BAJENARU - Minor Fortifications 2010
BAJENARU - Minor Fortifications 2010
BAJENARU - Minor Fortifications 2010
MINOR FORTIFICATIONS
Series editors:
OVIDIU ENTEA
FLORIAN MATEI-POPESCU
Constantin Bjenaru
MINOR FORTIFICATIONS
IN THE BALKAN-DANUBIAN AREA
FROM DIOCLETIAN TO JUSTINIAN
Editura Mega
Cluj-Napoca
2010
This volume is printed in the framework of the STRATEG Project PNCDI II,
P4, 91010/ 2007, financed by the National Authority for Scientific Research (ANCS).
General editors:
Ovidiu entea and Florian Matei-Popescu
Advisory editors:
Crina Sincovici (text layout)
Sorin Cleiu (photo & illustration processing)
Cover design:
Andrei Cmpeanu
ISBN 978-606-543-114-0
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
I. Introduction
II. The Dioceses of Thrace and Dacia: Administrative and Military Organization
Administrative organization: dioceses, provinces, cities
Military organization
13
13
21
25
25
32
40
40
44
51
51
54
62
62
77
78
86
93
93
161
161
164
169
179
VI. Conclusions
183
List of abbreviations
Bibliography
List of illustrations
Illustrations
187
191
217
231
Acknowledgements
Introduction
he study of constructions and military architecture in the Late Roman and Early Byzantine
periods is reflected by a rich scientific literature, but the level of knowledge reached is
much lower than that in the same field, but for the Early Roman period1. Even if the archaeological research during the last decades made significant contributions to the domain, many
of the specialized works use a schematic approach by dating the fortifications or analyzing the
evolution of military architecture based primarily on the literary and epigraphic sources, but
also on an incorrect interpretation of the archaeological data. This led, in the absence of clear
epigraphic data and without a serious analysis of the archaeological material, to a datation of
military or urban fortifications only according to the analogies provided by the specialized
literature and without the use of a critical approach2.
Starting from this situation, the present work tries to systematize the data available for
minor fortifications (those with a reduced surface) in the territories of the dioceses of Dacia
and Thrace in the 4th 6thc. AD and to establish the chronology for these structures that has
started controversies in many cases. The approach we used is a critical one, based especially on
the results of the archaeological research (in many cases insufficient or incorrectly interpreted),
but also on comparisons with similar situations in different areas of the Empire.
The authors that studied Late Roman fortifications tried to divide them into categories
using several criteria. Thus, M. Biernacka-Lubanska, who wrote one of the first syntheses
on fortifications in the present day territory of Bulgaria, used the geographic criterion
according to which she differentiated border fortifications from those inside the provinces.
The functional criterion was used only for fortifications inside the province, where three
main categories were identified: urban fortifications, military and roadside fortifications and,
finally, rural fortifications3. A classification according to the geographic criterion (Danubian
limes, Western Black Sea coast and intra provinciam) was also used by S.Torbatov for the
1
For an analysis of the situation based on the interpretation of the latest archaeological discoveries see REDD
2004, 157167. Also see LANDER 1980; LANDER 1984, 181f.; REDD 1995, 91f.; MAGNESS 1999;
MACKENSEN 1999, 201f.
REDD 2004, 163: Nos connaissances archologiques reposent encore trop souvent, il est vrai, sur des
fouilles anciennes, des plans obsoltes, et les chronologies proposes sont plus les fruit dun argumentaire
historique que dun examen srieux des contextes, quon connat trop mal. Cette situation de la recherche au
sol fige en retour la rflexion historique, en contribuant justifier ses schmas traditionnels de pense, et les
sources, elle-mmes partielles et lacunaires, sur lequelles elle repose presque exclusivement.
BIERNACKA-LUBANSKA 1982, 51f.
9
8
9
TORBATOV 2002.
BRULET 1990, 118f.
DINEV 2006; DINEV 2007 a.
For example: a new city mentioned by Hierocles at the beginning of the 6thc. in Scythia is Capidava, whose
surface delimited by the defense wall (1.30ha) is below the limit of 5ha proposed by V. Dinev for urban
fortifications. It is true that during the 6thc. there must have existed a dwelling district outside the walls, but
even if we take that into consideration it does not add up to the conventional limit. For other similar cases see
DINEV 2000, 6584.
PRINGLE 1981 (2001), 139f.
There are examples of fortifications with a surface over 5ha whose urban character remains uncertain. Among
these are the large fortifications built at the beginning of the 4thc. inside the Pannonian provinces (Sgvr
7.8ha, Keszthely 13.5ha, Alshetny 23ha), used by the mobile army and especially as supply bases
for the units on the limes (SOPRONI 1978, 139140; FITZ 1980; TTH 1985; SOPRONI 1985, 100f.;
BRKOCZI 1994, 9295; BORHY 1996, 207210). For the Balkans see below the fortifications at Vojvoda
and Kovaevec.
10
same category can be included a series of refuges, trade and production centres and fortified
residences (villas, palaces, churches and monasteries).
The present analysis focuses on minor military and roadside fortifications, to which
we added the small fortified residences. These form a rather homogenous group that can be
clearly differentiated from minor rural fortified settlements or refuges for three reasons:
- they have a regular plan (with minor deviations);
- they all have elements of military architecture (towers, gates, poternae, access staircases
etc.) or an organized internal space (barracks);
- they were built in a classic manner (opus quadratum, opus mixtum, etc.), always using
mortar10.
I considered that pertinent conclusions can be drawn only by studying data from a very
large territory. The dioceses of Dacia and Thrace offer a general image of the Late Roman and
Early Byzantine defensive constructions in the Balkan area, for which specialists in this field
have identified a series of characteristics. But the constant comparison to similar structures in
other parts of the Empire (especially to those that were excavated) is absolutely necessary for
dating the Balkan fortifications.
The extraordinary frequency of these small fortifications in the late Empire is already a
well-known fact11. Their study can solve certain less-known aspects of the Late Roman military
architecture, economic and social life. Chronological refinements can contribute to the inclusion
of other fortifications in this chronological frame by identifying in them certain construction
characteristics and types of defensive installations such as towers or gates. The analysis of the
minor fortifications location can contribute to understanding the deployment of military units
both along the frontiers and inside the provinces. As we shall see in the following pages, their
location also transforms these constructions into true ranging-poles that mark the trajectory of
ancient roads.
We considered necessary to include in the structure of our work a chapter that presents
the administrative and military organization of the Balkan provinces as an introduction to the
geographical, administrative and military context in which these fortifications were built. There
is also a selected inventory of the roads and fortifications (large and medium-sized) in the two
dioceses, as they appear in literary, epigraphic and archeological sources, in order to obtain a
general image of the constructive activities during the chosen period of time and to identify
the fortifications that, through their characteristics, can help date minor fortifications. Equally
important is the chapter that presents the state of the research on minor fortifications (terminology, typology, pre-Roman-Byzantine origins), doubled by an inventory of such structures in
the Empire, which we consider crucial in obtaining analogies for Balkan minor fortifications.
The volumes main chapter is a repertory of sites, followed by a typological and chronological
analysis of minor fortifications in the chosen area, accompanied by comments on the characteristics of military architecture and space organizing (towers, gates, staircases, barracks etc.) and
ends with a series of conclusions.
10
11
Many of the rural minor fortifications use dry set masonry (Trockenmauer) or very little mortar.
Cf.MIKULI 2002, 91; KIRILOV 2007, 331.
LANDER 1984, 261: a very large minority and perhaps a majority of new construction in the late Roman
period are less than 1.0ha in size.
11
II
1. A DMINISTRATIVE
fter overcoming the crisis that swept the Empire during the second half of the 3rd century,
the administrative configuration of the Balkan-Danubian area was modified starting with
the reign of Emperor Aurelian (270275). The retreat from Dacia determined the emperor to
create a new province south of the Danube, bearing the same name, by limiting the territories
of old provinces such as Moesia Superior, Moesia Inferior and Thrace1.
The administrative reforms started by Diocletian and continued by Licinius and
Constantine lead to the increase in the number of provinces and their grouping in 12 dioceses2.
