Colonia Ulpia Traiana
Colonia Ulpia Traiana | |
---|---|
![]() Colonia Ulpia Traiana (with Castra Vetera I & II) was created near the old course of the Rhine river (dark blue color) | |
Alternative name(s) | Roman-German civilian settlement |
Known also as | Castra Vetera |
Founded during the reign of | (Augustus: Vetera I & II) Trajan |
Founded | ca. 13 BC (Vetera I); 110 AD: colonia |
Abandoned | ca 440 AD |
Previous fortification | Vetera I Vetera II |
Place in the Roman world | |
Province | Germania inferior |
Limes | Limes Germanicus |
Nearby water | Rhine river |
Stationed military units | |
— Legions — | |
Legio VI Victrix - Legio XXX Ulpia Victrix | |
— Classis — | |
Classis Germanica | |
Location | |
Coordinates | 51°39′44″N 06°27′14″E / 51.66222°N 6.45389°E |
Town | Xanten |
Country | Germany |
Reference | |
UNESCO | |
Part of | Frontiers of the Roman Empire – The Lower German Limes |
Criteria | Cultural: ii, iii, iv |
Reference | 1631-065 |
Inscription | 2021 (44th Session) |
Site notes | |
Recognition | ![]() |

The Colonia Ulpia Traiana (CUT) was a Roman city (colonia) located in the area of present-day Xanten, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. It existed approximately from 100 to 275 CE and was a major center of the province of Germania Inferior. Today, the site is occupied by the Archaeological Park Xanten and the LVR-RömerMuseum . The archaeological remains are gradually being excavated and studied.
The Colonia Ulpia Traiana was founded by Emperor Trajan and named after him. As a colonia, it was one of approximately 150 cities in the Roman Empire that held this legal status, granting its inhabitants Roman citizenship and serving as a "miniature Rome." Ulpia Traiana was the third-largest Roman city in present-day Germany, after Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium (modern Cologne) and Augusta Treverorum (modern Trier). Its public buildings reflected the city's high status as a central hub for the surrounding region.
Pre-Colonia settlements
[edit]

Archaeological evidence traces the origins of the settlement back to the 4th century BCE. Additional finds date to the 3rd century BCE, but there is no evidence of continuous occupation in the 2nd and 1st centuries BCE. In 13/12 BCE, the Roman general Drusus established the legionary camp Vetera on the nearby Fürstenberg, which served as a base for campaigns into the right-bank Germanic territories (Drusus' campaigns). After a victorious campaign in 8 BCE, Drusus resettled 40,000 Germans, primarily Sugambri, to the left bank of the Rhine. He controlled the Rhine river: it was mainly a fluvial fleet, although it also operated in the North Sea. After 30 AD, the fleet moved its main base to the castrum of Alteburg, some 4 km south of Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium (modern Cologne).[1] These Germans, now known as Cugerni, formed the population of the settlement that would later become the Colonia Ulpia Traiana.
The name of this pre-colonia settlement is not recorded. One hypothesis suggests it was called Cugernorum, analogous to the Batavian capital Batavorum (modern Nijmegen).[2] A clue to the possible name comes from a fragmentary votive inscription to Mars Cicollus from the 60s CE, which likely preserves the first three letters of the place name (read as "Cib," "Cip," "Cir," "Gib," "Gip," or "Gir").[3] Julianus Egidius Bogaers proposed reconstructing this as "Cibernodurum," derived from the tribal name of the Cugerni (also spelled Cuberni).[4]
Due to its proximity to Vetera I, Cugernorum/Cibernodurum developed into a relatively prosperous trading center within a few years. However, it likely shared the fate of Vetera during the Batavian Revolt of 70 CE, when it was probably burned down. Evidence includes a burn layer in the eastern part of the later colonia, where the Mars-Cicollus altar, apparently deliberately smashed in antiquity, was found.[5]; [6] With the reestablishment of the military camp Vetera II in 71 CE, the settlement was also rebuilt. It featured a well-developed harbor and consisted mainly of timber-framed houses made from local materials.
