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Reconstruction of a Gaulish cellar, at Bibracte, a Gaulish oppidum or fortified city, once the capital of the Aedui, at Mont Beuvray near Autun in Burgundy, France. The original cellar was destroyed by fire in 20 BC and archaeologists removed sediments and found imprints of the wooden frame to reveal the construction of the room. The underground cellars were used to house cereals and wine imported from Southern countries. The houses above lined the main avenue of Bibracte and had galleried facades and wood shingle roofs. Before the Roman conquest of Gaul under Julius Caesar in 52 BC, the Celtic city of Bibracte had over 30,000 inhabitants. Picture by Manuel Cohen
Unique Identifier
AR6166829
Type
Image
Purpose
Public
Size
7087px × 4724px
Photo Credit
Manuel Cohen / Art Resource, NY
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Tags
1ST CENTURY BC
ARCHAEOLOGICAL
Archaeology
ARCHEOLOGICAL
archeology
Beam
Bourgogne
Bourgogne-Franche-Comte
Burgundy
Cellar
CELT
Celtic
COLOR IMAGE
colour image
EUROPE
EUROPEAN
EXCAVATION
FORTIFIED
French
Gallic
Gallo-Roman
Gaul
Gaulish
HERITAGE
hill fort
History
HORIZONTAL
House
INDOORS
INSIDE
interior
Iron Age
Nievre
Oppidum
RECONSTRUCTED
Reconstruction
Roman
Saone-et-Loire
SETTLEMENT
SITE
STORAGE
Town
Underground
Western Europe
Western European
Wood
wooden