Tag: frontier

  • Limes dacicus

    Limes dacicus

    The frontiers are physical or mental limits people have set for themselves, by their own free will or which nature raised, to withstand peoples expansion bouts. Technically, archaeologists labelled the oldest frontier in the Romanian space using the phrase limes dacicus. It runs in the western half of Romanias territory, along a distance of 1,000 kilometers. It is the frontier that Rome, conquering Dacia, traced, also physically, and which stood the test of time, even to this day.



    Ovidiu Țentea is a historian and an archaeologist with Romanias National History Museum and with him, we made our attempt to retrace the direction of that limit of the ancient world.



    “The phrase limes dacicus encapsulates the frontiers of the Roman province Dacia, the province which, during Emperor Trajans reign, was embedded into the Roman Empire for 160 years. The limits are physical but also administrative, for a province that was part of the Roman Empire. Physically, were speaking about the limits made of what has survived on the ground, traces of the frontiers, more or less visible. It is an extremely diverse and complex frontier, the most complex frontier that has been documented for the Roman Empire which exists on the territory of a state, but also the longest one. On the other hand, it is an administrative limit, since the Romans, well, its simply pointless for us to cling to the Latin word limes, back then hey did not believe their Empire had any ending or any limitation on the ground. It is a materialization, if you will, a tactical and a military one, in certain areas, being more of a mental frontier, material evidence of the then concluded agreements. All agreements they had with their neighbours had to be materialized on the ground through a frontier, through what today is, lets just say, a ploughed strip of land.”



    With the map of Romania in hand, and heading from the west to the east, clock-wise, we tried to mark the most important points of the limes. Ovidiu Tentea:



    “There are two defence lines that were operational in different timeframes. We have the inclusion of the Apuseni Mountains and of the gold mining areas, on the ground were quite familiar with the legionnaire castra of Apulum (Alba Iulia) and Potaissa (Turda), yet their emergence was tardier. The frontier was materialized somewhere further to the west, the data we have about that are not quite clear. Then it crosses the counties of Cluj and Salaj, through the area of the Meses Gate, where it is better known and here we are, on the inner area of the Carpathian Arc, towards the north. Were now eastward bound, we cross the mountains through the Rucăr-Bran corridor and were hitting the course of the Danube, along a route which has been more or less materialized on the ground, on the territory of todays Arges and Teleorman counties. Here we have the cross-alutan line, the so-called limes transalutanus, which ran concurrently, or in different timeframes, with the line of the Olt river. “



    But how was a ground frontier materialized, which was so long? Ovidiu Țentea:



    “In antiquity, the frontiers were rather routes the army was marching along. According to the enemy or the climate conditions, or even in keeping with the political circumstances, if you will, they were materialized on the ground, or not. For instance, in Banat, we have two roads with no fortifications proper, yet we have two lines of fortifications, which point to certain moments: to Trajan or Hadrians reigns, to Antoninus Piuss reign. Then there is the late 2nd century, the crisis of the 3rd, therefore the frontier changes, being well or less well-known. The most spectacular part of that segment can be found in north-western Transylvania, in the Cluj-Sălaj-Bistrița area, where very many towers are materialized, networks of towers defending certain areas, where the troops were stationed, in fortifications. Signalling rules were very well-known, the earth walls, the fortified moats. The system was very complex, and also very well documented. “



    The observation of the limes dacicus reveals the dynamics of a certain organization pattern, also telling us the existing limit was not set once and for all. Ovidiu Țentea:



    “As were heading towards the north east and east the traces are not that well documented, but they close the Carpathian Arc on the inside, then, via the Southern Carpathian gorges, the connection was provided with the alutanian and the cross-alutanian line, respectively, so the frontier could be closed to the east. Of course, there were enough troops, at least in the first half of the 2nd century and until the crisis caused by the Marcomannic wars, when troops decreased in numbers and large-scale operations were unfolding, so we get to know the major wars of that time. After that, historical sources do not materialize them anymore, but we do know that in time, the number of troops decreased, which happened all throughout the empire, so we can only discuss that episodically. Early into the 2nd century, there is the first organization, during Trajans reign, when the administrative aspect of that is rather less conspicuous, it is more like a military matter, it is a military district. After the first conflict of 117-118 AD, Hadrian is the first to organize that space administratively, naming it Dacia Superior, Dacia Inferior and subsequently, Dacia Porolisensis. So there were three provinces, with three governors. Which were reorganized, after Marcus Aurelius.”



