of many sagas, such as the Nibelungenlied, and it is now difficult to see behind the legend and find out whether she really had something to do with the streets now named after her.

Still, it is possible -perhaps even likely- that the Merovingian kings and queens repaired the roads. It is due to these maintenance efforts of later rulers that the road is still recognizable on many places and is usually still in use. It has been listed by UNESCO as World Heritage.
The road between Tongeren and Maastricht. Photo Jona Lendering.
The road between Tongeren and Maastricht.

The name Via Belgica is a recent invention by archaeologists, and is best avoided. The Romans named their roads after the men who built them: Via Appia, Via Egnatia, or Strata Diocletiana. It is only rarely that roads have a geographic element in their names, and in these cases, it invariably indicates a destination, not the country it traversed (Via Labicana, Via Portuense). Via Belgica would therefore be the name of the road leading to Belgica and can never have been an indication for a road through Belgica.

Literature

  • P. Stuart, Langs de weg. De Romeinse weg van Boulogne-sur-Mer naar Keulen, verkeersader voor industrie en handel (1987)
  • s.a., Erlebnisraum Römerstraße - Via Belgica (2008 Aachen)
© Jona Lendering for
Livius.Org, 2008
Revision: 6 Sept. 2008
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