Drususstein

{{short description|Masonry block in Mainz, Germany}}

File:Drususstein Gesamt 2011.jpg (2011)]]

The Drususstein (Drusus stone) is a nearly 20 metres high masonry block of Roman origin on the grounds of the citadel of Mainz, Germany. It was originally cased in marble. Researchers now largely accept that this is the structural remnant of the cenotaph mentioned by writers such as Eutropius and Suetonius,Eutropius Breviarium ab urbe condita, 7, 12-13; Sueton: Claudius, [https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Suetonius/12Caesars/Claudius*.html#1 1.3]; [https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Suetonius/12Caesars/Claudius*.html#11 11,2] erected in 9 BC by Roman troops in honour of the deceased general Drusus,Jürgen Oldenstein: Mogontiacum. In: Heinrich Beck, Dieter Geuenich and Heiko Steuer (Eds.): Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde. Band 20: Metuonis – Naturwissenschaftliche Methoden in der Archäologie. S. 147; Heinz Cüppers: Die Römer in Rheinland-Pfalz. p. 463; Andreas Panter: Der Drususstein in Mainz und dessen Einordnung in die römische Grabarchitektur seiner Erbauungszeit. p. 102. in Mogontiacum (now Mainz).

During the early days of the Principate the Drususstein was the starting point for elaborate memorial services in honour of Drusus, and the centre of the imperial cult in Mogontiacum. A procession road linked it to the theatre of Mogontiacum, which contained approximately 12,000 seats, making it the largest known theatre north of the Alps. It may have hosted a part of the annual ceremonies at the day of Drusus' death, and probably also at his birthday.Schmid, A., Schmid, R., Möhn, A., Die Römer an Rhein und Main (Frankfurt: Societäts-Verlag, revised edition 2006).

After being robbed of its marble casing in the early Middle Ages, the Drususstein served as a watchtower in the fortifications of the city in the 16th century. For that purpose a staircase and doorframe were made in the structure, which had been up to that point a solid building. Besides the pillars of aqueducts and the stage of the theatre, the Drususstein is one of the few remaining visible reminders of Roman Mogontiacum. Together with the Igel Column, it is the only funerary monument north of the Alps dating from antiquity that remains in its original location.Heinz Cüppers: Die Römer in Rheinland-Pfalz., {{p.|463}}

Historical background

The Roman general Nero Claudius Drusus, stepson of Augustus, founded the legionary camp of Mogontiacum opposite the mouth of the River Main, no later than 13–12 BC. It was intended to serve as a strategic starting point for the conquest of Magna Germania.Marion Witteyer: Mogontiacum – Militärbasis und Verwaltungszentrum. Der archäologische Befund. In Franz Dumont (Eds.), Ferdinand Scherf and Friedrich Schütz: Mainz – Die Geschichte der Stadt. p.  1026. During the campaign in 9 BC Drusus died. His brother Tiberius and the Roman army returned his body back to Mogontiacum. Before the transfer of the body to Rome, the soldiers honoured their popular commanderHans G. Frenz: Drusus maior und sein Monument in Mainz. p 394. Frenz führt diese Charakterisierung auf das antike Wahrnehmungsbild des Drusus bei Velleius Paterculus 2, 97, 2-4 und Tacitus: Annalen [http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/tacitus/tac.ann2.shtml#41 2,41]; [http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/tacitus/tac.ann6.shtml#51 6,51] zurück. with a memorial ceremony. During this time the apparently spontaneous wish arose among the soldiers to erect a monument to permanently honour Drusus in Mogontiacum. Appropriate construction activities were probably already ongoing in the immediate vicinity of the legionary camp, as Augustus approved the project retroactively.For a detailed account: Heinz Bellen: Das Drususdenkmal apud Mogontiacum und die Galliarum civitas. Korrektur-Nachtrag p. 96 ff. und insbesondere p. 98. As a special tribute to Drusus, Augustus himself wrote a grave inscription (elogium) which was attached to the cenotaph. With this the building was completed.

