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River port River port

Archaeological Area and the Patriarchal Basilica of Aquileia1998

UNESCO World Heritage

UNESCO World Heritage

In the 1st century AD, Aquileia was a thriving city, lying at a crossroads for trade goods travelling between the Mediterranean Sea and mainland Europe. Several monumental works, including the river port built on the Natiso cum Turro river bear evidence of such wealth. In Antiquity, the river ran to the east of the city and its bed was almost 50 metres wide.
Geographer Strabo reports about Aquileia: “There is an inland voyage thither for merchant-vessels, by way of the River Natiso, for a distance of more than sixty stadia. Aquileia has been given over as an emporium for those tribes of the Illyrians that live near the Ister; the latter load on wagons and carry inland the products of the sea, and wine stored in wooden jars, and also olive-oil, whereas the former get in exchange slaves, cattle, and hides”.
You will visit the remains of the river port (among the best preserved port installations in the whole Roman world) by walking on the so-called “Sacred Way”, a suggestive tree-lined pedestrian lane built in 1934 with the aim of ideally connecting the Roman vestiges, the First World War cemetery and the basilica with its extraordinary Early Christian mosaics.
As you walk, you will be able to see the quays, i.e. the vertical slabs used to load and unload the goods. Some of them still bear the small signs of the games played by sailors and dockers during their free time.
Above the quays you will easily recognize the remains of the city walls from the Late Antiquity (4th century) and of a later defensive enclosure (probably from the 5th century) built to strengthen the former and much closer to where the river bed was found.
Moreover, you will see the remains of the walls of the warehouses once used to store the goods, which probably included some rooms used as offices. Built in the early 1st century, these buildings were over three hundred metres long, but maximum thirteen metres wide.
Look for the special stones used to moor the boats: some of them have a horizontal hole; others are shaped as protruding parallelepipeds with a rounded edge and a vertical hole. According to a different assumption, the latter stones may have served as supports to accommodate wooden cranes used to help dockers load and unload the goods.

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  • Title: River port River port
  • Creator: Archaeological Area and the Patriarchal Basilica of Aquileia, Archaeological Area and the Patriarchal Basilica of Aquileia
  • Date Created: 1998, 1998
  • Location Created: Italy, Italy
  • Rights: Fondazione Aquileia © Gianluca Baronchelli
  • Location: Italy, Italy
  • Inscription Criteria: Criteria: (iii)(iv)(vi), Criteria: (iii)(iv)(vi)
  • Date of Inscription: 1998, 1998
  • Category of Site: Cultural site, Cultural site
UNESCO World Heritage

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