Abstract

This paper presents the results of a multi-disciplinary provenance study of querns and millstones during the Roman period (1st-4th century CE) in the northern part of the Roman Empire (provinces of Gallia Belgica and Germania Inferior). Comparative petrographical, mineralogical and geochemical analysis allowed an international team of archaeologists and geologists to identify the different raw materials used for the manufacturing of querns and millstones. As a result, (litho-) stratigraphic assignments as well as geological-geographical provenances are suggested or corroborated for the broad spectrum of these natural geo-materials. We give evidence for the exploitation of at least seven different rock types. They include sedimentary rocks (fine- to coarse-grained quartzitic and arkosic sandstones, conglomerates, limestones) and volcanic rocks (vesicular lavas) derived from different geological strata in the following geological-geographical settings: the volcanic Eifel area (Pleistocene lava), the Ardennes Massif (Palaeozoic sedimentary rocks) and the Paris and Northern Sea Basin (Cenozoic sedimentary rocks). Furthermore we show that a large diversity existed within different productions (different types of hand-mills and mechanical powered mills) and distribution patterns. This paper provides new data which will lead to new insights into the socio-economics of the local “Gallo-Roman” communities and into their networks within the northern Roman Empire.

Highlights

  • This paper presents the preliminary results of both ongoing and finished research projects and highlights the importance of an international and interdisciplinary collaboration between archaeologists and geologists, when it comes to raw material studies

  • Whereas local studies stop at the frontier, this international cooperation allows us to cross present borders to conduct a more holistic analysis of ancient stone distribution networks. It focuses on the provenance study of querns and millstones during the Roman period (1st-4th century CE) in the provinces of Gallia Belgica and Germania Inferior

  • This article is the result of a fruitful collaboration between several geologists and archaeologists

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Summary

Introduction

This paper presents the preliminary results of both ongoing and finished research projects and highlights the importance of an international and interdisciplinary collaboration between archaeologists and geologists, when it comes to raw material studies. Whereas local studies stop at the frontier, this international cooperation allows us to cross present borders to conduct a more holistic analysis of ancient stone distribution networks. It focuses on the provenance study of querns and millstones during the Roman period (1st-4th century CE) in the provinces of Gallia Belgica and Germania Inferior. The studied provinces are located between the rivers Seine and Rhine, in the northernmost parts of the Roman Empire, and were administratively subdivided into civitates or districts in Antiquity They are situated in northern France, western Germany, southern Netherlands and Belgium.

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