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Aemona (Titular See)

Colonia Iulia Aemona
Emona in ljubljana osm.jpg
Location of Emona in modern Ljubljana
Emona is located in Slovenia
Emona
Location within Slovenia
Alternative name(s) Emona, Aemona
Type Castrum, Colonia (after 43 AD)
Province Italia
Administrative unit Venetia et Histria
Limes Claustra Alpium Iuliarum
Directly connected to
— Stone structure —
Built during the reign of Second Triumvirate, Gaius Calvisius Sabinus, Lucius Marcius Censorinus
Built 35 BC
Size and area 540 m x 430 m (23.2 ha)
Shape Rectangular
Legions
Events 35 BC - AD 43, Colonia AD 43 - 452
Coordinates 46°2′51.7″N 14°30′3.32″E / 46.047694°N 14.5009222°E / 46.047694; 14.5009222Coordinates: 46°2′51.7″N 14°30′3.32″E / 46.047694°N 14.5009222°E / 46.047694; 14.5009222
Place name Ljubljana
Town Ljubljana
County City Municipality of Ljubljana
Country Slovenia
Condition Ruined
Exhibitions City Museum of Ljubljana
Website www.mgml.si/en/city-museum-of-ljubljana-377/archaeological-park-emona/

Emona or Aemona (short for Colonia Iulia Aemona) was a Roman castrum, located in the area where the navigable Ljubljanica river came closest to Castle Hill, serving the trade between the city's settlers - colonists from the northern part of Roman Italy - and the rest of the empire. Emona was the region's easternmost city, although it was assumed formerly that it was part of the Pannonia or Illyricum, but archaeological findings from 2008 proved otherwise. From the late 4th to the late 6th century, Emona was the seat of a bishopric that had intensive contacts with the ecclesiastical circle of Milan, reflected in the architecture of the early Christian complex along Erjavec Street in present-day Ljubljana.

The Visigoths camped by Emona in the winter of 408/9, the Huns attacked it during their campaign of 452, the Langobards passed through on their way to Italy in 568, and then came incursions by the Avars and Slavs. The ancient cemetery in Dravlje indicates that the original inhabitants and invaders were able to live peacefully side by side for several decades. After the first half of the 6th century, there was no life left in Emona. The 18th-century Ljubljana Renaissance elite shared the interest in Antiquity with the rest of Europe, founding the Ljubljana creation myth on image of Jason and the Argonauts. In 2014, it is the 2000-year anniversary of the first written mention of Emona. Other ancient Roman towns located in present-day Slovenia include Nauportus (now Vrhnika), Celeia (now Celje), Neviodunum (now the village of Drnovo) and Poetovio (now Ptuj).


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