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Neumagen wineshipPhoto: Deutsches Weininstitut
Neumagen wineship. The Neumagen wine ship was part of the tomb of a Roman wine merchant from the early third century. The remains of the tomb were found in Neumagen in 1878 as part of the foundation of the late antique defence wall of the Noviomagus Treverorum fortress. Neumagen therefore claims the title of “Germany's oldest wine village”. The original is now in the Rheinisches Landesmuseum Trier. A copy of the ship can be found at St. Peter's Chapel in Neumagen. There are other replicas, including one in the Knauf Museum in Iphofen. In 2007, apprentices of the Trier Chamber of Crafts made a wooden replica. The Stella Noviomagi (Star of Neumagen) anchors in the harbour of Neumagen-Dhron and is the largest floatable Roman ship ever reconstructed in the German-speaking world.