Cathedral – Southern Münster Garden: The Münsterthermen
Cathedral - southern Münster Garden, Aken
The name Aquae Granni, the Roman precursor of modern-day Aachen, points to Roman Aachen’s greatest asset: its hot springs! The mineral waters were quickly believed to have healing powers. Granni refers to Grannus, a Gallic deity associated with health and recovery. The earliest thermal baths date to around the turn of the millennium. From the outset, the Romans envisioned Aachen on a grand scale: even at its founding, the town had the air of a true city – 30 hectares in size, with wooden houses, thermal baths, and even a stone bathhouse with tiled roofs.
A City Growing Around Its Baths
In the early second century, Aquae Granni underwent a complete urban renewal. Emperor Trajan may have intended to elevate the vicus to a regional capital – a theory supported by stamped bricks and an inscription bearing his name. The original baths made way for a monumental square of more than 6,000 square metres, likely containing a forum and temple. Across the city, monumental new bath complexes were built.
Aquae Granni became one of the Roman Empire’s leading wellness centres and the only major spa in Germania Inferior.
The Münsterthermen – Roman Bathing Culture in Action
The city’s reputation as a centre for wellness is powerfully illustrated by the Münsterthermen, one of the largest thermal baths in the Roman Empire, covering around 6,700 square metres. In the southern Münster Garden, in front of the Ungarnkapelle, you will eventually be able to explore parts of two rooms with a well-preserved heating system (hypocaustum) via a planned digital presentation. These remains showcase the scale, sophistication, and social significance of Roman Aachen’s bathing culture, highlighting how the city’s famous springs shaped its urban development, public life, and cosmopolitan character.
Discover Roman Aachen on the VIA VIA Route, 2027
The Münsterthermen are a key stop on the VIA VIA Roman City Walk route of Aachen, which links the museum exhibit in Centre Charlemagne to visible archaeological remains throughout the city. Along the trail, you can encounter traces of Roman walls, baths, forums, and fortifications. Informative panels, multimedia displays, and encounters with Roman “characters” provide context, showing how the city’s thermal baths, civic structures, and fortifications evolved over centuries.
Are you ready to take a walk?
“‘The city smells of rotten eggs,’ Julia grimaces. My daughter is right. The thermal baths of Aquae Granni may be healing, but their sulphurous stench is unbearable. It doesn’t seem to bother the bathers, though. Our cart moves forward at a crawl through a crowd of shuffling people and wagons piled high with wood. ‘Most of it is for the baths,’ says a dark-skinned man walking beside us. ‘Every day, the thermae and the underfloor heating of the rich devour another piece of the forest. The baths heal the body, but not nature,’ he sighs, before vanishing again into the throng. Quintus Iulius has come up with the idea of bottling the spring water and selling it at the markets of Germania Inferior. Personally, I’m just looking forward to sliding into the warm water for a few hours — and talking with people from all corners of the Empire. Perhaps I’ll overhear some news about the situation in Rome. They seem to change emperors every few months this year. Murder and decapitation — not even the most curative water can wash that away.” – Ammulva Iucunda
Fun to know
- Photo of archaeological remains of the hypocaust of the Münsterthermen was taken by Stadtarchäologie Aachen.
- The reconstruction of the Münsterthermen is by Daniele del Grande and city archaeologist Andreas Schaub.