Autor: Arturo Ignacio Aldecoa - Santiago Martínez Caballero
Editorial: Life Tiermes
Año de publicación: 2009
ISBN:
Precio recomendado: 10 €
SHORT GUIDE TO TIERMES 2009: A celtiberian-roman city carved out of the rock. Notes on the site and its history.
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SHORT GUIDE TO TIERMES 2009
Visit
1. The Sun Gate
Passageway and access to the city from the south-west
This
passageway carved through the rock is 2.5 metres wide and is located in
the extreme south-east of the city. The original paving no longer
exists, even though all the drainage channels can still be seen. The
channels were also carved in the rock and were used to drain off the
water that filtered through the paving. The gate is halfway along the
passageway and the traces of the hinges and supports are still visible
in the rock.
2. Rock seating.
Public structure used to host different religious, commercial and recreational activities.
It
is a large structure consisting of a long, irregular cavea, facing
southwards and directly carved into the sandstone rock. The eastern
ends opens onto the so-called Sun Gate, a long passageway that connects
the open space in front of the cavea to the urban sector to the north.
The eastern end of the complex is flanked by a ramp, which is also
excavated out of the rock and which was an exit from the city to the
south. The complex is outside the area occupied by the hill terraces,
next to two urban viae running south from the settlement.
The
interpretation of the complex has always been problematic. S. Martínez
and J. Santos recently interpreted the eastern rock seating, the Sun
Gate and the flat area in front of it as parts making up a public space
known as a campus/Forum pecuarium. It was built between the first
century B.C. and the first century A.D.
3. Southern rock complex.
Architectural complex of private dwellings excavated out of the sandstone rock.
The
houses of the Southern rock complex are the most interesting and best
documented example of the rock architecture of Tiermes. The two houses
making up this urban complex provide the best example of how rock
architecture was combined with typical Roman building techniques.
Dating back to the first half of the 1st century A.D., the houses are
on the southern edge of the hill next to the surrounding plain. They
used the rock wall that had previously protected the house built there
in the 1st century B.C. The location of these buildings next to the
excavated homes and on the rock of the southern sector of Tiermes make
up a neighbourhood of dwelling areas, which also includes the House of
the Aqueduct.
Remains of marble paving
and the paintings to decorate the walls exemplify the set of different
solutions that were included in this building to normalise and decorate
the spaces for private use.
4. Southern Thermal Baths.
Remains of the large building housing the Roman thermal baths.
The
remains of a building identified as thermal baths are nearby. The
corner of one of the rooms still stands and there is evidence of
different sections, such as the caldarium and frigidarium, along with
mosaic floors in some places.
The
unearthed area has to be considered as the main sector, as one of the
walls made out of sandstone further north is also considered to be part
of the thermal baths. Putlog holes and other construction elements can
still be seen in the wall that undoubtedly formed part of the thermal
bath complex.
5. Hornacinas or Niche House.
House excavated in rock with four niches or larders in its walls.
Moving
westwards from the Rock Complex, there are the remains of other
buildings using the terrace rock, of which only a part of them is
visible. One of them is the so-called Hornacinas or Niche House as it
has four niches or larders in its walls. Several steps from the
entrance staircase, which was covered to avoid accidents in
contemporary agricultural work, still remain in the front.
6. Rock dwelling.
Rock dwelling known as “Pedro’s House”.
This
building, also known as "Pedro's House", is on the southern rocky
outcrop and has a central staircase that divides it into two. There
are doorways into the rooms on either side.
7. House of the Aqueduct.
Two large buildings near to one of the branches of the aqueduct and behind the rock dwellings.
House of the Aqueduct I
It
is a large private house, the first one to be fully excavated in
Tiermes, and its surface area occupies a whole block, with a total of
1800 m2. It borders on to four streets excavated in the rock and is
south facing. It is located next to the southern canal of the aqueduct,
which is the northern edge of the house.
House of the Aqueduct II
This
building has been only partly excavated and different rooms and
basements can be seen. It is noted for having a work area, possibly a
shop.
8. Collective dwelling area.
Large area excavated in rock, next to House of the Aqueduct I, around 32 x 28 metres.
There
are many examples of beam putlogs, flights of stairs and the remains of
eroded rooms. A street was carved through the sandstone rock to
overcome the slope between the terraces
9. Neighbourhood houses.
Buildings carved high up out of the rock.
