Having played a bit of @ExpeditionsGame, I've been more interested in understanding at what my immediate surroundings were like at the time of the Roman Empire.

So, I decided to find out...
First things first - if I woke up sometime in the late first century, not only would I find myself in the middle of expansive forests, but I'd be on a frontier - the Roman province of Germania Superior, on the 'Limes', or imperial border.
The 'Limes' were a wood and earthen border stretching across what is now Germany from Nordrhein-Westfalen to Bayern.

Regular watchtowers and forts would guard the border from the possibility of raiding Germanic tribes.
My local centre would have been at Bad Canstatt (Roman name unknown) which was a cavalry first probably used by troops from Hispania. So, basically, Maximus. 🤣

It also guarded the road between Mainz (Mogontiacum) and Augsburg (Augusta Vindelicorum), two important settlements.
For the most part, life was peaceful. There was far more trading with the tribes over the border than fighting for centuries, and Cannstatt's fort eventually had a vicus (civilian settlement) and a couple of villas nearby, as well as a cemetery.
Behind the border, within the Empire, life in Germania Superior wasn't too bad. Villas built there had beautiful mosaics, implying long periods of peace and prosperity, and troops had baths built. Both of these are found at Aria Flaviae, or Rottweil, as it's known today.
Essentially, life near Bad Canstatt or the Stuttgart metropolitan area wasn't too shabby for the three hundred or so years the Romans kicked about in the area.

The grapes the Romans brought grew, and would eventually become a huge industry. There were springs nearby too.
Eventually Cannstatt would fall to advancing Alemannic tribes and things would get seriously, outrageously violent - but that's a story for another time, I think... /FIN

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More from @MikeStuchbery_

Jan 26
So I'm now living by myself - pretty much for the first time as an adult. Prior to now I've either been in cohabiting long-term relationships or married.

I gotta say, it's quite a trip - and has made me think a lot about, well, what I'm doing with my life.
For many, many years, I felt like I needed to care for others - that if I wasn't effectively tending to someone else, I was wasting my time.

This, I think, was a compensatory move to offset my (undiagnosed) ADD - I may be hard work, but at least I was trying.
Living by myself, I find that there's so much time that I have that I never noticed before. I must have been running myself really ragged!

So, almost to comfort myself, I end up doing chores, cleaning things, throwing things out - even if it ends up being exhausting.
Read 6 tweets
Jan 24
Y'all know I go wandering, hiking between historical points of interest.

Friday I was out near Oppenweiler, north of Stuttgart.

Washerschloss Oppenheimer was one of the homes of the Sturmfeder barons. It was built in the 18th century on way, way older foundations.
Burg Reichenberg, not too far away from Oppenweiler, was built to guard the whole region. It was property of the Margraves of Baden.

It is perhaps the best preserved of all the castles built during the age of the Hohenstaufen dynasty.

The chapel has medieval wallpaintings.
Finally, Schloss Lautereck was property of the Counts of Lowenstein and guard the community of Sulzbach an der Murr.
Read 4 tweets
Jan 9
Some interesting things I came across during a walk through the 'Filder', an area south of Stuttgart - a short thread.
These are 'Neidköpfe' - carved heads placed on the eaves of buildings to keep evil spirits away in the 17th century. I found them on a house in the village of Bonladen.
Under the eaves of the Martinskirche in Plieningen I found these Romanesque carvings - around 800 years old. They depict biblical stories and lives of saints.
Read 5 tweets
Jan 4
Today I learned about Norbert Masur, a German Jew and member of the World Jewish Congress, who must have experienced one of the most surreal days in 20th century history... Image
As the US, French, British and Russian forces liberated Germany, and Berlin was about to fall, Norbert Masur, as the Swedish representative of the World Jewish Congress, was tapped to meet one of the Third Reich's most notorious individuals... Image
Seeing the writing on the wall, and hoping to save his skin, Heinrich Himmler, the head of the SS, used connections in the Red Cross and the intelligence services - and his personal masseur - to tee up a meeting with the World Jewish Congress... Image
Read 10 tweets
Jan 1
The Nazis actively avoided vaccinating prisoners and slave workers from the infectious diseases that were rife in the camps, and considered those diseases a valid tool of extermination, but you go wild, you historically-illiterate buffoon.
After a series of outbreaks, the German Empire introduced mandatory vaccinations for smallpox in the late nineteenth century.

These were relaxed by the Nazis.

1. google.com/amp/s/amp.dw.c…
2. jacobinmag.com/2021/09/vaccin…
Anti-vaccine belief has always been both prompted by anti-Semitism, and a generator of it. theatlantic.com/health/archive…
Read 4 tweets
Dec 28, 2021
Yesterday, I found myself with a little time to kill in Mainz.

Wandering about, I came across the Römerpassage shopping centre and the Isis Heiligtum - that is to say, the Roman Passage, and the Temple of Isis.

Did I check it out? What do you think?
Back in 2000, while they were building the underground carpark for the Römerpassage shopping centre, the remains of a 1st - 3rd century temple complex were found.

Soon enough, it was determined that it was a temple to two goddesses - Isis & Mater Magna.
'But Mike', I hear you say, 'Isis was an Egyptian goddess, and Mater Magna is kinda like Cybele - she's Greek!'

Very observant. Romans, especially soldiers, were world class god-appropriaters.

Mogontiacum (Mainz) being the home of legions, had temples to many deities.
Read 7 tweets

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