Constantine grouped the dioceses in prefectures (praefectura per Orientem, praefectura per
Illyricum, Italiae et Africae and praefectura Galliarum). The frontier between the prefecture of
the Orient and Illyricum ran through the Balkan Peninsula3. As early as the reign of Diocletian
the eastern part of the peninsula belonged to diocese Thracia (part of the prefecture of the
Orient), which was divided into six provinces: Europa, Rhodope, Thrace, Haemimontus,
Moesia Inferior4 and Scythia. The western part belonged to diocese Moesia in the prefecture
Illyricum, which was made up of 10 provinces: Dacia5, Moesia Superior, Dardania, Praevalis,
Macedonia, Thessaly, Achaia, Epirus Nova, Epirus Vetus and Crete.
During the reign of Constantine or at the latest in the middle of the 4thc. the diocese
Moesia was divided in two6 smaller dioceses: the southern provinces (Macedonia, Thessaly,
1
VETTERS 1950, 67; VELKOV 1977, 21. An inscription from 282283 AD (A 1912, 200 = ILB, 188)
seems to attest the existence of two provinces Dacia, later known as Ripensis and Mediterranea.
For the history of the administrative organization in the Late Roman Empire see SESTON 1946, 311342; STEIN
1959, 4750; JONES 1964, 4252; BARNES 1982, 201f. The main document attesting the administrative reform
is Laterculus Veronensis (BURY 1923), dated by most specialists to the reigns of Licinius and Constantine (for a
synthesis of the opinions see ZUCKERMAN 2002, who brings arguments for dating it around the year 314).
For the evolution in time of this border between the eastern and western parts of the Roman Empire, see
WEILER 1996, 123143.
As late as the end of the 3rdc. and the first half of the 4thc. the two provinces Moesia were still called Inferior
and Superior (see below, n. 42).
Diocletian may have united the two Dacias created by Aurelian in a single province (BURY 1923, 135). A
new division (Dacia Ripensis and Dacia Mediterranea) could have taken place during the reign of Constantine
(Dacia Ripensis is represented at the Council of Serdica in 343) or even later (but surely before 386, when
Dacia Mediterranea is attested in CTh, I, 32,5).
The exact date of the division remains unknown. There are indications for a date before 327 (CTh, XI, 3,
2 attests a comes Macedoniae). The most certain source is dated around 369 (Rufius Festus, Brev., 52.810).
Cf.DEMOUGEOT 1981, 231232.
13
Achaia, Epirus Nova, Epirus Vetus and Crete) formed diocese Macedonia, while the northern
provinces (Praevalitana, Dardania, Dacia Mediterranea, Dacia Ripensis and Moesia Prima)
formed diocese Dacia. The two new dioceses, along with diocese Pannonia, were part of the
praefectura praetorio Illyrici, Italiae et Africae (which later, after it got separated from Africa
and Italy, became praefectura Illyrici, with the capital at Sirmium) and later (395), after the
prefecture was finally divided between the East and the West, became part of Eastern Illyricum7.
The administrative organization at the beginning of the 6thc. was clearly described by
Hierocles Synecdemos8. Thus, in the Balkan Peninsula existed only two dioceses at that time:
Thrace (Thrakike), made up of provinces Europa, Rhodope, Thrace, Haemimontus, Moesia
Secunda and Scythia, and diocese Illyricum (Illyrikon), made up of provinces Macedonia Prima,
Macedonia Secunda, Thessaly, Hellas, Crete, Epirus Vetus, Epirus Nova, Dacia Mediterranea,
Dacia Ripensis, Dardania, Praevalis, Moesia Prima and Pannonia. One can notice that to the
west the old dioceses Dacia and Macedonia are not mentioned anymore, as they along with
what remained of Pannonia (the territory around Sirmium) were integrated in the large
administrative unit called Illyricum.
During the reign of Justinian the administrative organization of the Balkan provinces
remains largely the same, even if some of the territories were reconfigured. Two important
moments for this period are the promotion of Iustiniana Prima to the status of archbishopric in
Illyricum and the creation of district Quaestura Exercitus. According to the novella published in
535, Iustiniana Prima, as a new imperial foundation, was proclaimed an archbishopric over tam
ipsa Mediterranea Dacia quam Dacia Ripensis, nec non Mysia prima, et Dardania et Praevalitana
provincia e Secunda Macedonia, et pars secundae etiam Pannoniae, quae in Bacensi est civitas.
At the same time, according to the same document, authorities tried to transfer in the new
city the capital of prefecture Illyricum (which was moved to Thessalonica after Sirmium was
conquered by the Gepids), but this transfer was never finalized, as sources continue to mention
Thessalonica as the capital of the prefecture9.
The most important change took place in 536, when provinces Moesia Secunda, Scythia,
the Cycladic islands, Caria and Cyprus were subordinated to a quaestor Iustiniani exercitus based
in Odessos10. Several opinions exist on the attributions of this administrative unit and there
is a general agreement on its military role in reinforcing the Danubian frontier against the
barbarian threat11. A recent analysis of the data on the quaestura exercitus belongs to S.Torbatov,
who supports the idea that this institution also played a financial role, apart from the military
and juridical one12.
The dioceses were commanded by a vicarius with the rank of vir spectabilis, who represented civilian rule. It seems that during the reign of Anastasius the vicar of Thrace was replaced
with the two vicars of the Long Wall (vikarios tou Makrou Teichos), one of which held the civilian
power and the other the military one. During the reign of Justinian a new position appeared in
the administrative apparatus of the diocese of Thrace, namely a praetor Iustinianus Thraciae (Iust.
Nov., XXVI, dated May 18, 535), which received the supreme civilian and military authority.
In the second half of the 6thc. there was a return to the old position of vicar13. The finances of
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
DEMOUGEOT 1981, 236, 249250; WEILER 1996, 136137. The administrative situation after 395 is
well documented by the Notitia Dignitatum.
Hierocles, Synecd., 631657.
Iust.Nov. XI = FHDR II, 377379. Cf. CURTA 2002, 130; CURTA 2006, 68, n. 12 (with references).
Iust.Nov. XLI = FHDR II, 380383.
JONES 1964, 280; VELKOV 1977, 62; Al. Barnea, in SUCEVEANU, BARNEA 1991, 243244.
TORBATOV 1997, 80.
VELKOV 1977, 64.
14
the dioceses were administered during the reign of Diocletian by a rationalis dioceseos, and later
by a comes largitionum or comes thesaurorum.
According to the picture presented by the Notitia Dignitatum, the civilian government
of the provinces was entrusted either to consulares with the rank of vir clarissimus (Thrace,
Europa14, Dacia Mediterranea), or to praesides with the rank of vir perfectissimus (Haemimontus,
Rhodope, Moesia Secunda, Scythia, Dacia Ripensis15, Moesia Prima, Praevalitana, Dardania).
Their main attributions were administrative, fiscal and juridical. But often during the reign of
Diocletian we come across praesides involved in the building of urban and military fortifications
(castra, centenaria) and even in military operations16.
The city and its territory represented the last administrative subdivision of a province.
During the 4th 5thc. the urban administrative authority was gradually transferred from the
curiales to the bishops, and the urban territories were at the same time ecclesiastical districts. A
major change in the Late Roman period was that the cities did not attain urban status through
the old ius civitatis, but by the public buildings they contained17. V. Dinev drew up a classification of the cities in the dioceses of Dacia and Thrace based on the dimensions of the intra
muros surface, which was considered an indicator of the number of inhabitants18.
In the following pages it will be presented each provinces borders and main cities known
from the literary and archaeological sources.
MOESIA PRIMA. The successor of the former province Moesia Superior kept its
western border on the river Drina19. To the north it neighbored Pannonia Secunda on the lower
course of the river Sava (between the latters junction with the Drina and its confluence with the
Danube) and along the Danube (from Singidunum to the confluence with the river Poreka)
it had a common frontier with the barbaricum. During the 4thc. this province also contained
territories located north of the Danube.
Historical sources indicate that during the 4th 6thc. six cities existed in the province.
