Archäologische Forschungen in Teurnia | Buchbeschreibung, Autor und Verlag
11/06/2026
Lesedauer: 11 min
Schneller Überblick zu Archäologische Forschungen in Teurnia von Christian Gugl mit den wichtigsten Buchangaben. Nützlich für alle, die gezielt prüfen statt nur überfliegen wollen.

Archäologische Forschungen in Teurnia: Inhalt, Einordnung und bibliografische Details
Archäologische Forschungen in Teurnia gehört zur Kategorie Sachbuch und stammt von Christian Gugl - eine Kombination, die den Titel sowohl fachlich als auch bibliografisch interessant macht. Die Kurzbeschreibung von Archäologische Forschungen in Teurnia zeigt, welche Inhalte Leserinnen und Leser erwarten dürfen: The Claudian-era Municipium Teurnia, today's St. Peter in Holz, is situated four kilometers west of Spittal an der Drau (Carinthia, Austria). Along with Virunum, Celeia, luvavum and Aguntum, Teurnia counts as one of the oldest Roman cities in the province of Noricum. Due to its strategic location on the Drava River and at the intersection of two principal routes, namely the Drava Valley and the Tauern roads, Teurnia developed from a LaTène-period settlement to a Roman city, whose territory included large parts of Upper Carinthia and the Lungau in modern Salzburg. The assessment of La Tène period settlement activity in Teurnia is based solely on the finds assigned to the La Tène culture of Mokronog group centered in the south-east Alps. Continuous settlement in Teurnia can be proven from the late La Tène until the early Imperial period. A comparable trend can be seen at Celeia-Celje, where the initial Celtic hill settlement eventually developed into a Roman vicus in the valley. In contrast to this, the oldest identifiable settlement activity at Aguntum, luvavum and the Flavian municipium of Solva dates to the Augustan period, while Virunum was created as a new, planned provincial capital during the reign of the emperor, Claudius. The first settlement expansion in Teurnia is identifiable as early as the 3rd and 2nd decades of the first century BCE, as the first turf and timber constructions originated east of the 620m-high Holzer Mountain where habitation areas were located, built on serveral terraces on the eastern slope of the hill. Through the combined analysis of finds and results from the 1971-1978 excavations as well as several series of aerial photographs, the expansion and resulting monumentality of Teurnia?s cityscape, after being awarded municipal status, is understandable. In this regard discussion continues as to whether the forum of the imperial-era city was actually located up on the hill, as proposed by R. Egger at the beginning of the last century, or in the lower town situated east of Holzer Mountain, as the preliminary interpretation of recent aerial photographs suggests. After a catastrophic fire in the early 3rd century CE this habitation area, a neighborhood with several prestigious homes and a public thermal bath furnished with high quality fittings such as stucco decoration, marble-cladding, wall paintings, window glass, and hypocaust heating technology, was not reconstructed. The abandonment of this settlement area may already have occurred before the Germanic invasions in the late 3rd century CE, maybe as a result of the Severan prospription measures Als Veröffentlichungsdatum ist 2000 hinterlegt; verlegt wurde der Titel von Österreichisches Archäologisches Institut in xx.
Einordnung nach Autor, Thema und Ausgabe
Mit der Sprache Deutsch lässt sich Archäologische Forschungen in Teurnia auch im internationalen oder mehrsprachigen Kontext präzise filtern. Gerade wer nach Werken von Christian Gugl sucht, sollte Archäologische Forschungen in Teurnia näher betrachten. Innerhalb von Sachbuch bietet Archäologische Forschungen in Teurnia eine klar erkennbare thematische Zuordnung. Mit Österreichisches Archäologisches Institut in xx ist die verlegerische Zuordnung der Ausgabe klar nachvollziehbar. Das hinterlegte Publikationsdatum 2000 unterstützt dabei, Archäologische Forschungen in Teurnia zeitlich korrekt zu klassifizieren.
Was behandelt Archäologische Forschungen in Teurnia?