Only
the inner wall of the building remains, which was a deep cut into the
rock nearly 30 m high. The traces remain of different putlog lines for
the slab floors. Up to six stories can be counted in the wall, which
means that it was almost certainly a neighbourhood house or insula,
carved out of the rock. However, no further details are known as the
ground plan of the building has not been excavated.
It is believed that the three walls that are not conserved would have been built using wood frameworks and adobe bricks.
10. Defence remains.
Remains carved out of the rock close to the Western Gate, which have been rather eroded by the weather.
They may have been used for defence purposes and were connected to the West Gate.
11. The West Gate.
It is an internal communication ramp of the Roman city and possibly reused an entrance to the pre-Roman urban complex.
This gate was the way to the three terraces that make up the hill on which the city is built.
It
is another of the ways into the city and was also made out of the
sandstone rock of the hill. As can be observed in the entrance itself,
it does seems that it would not have been used for vehicles, but rather
for the exclusive use of passer-bys, due to the raised height of the
lower step.
It is a similar structure to
the Sun Gate, but with a longer and steeper ramp, as it linked the
three terraces of the hill on which the city is built. The marks to
place the wood jambs of a double door, which would cut off the city
centre from the outside, are approximately in the centre of the first
stretch of the gate.
12. Room with semicircular chevet.
Rectangular space with semicircular chevet, 10 metres long by 2 and 3 metres wide.
This
room is still 1 metre high at the walls carved in the rock and a stone
staircase is in its centre. It is on the northern channel of the
aqueduct and its use is unknown.
13. Temple?
Remains of a structure on the top of the hill.
Only
the traces remain of the foundations of a small building, along with
some rabbets in the rock, that could be steps, at the highest part of
the hill, which overlooks and dominates the surrounding area. At least
three construction phases can be made out here.
14. Theatre cavea.
Public building with small seating area.
A
public building was erected on the north-western slope of the city in a
recess in the rock. Some worn steps that look as if they would have
been used as seating in a theatre cavea can still be seen. No
conclusive information exists about this structure.
15. Roman Aqueduct.
Infrastructure to supply water to the city.
The
city infrastructures included the one to supply running water to the
city, which was an aqueduct filled with a wide range of transport and
distribution solutions, characteristic of Roman aqueducts. The original
part of its works dates back to the Tiberian era (14-37 A.D) and it is
the most outstanding piece of engineering in Tiermes.
The
Tiermes aqueduct had the typical elements to collect, transport and
then distribute the water in the city. The water collection point
(caput aquae) is thought to have been located on the northern slope of
the Sierrea de Pela mountains, at the source of River Pedro, 3.6 km to
the north of Tiermes.
There was a fork
structure or castellum aquae next to the West Gate. It no longer
exists today, but it was the starting point for the two urban branches
of the aqueduct, which are well know as they have been explored to a
large extent.
The Tiermes aqueduct is an
infrastructure built in order to meet the water supply needs for
drinking and hygiene in a city that had undergone significant urban
and, surely, demographic growth after the conquest, nearly a century
earlier.
The theoretical study indicates that, according to
the river bed of the Pedro spring, the Tiermes aqueduct could supply up
to a population of 20,000 inhabitants, as it supplied up to 70 litres
of water per second. However, the figure was much higher than the
population that Tiermes must have had at its moment of greatest
splendour.
16. Small ramp excavated in sandstone.
On
the northern side of Tiermes, on the second terrace, a communication
ramp was built between two terraces of the western sector of the urban
complex, cared in the sandstone rock. The entrance was covered during
the Later Roman Empire by the defensive wall.
17. Later Roman Imperial Wall.
Stretch of wall.
The
Roman walled perimeter of Tiermes was around three sides of the city,
where access was easier. An important stretch has been found,
approximately 200m in length, along which there are four cubes or tower
foundations, and it is roughly 4 m thick.
Both
the building method and the materials found date the construction of
the wall to the second half of the 3rd century A.D., until we have more
data to that effect.
18. Flavius Forum. South and east portico.
South and east porticos of the Flavius Forum.
The
lower level of the south and east porticos of the Flavius Forum, under
the level of the square, are structured in an L-shape, open towards the
outside by means of large pilasters, which lead on to a passageway or
ambulatory which end in a set of tabernae built in the east and south
walls of the artificial terrace that supports the market square.
