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Vienne is a commune of France, located 30 km south of Lyon, on the Rhône River. It is the second city after Grenoble in the Isère département, of which it is a sous-préfecture. Population (2001): 29,400.

Vienne was an important early bishopric in Christian Gaul. Its most famous bishop was Avitus of Vienne. At the Council of Vienne, convened there in October 1311, Clement V abolished the order of the Knights Templar the following year.

A suspension bridgeA suspension bridge is a bridge that consists of two multiple column pillars, one on either end of the central span, with two or more cables slung between them. The bridge deck is suspended from vertical cables or rods attached to the main cables. The mai leads from the city to the right bank of the Rhône, where the industrial quarter of Ste Colombe now occupies part of the ancient city. Here is a tower, built in 1349Events October 20 Pope Clement VI publishes a papal bull that condemns the Flagellants The bubonic plague is spread to Norway when an English ship with everyone dead on board floats to Bergen Births Duke Albert III of Austria, on September 9 Deaths Willia by Philip of Valois to defend the French bank of the Rhône, as distinguished from the left bank, which, as part of the kingdom of Provence , was dependent on the Holy Roman EmpireThe Holy Roman Empire ( German: Heiliges Romisches Reich was a political conglomeration of lands in western and central Europe in the Middle Ages. Emerging from the eastern part of the Frankish realm after its division in the Treaty of Verdun ( 843), it l. This state of things is also recalled by the name of the village, St Romain en Gal , northwest of Ste Colombe.

1 History

1.1 Roman Vienne

The oppidumTo the Romans, an oppidum was the main settlement in any administrative area. Julius Caesar described the larger Iron Age settlements he encountered in Gaul as oppida and the term is now used to describe the large pre-Roman towns that existed all across E of the AllobrogesThe Allobroges were a warlike nation in Gaul located near the Rhone River in what later became Savoy, Dauphine, and Vivarais. The Allobroges were made offers to join in the Catiline conspiracy, but they refused the offers and exposed the plot in 63 B. became a Roman colony about 47 BCE under CaesarAlternative meanings: Julius Caesar (disambiguation). Gaius Julius Caesar ( Latin: C·IVLIVS·C·F·C·N·CAESAR) ( July 13, 100 BC March 15, 44 BC) was a Roman military and political leader whose conquest of Gallia Comata extended the Roman world all the way t, but the Allobroges managed to expel them: the exiles then founded the colony of Lugdunum (today's Lyon). Under the ealy Empire Vienne regained all its former privileges as a Roman colony. Later it became a provincial capital. In 257 Postumus was proclaimed emperor here of a short-lived Gallo-Roman empire with its capital at Trier. On the bank of the Gre are traces of the ramparts of the old Roman city, and on Mont Pipet (east of the town) are the remains of an amphitheatre, while the ruined 13th century castle there was built on Roman footings. Several ancient aqueducts and traces of Roman roads can still be seen.

Two Roman monuments at Vienne are outstanding. One is the temple of Augusta and Livia, a rectangular building of the Corinthian order, erected by the emperor Claudius, which owes its survival, like the Maison Carrée at Nimes, to being converted to a church soon after the Theodosian decrees as "Notre Dame de Vie." In it the local Festival of Reason at the time of the Reign of Terror. The other is the Plan de l'Aiguille, a truncated pyramid resting on a portico with four arches, from the Roman circus . Many popular theories have been advanced as to what this structure was intended for, even the legend of Pontius Pilate has made this his tomb.



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