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Via Claudia Augusta

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(Redirected from Via Claudia) Roman road
Modern replica of a Roman milestone on the Via Claudia Augusta near Unterdiessen, Bavaria.
Modern signage of the revitalized track near Unterdiessen, Bavaria.

The Via Claudia Augusta is an ancient Roman road, which linked the valley of the Po River with Rhaetia (encompassing parts of modern Eastern Switzerland, Northern Italy, Western Austria, Southern Germany and all of Liechtenstein) across the Alps.

The route still exists, and since the 1990s increased interest in long-distance hiking and cycling have made the German and Austrian stretches of the Via Claudia Augusta popular among tourists, with the result that modern signage (illustration) identifies the revitalised track. Since 2007, the Giontech Archeological Site, in Mezzocorona/Kronmetz (Italy) serves as the Via Claudia Augusta International Research Center with the support of the Foundation Piana Rotaliana and the Government of the City of Mezzocorona/Kronmetz.

History

In 15 BC, the Roman general Nero Claudius Drusus, the stepson of Augustus, got orders from his stepfather to improve the passage through the Alps for military purposes and to increase Roman control over Rhaetia and Noricum. The project of converting a pack-animal trail to serve wheeled vehicles was completed sixty years later in 46-47 AD by the son of Drusus, the Emperor Claudius. People and goods could pass between the Adriatic and the broad valley of the Po to Tridentum (modern Trento), then northward following the Adige River up to Pons Drusi, the "bridge of Drusus" which developed into Bolzano. Thence it continued towards Maia (near Merano), and over the Reschen Pass. From the pass it descended through the valleys of the Inn River and the Lech, just beyond Augusta Vindelicorum (Augsburg), with an extension to Burghoefe (Sumuntorium), now Mertingen near the Danube river and not far from the present-day town of Donauwörth; here the Via Claudia Augusta branched into the then important Roman military road running from West to East on the south side of the Danube river (via militaris iuxta riva danuvii or shorter via iuxta danuvii). This then important road is called by modern-day German historians Donausüdstrasse. It served to secure the Roman northern frontier, which was marked until the end of the first century by the Danube river.

Two milestones have been found, one at Rabland, a frazione of Partschins, near Merano in the South Tyrol and the other in Cesiomaggiore, near Belluno. Both are inscribed with the far terminus of the Via Claudia Augusta, Augusta Vindelicorum (modern Augsburg). The milestones indicate that two routes joined at Tridentium before crossing the Alpine pass: one found its starting point at the vicus of Ostiglia, near the Po, the other, its site less securely identified by archaeologists and historians, at the Adriatic port of Altinum, (near the Venetian Lagoon). On its way to Tridentium, that route crossed the Via Annia, which linked Adria to Aquileia, the Via Popilia, which linked Altinum with Rimini, the Via Aurelia, between Padua and Feltre passing through Asolo, and the Via Postumia, the road linking Genoa and Aquileia. This road was initiated by Drusus as a military artery of conquest and defence, and Emperor Claudius continued its development as a cultural and commercial artery with permanently populated posting stations where fresh horses would be available. Some grew into considerable settlements and were fortified during the later Empire. Others can be identified only by the findings of archaeologists. In the 2nd century AD, a second Alpine pass was opened to wheeled traffic, the Brenner Pass.

Cities and locations along the route

Cycle touring

Via Claudia Augusta
Legend
km
0.0 Donauwörth 410 m above sea level
1.4 Danube 403 m
22.2 Lech canal 2x 427 m
42.1 Lech 2x 459 m
50.0 Augsburg 494 m
95.0 Landsberg am Lech 607 m
135 Schongau 726 m
162 Forggensee 783 m
172 Füssen 808 m
174 Lech 798 m
175 Austrian border 812 m
185 Pflach 840 m (AA)
207 Lermoos 1,004 m
221 Fern Pass 1,212 m
244 Imst 827 m
247 Inntal Autobahn 712 m
257 Starkenbach 737 m
263 Zams 767 m
267 Inn 785 m
267 Landeck 785 m
268 Inn 794 m
274 Fließ 850 m
281 Inn 864 m
281 Prutz 864 m
290 Tösens 930 m
Inn 3x
299 Pfunds 970 m
306 Finstermünz 1,140 m
315 Nauders 1,394 m
321 Italian border 1,455 m
323 Reschen Pass 1,504 m s.l.m.
1,499 m s.l.m. Reschensee 323
332 St. Valentin auf der Haide 1,472 m s.l.m.
1,451 m s.l.m. Haidersee 333
400 Merano 325 m s.l.m.
420 Adige 245 m s.l.m.
440 Bolzano 262 m s.l.m.
510 Trento 194 m s.l.m.
historical correct route popular route
59 m s.l.m. Verona 620 600 Lamon 594 m s.l.m.
13 m s.l.m. Ostiglia 700 630 Feltre 325 m s.l.m.
655 Piave 250 m s.l.m.
764 Altinum 4 m s.l.m.
773 Altino (close to Venice) 1 m s.l.m.

Today the Via Claudia Augusta is an important route used by cyclists to cross the Alps. It starts in Donauwörth (Germany) and branches near Trento into two routes. The first and historically correct route ends in Ostiglia, the second and more popular one in Venice.

The length of the trail is approximately 700 kilometres (435 miles). As a special service there are bus shuttles that take bicycles and cyclists over both the Fern Pass and the Reschen Pass, which are the most demanding parts of the route.

Notes

  1. Melchiori, Leone (2008), Studi di archeologia romana nella Piana Rotaliana, InMezzo, p.8
  2. Fellin, Umberto (2008), 2000 anni di storia, Alto Adige, p.28
  3. Noricum is modern Austria.
  4. Identified in 1552 and conserved in the Bolzano Civic Museum.
  5. "Via Claudia Augusta - die alte Römerstraße, Bayern, Tirol, Südtirol, Italien: Introduction". Via Claudia Augusta. VIA CLAUDIA INFO. Retrieved 28 September 2016.

External links

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