The Roman
Eifel Aqueduct was completed around 80 AD and broken and largely destroyed by Germanic tribes in 260. By the Middle Ages the
limestone-like limescale accretions from the inside of the aqueduct were particularly desirable as a building material, called "Eifel marble" in an area with little natural stone. In the course of operation of the aqueduct, many sections had a layer as thick as . The material had a consistency similar to brown
marble and was easily removable from the aqueduct. Upon polishing, it showed veins, and it could also be used like a stone board when cut flat. This artificial stone found use throughout the Rhineland and was very popular for
columns, window frames, and even
altars. Use of "Eifel marble" can be seen as far east as
Paderborn and
Hildesheim, where it was used in the
cathedrals.
Roskilde Cathedral in
Denmark is the northernmost location of its use, where several gravestones are made of it. Trade to the west took it to England as a high-status export material in the 11th and 12th centuries, where it was made into columns for a number of
Norman English Cathedrals. The impressive polished brown stone was known for many years as 'Onyx Marble'. Its origin and nature was a mystery to people studying the stonework at
Canterbury Cathedral, until its source was identified in 2011. It is used there as columns supporting the cloister roof, alternating with columns of Purbeck Marble. These large cathedral cloisters needed several hundred such columns around an open quadrangle, which must have been supplied by a well-organized extraction and transport operation. The Eifel deposits, now called
Calcareous sinter or calc-sinter (since it is neither
onyx nor
marble), have also been identified at
Rochester and in the now lost
Romanesque cloister at
Norwich as well as the Infirmary Cloisters, Chapter House windows, and Treasury doorway at Canterbury. ==Related material==