Colonia Ulpia Traiana
[edit]Around 100 CE, Emperor Trajan elevated the settlement to the status of a colonia, naming it Colonia Ulpia Traiana after his full name, Marcus Ulpius Traianus.[7] Initial construction included (at least partial) erection of the city wall and the expansion of the existing street grid in a rectangular pattern (Hippodamian plan). Major new constructions within the city are only documented from the reign of Emperor Hadrian (117–138 CE), leaving it unclear whether Trajan's founding involved demolishing existing settlement structures.[8] In the following decades, the colonia was equipped with aqueducts, a sewer system, temples, a forum, and an amphitheater. Previously undeveloped areas were also built up, leading to the discovery of graves within the colonia, despite cemeteries typically being located outside Roman settlements.[9] Within its walls, the 73-hectare city housed approximately 10,000 people, consisting of Romanized Gauls and Germans. With the city's elevation, veterans from the legions stationed at Vetera, among other places, received land grants, forming a wealthy resident class.

The colonia was a completely new town with a huge defensive wall and other important buildings, like an amphitheater. For this town the old castrum settlement was completely abandoned. The colonia became the second most important commercial post in the province of Germania Inferior, surpassed only by Colonia Agrippinensis (today's Cologne). In 122 AD, Vetera II became the camp of Legio XXX Ulpia Victrix, replacing VI Victrix which had moved to Britannia. Colonia Ulpia Traiana was defended by huge walls 3.4 km long and with 22 towers[10]
During the whole 2nd and the first half of the 3rd century this Roman colony was involved into a continuing process of urbanization and architectural improvement. The Roman Baths were built by Hadrian around 125 AD, with a big Port Temple.[11] But the huge complex of Thermae (that comprised hot, warm and cold baths, changing rooms, and saunas) was destroyed in 275 AD.
Various trades are attested in the city. In 1993, excavations at the harbor uncovered numerous layers of Roman pottery, mostly misfired pieces, indicating a local pottery workshop.[12] Additional pottery waste found under the Matronae sanctuary in Insula 20 confirms local ceramic production in the pre-colonia period.[13] In Insula 39, metalworking workshops were excavated, primarily processing silver.[14]
Archaeological evidence suggests that the settlement of Colonia Ulpia Traiana declined throughout the 3rd century, often linked to Germanic raids in the Germanic and Gallic provinces during this period (Crisis of the Third Century). In the second half of the century, the Rhine arm in front of the city silted up, removing a natural defensive barrier.[15] The only clear archaeological evidence for a possible destruction of the city comes from the fill of a cellar in the Roman inn, where a burnt layer containing a silver coin of Emperor Aurelian (r. 270–275) was found. This has led to the assumption that the historically documented extensive raids by the Franks in 275/276 caused the city's destruction. However, Bernd Liesen and Marcus Reuter concluded from their analysis of the inn's cellar excavations that this single find is insufficient to link the destruction of the entire colonia to the Frankish raids or to confirm a violent destruction of the inn itself.[16]
Post-Colonia settlement
[edit]In the late 3rd century, a strong fortification encompassing nine insulae was built in the central areas of the colonia. This was initially dated to around 310 CE, leading to assumptions of a prolonged settlement interruption following the presumed destruction around 275 CE.[17] However, it is now evident that the fortification was likely constructed in the last quarter of the 3rd century.[18] It remains debated whether this settlement can be identified with Tricensimae, a place mentioned in late antique sources and named after the Legio XXX Ulpia Victrix, the main legion of the nearby Vetera II camp since around 120 CE. This raises the question of whether Vetera II was abandoned in the 3rd century, with the remaining legionaries relocating to the new fortification within the Colonia Ulpia Traiana.[19]
In 352 CE, the settlement was captured by the Franks. Rebuilt from 359 CE, it was finally abandoned in the first half of the 5th century.
