Bedaium Roman Museum
The Bedaium Roman Museum in Seebruck am Chiemsee is run by the Bedaium in Seebruck e. V. operated. It shows around 500 exhibits.
history
The Roman Museum in Seebruck was opened on October 15, 1988. The background to the foundation of the museum is the fact that today's Seebruck emerged from the Bedaium castle, which was founded in 50 AD at the outflow of the Alz from the Chiemsee . In 1843, when the Seebruck church tower was rebuilt, the foundations of a late antique fort were discovered . In the area there are other testimonies from 4000 years of settlement history.
Exhibits
The exhibition in the Roman Museum was set up by the then Prehistoric State Collection in Munich. In addition to evidence from half a millennium of the Noric - Celtic village community and the Roman beneficiary station, finds from prehistory and the settlement by the Bavarians are shown. Part of the fort wall of the late antique fort is also visible.
A 27 km long archaeological trail, opened in 1998, begins and ends at the museum. Its breakpoints are:
- Roman museum
- Bedaium burial ground
- Celtic homestead Stöffling
- Keltenschanze near Truchtlaching
- Refuge on the Alz
- Burial mound near Ischl
- Grave fields near Ischl
- Hoard of home Hilgen
- Roman road near Seebruck
- Kiln and Roman settlement
- Roman strip house
Web links
Coordinates: 47 ° 55 ′ 59.9 ″ N , 12 ° 28 ′ 36.5 ″ E