Five of them are mentioned by Hierocles20 at the beginning of the 6th c.: Viminacium (Kostolac)
the provinces capital, Singidunum (Belgrade), Tricornium (Ritopek), Gratiana (unidentified
at the present moment, but surely located on the limes, where it is mentioned by the Notitia
Dignitatum) and Horreum Margi (uprija). From the bishops lists it is clear that, at least in
th 4th 5thc., Margum (Kuli) also attained city status. Therefore there was a concentration
of urban life on the Danubian limes, as most cities were former Roman municipia21 and their
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
An inscription from Perinthos, dated to 324, mentioned a consularis provinciae Europae et Thraciae (CROW
2002, 342, after G. Dagron).
Probably replaced by a consularis in the second half of the 5thc. and the beginning of the 6thc., as mentioned
by Hierocles, Synecd. 655, 1 (VELKOV 1977, 7071).
There are many examples in the African provinces (Numidia, Mauretania Caesariensis, Mauretania Sitifensis,
Tripolitania) and in the Eastern (Arabia, Augusta Libanensis) or Western provinces (Raetia, Britannia). For
their inventory see HOFFMANN 1974, 383384, n. 22. See also a new inscription in Syria: SARTRE 2007,
263264 (= IGLSyr XVI, 708). Cf. MANN 1977, 12: during the reign of Diocletian the praeses was still in
most provinces also the military commander. There is also a Balkan foundation inscription from Paleokastra,
in Epirus Vetus, which attests the building of the fort during the reign of Licinius (311313) and mentions a
praeses (BAE 1981, 207208, 217; MIKULI 2002, 16).
Al. Barnea, in SUCEVEANU, BARNEA 1991, 178179.
DINEV 1999. See below, p. 41.
ZANINOVI 1983, 93.
Hierocles, Synecd. 657, 26.
For the urban evolution in Moesia Superior and then in Moesia Prima see MIRKOVI 1968 and MCSY
1974, 115f., 308f.
15
prosperity was ensured by the proximity of the imperial mines in the northern part of the
province22. As the name shows, Gratiana was founded during the Valentinian I/Valens period
as a base for a border unit (auxilium Gratianense) and later attained city status23. Archaeological
excavations did not provide enough information on the provinces city life, as the urban area
at Viminacium was delimited only topographically (over 30ha during the 4th 5thc. and for
the 6thc. there is a segment of the defense wall at Svetinja), there are only few discoveries at
Singidunum (in the 4thc. the Roman fort of approx. 20ha extended northwards with another
10ha and during the 6thc. the urban area was reduced to 67ha, in the forts NW area) and
the situation is very unclear at Horreum Margi (the defense wall encloses 14ha)24.
DACIA RIPENSIS.The provinces western border (neighboring Moesia Prima) started
at the mouth of the river Poreka and continued southwards to the springs of the river Timok
(Timacus). To the east the border with Moesia Secunda was on the river Vit (Utus). To the south
it neighbored Dacia Mediterranea on a trajectory that lead along the peaks of the Balkans25.
Hierocles mentioned five cities in this province: Ratiaria (Arar) the capital, Bononia
(Vidin), Aques (Prahovo), Castra Martis and Oescus (Gigen)26. The other sources and especially
the archaeological research do not provide concrete data on the size of these cities, which were
located mainly on the limes: Ratiaria had a surface of approx. 3035ha during the Late Roman
period, Oescus increased its size to approx. 28ha, Bononia was a new city that covered a surface
of 23ha, and Aquae reached approx. 29 ha27. About Castra Martis, the only city in the provinces
interior, we know for sure that it was also a bishopric as early as the 4thc. (council of Serdica,
343) and it is traditionally located at Kula, where there is a Tetrarchic quadriburgium and a
small fortification of only 1.25ha attached to it, too small to be considered an urban centre28.
An important urban centre in the provinces interior was the one at omakovci, located on the
river Iskr valley, along the Oescus Serdica road. The fortified area covers approx. 15ha and
I believe this is a powerful argument in favor of locating here the Castra Martis mentioned by
the ancient sources29.
DACIA MEDITERRANEA. Based on ancient itineraries we can recreate the borderline
with Dardania and Thrace. Its trajectory at the frontier with Dacia Ripensis is also well known,
as it followed the peaks of the Balkans up to the source of the river Vit. The border with
Macedonia underwent some changes in the 5th 6thc. when Bargala, which was initially part of
Dacia Mediterranea (according to an inscription from 371), appears in other sources as being
part of the territory of Macedonia30.
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
DUANI S.1995, 219225 (with considerations on the role of metalla Tricorniensia); DUANI S.2004,
256, n. 47: the Danube (and the Save) facilitated the transport of metals as well as miners commodities ();
the administration, defence and peregrine labour in the mines of the ripa Danuvii were all centered in the
Danubian forts (Tricornium, Pincum, Aquae).
PETROVI P. 19821983b proposes the identification with the fortification at Dobra-Saldum, a theory
with no conclusive arguments.
DINEV 1999, 4546, 5051, with references. At Horreum Margi a scutaria Horreomargensis, mentioned by
NDOr. XI, illustrates the importance of this city for the Late Roman army.
VETTERS 1950, 7; VELKOV 1977, 8586.
Hierocles, Synecd. 655, 16.
VELKOV 1977, 86f.; DINEV 1999, 44, 4648 (with references). The same authors also included Augustae
(Hrlec) among the provinces possible cities, based on it being mentioned by Procopius as a polis. Its fortified
area is of approx. 8ha.
DINEV 2000, 6970, who questions the identification of Kula with Castra Martis.
For the discoveries at omakovci see VETTERS 1950, 1314; VELKOV 1977, 89; DINEV 1999, 50.
VELKOV 1977, 93; PAPAZOGLU 1988, 9798; MIKULI 2002, 2224, who tries to draw the border
between the two provinces based on the position of the fortifications.
16
At the beginning of the 6th c. the province had five cities: Serdica (Sofija), Pautalia
(Kjustendil), Germania (Sapareva Banja), Naissus (Ni) and Remesiana (Bela Palanka)31. Procopius
also mentioned several administrative districts on the territory of the two Dacias during the
6th c.32. Apart from the territories of the above-mentioned large cities, Procopius mentions
the territories Cabetzos and Scassetana. Other cities that were part of Dacia Mediterranea are
Bargala (Kozjak) in the 4thc. and Iustiniana Prima (Cariin Grad), founded in the 6th c.
From an archaeological point of view the only well known situation is that of Serdica, a
true metropolis of the Balkans and even the residence of several emperors, whose urban surface
during the 4thc. is estimated at 84ha. Pautalia developed on the same location as the Early
Roman town (29ha) and in the 6thc. it was added a fortification of 2.1ha. For Naissus (a surface
estimated at 20ha) and Remesiana (5ha) we have little archaeological data. About Bargala we
know that it covered a surface of 4.7 ha, and the bishops basilica excavated here proves the
settlements urban status33. About Germania, which during the Early Roman period was the
headquarters of an auxiliary unit stationed in Thrace (cohors II Lucensium), we only know the
trajectory of a segment of the defense wall, which enclosed a surface of 2.2ha. The city developed
especially during the 5th 6thc., when a basilica decorated with mosaics was built34.
DARDANIA. The provinces territory was made up of the historical Dardania that
represented, during the Early Roman period, the southern part of the province Moesia Superior.
It had borders with Dacia Mediterranea, Moesia Prima, Praevalitana and Macedonia Secunda.
V. Popovi supposes that from 545 onwards the territory of Iustiniana Prima, until then a part
of Dacia Mediterranea, was transferred to Dardania35.
According to the list drawn up by Hierocles for this province run by a praeses, Dardania
had three cities: Scupi (the capital), Merion and Ulpiana36. Archaeological research demonstrated
the remarkable development of the metropolis Scupi (Skopje), which in the 4th 5thc. covered over
43ha and had many public monuments, but after the devastating earthquake of 518 was reorganized around a new, much smaller fortification (2.30ha). Ulpiana (Graanica) developed as well,
covering an urban area of approx. 35ha, to which was added in the 6thc. another fortification of
almost 16ha. An important city, whose name remains unknown, was identified at Konjuh (located
in the border area between Dardania, Macedonia and Dacia Mediterranea), covering a surface of
17ha, with many public buildings and a Christian basilica. According to some authors, in the
category of small urban centres we can also include two important sites located in the southern
part of the province: uer (9ha, 4th 6th c.) and Vodno-Markovi Kuli (6th c.)37.
