Listed 2 sub titles with search on: Information about the place for wider area of: "GRENOBLE Town ISERE" .
Cularo (Grenoble) Isere, France.
A city of Gallia Narbonensis in the territory of the Allobroges on the Isere.
Apparently mentioned by Cicero (Ad fam. 10.23.7): Civarone (for Cularone) ex Allobrogum
finibus; cited in the Peutinger Table as Culabone; and by the Geographer of Ravenna
(4.27) as Curarore. The Celtic oppidum was probably situated on a hill close to
the river. It was a customs post of the Quadragesima Galliarum. Between 288 and
292 a rampart was built to protect the city against the barbarian invasions. Under
Gratianus it became Gratianopolis, whence the modern name Grenoble (Not. Gall.
11.5; Sid. Apoll. Epist. 3.14.1).
The surrounding wall was oval and had two gateways, known by their
inscriptions (CIL XII, 2229): one, known as the Rome gate (near the Freres Precheurs),
was called the Gate of Jove; the other, the Vienne gate near the cathedral, was
called the Gate of Hercules. They seem to mark an oblique axis oriented nearly
E-W; the corresponding N-S road has not yet been found.
Slightly to the N along the Isere, the surrounding wall stood until
the city was seized by the Protestant forces of Lesdiguieres in 1591. A few fragments
can still be seen, especially under the Treille de Stendhal (Jardin de Ville).
Its circuit can be traced almost in its entirety, thanks to ancient plans. Several
fragments have recently been unearthed: near the cathedral parts of the wall and
two towers have been preserved, but in the Rue de la Republique and Rue Lafayette
quarter the fragments were destroyed after excavation. The towers, three of which
have been found, are 22-24.4 m apart and 7.8 m in diameter; the foundations are
very solid. The walls, 4.5-5 m thick at the bottom, are faced on both sides with
small rectangular mortared stones; the core consists of irregular blocks and other
material bedded in a mortar of broken tiles. The foundations have four main elements:
wooden supports 40-50 cm apart (which make it a wall on piles); above these a
regular layer of boulders; then some rubble; and finally a course of flat stones.
Outside the wall there was probably a ditch.
The main Christian monument is the Saint-Laurent crypt on the right
bank of the Isere. The building has been variously dated: from the late 6th to
the late 8th c. Some of the capitals follow Graeco-Roman models, others are clearly
Roman, and several columns are made of reused material. A 4th c. Gallo-Roman mausoleum,
destroyed at the time of the Lombard invasions in 574, and a burial vault of the
same period have also been found.
The museum contains inscriptions, pottery, and architectural and sculptural
fragments.
M. Leglay, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Jan 2006 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
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