
Plan of the oppidum of Bibracte

Walls of Bibracte

Bibracte and Autun
'Bibracte', a Gaulish ''
oppidum'' or fortified city, was the capital of the
Aedui and one of the most important
hillforts in
Gaul. It was situated near modern
Autun in
Burgundy,
France. The
material culture of the Aedui corresponded to the Late
Iron Age La Tène culture,
In 58 BC, at the
Battle of Bibracte,
Julius Caesar's armies defeated the
Helvetii 16 miles south of the fort. In 52 BC, at Bibracte
Vercingetorix was proclaimed head of the Gaulish coalition. Again at Bibracte
Julius Caesar, the victor at the
battle of Alesia, completed dictating his ''
Gallic Wars''. A few decades after the Roman conquest of Gaul, Bibracte was abandoned in favour of
Autun, 25 kilometres distant.
Without a continuous settlement to disturb or efface the site, Bibracte remained for modern archaeology to rediscover.
The first excavations were begun at the site by the wine merchant Gabriel Bulliot between 1867 and 1895. His nephew
Joseph Déchelette, author of a famous ''Manuel d'Archéologie'' continued the excavations between 1897 and 1907
Today 'Mont Beuvray' is generally credited as the ancient Bibracte. The site straddles the borders of the French départements of
Nièvre and
Saône-et-Loire in
Burgundy. The site is an archaeological park at the centre of a protected forest, and a site of cooperative European archaeological efforts, a training ground for young archaeologists as well as a centre for interpreting Gaulish culture for a popular audience. Important international excavations take place at Mont Beuvray, with teams from the universities of
Sheffield,
Kiel,
Budapest,
Vienna and
Leipzig.
External links
★
Bibracte website (in English)
★
''Athena Review'' article "Bibracte"
★
Bibracte, a city of the Gauls