- the
suburbium acquired its own
fence or wall. In the High
Middle Ages, the gord
usually evolved into a castle,
citadel or kremlin, and the
suburbium into...
- from the Old
French subburbe,
which is in turn
derived from the
Latin suburbium,
formed from sub (meaning "under" or "below") and urbs ("city"). The first...
- topographi****
urbis Romae:
Suburbium,
edited by
Adriano La
Regina and
produced by
Edizioni Quasar covers sites in the
suburbium of
ancient Rome. R. B. Ulrich...
-
spring of the
Uecker River. In this region,
burghs with a proto-town
suburbium were set up at
Drense and on an isle in Lake
Oberuckersee (near modern...
- the south, the
Altendorf suburbium in the north-west
around Altendorf and Am
Alten Tor
street and the
Altnordhausen suburbium in the south-east around...
- towers.
Below the gord, but
still within the town walls, was the urbs or
suburbium,
which held the
residences for the
nobility and merchants. The
towns often...
- Carrara, 'ad
Gallinas Albas', in
Lexicon Topographi****
Urbis Romae:
Suburbium, vol. III (2005. Rome), p. 17-24 Jane
Clark Reeder, 2001. The
Villa of...
-
settlement areas. The
stronghold consisted of a
fortified burgh with a
suburbium. The
Pomeranians mined salt in salt pans
located in two
downstream hills...
- was
mentioned for the
first time in 779. In 1192, it was
referred to as
Suburbium castri Wertheim and in 1200 the town was
referred to as an
oppidum and...
- an
Ostsiedlung town
attached to a
preexisting castrum (castle with a
suburbium). The
castrum was
located on the
island with the cathedral, the Ostsiedlung...