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LIFFOL-LE-GRAND Vosges, France.

A small Gallo-Roman center on the route of a diverticulum linking Grand to the great Roman road from Langres to Trier. In 1830 public works at the locality called La Rupt-de-Villet led to the discovery, amid ancient foundations and other debris, of a small square mosaic (1.7 m on each side), half of which is preserved today in the Epinal Museum. New excavations undertaken at the same place in 1966 revealed the existence of a large rural villa. It is surrounded by a rectangular colonnaded portico with a perimeter of ca. 540 m. Near the NE corner of this enclosure several living rooms were studied. One of these was in the shape of a T with three arms of equal length. It was paved with a mosaic with a square emblema of geometric type whose design could be reconstructed. Another room was also adorned with a mosaic, with a central opus sectile motif, of which only the edge and scattered pieces of various marbles remain.

Near the ancient diverticulum, at the top of a hillside dominating the site, a building apparently used for farming was discovered. It had a large central room, flanked at the NE and SE corners by two identical small rooms. The artifacts collected, as well as the pottery and coins, belong to two distinct periods: the end of the 1st c. and the 3d and 4th c.


BIBLIOGRAPHY

M. Toussaint, Répertoire archéologique Vosges (1948) 130-31; R. Billoret in Gallia 24 (1966); 26 (1968); 28 (1970).

R. BILLORET

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