
Roman Schmidig
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Papers by Roman Schmidig
The micromorphology allowed the disproving of the common interpretation of a structure in the workshops of smiths as a dip tank. Thanks to archaeozoological analyses two tanning workshops – for hides but also for skins – were identified. Pits containing one to three barrels might have been used while processing the animal skins. The combination of these analysis allows us to identify not only the practiced handicrafts but can give us an idea of the living environment and offers even a whiff of the smells which might have prevailed.
Within the framework of a thesis, eight plots with nearly 40 successively built buildings were analyzed. Most of them were striphouses, the typical housing type for civil settlements near military fortresses. They were used to live in, but also as workshop for various handicrafts. Easily recognizable – by means of slacks and scales – were various workshops of smiths. The paper will discuss some of the archaeological features observed within these workshops (micromorpological analysis by Sarah LoRusso).
Thanks to archaeozoological analyzes (by Sabine Deschler-Erb and Roman Schmidig) two tanning workshops – for hides but also for skins – were identified. Pits containing one to three barrels might have been used while processing the animal skins. The evidence for the processing of hides has rarely been identified in the archaeological record. The hides main use is for the fabrication of shoe soles. The key customer of this workshop must have been the legion, with its demand of 18’000 shoes per annum.
The combination of the analysis of the features with the archaeobiological data allows us to identify not only the practiced handicrafts but can give us an idea of the living environment and offers even a whiff of the smells which might have prevailed.
Books by Roman Schmidig
IN A QUARTER FOR HANDICRAFTS IN THE CANABA E OF THE
LEGIONARY CAMP (WINDISCH ZIVILSIEDLUNG WEST 2006–2008).
For the first time a partial report of a large-scale excavation offers an in-depth view into the development and structure of the canabae legionis of Vindonissa.
– To the west of the camp, a roman cemetery was abolished, the terrain was reparcelled and rapidly overbuilt.
– A major fire around 70 AD destroyed the whole quarter.
– The quarter is abandoned just after 106 AD – almost simultaneously with the arrival of the XI legion in their new camp of Durostorum.
–The inhabitants are craftsmen – i.e. smiths and tanners. They probably produced for the camp.
– The dual settlement structure consisting of canabae legionis and vicus, known from other legion garrisons, does not seem to exist for Vindonissa
– the whole civil settlement should be addressed as canabae.
The micromorphology allowed the disproving of the common interpretation of a structure in the workshops of smiths as a dip tank. Thanks to archaeozoological analyses two tanning workshops – for hides but also for skins – were identified. Pits containing one to three barrels might have been used while processing the animal skins. The combination of these analysis allows us to identify not only the practiced handicrafts but can give us an idea of the living environment and offers even a whiff of the smells which might have prevailed.
Within the framework of a thesis, eight plots with nearly 40 successively built buildings were analyzed. Most of them were striphouses, the typical housing type for civil settlements near military fortresses. They were used to live in, but also as workshop for various handicrafts. Easily recognizable – by means of slacks and scales – were various workshops of smiths. The paper will discuss some of the archaeological features observed within these workshops (micromorpological analysis by Sarah LoRusso).
Thanks to archaeozoological analyzes (by Sabine Deschler-Erb and Roman Schmidig) two tanning workshops – for hides but also for skins – were identified. Pits containing one to three barrels might have been used while processing the animal skins. The evidence for the processing of hides has rarely been identified in the archaeological record. The hides main use is for the fabrication of shoe soles. The key customer of this workshop must have been the legion, with its demand of 18’000 shoes per annum.
The combination of the analysis of the features with the archaeobiological data allows us to identify not only the practiced handicrafts but can give us an idea of the living environment and offers even a whiff of the smells which might have prevailed.
IN A QUARTER FOR HANDICRAFTS IN THE CANABA E OF THE
LEGIONARY CAMP (WINDISCH ZIVILSIEDLUNG WEST 2006–2008).
For the first time a partial report of a large-scale excavation offers an in-depth view into the development and structure of the canabae legionis of Vindonissa.
– To the west of the camp, a roman cemetery was abolished, the terrain was reparcelled and rapidly overbuilt.
– A major fire around 70 AD destroyed the whole quarter.
– The quarter is abandoned just after 106 AD – almost simultaneously with the arrival of the XI legion in their new camp of Durostorum.
–The inhabitants are craftsmen – i.e. smiths and tanners. They probably produced for the camp.
– The dual settlement structure consisting of canabae legionis and vicus, known from other legion garrisons, does not seem to exist for Vindonissa
– the whole civil settlement should be addressed as canabae.