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
PRAEVALITANA. The data on this province is scarce38. It occupied the southern part
of the former province Dalmatia, but there is no concrete data on its territory. To the west there
was Dalmatia, to the north and east Moesia Prima and Dardania39, while to the south it neighbored Epirus Nova along a line that started immediately south of Lissus.
Hierocles mentioned that the province was run by a praeses and had three cities: Scodra,
Lissus and the capital Doclea40. Abouth Scodra (Shkodr) we know that it covered approx.
3540ha, while Doclea (Duklja) was an important bishopric that developed on a surface of
approx. 25 ha and had representative buildings, including Christian basilicas. About Lissus
(Lezhe, on the Adriatic coast) we know almost nothing. An important centre on the border
with Epirus Nova must have existed at Grazhdani (identified by some authors with Dober),
which had a fortified area of 34 ha41.
MOESIA SECUNDA. As we have mentioned, when Dacia Ripensis was created by
Aurelian, its border with the former Moesia Inferior (which later became Moesia Secunda42)
was established on the river Vit (Utus). The border between the two provinces most probably
ran along the entire course of the river43. To the south the border with Thrace was set on the
peaks of the Balkans, but all mountain passes (Trojan, ipka, Pass of the Republic, Tvrdica,
Vratnik, Kotel, Vrbica, Ri) belonged to Moesia Secunda. The territory of Odessos on the
Black Sea coast (starting to the north near Kranevo and ending south probably near Cape
Emine) represented the provinces eastern limit44.
Moesia Secunda had seven cities in the first decades of the 6th c.: Marcianopolis, Odessos,
Durostorum, Nicopolis ad Istrum, Novae, Appiaria and Abrittus45. Historical sources and archaeological discoveries indicate the capital Marcianopolis (Devnja, which covered approx. 70ha) and
Odessos (Varna, 43ha) as the provinces true metropolises. The latter reached its highest degree
of development during the reign of Justinian, when it became the headquarters of the quaestura
exercitus. Durostorum (Silistra) represents a highly instructive situation for urban evolution in Late
Antiquity: the fort of legio XI Claudia (19ha) was used throughout the 4th 6thc., the external
area (the former canabae) were intensely populated during the 4thc. and several hundred meters
northwards a new fortification was built on the bank of the Danube (34ha). Novae (Svitov)
developed around the headquarters of the legio I Italica, whose Early Roman fort was extended
in the 4thc., which created a final urban area of 26ha. About Nicopolis ad Istrum (Nikjup) we
know that during the 4th 5thc. it still had its Early Roman defense that enclosed a surface
of 21.5ha and that the extra muros area was intensely inhabited. But in the second half of the
5thc. and the 6thc. the fortified area was reduced to a castellum of only 5.74ha, with no urban
elements. It is presumed that most of the inhabitants of the old town took refuge southwards,
in Veliko Trnovo, where a prosperous urban centre developed during the 6thc. (approx.12ha,
identified by some authors with Zikideva mentioned by Procopius and Theophilact Simocatta,
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
but also by the Notitia Episcopatuum)46. If most cities in Moesia Secunda started as Greek or
Early Roman towns, Abrittus (Razgrad) was a new city founded in the 4thc., which covered an
area of almost 12ha. There is no information on Appiaria (Rjahovo). Sexaginta Prista (Ruse),
which is mentioned as a bishopric, also seems to have enjoyed city status, as did the centers at
Vojvoda (10ha, identified by some with the Diniskarta mentioned by Procopius and the 11thc.
Dineia) and Kovaevec (5.2ha)47.
SCYTHIA. The provinces southern limit, on the border with Moesia Secunda, passed
east of the Marcianopolis Durostorum road and was recently mapped with a high degree of
accuracy by S.Torbatov. It started at Lake Oltina, followed a north-south trajectory on the Suha
Reka Valley, then turned on an east-west trajectory through the valley of the Batovska Reka (the
ancient Zyras) until it reached the Black Sea north of Kranevo48.
The number of cities mentioned by Hierocles in this province is surprisingly high
(15) and can be compared to the situation in province Europa. These are Tomis, Dionysopolis,
Akrai, Callatis, Istros, Constantiana, Zaldapa, Tropaion, Axiopolis, Capidava, Karsos, Troesmis,
Noviodunum, Aegyssus and Halmyris. The presence of such a high number of cities is clearly
connected to the changes in the ecclesiastic organization of province Scythia. When Tomis was
promoted from the only bishopric accepted in the province to a metropolitan centre, all the
cities subordinated to it became bishoprics themselves49. From an archaeological point of view
the cities on the coastline developed in different manners: if Tomis (approx. 6070 ha) and
Callatis (10ha known at the present moment, but a significant area of the city is submerged)
reached a high degree of urban development, the fortified area at Histria was reduced to only
7ha during the Late Roman period, apart from which there also existed a more extensive extra
muros dwelling area during the 6thc. Dionysopolis (Balik) was a prosperous city in the 4th
5thc., but the old Hellenistic urban area was devastated by an earthquake. During the reign of
Anastasius or Justinian a new city was built on another location (approx. 15ha). Another city
on the coastline was Acrae (Kaliakra), which had in the 4th 5thc. a fortified area of approx.
25ha. There is little information on the urban characteristics of the cities on the Danubian
limes, with the exception of Capidava and Halmyris, where archaeological excavations have
revealed good quality buildings and Christian basilicas. Three important cities were located on
the provinces central road: Zaldapa (Abrit, covering over 25ha), Tropaeum Traiani (9ha) and
Ibida (Slava Rus), which was not mentioned by Hierocles, but whose surface of 24ha places it
among the large cities in the province and justifies the term polis used by Procopius (De aedif.
IV, 7, 19). Constantiana could very well be located on the coastline, either at Cape Doloman
(ancient Argamum) or at Enisala50.
THRACE. The northern border with Moesia Secunda followed the peaks of the Balkans
and to the west it bordered Dacia Mediterranea on an approximately NE-SW trajectory through
the Trajanova Vrata (the Suki Pass). The southern border with province Rhodope followed the
46
47
48
49
50
DINEV 1997 b (with bibliographical references). A new hypothesis on the location of this city was launched
by S.Olteanu, who supports the identification of Zikideva with the fortress at Kovaevec (OLTEANU 2007,
68f.).
VELKOV 1977, 99f.; DINEV 1999, 42, 47f. (with references). The limited excavations at Vojvoda did
not bring any proof for the settlements urban status. At Kovaevec (Zikideva?) the research is still in its initial
phase.
TORBATOV 2000 b, 70f., fig.7; TORBATOV 2002, 1421, fig.1. For an older attempt to map the border
see VULPE 1972.
POPESCU 1969.
For the urban development in the province Scythia see VELKOV 1977, 107f.; Al. Barnea, in SUCEVEANU,
BARNEA 1991, 178f.; DINEV 1999, 42f.; TORBATOV 2002, 86f.; ZAHARIADE 2006, 61f.
19
peaks of the Rhodope Mountains. To the east the border with Haemimontus passed somewhere
west of the river Tonzos (Tunda)51.
Hierocles mentioned that it was governed by a consularis and had five cities: Philippopolis,
Beroe, Diocletianopolis, Sebastopolis and Diospolis52. The capital Philippopolis (Plovdiv) reached a
new degree of development during the Late Roman and Early Byzantine period, with an urban
area estimated at approx. 80ha and a population of approx. 100,000. Beroe/Augusta Traiana
(Stara Zagora) was still defended by the wall built during the reign of Marcus Aurelius, which
enclosed a surface of 48.5 ha. As the name shows, Diocletianopolis (Hisarja) was a new city
built at the end of the 3rd beginning of the 4thc. Archaeological excavations have delimited a
fortified area of approx. 30ha, with many public and private buildings. We cannot say much
about Sebastopolis and Diospolis, the other cities mentioned by Hierocles, as they have not been
identified yet. A smaller town must have existed at Simeonovgrad (known in medieval sources
as Constantia), whose fortified area covered 5 ha53.