19. Triangular market area.
Space adjoining the Flavius Forum identified as a provisional commercial area.
The
area immediately to the east of the Flavius Forum is made up a
triangular market area, that uses part of a street from the Julius
Claudius era. The lower level of the Forum and other buildings on the
terrace over look the market area.
20. Flavius Forum.
As
the city became more wealthy, it was able to build a new forum in the
70s A.D., which we have called the Flavius Forum due to its type of
architecture and its chronology.
It is a
rectangular quadriportico, with short sides to the north and south,
built on a large artificial terrace made out of emplecton, a type of
masonry in which the outer faces of the wall are ashlar, the space
between being filled with broken stone and mortar. Cross layers of
stone are interlaid as binders. Only the foundations remain, but it was
built as a duplex portico (double columnata) on the north and west
sides, and simplex (just one) on the other two. Two large rectangular
rooms in the centre of the two first sides stand out. The first, where
the base of a large podium still remains, is built on the cella of the
Augustan temple, which was demolished to build the new public space.
Several
tabernae are located to the south of this room. Special mention should
be made two that were merged into a single area between the 2nd and
3rd centuries A.D., which is now paved with a multi-coloured mosaic
with geometric and plant motifs.
On the
north side of the quadriportico, the central room, which is more
difficult to interpret, is flanked by other tabernae. A large room
with a central tank, to the West, and a large apsed room, to the east,
are noteworthy.
21. Mosaic building.
There is an important structure with three rooms with mosaics to the north of the Flavius Forum.
The
rectangular central room, paved with white tessera, depicts a central
emblem using dark blue and red tessera. The two circular side rooms
have white tessera floors. The building was either part of the thermal
area of an urban domus or of public baths.
22. Julius Claudius Forum.
Commercial, religious and administrative centre of the Roman centre.
It
is between the Romanesque chapel, the Flavius Forum and the late
antiquity wall. From an overall point of view, the area between these
three buildings seems to be identified with the main public centre of
the city, which must have been set up during the high-imperial era,
even though the exact perimeter is currently unknown.
Only
the southern sector has been excavated. Therefore, we have only
unearthed some of the buildings, and sometimes only part of them, that
make it up and which look over a square, which is located to the north
and remains practically unexplored. We have identified the following
elements in the sector to the south of the Forum square:
a) South portico (26-37 A.D.).
It closed the square to the south, by means of a terraced structure
which offset the differences in level, and a public building was built
on it.
b) Monumentum to Tiberius (June 26 A.D..- June 27 A.D.).
A monument dedicated to the Emperor Tiberius Caesar Augustus was
located somewhere in the square. Only the base with its honorary
inscription remains, but it was recovered outside its original setting.
c) Claudius Sacellum (41-54 A.D.). Apsed
chapel, located next to the Nero Temple of the Forum. About 5 m wide
and 9 m long, it faces northwards and overlooks the square. It was
used for some type of public worship.
d) Nero temple of the Forum (54-68 A.D.).
Last building erected this part of the Forum, this large classic
structure closed the main part of the south side. The building was
constructed on a square artificial platform, measuring 16.4 m wide and
18.4 long, standing directly on the sandstone.
22bis. Forum district.
Private residential district next to the Forum.
The
latest digs in this zone have unearthed part of a residential district
next to the Forum, where there are different buildings from different
chronological and cultural eras.
Structures
were initially noted from the late Celtiberian period, between the 1st
century B.C. and the Augustan period, where the city had already been
conquered and different native lifestyles began to coexist with the
Roman customs.
Two blocks, Insula I and
II, and bordered by streets, have been identified from this period.
Street II includes drainage channels dug out in the rock. Street III
still has the paving from the 1st century B. C. in limestone, with
pavements and stones to cross the stream.
The
current distribution of buildings and streets dates back to the two
first centuries of that era, on the previous original layout. The
ground plan and internal distribution of the different buildings are
adapted to the irregular layout of the blocks. Special mention should
be made of the presence of numerous underground rock rooms, some of
which have access steps also carved out of rock, together with channels
to drain off the water that filtered through the rock. The
well-conserved paving in Street I dates back to that period.
23. Romanesque Chapel.
Dedicated
to Santa Maria de Tiermes, it is a rectangular chapel with an apsed
chevet, consisting of a single nave and a porticated gallery on the
south side.