Post-Roman era
[edit]
Around 440 AD the city was definitively abandoned by the Roman Empire, who moved most of the remaining inhabitants to the area of Augusta Treverorum.[20] In the second half of the fifth century, the Franks began to settle in the area (mixing with the small surviving Romanized population), but no urban settlements have been found from this time as the Franks did not build in stone, unlike the Romans.
The buildings initially remained intact, but the decaying colonia increasingly served as a quarry with the onset of medieval construction.[21] Usable materials were repurposed for the construction of the church and the town of Xanten or sold to Holland, causing the Roman city to gradually disappear from the surface. Only the Capitol remained a visible ruin until after 1839.[22] After the stones were cleared and the subsurface searched for more, as evidenced by access holes in the remains of the large baths, the area was converted to farmland.[23]
Since the modern town of Xanten was built on the Roman cemetery, the Roman structures, unlike those in Cologne or Trier, were preserved and only affected by stone quarrying.[24]Systematic excavations began in the 19th century by the Lower Rhine Antiquarian Society, continued in the 1930s during the construction of the Bundesstraße 57, and furthered in the 1950s and 1960s, bringing the Roman city back into focus. From the 1970s, individual buildings were reconstructed as part of the Archaeological Park Xanten, which now encompasses nearly the entire former city.[25]
Structures
[edit]

The city wall of Colonia Ulpia Traiana enclosed the 73-hectare city over a length of 3.4 km. The settlement was divided into insulae by a grid of perpendicular streets, numbered modernly from 1 to 40. At the city's center (Insula 25) was the forum, occupying an entire insula.
South of the forum, Insula 26 housed the Capitol. Like other major structures of the CUT, it was built in the 2nd century, on an area previously densely packed with houses, some richly decorated with paintings. The Capitol spanned a large district, with the temple oriented northeast toward the Rhine. Only foundations remain, though ruins were visible until the early 19th century, when initial excavations took place.
Northwest of the forum were the thermae, occupying Insula 10. The so-called administrative palace, whose function remains unclear, spanned three insulae (4, 11, and 17) west of the forum. Other significant public buildings included the Amphitheater of Colonia Ulpia Traiana in the southern part of the city (Insula 40) and the large Harbor Temple (Insula 37). A smaller Matronae sanctuary, the Matronae Temple, was excavated within the residential area (Insula 20). In Insula 38, adjacent to the small harbor gate and thus near the harbor, was the inn with its associated baths.
The private residential and commercial insulae were subdivided into parcels, typically measuring about 12 × 44 m. These were mostly strip houses. Some houses were richly decorated with wall paintings, but no evidence of mosaics has been found, nor have atrium or peristyle houses been identified, distinguishing the city from Cologne. In Insula 3, a larger residential building resembling a villa rustica rather than a typical urban house was excavated, over 20 m long with corner risalits facing the courtyard and colonnades along the street front. Some rooms had hypocaust heating.[26] In Insula 19, several residential buildings were excavated, some with high-quality wall paintings, including the so-called Eagle-Gigantomachy Wall.[27]
Water supply
[edit]
The numerous wells found in the CUT area were insufficient to supply a city of this size with adequate drinking and utility water. Remains of water pipelines were discovered in the Xanten area as early as the 19th century and after World War II, but their connections were long unclear. The Hees or the "Sonsbeck Heights" were the only viable water catchment areas.[28]
In 1959, Hermann Hinz discovered a pipeline running from the push moraines of the "Hees" through modern Xanten, along the former cemetery road, reaching the CUT from the south.[29] In 1975, during road construction in the Sonsbeck district of Labbeck, a section of the pipeline was found, designed to channel surface water from the Sonsbeck Heights to the CUT. It consisted of a mortar channel lined with brick rubble, showing traces of typical calcareous sinter. The foundation was solidly built from Eifel greywacke, basalt, and tuff stones. Slate fragments indicated the former covering of the channel, which had a gradient of 20 cm per 100 m. Part of this pipeline was relocated and preserved in the Archaeological Park Xanten.[30]; [31]; [32]
In May 2007, during dry weather, aerial archaeologist Baoquan Song from the Ruhr University Bochum observed clear vegetation anomalies indicating a row of aqueduct pillars in the so-called "Furth." Further evidence of pipeline sections was found at the Hasenacker Forester’s Lodge.[33] Excavations in December 2008 confirmed the aerial images.[34] During construction work at Xanten’s marketplace in late 2009, remains of pipeline foundations were discovered.