HAEMIMONTUS.The province was made up of the eastern territories of historical
Thrace, down to the Black Sea. To the north it bordered Moesia Secunda (see above) and the
western border with Thrace lay somewhere west of the river Tunda. To the south-west the
province ended with the territories of Hadrianopolis and Plotinopolis and the southern border
with province Europa is supposed to have followed the river Ekrene, north of the cities Bergule
and Bizye and down to the Black Sea coast54.
Hierocles mentions in the province the cities of Hadrianopolis, Anchialos, Debeltos,
Plotinopolis and Tzoides at the beginning of the 6th c.55. From an archaeological point of
view there is no sufficient data on large cities such as Hadrianopolis (Edirne) and Anchialos
(Pomorje), but their importance is made clear by ancient sources. There is no sufficient data on
Plotinopolis (Didymoteichon) either, a city founded by Trajan and restored by Justinian. Among
the provinces smaller towns, Debeltos (the former Roman colony of Deultum) was in decline,
its fortified area being reduced to only 56ha in the 4thc. Tzoides (Sliven) was a city newly
built at the beginning of the 4thc., which covered an area of 4.5ha. Mesambria (Nesebr) and
Sozopolis (former Apollonia, Sozopol) were not mentioned by Hierocles, but there is enough
data to attest their urban character at least in the 6thc. Both coastline towns covered an area
estimated at approx. 25 ha56.
RHODOPE. The province was made up by the southern slopes of the Rhodope
Mountains and the northern coast of the Aegean Sea. To the west it bordered Macedonia on
the river Nestos (Mesta), to the east it contained the lower course of the river Hebros (Marica)
and bordered both Haemimontus, as well as Europa just east of the city of Ainos.
From Hierocles we learn that Rhodope had six cities: Ainos, Maximianopolis, Traianopolis,
Maroneia, Topeiros, Nicopolis and Kereopyrgos57. Apart from those, ancient sources mention
Abdera (Ammianus Marcellinus) and Anastasiopolis (Procopius). The province included old
Greek cities on the Aegean coast, such as Ainos, Abdera and Maroneia, Early Roman imperial
foundations Topeiros (Paradeisos), Traianopolis (Loutros) and Nicopolis ad Nestum (Goce
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
Delev), but also new cities such as Maximianopolis (founded during the Tetrarchy over the
former Porsulae, located at Komotini) and Anastasiopolis (Amaxades, founded at the beginning
of the 6th c.). The archaeological research of this provinces urban centres is still at its beginnings.
The best known sites are the fortified area at Nicopolis ad Nestum (11ha), then Maroneia (19ha
during the Late Roman period) and Traianopolis (over 20ha)58.
EUROPA. The province covered the south-eastern part of historical Thrace down to the
Sea of Marmara, including the Thracian Chersonesos.
Hierocles mentions no less than 14 cities in the province at the beginning of the 6thc.,
which makes it one of the best urbanized in the diocese of Thrace: Eudoxiopolis (the new
name of Selymbria), Heraclea (former Perinthos), Arcadiopolis (former Bergule), Bizye, Panion
(re-baptized Theodosiopolis), Hormoi, Ganos, Gallipolis, Merizos, Siltike, Sanadia, Aphrodisias,
Apros (the old Roman colony Apri) and Koila59. As in the case of Rhodope, there is no sufficient
archaeological data to illustrate this extraordinary urban development. The best known sites are
Eudoxiopolis/Selymbria (Silivri, approx. 12ha) and Bizye (Vize, approx. 7ha)60. Remarkably, in
Europa unlike in other provinces a massive urbanization effort is attested during the first
decades of the 5thc., during the reigns of Arcadius and Theodosius II61.
2. M ILITARY
ORGANIZATION
he army of the two dioceses was commanded by a magister militum per Thracias and a
magister militum per Illyricum respectively, both with the rank of vir illustris. They had
the supreme command over the comitatenses and the duces of the border provinces. Before
the creation of this position (at the end of the 4th c.) it seems that, at least for the diocese of
Thrace, the army was commanded by a comes rei militaris per Thracias, also mentioned by
Ammianus Marcellinus. In the 4thc. Notitia Dignitatum mentions three permanent bases for
mobile units: cohors IV Gallorum at Ulucitra (in province Rhodope), cohors I Aureliana at Sub
RadiceViamata and cohors III Valeria Bracarum at Drasdea (province Thracia). Most probably
these units reflect the early organization of the mobile army during the reign of Diocletian
and were commanded by the comes per Thracias62. The comitatenses63 were spread in all the
cities and forts inside the provinces, including those on the Black Sea coast. Epigraphic sources
attest garrisons at Anchialos (vexillatione equitum Dalmatarum comitatensium Anchialitana),
Odessos (Constantini seniores), Tomis (cuneus Dalmatarum?, sagittarii iuniores), Histria (vexillatio catafractariorum) and Ulmetum (lanciarii iuniores)64.
In the diocese Dacia Notitia Dignitatum mentions units of pseudocomitatenses Scupenses,
Ulpianenses and Merenses65 under the command of the magister militum per Illyricum, which
indicates the three cities as the place of origin for the units.
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
VELKOV 1977, 124f.; DINEV 1999, 4850, 52 (with references). Anastasiopolis seems to be the successor
of the old roadside station Stabulum Diomedis on the Via Egnatia (PANTOS 1983, 176177).
Hierocles, Synecd. 631, 4b 634,3. For their location see VELKOV 1977, 119f.
DINEV 1999, 51, 54 (with references).
CROW 2002, 346.
NDOr XL, 4449. Cf. VELKOV 1977, 6970; ZAHARIADE 1988, 42, 44.
The creation of the mobile army started during the Licinius/Constantine period (313324), but got well
under way especially after 324. See BERCHEM 1952, 75f.; ZAHARIADE 2006, 167.
Most are mentioned in Notitia Dignitatum as subordinated to the commander of Thrace, or among the
Palatine legions. Cf. VELKOV 1977, 6768; ARICESCU 1977, 121125; ZAHARIADE 1988, 95.
NDOr. IX, 4244. Cf. JOVANOVI 2003, 2326.
21
A dux commanded the border army in each of the four Danubian provinces66. They
initially held the rank of vir perfectissimus, but during the 4thc. and at the beginning of the 5thc.
they were promoted to the rank of vir clarissimus and then vir spectabilis67. The first known dux
is that of province Scythia, Aurelius Firminianus, mentioned by an inscription from Tomis
dated by most specialists during the first Tetrarchy (293305)68. Other names mentioned by
ancient sources are Latronianus (293), Valerius Romulus (322323), Sappo (337340), Flavius
Stercorius (369), Iunius Soranus (373374), probably Gerontios (386) and Flavius Servandus
(beginning of the 5thc., mentioned with the title komes kai archon)69. In Moesia Secunda only
Fortunius is attested with certainty (4th or 5th c.)70, and only Tautomedes (366)71 is mentioned
in Dacia Ripensis.
Two legions were stationed in each province: IV Flavia (Singidunum) and VII Claudia
(Viminacium) in Moesia Prima, XIII Gemina (Ratiaria) and V Macedonica (Ratiaria) in
Dacia Ripensis, I Italica (Novae) and XI Claudia (Durostorum) in Moesia Secunda, I Iovia
(Noviodunum) and II Herculia (Troesmis) in Scythia.
Many auxiliary units were stationed in forts along the limes. Notitia Dignitatum presents
a clear picture of their distribution at the end of the 4th beginning of the 5thc.
Thus, in Moesia Prima72, apart from the two legions stationed at Singidunum and
Viminacium, the most important auxiliary forts were, from the west eastwards: Tricornium
(Ritopek), Aureus Mons (Seona), Margum (Kuli), Contra Margum/Castra Augustoflavianensis
(Kuvin), Lederata (Ram), Pincum (Veliko Grdite), Cuppae (Golubac), Novae (ezava) and
Taliata (Donji Milanovac). All auxiliary units were recruited locally, as shown by their names:
auxiliares Reginenses, auxiliares Tricornienses, auxiliares Novenses, auxilium Margense, auxilium
Cuppense, auxilium Gratianense, auxilium Taliatense, auxilium Aureomontanum. The cavalry
units were the cuneus equitum Dalmatarum (at Aureus Mons, Pincum and Cuppae), cuneus
equitum sagittariorum (at Tricornium and Lederata), cuneus equitum promotorum (at Flaviana
and Viminacium), cuneus equitum Constantacorum (at Pincum). An important role was played
by the Danubian fleet that had bases at Margum (praefectus classis Stradensis et Germensis) and
Viminacium (praefectus classis Histricae).