Im thematischen Kontext von Sachbuch setzt Archäologische Forschungen in Teurnia laut Beschreibung auf folgende Schwerpunkte: The Claudian-era Municipium Teurnia, today's St. Peter in Holz, is situated four kilometers west of Spittal an der Drau (Carinthia, Austria). Along with Virunum, Celeia, luvavum and Aguntum, Teurnia counts as one of the oldest Roman cities in the province of Noricum. Due to its strategic location on the Drava River and at the intersection of two principal routes, namely the Drava Valley and the Tauern roads, Teurnia developed from a LaTène-period settlement to a Roman city, whose territory included large parts of Upper Carinthia and the Lungau in modern Salzburg. The assessment of La Tène period settlement activity in Teurnia is based solely on the finds assigned to the La Tène culture of Mokronog group centered in the south-east Alps. Continuous settlement in Teurnia can be proven from the late La Tène until the early Imperial period. A comparable trend can be seen at Celeia-Celje, where the initial Celtic hill settlement eventually developed into a Roman vicus in the valley. In contrast to this, the oldest identifiable settlement activity at Aguntum, luvavum and the Flavian municipium of Solva dates to the Augustan period, while Virunum was created as a new, planned provincial capital during the reign of the emperor, Claudius. The first settlement expansion in Teurnia is identifiable as early as the 3rd and 2nd decades of the first century BCE, as the first turf and timber constructions originated east of the 620m-high Holzer Mountain where habitation areas were located, built on serveral terraces on the eastern slope of the hill. Through the combined analysis of finds and results from the 1971-1978 excavations as well as several series of aerial photographs, the expansion and resulting monumentality of Teurnia?s cityscape, after being awarded municipal status, is understandable. In this regard discussion continues as to whether the forum of the imperial-era city was actually located up on the hill, as proposed by R. Egger at the beginning of the last century, or in the lower town situated east of Holzer Mountain, as the preliminary interpretation of recent aerial photographs suggests. After a catastrophic fire in the early 3rd century CE this habitation area, a neighborhood with several prestigious homes and a public thermal bath furnished with high quality fittings such as stucco decoration, marble-cladding, wall paintings, window glass, and hypocaust heating technology, was not reconstructed. The abandonment of this settlement area may already have occurred before the Germanic invasions in the late 3rd century CE, maybe as a result of the Severan prospription measures Über die Schlagwörter Antiquities, Excavations (Archaeology), La Tène period lässt sich Archäologische Forschungen in Teurnia auch in größeren Beständen gezielt auffinden.
Wichtige Kennzeichen dieser Ausgabe
Durch die Kombination aus Österreichisches Archäologisches Institut, xx und 2000 lässt sich die Ausgabe sauber verorten. Die Open-Library-Zuordnung über OL20932876W und OL28359903M verbessert die externe Nachvollziehbarkeit des Werkes.
Bibliografische Daten auf einen Blick
- Thematische Tags: Antiquities, Excavations (Archaeology), La Tène period
- Inhaltliche Kurzcharakteristik: The Claudian-era Municipium Teurnia, today's St. Peter in Holz, is situated four kilometers west of Spittal an der Drau (Carinthia, Austria). Along with Virunum, Celeia, luvavum and Aguntum, Teurnia counts as one of the oldest Roman cities in the province of Noricum. Due to its strategic location on the Drava River and at the intersection of two principal routes, namely the Drava Valley and the Tauern roads, Teurnia developed from a LaTène-period settlement to a Roman city, whose territory included large parts of Upper Carinthia and the Lungau in modern Salzburg. The assessment of La Tène period settlement activity in Teurnia is based solely on the finds assigned to the La Tène culture of Mokronog group centered in the south-east Alps. Continuous settlement in Teurnia can be proven from the late La Tène until the early Imperial period. A comparable trend can be seen at Celeia-Celje, where the initial Celtic hill settlement eventually developed into a Roman vicus in the valley. In contrast to this, the oldest identifiable settlement activity at Aguntum, luvavum and the Flavian municipium of Solva dates to the Augustan period, while Virunum was created as a new, planned provincial capital during the reign of the emperor, Claudius. The first settlement expansion in Teurnia is identifiable as early as the 3rd and 2nd decades of the first century BCE, as the first turf and timber constructions originated east of the 620m-high Holzer Mountain where habitation areas were located, built on serveral terraces on the eastern slope of the hill. Through the combined analysis of finds and results from the 1971-1978 excavations as well as several series of aerial photographs, the expansion and resulting monumentality of Teurnia?s cityscape, after being awarded municipal status, is understandable. In this regard discussion continues as to whether the forum of the imperial-era city was actually located up on the hill, as proposed by R. Egger at the beginning of the last century, or in the lower town situated east of Holzer Mountain, as the preliminary interpretation of recent aerial photographs suggests. After a catastrophic fire in the early 3rd century CE this habitation area, a neighborhood with several prestigious homes and a public thermal bath furnished with high quality fittings such as stucco decoration, marble-cladding, wall paintings, window glass, and hypocaust heating technology, was not reconstructed. The abandonment of this settlement area may already have occurred before the Germanic invasions in the late 3rd century CE, maybe as a result of the Severan prospription measures
- Autor beziehungsweise Autoren: Christian Gugl
- Externe Work-Referenz: OL20932876W
- Primäre Kategorie: Sachbuch
- Internationale Standardbuchnummer (ISBN-10): 3900305307
- Umfang: 292 Seiten
- Publiziert bei: Österreichisches Archäologisches Institut
- Open-Library-Editions-IDs: OL28359903M
- Sprache: Deutsch
- Ort der Veröffentlichung: xx
- Buchtitel: Archäologische Forschungen in Teurnia
- Erscheinungsdatum: 2000
Warum sich Archäologische Forschungen in Teurnia gut einordnen lässt
Durch die Kombination aus Titel, Autorenschaft, Kategorie und Schlagwörtern - also Archäologische Forschungen in Teurnia, Christian Gugl, Sachbuch und Antiquities, Excavations (Archaeology), La Tène period - ist der Datensatz sowohl für Suchmaschinen als auch für Nutzerinnen und Nutzer sehr gut interpretierbar.
