"Because history is not" exact science "- it is a humanistic discipline. Its main subject is people, and, as Thucydides said a long time ago, history is not about studying circumstances, but about people in circumstances. Anyone who forgets that because he is in love with his own special area of interest or is fascinated by the model-building activities and ideal types of behaviourists can only be described as simple-minded.”
- Gordon A. Craig, 1981 in Münster / Westphalia
Carnuntum - the amphitheatre of the military city
- Written by Portal Editor
- Category: Antiquity
- Hits: 2953
We had walked back from Heidentor along Heidentorgasse to the centre of Petronell-Carnuntum, then followed the signs to the military camp on the main road.
Hiking the Heidentor - a walk outside Carnuntum
- Written by Portal Editor
- Category: Antiquity
- Hits: 3603
After an extensive tour through the amphitheatre and the gladiator school outside the civilian city of Carnuntum, we made our way to the Heidenor.
Carnuntum's gladiator school - next to Vienna
- Written by Portal Editor
- Category: Antiquity
- Hits: 2755
After we had thoroughly inspected the amphitheatre during our tour, we noticed a wooden structure in the immediate vicinity that had also sparked our interest: the so-called gladiator school.
Petronell amphitheatre of Carnuntum next to Vienna
- Written by Portal Editor
- Category: Antiquity
- Hits: 2881
Next to the Roman military camp of Carnuntum, which was located directly on the banks of the Danube on the Pannonian Limes, the civilian city of Carnuntum developed in quick steps in addition to the military camp until it became the administrative centre of the Roman province of Pannonia at the beginning of the 2nd century AD.
Roman games - parlor games were particularly popular
- Written by Portal Editor
- Category: Antiquity
- Hits: 2425
When you think about the Roman era and then use the term “games”, almost everyone who has dealt with the Roman era thinks of the gladiatorial fights in arenas such as Avenches in Switzerland, of chariot races in stadiums like that of Afrodisias or theater performances like in the imposing theater of Aspendos.
Wels - Remains of the Roman city wall in Schubertstraße
- Written by Portal Editor
- Category: Antiquity
- Hits: 3610
At first, it was just a poster on the banks of the Traun, which drew our attention to the Roman past of the modern town of Wels.
Hüfingen – Roman fort bath of Brigobannis - Römermuseum
- Written by Portal Editor
- Category: Antiquity
- Hits: 3569
At latest with the finding of the map Tabula Peutingeriana many locations along the Roman roads are to be assigned to today's cities.
Aristophanes - carry owls to Athens
- Written by Portal Editor
- Category: Antiquity
- Hits: 7202
In many countries of our world the owl is considered as a bird of wisdom and it was same in ancient Athens already, where the little owl was considered a symbol of wisdom too.
Everything flows - a saying of Greek philosopher Heraclitus
- Written by Portal Editor
- Category: Antiquity
- Hits: 14923
Although the saying, "Everything flows ..." was later attributed to the Greek philosopher Heraclitus of Ephesus as a result of his philosophies, this approval has survived until today.
Singidunum - main castle of the Celtic group Skordiscian
- Written by Portal Editor
- Category: Antiquity
- Hits: 3722
The area at the mouth of the river Sava into the Danube, now place of the Serbian capital Belgrade, has been continuously inhabited since the middle of the Palaeolithic period.
Roman construction - insights into technology
- Written by Portal Editor
- Category: Antiquity
- Hits: 33695
The technical and organizational concerns in the Roman building technique during the Roman Empire are also based on Hellenistic values. In his work De architectura libri decem (22 BC) the Roman officer Vitruvius describes the techniques and mathematical foundations adopted from the Greeks.
Province of Noricum - trade routes determined the success
- Written by Portal Editor
- Category: Antiquity
- Hits: 6098
From the Celtic kingdom, under the leadership of the Noric tribe, a Roman province of the same name had emerged, which was assigned to the Roman Empire with its capital Virunum (now Zollfeld near Maria Saal).
Noricum - a Celtic kingdom in today's Austria
- Written by Portal Editor
- Category: Antiquity
- Hits: 11856
Noricum was once a Celtic kingdom under the leadership of the Noric tribe on a large part of the territory of present-day Austria as well as adjacent regions of Bavaria (east of the Inn) and Slovenia, which later became a province of the Roman Empire under the designation Provincia Noricum.
Aulus Cornelius Celsus - Roman Doctor?
- Category: Antiquity
- Hits: 24533
Always people tried to work in the field of medical treatment to help others when injured or helpless. Some big steps could be done in Greek and Roman period because of development in research and for the first time experiences were written down.
Roman Thermal Baths and Baths in Antiquity
- Category: Antiquity
- Hits: 32099
Involvement of human beings with water goes back to earliest days of history. In the prehistoric ages, prior to the transition from nomadic existence to forming permanent settlements, water usage was partially a part of nature that could not be controlled.
Innsbruck Wilten - once Roman Settlement Veldidena
- Written by Portal Editor
- Category: Antiquity
- Hits: 19459
As a part of our project development "A journey of Intimacy and Culture along the Roman Roads" to create a concept for modern Camper routes to the south our route direction inevitably leads over the Alps.
Johanniter – from the pilgrim hospital in Jerusalem to Rhodes
- Written by Portal Editor
- Category: Middle Ages
- Hits: 815
Long before the First Crusade, merchants from Amalfi had founded a pilgrim hospital in Jerusalem, knowing full well that pilgrims to the holy cities represent an important economic factor (which is still true today),
The Hospitallers - expansion and consequences to Europe
- Written by Portal Editor
- Category: Middle Ages
- Hits: 1135
In the first part of our article “The Hospitallers – from the pilgrim hospital in Jerusalem to the conquest of Rhodes” we described their origins as an aid organization for pilgrims until the loss of the “holy land”.
Konrad Peutinger - Tabula Peutingeriana Roman map
- Written by Portal Editor
- Category: Middle Ages
- Hits: 4324
We often encountered Roman "road maps" as sections or copies belonging to the respective region in Roman museums, we had been able to connect the name Konrad Peutinger from the respected merchant family of the imperial city of Augsburg with these maps.
Levante - Land of the Sunrise in near East
- Written by Portal Editor
- Category: Middle Ages
- Hits: 1168
A term that appears in some of our articles and should now finally be clarified, because Levante comes from the Italian meaning "sunrise" and is therefore roughly equivalent to the term "morning land".