The limes of Dacia Ripensis73 was defended by the two legions brought from Dacia:
legio XIII Gemina (at Ratiaria) and legio V Macedonica (at Oescus), whose detachments were
stationed, along with many auxiliary units, in a series of forts and fortresses. There are (from
the west eastwards): Translucus (Hajduka Vodenica?), Dierna (Orova), Transdierna (Tekija),
Transdrobeta (Kostol), Aegeta (Brza Palanka), Dorticum (Vrv), Bononia (Vidin), Almus (Lom),
Cebrus (Gorni Cibr), Augustae (Hrlec), Variana (Leskovec), Utus (Milkovica), but also several
unidentified ones, such as Burgonovo, Crispitia, Transalba and Siosta. Detachments of the legio XIII
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
There is a theory that during the Tetrarchy Moesia Secunda and Scythia formed a single unit (covering the
territory of the former Moesia Inferior) commanded by a dux that also controlled the northern territories of
the Black Sea (SARNOWSKI 1990, 859).
ZAHARIADE 1988, 4647.
CIL III, 764 = ILS, 4103 = IGLR, 2. Recently ZUCKERMAN 2002, 636 proposed to date this famous
inscription to a later period (Augusti Galerius and Licinius, Caesares Constantine and Maximinus, more
precisely the years 308310). LEWIN 2004, 229 also has a different interpretation of CIL III, 14450 = IGLR,
3, traditionally attributed to the same dux (see below, p. 3334).
ZAHARIADE 1988, 4244.
ZAHARIADE 1988, 44.
CTh, XV, 1, 13; VETTERS 1950, 26; VELKOV 1977, 66.
NDOr. XLI.
NDOr. XLII. Cf. IVANOV R.1997, 520.
22
Gemina were also stationed at Dierna, Transdrobeta, Aegeta and Burgonovo, and of the legio V
Macedonica at Sucidava, Variniana and Cebrus. The most important cavalry units were the cuneus
equitum Dalmatarum Divitensium (at Drobeta and Dorticum), cuneus equitum Dalmatarum
Fortensium (at Bononia), cuneus equitum Dalmatarum (at Augustae and Variana), cuneus equitum
scutariorum (at Aegeta and Cebrus) and cuneus equitum stablesianorum (at Almus). There are
several auxiliary units recruited locally: auxilium primorum Daciscorum (Drobeta), auxilium
secundorum Daciscorum (Burgonovo) and auxilium Crispitiense (Crispitia). The Danubian fleet
was made of the classis Histrica (at Aegeta) and the classis Ratiarensis (at Ratiaria).
In Moesia Secunda74 the limes sectors were divided among the legions at Novae and
Durostorum, each stationed in two bases: legio I Italica at Novae and Sexaginta Prista, legio XI
Claudia at Durostorum and Transmarisca. Auxiliary units were stationed in the following forts
(from the west eastwards): Ansamus (erkovica), Securisca (Bjala Voda), Dimum (Belene), Iatrus
(Krivina), Trimammium (Meka-Stlpite), Mediolana, Sexaginta Prista (Ruse), Tegra (Marten),
Appiaria (Rjahovo), Transmarisca (Tutrakan), Candidiana (Malk Preslavec), Tegulicium
(Vetren), Durostorum (Silistra), Cimbriana (Gura Canliei), Altinum (Oltina) and Sucidava
(Izvoarele). Their local origin is illustrated by names of units like milites Dacisci (at Mediolana),
milites Novenses (at Transmarisca), milites primi Moesiaci (at Candidiana), milites Moesiaci (at
Tegulicium), milites Cimbriani (at Cimbriana), milites nauclarii Altinenses (at Altinum). Among
the cavalry units we remark those based both in Moesia Secunda and in Scythia: cuneus equitum
scutariorum (Securisca and Iatrus, but also at Sacidava), cuneus equitum armigerorum (at
Sexaginta Prista, but also at Aegyssus), cuneus equitum Solensium (at Dimum and at Capidava),
cuneus equitum stablesianorum (at Sucidava, but also at Cius and Beroe).
The defense of the Scythian limes75 was entrusted to the two legions created by
Diocletian. According to the Notitia Dignitatum, they were each stationed in two bases: legio
I Iovia at Noviodunum and Aegyssus, and legio II Herculia at Troesmis and Axiopolis. The
auxiliary units of the Scythian limes were cunei and milites stationed in the forts at Sacidava
(Muzait), Flaviana (Rasova), Axiopolis (Cernavod), Capidava (Capidava), Carsium (Hrova),
Cius (Grliciu), Beroe (Piatra Frecei), Troesmis (Iglia), Arrubium (Mcin), Dinogetia (Garvn),
Noviodunum (Isaccea), Aegyssus (Tulcea), Salsovia (Mahmudia), Talamonium (= Halmyris,
Murighiol) and Gratiana (Dunavu de Jos?). Among these units we remark those created
by the successors of Constantine (milites primi Constantiani at Noviodunum, milites secundi
Constantiani at Troesmis, milites quinti Constantiani at Salsovia)76; others were created later
(milites primi Gratianenses at Gratiana, cuneus equitum Arcadum at Talamonium). There are
also locally recruited milites Scythici at Carsium and Dinogetia, and specialized units like milites
nauclarii at Flaviana and milites superventores at Axiopolis.
Stamped bricks are an important source for understanding the chronology and structure
of the defensive system on the limes. T. Sarnowski has undertaken a systematic analysis of the
stamped bricks in provinces Dacia Ripensis and Moesia Secunda, for which he distinguished
four main chronological stages77:
- Diocletian/Tetrarchy (284311): the classic production of stamped bricks continued
(LEGXIIIGEM, LEGXIIIG, LEGIITAL, LEGXICL) with slight innovations in the case of
legio V Macedonica, whose stamps mention a specific cohort (LEGVMCII, LEGVMCIII,
LEGVMCIIII etc.)78;
74
75
76
77
78
- Constantine (311337): the stamps clearly mention the division of detachments among
different bases, usually along with the name of the fort they were produced in (LXIIIGPSLEG,
LEGXIIIGRAT, LEGVMOES, LVMVAR, PRLVMOES, PRLVMVTO, PRLVMVAL,
LEPIFIGVCRTV, LEPIFICOR, IITALFICOR, LEGXICL/FIGKAS, LEGXICLFTRM,
LEGXICLCAND etc.)79;
- Constans/Constantius II (337361): in Dacia Ripensis there are still legionary stamps
that mention the name of the base (PPRIP, PROES, PRVAR), but most of them simply
mention the fort they came from (DIERNA, DRVBETA, AQVIS, DIERTRA, AVGVSTISFO,
ALM, BON, DIANA, OESCO, VARINIA, VTO, CEBR), as the latter were also produced by
auxiliary units;
- Valentinian I/Valens (364378): on the stamps in Dacia Ripensis appears the abbreviation of the provinces name (DARAQVIS, DRP/AQVIS, DARPAST, DARDIANA,
DRPDRVB, DRPDIERNA, DRDI etc.), and in Moesia Secunda were recorded the
RVMORID80 stamps.
An important role in the military organization of the Danubian provinces was played
by the fleet. When the provinces were reformed at an administrative and military level, it is
highly probable that the great Early Roman naval unit that defended this area the classis
Flavia Moesica was also reorganized. For each sector of the limes separate units were formed.
The most important bases of the Danubian fleet, as mentioned by the Notitia Dignitatum,
were in Moesia Prima at Viminacium (praefectus classis Histricae) and Margum (praefectus classis
Stradensis et Germensis), in Dacia Ripensis at Aegeta (praefectus classis Histricae) and Ratiaria
(praefectus classis Ratiarensis), in Moesia Secunda at Appiaria (milites tertii nauclarii) and Altinum
(milites nauclarii), and in Scythia at Flaviana (milites nauclarii) and Plateypegiis(?) (praefectus
musculorum Scythicorum et classis inplateypegiis)81.
