The region around Biesheim has been settled since pre-Roman times. Along with
Augusta Raurica (Kaiseraugst), Argentovaria was probably one of the largest
oppida (caput civitatis) of the
Rauraci. To keep the population under control the Romans built a simple wood-earth fortification at this strategically important site. The Roman civilian settlement did not develop around this early fort, but around the temple area from 20 AD. The wood and earth fort was founded in the 1st century AD, the late antique fort was probably built between 369 and 370 during the reign of Emperor Valentinian I (364–375) in the course of the last expansion and strengthening measures on the Rhine Limes. It belonged to a fortress belt (
claustra/clausurae), which consisted of the forts Breisach / Münsterberg (
Mons Brisiacum), Sasbach-Jechtingen, and Horbourg and probably also included an Alemannic fortification on the
Zähringen castle hill. The wood-earth forts of the 1st century may have served as a staging area and deployment base for campaigns in the areas on the right bank of the Rhine. The duties of the garrison in Argentovaria were probably to monitor road traffic, control shipping traffic on the river, and watch over the Rhine crossing. Other activities included the observation of the barbarians on the right bank of the Rhine, daily patrols, and the transmission of messages and signals along the Limes. In the years between 259 and 260, Alemannic tribes finally overran the Upper Germanic-Raetian Limes. Then they occupied the
Agri Decumates, which had been under Roman rule for more than 200 years. After the
Crisis of the 3rd Century, the Romans were able to stabilize the border along the Rhine, Lake Constance, Iller and Danube lines again. Here, from the late 3rd century, the emperors
Diocletian and
Maximian built the chain of forts of the so-called
Danube-Iller-Rhine Limes. Nevertheless, the Alemanni repeatedly invaded the territory of the Empire, since they often exploited the internal power struggles of the Romans which were usually associated with an almost complete withdrawal of the Limes troops. In 357 the
Battle of Argentoratum took place near what is now
Strassburg, in which Emperor
Julian the Apostate succeeded in routing the Alemanni and taking their King
Chnodomar prisoner. In 378, allegedly 40,000 Alemannic
Lentienses broke through the Rhine Limes—either directly at the Sponeck crossing or near Breisach—devastating the border areas and penetrating into the interior of
Gaul. To defend his own territory the Western Emperor,
Gratian, had to recall a large part of his army from
Illyricum, whence it had been dispatched to assist his uncle, the Eastern Emperor,
Valens against the
Goths and
Alans invading
Thrace. The invading Alemanni were soon thrown back across the Rhine by Gratian and his Frankish military leaders, the
comes Nannienus and the
comes domesticorum Mallobaudes after the nearby
Battle of Argentovaria, but this victory cost Valens dearly, since Gratian then arrived too late in the
Balkans, to save Valens from the catastrophic defeat at the
Battle of Adrianople. In August 369 Emperor Valentinian I was staying in the neighboring fort Mons Brisiacum, from where he could, at least temporarily, coordinate and monitor the large-scale construction activities of the Romans on the Rhine Limes. In the course of this, the fortress in Argentovaria was built. Judging by the number of coins, it existed until the withdrawal of the regular border troops under
Stilicho between 401 and 406, and possibly even until the middle of the 5th century. The ruins of the fort were probably still visible above ground until the end of the 17th century. From 1701 on it was removed to extract stone material for the construction of the Neuf-Brisach fortress. ==Fort==