FAQ zu Archäologische Forschungen in Teurnia
Wofür sind die Open-Library-IDs hilfreich?
Mit OL20932876W und OL28359903M lässt sich das Werk auch in externen bibliografischen Zusammenhängen besser verknüpfen.
Wer sollte sich für Archäologische Forschungen in Teurnia interessieren?
Besonders relevant ist Archäologische Forschungen in Teurnia für Leserinnen und Leser, die nach Literatur aus dem Bereich Sachbuch suchen oder gezielt Veröffentlichungen von Christian Gugl betrachten möchten.
In welcher Sprache liegt das Buch vor?
Die Ausgabe ist in Deutsch verfügbar; thematisch unterstützen zusätzlich die Tags Antiquities, Excavations (Archaeology), La Tène period bei der Einordnung.
Gibt es eine inhaltliche Zusammenfassung?
Ja, die Beschreibung fasst die Ausrichtung des Buches so zusammen: The Claudian-era Municipium Teurnia, today's St. Peter in Holz, is situated four kilometers west of Spittal an der Drau (Carinthia, Austria). Along with Virunum, Celeia, luvavum and Aguntum, Teurnia counts as one of the oldest Roman cities in the province of Noricum. Due to its strategic location on the Drava River and at the intersection of two principal routes, namely the Drava Valley and the Tauern roads, Teurnia developed from a LaTène-period settlement to a Roman city, whose territory included large parts of Upper Carinthia and the Lungau in modern Salzburg. The assessment of La Tène period settlement activity in Teurnia is based solely on the finds assigned to the La Tène culture of Mokronog group centered in the south-east Alps. Continuous settlement in Teurnia can be proven from the late La Tène until the early Imperial period. A comparable trend can be seen at Celeia-Celje, where the initial Celtic hill settlement eventually developed into a Roman vicus in the valley. In contrast to this, the oldest identifiable settlement activity at Aguntum, luvavum and the Flavian municipium of Solva dates to the Augustan period, while Virunum was created as a new, planned provincial capital during the reign of the emperor, Claudius. The first settlement expansion in Teurnia is identifiable as early as the 3rd and 2nd decades of the first century BCE, as the first turf and timber constructions originated east of the 620m-high Holzer Mountain where habitation areas were located, built on serveral terraces on the eastern slope of the hill. Through the combined analysis of finds and results from the 1971-1978 excavations as well as several series of aerial photographs, the expansion and resulting monumentality of Teurnia?s cityscape, after being awarded municipal status, is understandable. In this regard discussion continues as to whether the forum of the imperial-era city was actually located up on the hill, as proposed by R. Egger at the beginning of the last century, or in the lower town situated east of Holzer Mountain, as the preliminary interpretation of recent aerial photographs suggests. After a catastrophic fire in the early 3rd century CE this habitation area, a neighborhood with several prestigious homes and a public thermal bath furnished with high quality fittings such as stucco decoration, marble-cladding, wall paintings, window glass, and hypocaust heating technology, was not reconstructed. The abandonment of this settlement area may already have occurred before the Germanic invasions in the late 3rd century CE, maybe as a result of the Severan prospription measures
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