79
80
81
For the repartition of legions in Moesia Prima in different bases see DUANI M. 1976, 275283; DUANI
M. 1978, 343345.
Probably from Flavius Rumoridus, magister militum per Thracias during the reign of Theodosius I (year 384)
and consul in 403. According to T. Sarnowski, he was the dux of Moesia Secunda at the beginning of his
career, more precisely during the reign of Valens; at the same time Tautomedes commanded in Dacia Ripensis
and Flavius Stercorius in Scythia and all of them were entrusted with the task of restoring the Danubian limes
(SARNOWSKI 1985, 125f.). The RVMORID stamp also appears in Scythia, at Cius (ISM V, 125).
ZAHARIADE 1988, 8891; BOUNEGRU, ZAHARIADE 1996, 22 f.; IVANOV R. 1997, 529;
ZAHARIADE 2006, 175176.
24
III
1. R OADS
ntil the present moment there is no updated synthesis on the Roman roads in the Balkan
provinces. Most works that treat different aspects of the history of these provinces do not
present a clear roadmap and in many cases the roads are drawn in an arbitrary manner on maps,
confusing anyone who wants to use these maps for other studies1. This is why such a synthesis
should take into account all available sources. Apart from ancient itineraries, milestones and
other epigraphic sources like the ones attesting beneficiarii, archaeological discoveries are
also extremely important, from classic roadside stations (praetoria, mansiones, mutationes and
tabernae) to larger or smaller fortifications that were usually built along the roads. Also, such
a study should be based on each areas geographic characteristics2, as well as on field surveys or
aerophotogrammetry.
The road network developed over time in the Balkan provinces following the ancient
natural roads used by the local populations, as well as the roads used by the Greek colonists along
the coasts of the Aegean, Adriatic and Black Sea. Roman military roads were built gradually,
after the provinces were established, and became the main axes of this road system. Apart from
these, during the 2nd 3rdc. other main roads developed, whose structure is very well described
in ancient itineraries. In the 4thc., and later as well, a series of changes occur in the axes of
communication, due especially to the changes in military organization and the increase in the
number of fortifications (bases for the mobile units, supply centres, roadside fortifications,
etc.), but also to the development of new urban centres or imperial residences. These changes
increase the importance of certain roads which had been secondary until then.
To have a general picture of the road network in the dioceses of Thrace and Dacia we
will try to organise the available data, taking into consideration what we have mentioned above.
Based on this information we distinguish four road categories:
1. The Danube road and Trans-Balkan strategic roads (viae militares3);
2. Coastline roads;
1
We will see that establishing the exact trajectory of Roman roads helps determine the exact character of certain
Late Roman-Early Byzantine minor fortifications.
Very instructive from this point of view is the work by Ivan Mikuli regarding the fortifications in the Former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, where the trajectory of the communication routes also takes into account
this important aspect (MIKULI 2002, 30f.).
Cf. AEL 1977, 253254.
25
3. Interprovincial roads;
4. Provincial and regional roads (semitae).
The Danube road follows the Empires frontier between Singidunum and the mouths of
the Danube. Its construction in the Moesian sector, beginning at Singidunum, started as early
as Tiberius reign4 and continued in time towards the mouth of the Danube, advancing as new
Roman garrisons were established in this area. Ancient itineraries mention the most important
forts and fortresses on this road, as well as several road stations (Singidunum Aureus Mons
Margum Viminacium Pincum Cuppae Novae Ad Scrofulas Taliata Gerulata Una
Egeta Clevora Aquae Dorticum Ad Malum Bononia Ratiaria Remetodia Almus
Pomodiana Cebrus Augustae Variana Pedoniana Valeriana Oescus Utus Ansamus
Securisca Dimum Novae Iatrus Scaidava Trimammium Sexaginta Prista Tigra
Appiaria Transmarisca Candidiana/Nigrinianis Tegulicium Durostorum Sacidava
Altina Sucidava Axiopolis Capidava Carsium Cius Beroe Troesmis Arrubium
Dinogetia Noviodunum Aegyssus Salsovia Halmyris Ad Stoma). The maintenance of the
Danube road was a constant worry for the emperors of the Late Empire, especially during the
Tetrarchy and the reign of Constantine5 but also later, under Anastasius and Justinian, when
many of the old fortifications were restored and new ones were built6.
The first category also includes the two great Trans-Balkan roads mentioned in most
of the ancient sources concerning this field, as they practically represented bridges between the
Empires eastern and western areas. The oldest is Via Egnatia, built as early as the 2ndc. B.C. in
order to significantly shorten the distance between Italy and the eastern provinces. The itineraries and milestones discovered along its trajectory prove the high degree of attention paid by
4thc. emperors to its maintenance7. Its starting point was on the Adriatic coast, at Dyrrachium
or Apollonia, then it passed through Epirus Nova and Macedonia on the following itinerary:
Clodiana Ad Quintum Scampa (Elbasan)8 Treiecto Ad Dianam Candavia Tres Tabernas
Pons Servili Claudanon Patras Lychnidus (Ohrid) Scirtiana Castra Nicaea (Dolenci)9
Heraclea Lyncestis (Bitola) Cellis Edessa Pella (renamed Diocletianopolis) Thessalonica
Mellisurgin Apollonia Amphipolis Domeros Ad Duodecimum Philippi Neapolis
Acontisma, then crossed the river Nestos into the diocese of Thrace, passing through Topeiros
Cosintus Stabulum Diomedis (Amaxades)10 Porsulae (renamed Maximianopolis) Tempyra
Traianopolis Ainos Dymai Cypsela (the terminus of the old road11) Syracella Apri
Rhaedestos Perinthos (renamed Heraclea).
The central Trans-Balkan road, that connected the Middle Danube area to Constantinople,
is the most important to the history of these provinces during the 4th 6thc. On this artery, vital to
the imperial authority (in the Byzantine sources it appears as imperial road: ),
which started in Viminacium and passed through the most important towns in the Balkans
(Naissus, Serdica, Philippopolis and Hadrianopolis), ancient itineraries mention 62 stations (many
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
13
14
15
16
HOLLENSTEIN 1975, passim. Cf. BEEVLIEV 1969; VELKOV 1977, 192193; SPEIDEL 1984; VASI,
MILOEVI 2000, 129f.
Among those that have been excavated we mention Mansio Municipio Kalite, Iovis Pagus Velike Laole,
Idimum Medvedja (VASI, MILOEVI 2000, 140 f., see also Gazetteer no. 63), as well as Stenes
Trajanova Vrata (Gazetteer no. 86).
MIJOVI, KOVAEVI 1975, 48f., fig.1.
HOLLENSTEIN 1975, passim; BARNEA Al. 1997, 32; BRBULESCU, CTEIA 1997; TORBATOV
2004b, 88, 94 (who notices that certain segments of the road are built at considerable distance from the
coastline). Cf. SUCEVEANU 1992, 196, fig.1; SOUSTAL 1992, 59f.
Section Lissus-Naissus: PETROVI V. 2008. Section Naissus-Ratiaria: POPOVI V. 1974 and PETROVI,
FILIPOVI 2007.
27
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
Traditionally identified with the modern town Knjaevac, but see recently new arguments for the location of
Timacum Maius at Nievac-Svrljig (PETROVI, FILIPOVI 2007, 3540).
Auxiliary Roman fort, rebuilt during the Late Empire (PETROVI P. 1986).
Inscription that mentions this road, dated to 367375 (A 19691970, 570 = ILB, 187). Cf. HOLLENSTEIN
1975, 40, no. 81.
VELKOV 1977, 195. For omakovci = Castra Martis, see above, p. 16.
MIRKOVI 1960 (who proposes a trajectory deviated from the Upper Morava river, through Ulpiana);
MIRKOVI 1980; GEORGIEVSKI 19901991; MIKULI 2002, 3336, 41.
PAPAZOGLU 1988, carte 20.
Roman auxiliary fort (cohors II Lucensium), which received town status in Late Roman period, see VELKOV
1977, 97.