    Limes dacicus was the first civilization frontier of the Romanian space. Now it has become part of the universal heritage. (EN)


  • Limes dacicus

    Limes dacicus

    The frontiers are physical or
    mental limits people have set for themselves, by their own free will or which
    nature raised, to withstand people’s expansion bouts. Technically, archaeologists
    labelled the oldest frontier in the Romanian space using the phrase limes dacicus.
    It runs in the western half of Romania’s territory, along a distance of 1,000 kilometers. It is
    the frontier that Rome, conquering Dacia, traced, also physically, and which
    stood the test of time, even to this day.


    Ovidiu Țentea is a historian and an
    archaeologist with Romania’s National History Museum and with him, we made our
    attempt to retrace the direction of that limit of the ancient world.


    The
    phrase limes dacicus encapsulates the frontiers of the Roman province Dacia,
    the province which, during Emperor Trajan’s reign, was embedded into the Roman Empire
    for 160 years. The limits are physical but also administrative, for a province that
    was part of the Roman Empire. Physically, we’re speaking about the limits made
    of what has survived on the ground,
    traces of the frontiers, more or less visible. It is an extremely diverse and complex
    frontier, the most complex frontier that has been documented for the Roman Empire which exists on the territory of a state, but also the longest one. On the
    other hand, it is an administrative limit, since the Romans, well, it’s simply
    pointless for us to cling to the Latin word limes, back then hey did not believe their
    Empire had any ending or any limitation on the ground. It is a materialization,
    if you will, a tactical and a military one, in certain areas, being more of a mental
    frontier, material evidence of the then concluded agreements. All agreements
    they had with their neighbours had to be materialized on the ground through a
    frontier, through what today is, let’s just say, a ploughed strip of land.


    With the map of Romania in hand,
    and heading from the west to the east, clock-wise, we tried to mark the most important
    points of the limes. Ovidiu Tentea:


    There are two defence lines that were
    operational in different timeframes. We have the inclusion of the Apuseni Mountains
    and of the gold mining areas, on the ground we’re quite familiar with the legionnaire
    castra of Apulum (Alba Iulia) and
    Potaissa (Turda), yet their emergence was tardier. The frontier was materialized somewhere further to the
    west, the data we have about that are not quite clear. Then it crosses the
    counties of Cluj and Salaj, through the area of the Meses Gate, where it is
    better known and here we are, on the inner area of the Carpathian Arc, towards
    the north. We’re now eastward bound, we cross the mountains through the Rucăr-Bran corridor and we’re hitting the course of
    the Danube, along a route which has been more or less materialized on the
    ground, on the territory of today’s Arges and Teleorman counties. Here we have
    the cross-alutan line, the so-called limes transalutanus, which ran concurrently,
    or in different timeframes, with the line of the Olt river.


    But how was a ground frontier materialized,
    which was so long? Ovidiu Țentea:

    In antiquity, the frontiers were rather routes the
    army was marching along. According to the enemy or the climate conditions, or
    even in keeping with the political circumstances, if you will, they were materialized
    on the ground, or not. For instance, in
    Banat, we have two roads with no fortifications proper, yet we have two lines
    of fortifications, which point to certain moments: to Trajan or Hadrian’s
    reigns, to Antoninus Pius’s reign. Then there is the late 2nd
    century, the crisis of the 3rd, therefore the frontier changes, being well
    or less well-known. The most spectacular part of that segment can be found in
    north-western Transylvania, in the Cluj-Sălaj-Bistrița
    area, where very many towers are materialized, networks of towers defending certain
    areas, where the troops were stationed, in fortifications. Signalling rules were very well-known, the earth walls,
    the fortified moats. The system was very complex, and also very well
    documented.


    The observation of the limes dacicus reveals the
    dynamics of a certain organization pattern, also telling us the existing limit
    was not set once and for all. Ovidiu
    Țentea:


    As we’re heading towards the north east and east the traces are not that
    well documented, but they close the Carpathian Arc on the inside, then, via the
    Southern Carpathian gorges, the connection was provided with the alutanian and
    the cross-alutanian line, respectively, so the frontier could be closed to the
    east. Of course, there were enough troops, at least in the first half of the 2nd
    century and until the crisis caused by the Marcomannic wars, when troops decreased
    in numbers and large-scale operations were unfolding, so we get to know the major
    wars of that time. After that, historical sources do not materialize them anymore,
    but we do know that in time, the number of troops decreased, which happened all
    throughout the empire, so we can only discuss that episodically. Early into the
    2nd century, there is the first organization, during Trajan’s reign,
    when the administrative aspect of that is rather less conspicuous, it is more
    like a military matter, it is a military district. After the first conflict of
    117-118 AD, Hadrian is the first to organize that space administratively,
    naming it Dacia Superior, Dacia Inferior and subsequently, Dacia Porolisensis. So there were three provinces, with
    three governors. Which were reorganized, after Marcus Aurelius.


    Limes dacicus was the first civilization frontier of the Romanian space.
    Now it has become part of the universal heritage. (EN)