Fictional references

The ceremonies at the Drususstein feature as a major plot element in volume 2 of the novel series Romanike.[http://www.corpus-sacrum.de The Romanike series, Codex Regius (2006-2014)] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160806015742/http://corpus-sacrum.de/ |date=2016-08-06 }}

Gallery

{{gallery|

file:Drususstein Abbildung Huttich.jpg| Image by {{ill|Johannes Huttich|de}} (Woodcut, between 1512/13 and 1517)|

file:De Merian Mainz Trier Köln 009.jpg|Image in Matthäus Merian's Topographia Germaniae (Engraving, 1646)|

File:Drususstein Rekonstruktion Lehne.jpg|Graphical reconstruction by {{ill|Friedrich Lehne|de|lt=F. Lehne}}, 1811|

File:Drususstein Rekonstruktion Frenz.jpg|Graphical reconstruction by {{ill|Hans G. Frenz|de}}, 1985|

file:Drususstein Ende 19. JH.jpg|Early photograph of the Drususstein with flagstaff (1892 or 1895/96)|

file:DBP 1962 375 2000 Jahre Mainz.jpg|Postage Stamp by the Deutsche Bundespost (1962): 2000 year Celebrations of the City of Mainz|

}}

Literature

  • {{cite book

|title= Das Drususdenkmal apud Mogontiacum und die Galliarum civitas

|last= Bellen

|first= Heinz

|editor1-first=Leonhard

|editor1-last=Schumacher

|series=Historia Einzelschriften

|trans-title=Politik-Recht-Gesellschaft. Studien zur Alten Geschichte

|volume= 115

|year= 1997

|language=de

|page= 85 ff

}}

  • {{cite book

|title= Mainz von der Zeit des Augustus bis zum Ende der römischen Herrschaft.

|trans-title=Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt: Geschichte und Kultur Roms im Spiegel der neueren Forschung.

|language=de

|last= Decker

|first= Karl-Viktor

|author2=Selzer, Wolfgang

|volume= II.5.1

|year= 1976

|editor1-first= Hildegard

|editor1-last= Temporini

|editor2-first= Wolfgang

|editor2-last= Haase

|publisher= Walter de Gruyter

|location= Berlin

|isbn= 3-11-006690-4

|pages= 457–559

}}

  • {{cite book

|title= Drusus maior und sein Monument zu Mainz.

|trans-title=Jahrbuch des Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums Mainz

|last= Frenz

|first= Hans. G.

|language=de

|volume= 32

|year= 1985

|pages= 394–421

}}

  • {{cite book

|title= Der Drususstein in Mainz und dessen Einordnung in die römische Grabarchitektur seiner Erbauungszeit.

|trans-title=Mainzer Archäologische Schriften

|volume= 6

|last= Panter

|first= Andreas

|language=de

|year= 2007

|publisher= Archäologische Denkmalpflege Amt Mainz

|location= Mainz

|isbn= 978-3-935970-03-7

}}

  • {{cite book

|title= Mainz. Vom "elenden Steinklumpen" zum Denkmal. Aus der Geschichte der Mainzer Römerruinen

|last= Pelgen

|first= Franz Stephan

|language=de

|year= 2003

|publisher= Philipp von Zabern

|location= Mainz

|isbn= 3-8053-3283-1

}}

  • {{cite book

|title= Römische Steindenkmäler. Mainz in römischer Zeit

|last= Selzer

|first= Wolfgang

|language=de |author2=Karl-Victor Decker |author3=Anibal Do Paco

|year= 1988

|publisher= Philipp von Zabern

|location= Mainz

|isbn= 3-8053-0993-7

}}

  • {{cite book

|title= Mogontiacum (Mainz) als politischer und religiöser Zentralort der Germania superior.

|trans-title=Zentralität und Religion

|series=Studien und Texte zu Antike und Christentum

|editor1-first=Hubert

|editor1-last=Cancik

|editor2-first=Alfred

|editor2-last=Schäfer

|editor3-first=Wolfgang

|editor3-last=Spickermann

|volume=39

|last= Spickermann

|first= Wolfgang

|language=de

|year= 2006

|publisher= Mohr Siebeck

|location= Tübingen

|isbn= 3-16-149155-6

}}

References

{{reflist}}