The architectural remains of
the Middle Ages that have survived to the present in Tiermes are mainly
in the Romanesque chapel, built in the 12th century.
The ground plan is a single nave with a semicircular apse in the chevet
and a porticated gallery added to the southern side. The main doorway
is on the south façade and is framed by simple single-arched archivolts
on two columns with carved capitals depicting Adam and Eve with the
serpent on the left and two quadrupeds and an individual with a turban
on the right. The porticated gallery
consists of five openings on the longest side, with the central one
being the entrance. It has single arches on double columns, supported
on a podium and separated by buttresses. The twelve capitals of the
gallery feature magnificent iconography, both in terms of quality and
in variety of themes. Special mention should be made of the
mythological iconography, depicting two knights fighting, a boar hunt,
and a motif of a basket or bees-hive, which is finely carved and a
wonderful example of the outstanding trepan work from the Silos
Monastery, among others.
There are three
decapitated sculptures inside the portico and within a niche. They are
holding notices that say in Latin "Give and you will receive. Domingo
Martin made me. 1182”. We do not know whether the text refers to the
sculptures, portico or to the chapel.
The
chapel, where mass is held during the summer, organises pilgrimages
twice a year: on the third Sunday of May and on 12th October, which
continue a tradition passed down through the ages for a good harvest
and in thanksgiving.
24. Medieval necropolis of the chapel.
The
early medieval necropolis is located around the Our Lady of Tiermes
Chapel, with more than 200 tombs, 129 of which have been exhumed.
The
excavated area has a high density of burial sites, most of which are
mainly slab tombs. There are also sarcophagus and ossuary tombs.
The
timeline of the necropolis is approximately from the 11th to the 15th
centuries. There is a Roman road that is part of the Tiermes urban
network, next to the Forum area, running past the necropolis. Only two
burials from the late antiquity period (6th to 7th centuries A.D) have
been exhumed.
The Visigoth necropolis is
nearby and decorative remains from a possible place of worship from the
same period have been found there.
25. Parking.
There is a car park at the end of the road from the Museum to the site.
26. Carratiermes Celtiberian necropolis.
It is an iron-age Celtiberian necropolis (6th century B.C. to 1st century A.D.).
The
Carratiermes incineration Celtiberian necropolis is on a gentle slope
running down to a river, less than one kilometre from the Tiermes
oppidum and Roman urbs, in a place known as Carratiermes as a King’s
Highway ran through it. The 645 tombs excavated so far (10 or 15% of
the estimated total of the necropolis) date from the 6th century A.D. (
early Celtiberian era) to the 1st century A.D. (at the height of the
Romans). The remains of a Bronze Age village are under its structures.
The necropolis is spatially spread out
horizontally. There are areas of concentration, empty areas and groups
of tombs that form burial mounds. There are no defined paths, but there
are steles on different tombs. It has been noted that different grave
goods are laid out north-south, possibly using the stars.
Three
phases can be seen in the necropolis: early celtiberian, high
Celtiberian and late celtiberian. Different funeral structures have
been documented: shallow tombs, tombs covered by sandstone stones,
tombs marked by stone steles, and rabbets in the natural conglomerate.
The grave goods include bronze items (early Celtiberiean), weapons,
prestigious items and ceramic articles (high and late Celtiberian
stages).
27. Late medieval necropolois by the river.
Late medieval rock necropolis.
The
late medieval rock necropolis, with 50 tombs from between the 9th and
11th centuries A.D., is located 500 metres from the Chapel, next to the
River Tiermes and a roadway that is known as the "King's Highway"
(start of the Roman Tiermes-Segontia road), which 200 metres further on
runs past the Carratiermes Celtiberian necropolis.
There
are two groups of three steles carved in the rock by the tombs. The
Roman Tiermes necropolis may be located near to this area and the two
sets of rock steles found here may belong to it. A possible oratory
carved in the neighbouring quarry surrounded by numerous medieval tombs
was also found here.
28. Roman quarries.
Different quarries, places where blocks of stone were quarried to build the different structures, surround the city.
Some
carved blocks that were not quarried can still be seen. There are
Roman inscriptions on some of the walls, with names of people and
numerous engravings of different themes and over a wide time period
(from very early periods to the present).
29. Tiermes Museum.
Opened in 1986, it houses an attractive exhibition of the archaeological findings in Tiermes, its history and its monuments.
Más información: guia en ingles de tiermes 2009.pdf
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