Gallery
[edit]-
Rebuilt Amphitheater in the "Archaeologischer Park"
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Actual Stadium in rebuilt Amphitheater
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2003 "Romerfest" in "Stadium" of rebuilt Amphitheater
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Thermae section
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Heating system in Roman buildings
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Thermae floor tiles
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Model of the Roman Baths
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Rebuilt "Harbor Temple" in the "Archaeologischer Park"
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Remains of "Basilica"
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Pliny the Elder's inscribed phalera
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Roman walls in the "Archaeologischer Park"
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Small Gate in the "Archaeologischer Park"
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Temple of the Matrons (excavation))
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Corn Mill (reconstruction)
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Main Gate in the Archaeologischer Park"
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Aqueduct in the "Archaeologischer Park"
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Porticus of reconstructed Roman house
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Reconstructed "Triclinum"
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Reconstructed mansion bedroom
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Reconstructed Roman kitchen
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Gravestone of equites "Reburrus"
See Also
[edit]- Colonia Ulpia Traiana Horse-Phalerae
- Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium
- Germania inferior
- Augusta Treverorum
References
[edit]- ^ Köln-Alteburg at livius.org
- ^ Proposed by Franz Oelmann: Bericht über die Tätigkeit des Landesmuseums in Bonn in der Zeit vom 1. April 1934 bis 31. März 1935. In: Bonner Jahrbücher. Volume 140/141, 1936, pp. 429–464, here p. 431.
- ^ AE 1981, 690.
- ^ Julianus Egidius Bogaers: Zum Namen des „oppidum Cugernorum“. In: Naamkunde. Volume 16, 1984, pp. 33–39 (Digital copy).
- ^ Rüger 1981, pp. 329–336.
- ^ Schmitz 2008, pp. 117–140, here p. 134.
- ^ Eck 2008, pp. 243–255.
- ^ Müller 2008, pp. 269–275.
- ^ Landschaftsverband Rheinland 2003, p. 18.
- ^ Livius: Colonia Ulpia Traiana/Xanten
- ^ Reconstructed Port Temple
- ^ Boelicke 1995, pp. 51–54.
- ^ Kroemer 1995, pp. 658–664.
- ^ Zieling 1995, pp. 65–70.
- ^ Landschaftsverband Rheinland 2003, p. 20.
- ^ Liesen & Reuter 2009, pp. 279–312.
- ^ Rüger 1987, pp. 637–638.
- ^ Bridger 2012, pp. 12–36, here pp. 23–24.
- ^ Reuter 2012, pp. 28–30.
- ^ Otten, Thomas. "Colonia Ulpia Traiana. Xanten und sei Umland in römischer Zeit". p. 550-582
- ^ Landschaftsverband Rheinland 2003, p. 23.
- ^ Landschaftsverband Rheinland 2003, p. 24.
- ^ Landschaftsverband Rheinland 2003, p. 26.
- ^ Landschaftsverband Rheinland 2003.
- ^ "Der Archäologische Park ist erweitert" [The Archaeological Park Has Been Expanded]. Retrieved August 9, 2025. on apx.lvr.de (official website of the Archaeological Park Xanten)
- ^ Heimberg 1973, pp. 350–351.
- ^ Zelle 2001, pp. 124–137.
- ^ Böcking 2005, p. 187.
- ^ Hinz 1959, pp. 134–148.
- ^ Böcking 2005, pp. 263–266.
- ^ Wegner & Heimberg 1975, pp. 81ff..
- ^ Rüger 2002, pp. 635–636.
