. "In the Roman period there was an important settlement (vicus) on the territory of the present-day village of Elewijt (part of Zemst, Flemish Brabant, Belgium). It was located at the junction of a secondary road (deverticulum) with the major Roman road between Tongeren and Boulogne. In the early first century, a temporary military camp was built and not much later a village started to develop. At the end of the second century, the village was ravaged by Germanic tribes, after which it was slowly rebuilt with a completely different ground plan. The vicus continued to exist as a village until the late third century, but did not recover from a second heavy attack at the end of this period. The present-day village of Elewijt developed half a mile south of the center of the vicus and cannot be seen as its successor."@en . . "47288237"^^ . . . "POINT(4.4963889122009 50.968612670898)"^^ . "first century"@en . "Elewijt vicus"@en . "De vicus van Elewijt was een Gallo-Romeinse nederzetting ten noorden van het huidige Elewijt. Er bestond al een nederzetting v\u00F3\u00F3r de komst van de Romeinen, maar die kwam vooral tot bloei in de periode 50 \u2013 200 na Chr., toen ze uitgroeide tot een middelgrote vicus langs de Romeinse hoofdweg Bavay\u2013Edingen\u2013Asse\u2013Rumst\u2013Rijsbergen. Omstreeks 300 na Chr. werd het dorp verwoest door Germaanse stammen."@nl . . . . . . . . . . . . "Roman roads and settlements near the Elewijt vicus"@en . . . "50.96861111111111 4.496388888888889" . . . . . . . . "1007947750"^^ . . . "In the Roman period there was an important settlement (vicus) on the territory of the present-day village of Elewijt (part of Zemst, Flemish Brabant, Belgium). It was located at the junction of a secondary road (deverticulum) with the major Roman road between Tongeren and Boulogne. In the early first century, a temporary military camp was built and not much later a village started to develop. At the end of the second century, the village was ravaged by Germanic tribes, after which it was slowly rebuilt with a completely different ground plan. The vicus continued to exist as a village until the late third century, but did not recover from a second heavy attack at the end of this period. The present-day village of Elewijt developed half a mile south of the center of the vicus and cannot be s"@en . . "Vicus van Elewijt"@nl . . . "50.96861267089844"^^ . . "2727"^^ . . . . . . "Elewijt vicus"@en . . "4.496388912200928"^^ . "fourth century"@en . . . . "Roman site"@en . "De vicus van Elewijt was een Gallo-Romeinse nederzetting ten noorden van het huidige Elewijt. Er bestond al een nederzetting v\u00F3\u00F3r de komst van de Romeinen, maar die kwam vooral tot bloei in de periode 50 \u2013 200 na Chr., toen ze uitgroeide tot een middelgrote vicus langs de Romeinse hoofdweg Bavay\u2013Edingen\u2013Asse\u2013Rumst\u2013Rijsbergen. Omstreeks 300 na Chr. werd het dorp verwoest door Germaanse stammen."@nl .