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Vindobona - Wikipedia Vindobona (Latin pronunciation: [wɪnˈdɔbɔna]; from Gaulish windo- "white" and bona "base bottom") was a Roman military camp (or castra) in the province of Pannonia, located on the site of the modern city of Vienna in Austria
Vindobona – Roman Vienna At a time when the greatest threat to local sensibilities was not a poorly-played waltz but an incursion by barbarian hordes, Vienna was called Vindobona: a name that covered the Roman military camp and associated settlements here
Vindobona (Vienna) - Livius Vindobona: Roman military base and town in Pannonia Superior (modern Wien, English Vienna)
From the Romans to the Middle Ages - History of Vienna In the first century AD, the Romans set up a military camp, called Vindobona, which formed part of the large number of similar facilities along the Limes frontier
Vindobona - Vienna in Roman times - Ancient World Magazine In building their empire, the Romans preferred borders that were relatively easy to defend, such as rivers Next to the Danube, they founded a fort called Vindobona on the site of the later city of Vienna
Vindobona | Research Starters - EBSCO Vindobona was a significant Roman military camp located in what is now Vienna, Austria, historically situated along the Danube River in the region of Pannonia Originally inhabited by the Celtic Boii tribe, Vindobona was integrated into the Roman Empire during the reign of Emperor Augustus
The birth of Vienna: Vindobona - Time Travel Vienna In the first century, the Romans founded a military camp called Vindobona on the site of today’s Vienna city center It was one of many to secure the Limes, the border of the Roman Empire
Vindobona | Military Wiki | Fandom Vindobona (from Gaulish windo- "white" and bona "base bottom") was a Celtic settlement and later a Roman military camp on the site of the modern city of Vienna in Austria
On the Edge of the Empire: Vindobona (Vienna) a Roman town on the . . . During the conflict with the Marcomanni Vindobona was sacked and Marcus Aurelius promoted its reconstruction The fortress was strengthened during the IIIrd century and it was provided with better facilities for the legionaries