- ^ Ohlig 2007, pp. 186ff..
- ^ "Wie das Wasser nach Xanten kam" [How Water Came to Xanten]. Archived from the original on October 15, 2013. Retrieved August 9, 2025., Press release of the Landschaftsverband Rheinland/Rheinisches Amt für Bodendenkmalpflege.
Bibliography
[edit]The primary publication series for excavation reports, studies of specific find categories, and further research on Colonia Ulpia Traiana is the Xantener Berichte, most of which are freely available on the Archaeological Park Xanten website.
- Landschaftsverband Rheinland, Rheinisches Landesmuseum Bonn (ed.): Series Colonia Ulpia Traiana. Rheinland-Verlag, Cologne.
- Arbeitsbericht 4. Zu den Grabungen und Rekonstruktionen. (Work Report 4: On Excavations and Reconstructions.) 1980, ISBN 3-7927-0552-4 (= Guides and Writings of the Archaeological Park Xanten 5)
- Arbeitsbericht 5. Zu den Grabungen und Rekonstruktionen. (Work Report 5: On Excavations and Reconstructions.) 1981, ISBN 3-7927-0608-3 (= Guides and Writings of the Archaeological Park Xanten 6)
- Arbeitsbericht 6. Zu den Grabungen und Rekonstruktionen. 1984, ISBN 3-7927-0794-2, trans-title=Work Report 6: On Excavations and Reconstructions.
- Arbeitsbericht 7. Grabung, Forschung, Präsentation. 1992, ISBN 3-7927-1240-7, trans-title=Work Report 7: Excavation, Research, Presentation.
- Christoph B. Rüger: Colonia Ulpia Traiana. (The Romans in North Rhine-Westphalia.) In: Heinz Günter Horn (ed.): Die Römer in Nordrhein-Westfalen. Licensed edition of the 1987 edition. Nikol, Hamburg 2002, ISBN 3-933203-59-7, pp. 626–638
- Ursula Heimberg, Anita Rieche: Colonia Ulpia Traiana. Die römische Stadt. Planung – Architektur – Ausgrabung. (Colonia Ulpia Traiana: The Roman City. Planning – Architecture – Excavation.) Rheinland-Verlag, Cologne 1998, ISBN 3-7927-1725-5; Habelt, Bonn 1998 (= Guides and Writings of the Archaeological Park Xanten 18)
- Brita Jansen, Charlotte Schreiter, Michael Zelle: Die römischen Wandmalereien aus dem Stadtgebiet der Colonia Ulpia Traiana. Band I: Die Funde aus den Privatbauten (The Roman Wall Paintings from the City Area of Colonia Ulpia Traiana. Volume I: Finds from Private Buildings) (= Xantener Berichte. Volume 11). Philipp von Zabern, Mainz 2001, ISBN 3-8053-2873-7
- Martin Müller, Hans-Joachim Schalles, Norbert Zieling (eds.): Colonia Ulpia Traiana. Xanten und sein Umland in römischer Zeit (Colonia Ulpia Traiana: Xanten and Its Surroundings in Roman Times.) (= History of the City of Xanten. Volume 1). Philipp von Zabern, Mainz 2008, ISBN 978-3-8053-3953-7
- Martin Müller, Bernhard Rudnick, Norbert Zieling: Colonia Ulpia Traiana, Xanten. Die geophysikalischen Untersuchungen mit GPR der Jahre 2006 bis 2023 (Colonia Ulpia Traiana, Xanten: Geophysical Investigations with GPR from 2006 to 2023.) (= Xantener Berichte. Volume 47). Nünnerich-Asmus, Oppenheim 2024, ISBN 978-3-96176-305-4
- José Remesal Rodríguez (ed.): Colonia Ulpia Traiana (Xanten) y el Mediterráneo. El comercio de alimentos. (Colonia Ulpia Traiana (Xanten) and the Mediterranean: The Trade in Foodstuffs.) Publicacions. Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona 2019, ISBN 978-84-9168-197-7