Timeline of Basel

The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Basel (or Basle, in the once-preferred English spelling).

Established in the 4th century, the city rose to importance in the medieval period as a bishop's seat. In the 15th century it became an important center of Renaissance humanism and, in the 16th century, of the Protestant Reformation. Basel joined the Swiss Confederacy in 1501. In the 19th century, Basel was a center of Industrialisation, and it remains one of the major cities of contemporary Switzerland.

Early history

  • 150 BC – Settlement of the Gaulish Rauraci on the northwestern outskirts of the present city
  • 58 BC
    • Rauraci together with Helvetii try to emigrate to Gaul, but are defeated at the Battle of Bibracte by Julius Caesar and sent back to their homeland
    • Returning Rauraci build a fortified settlement, called oppidum (located in today's Basel Cathedral hill)
  • c. 44 BC – Augusta Raurica is founded by the Romans some 5 km from the site of the future city.
  • c. 15 BC – Successful colonization of the area supported by the Augustus's conquest of the central Alps
  • 2nd C. AD
    • Augusta Raurica becomes a prosperous commercial trading centre and the capital of a local Roman province
    • Population reaches approximately twenty thousand people
  • 250 AD – Powerful earthquake damages a large part of the city
  • ca.260 AD – Alemanni tribes and/or marauding Roman troops destroy Augusta Raurica
  • ca.300 AD, following the loss of the Limes Germanicus and the right bank of the Rhine River, the Roman army builds a castra (fort) named Castrum Rauracense near the old site of Augusta Raurica. It was intended to serve as the headquarters of the legio I Martia and to protect a ford over the Rhine.
  • 4th century AD
    • The fort grows in importance because it commands a bridge that lies along the road from Gaul to the Danube River.
    • Emperors Constantius II and Julian assemble their armies at the Castrum Rauracense before marching to battle against the Alemanni.
    • A church is built near Castrum Rauracense. The fort and neighboring church become the seat of a bishop, with the bishop first being mentioned in 346.
  • 374 AD – The town named Basilea or Basilia (from Greek Basileia, Βασιλεια "kingship") is documented
  • ca.400 AD – Following the collapse of the Roman Empire, the Roman troops withdraw from Castrum Rauracense and Basilea, the Germanic Alemanni settled in
  • 7th century AD – The bishop moves to Basel and the settlement at Castrum Rauracense declines in importance

Middle Ages

Old Swiss Confederacy

Modern history

After 1945

See also

References

This article incorporates information from the German Wikipedia.

Bibliography

47°34′00″N 7°36′00″E / 47.566667°N 7.6°E / 47.566667; 7.6

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Timeline of Basel, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.