URBAN PLANNING AND RITUAL ACTION IN COLONIA ULPIA TRAIANA (XANTEN, GERMANY): UNDERSTANDING A NON-SOLAR ORIENTATION PATTERN
Keywords:
Roman Towns, Urban Orientation, Limes Germanicus, Trajan, Matronae, Major Lunar Standstill, Venus.Abstract
There is increasing evidence to suggest that cosmological factors were applied in the planning and
orientation of Roman towns, at least under Augustus. Among others, this is the case of Colonia Augusta
Praetoria Salassorum (Aosta) in Italia, Colonia Urbs Iulia Nova Carthago (Cartagena) in Hispania Citerior
Tarraconensis, Colonia Copia Claudia Augusta Lugdunum (formerly Colonia Copia Felix Munatia, Lyon) in Gallia
Lugdunensis, Colonia Augusta Treverorum (Trier) in Gallia Belgica, and Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium
(formerly Ara Ubiorum, Cologne) in Germania Inferior. For the sake of strengthening the sample of cities
studied, and identifying orientation patterns from a chronological and astronomical perspective, a number
of public structures from Colonia Ulpia Traiana (Xanten) in Germania Inferior were measured. This town was a
Roman colony, founded in A.D. 98 by Trajan with a contingent of veteran soldiers and a group of Germanic
people. The result was the establishment of a typical Roman settlement with an orthogonal urban grid,
whose planning and orientation took cosmological factors into account. In this case, in contrast to the
previous examples, we propose that the decumanus maximus was not oriented directly according to the solar
arc, but that instead it was possibly linked with other celestial bodies. In addition, the Gallo-Roman temple
supposedly dedicated in this town to the Matronae or the Matres was oriented according to the major lunar
standstill (“lunistice”). Therefore, this study aims to present the first results regarding the urban orientation
of Colonia Ulpia Traiana according to a non-solar pattern, and attemps to provide a preliminary explanation
for it from a cultural perspective.