AVRAMOV 1914; TSONTCHEV 1959; MADAROV M. 1986; MADAROV M. 1990; MADAROV
M. 2004; HRISTOV et al. 2004.
Viamata is not mentioned in the Tabula Peutingeriana, but does appear, along with Sub Radice in NDOr. XL,
48, as headquarters of the cohors I Aureliana. Somewhere at mid-distance between Philippopolis and Viamata,
near the modern village ernozem (where a roadside station has been identified) another short road branch
started westwards, connecting this road to the new city Diocletianopolis (Hisarja).
Roman fort built during the reign of Antoninus Pius, headquarters of the cohors II Mattiacorum, completely
rebuilt at the end of the 3rdc. (HRISTOV et al. 2003; HRISTOV 2006).
MADAROV M. 1988.
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
Milestones dating from the reign of Hadrian (IGB I2, 384, Izvorite), Constantine (SSIB, 200, Korten) or
from an undetermined period (IGB III/2, 1651, Kiril-Metodievo). Cf. HOLLENSTEIN 1975. For recent
research on the Augusta Traiana Cabyle sector see SIRAKOV 2007.
Gazetteer, no. 97.
VELKOV, LISICOV 1994.
BIERNACKA-LUBANSKA 1982, 239, fig.74.
TORBATOV 2004 b, 90, 95; WENDEL 2006, Abb. 1.
V. Vladimirov, ArhSofia 5, 1963, 1, 3334. Cf. HOLLENSTEIN 1975, 40, no. 81.
Gazetteer, no. 72.
Gazetteer, no. 100.
OVAROV T. 1978.
IGB III/2, 1835. Cf. HOLLENSTEIN 1975, 37, no. 55.
Cf. WENDEL 2006, 452, Abb.1. For the Early Byzantine and Mediaeval fortress (Markeli) in Karnobat see
TEREVA, ALADOV 2000, 294298; ALADOV et al. 2006.
VELKOV 1977, 195; WENDEL 2006.
TORBATOV 2000 a.
29
bases for the forts along the limes, we believe that such a road, which connected the provinces
Dacia Ripensis and Moesia Secunda on a trajectory parallel to the Danube frontier, seems to have
started at Ratiaria, following the direction Montana Tlaene41 omakovci (Castra Martis?)
Storgosia (or Melta) Nicopolis ad Istrum Kovaevec (Zikideva?) Abrittus Palmatae. From
there it connected to the central Scythian road (Zaldapa Tropaeum Noviodunum). We must
notice that this road practically a belt of large inner fortifications representing important bases
for the comitatenses units intersected all the important roads with N-S orientation: Naissus
Ratiaria, Serdica Oescus, Philippopolis Oescus, Augusta Traiana Novae, Marcianopolis
Sexaginta Prista, Marcianopolis Durostorum.
The Marcianopolis Zaldapa Tropaeum Traiani Ulmetum Ibida Noviodunum
road became highly important during the Late Roman Early Byzantine period42. We do not
know the exact trajectory of this road, but based on the discovery of milestones and of certain
fortifications we can propose the following succession: Devnja (Marcianopolis) Kipra43
Novo Botevo44 Paskalevo45 Abrit (Zaldapa) Cetatea (Civitas Ausdecensium?)46 Adamclisi
(Tropaeum Traiani) Mircea Vod47 (or Medgidia) Dorobanu48 Pantelimonul de Sus
(Ulmetum) Rmnicu de Jos49 Sarighiol de Deal50 Camena (vicus Petra) Slava Rus (Ibida)
Mihai Bravu51 Izvoarele52 Niculiel Isaccea (Noviodunum).
Provincial and regional roads (semitae) ensured quick connections between different
locations, some gaining strategic importance in time. Here is a succinct table of the most
important provincial roads:
Moesia Prima:
- Praesidium Dasmini Kraljevo (formerly Municipium Celegerorum) and on towards the
border with Dalmatia53;
- Pincum Kraku lu Jordan Majdanpek (along the valley of the Pek River, a rich mining
area)54.
Dacia Ripensis:
- Timacum Minus Aquae (along the valley of the Timok River), a road connecting the
inner military road to the limes;
- Bononia Kula Gamzigrad (Romuliana), probably leading to Horreum Margi (a highly
important road starting with the Tetrarchic period);
- Montana Augustae (along the valley of the Ogosta River), connecting the mining area
to the limes.
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
Dacia Mediterranea:
- Pautalia Germania on the border with Thrace, making the connection with the central
road;
- Naissus Leskovac Cariin Grad (Iustiniana Prima), which was especially important
during the reign of Justinian.
Dardania:
- Ulpiana Soanica Ras55 the border with Dalmatia (a densely populated area, with
numerous fortified settlements);
- Scupi Pautalia (fortifications along the road)56.
Moesia Secunda:
- Melta Nicopolis ad Istrum Trgovite umen Madara Marcianopolis (road
mentioned in the Tabula Peutingeriana) and on towards Odessos;
- Sexaginta Prista Abrittus Vojvoda Marcianopolis, which connects an important
fluvial base to the capital of the province57.
Scythia:
- Tomis Straja58 Miritea59 Plopeni60 Zaldapa;
- Tropaeum Traiani Plopeni Callatis;
- Tomis Poiana61 Castelu62 Mircea Vod63 Axiopolis (along the Carasu valley);
- Histria Ulmetum Capidava;
- Tomis Mihail Koglniceanu64 Ulmetum Carsium;
- Enisala (Constantiana?) Babadag-Topraichioi65 Mihai Bravu66 Izvoarele Horia67
Cerna68 Troesmis (along the valley of the Taia River);
- Ibida Babadag-Topraichioi Cataloi Aegyssus (at least in the 6thc. it was a variant
to the central Dobrudjan road, as reflected in Procopius, De aedif. IV, 7, 1920);
- Troesmis Nifon69 Noviodunum.
Thrace:
- Philippopolis Nicopolis ad Nestum, as proven by a milestone70;
- Constantia (Simeonovgrad) Tuida (Sliven), marked by a series of fortifications sunch
as those in Znamenosec, Gipsovo, Djadovo, Asenovec71.
Haemimontus:
- Anchialos Ostudizo, mentioned in the itineraries and connected to the imperial TransBalkan road.
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
Europa:
- Apri Aphrodisias Gallipolis Sestos (road across the Thracian Chersonesos).
If we consider the chronology of late Roman milestones we can identify five periods of
especially intense road construction and repairs72. These correspond to the Tetrarchic period
(293305), the reigns of Licinius/Constantine (308323), of Constantine and his successors
(323340), of Valentinian I, Valens and Gratian (367375), as well as that of Theodosius I
(383392). These periods coincide with the times when fortifications were also built or restored.
2. F ORTIFICATIONS
2.1. A new beginning: Post-Gothic reconstructions (second half of the 3rd c.)
he results of the frequent barbarian attacks at the middle of the 3rd c. were felt
throughout the Balkan Peninsula. A great number of settlements, military or civilian,
cities or villages, were destroyed and turned into ruins. The proportions of the disaster are
clearly shown by the famous text in the Historia Augusta, which mentions the excidium
Histriae, but also by the disappearance of the Roman provincial coins or the desertion of
certain monumental sculpture workshops in Tomis and Odessos73. It is clear that the defence
walls of cities and forts sustained heavy damage, which the emperors in the second half of
the 3rdc. tried to remedy.
The first repairs are mentioned during the reign of Gallienus. It is the case of the inscriptions at Philippopolis74 and Serdica75 regarding the repair of the defence walls during the reign
of Gallienus (more exactly between 260268). To the same reign are dated two inscriptions in
Montana that attest either the construction of surveillance points (256)76, or the construction
a fundamentis of the gates and towers of the fortification by the cohors III Collecta (in 258)77. It
is also noteworthy to mention a text from Historia Augusta, which states that Gallienus charged
the commanders Cleodamos and Athenaios, both from Byzantium, with the reconstruction of
the cities destroyed by the attacks of the Goths come on the sea78. An inscription from Oescus
referring to the eastern gate (porta Utensis)79 can also be connected with the defence wall repairs
during this period.
During the reigns of Aurelian and Probus, repairs are attested regarding certain defence
walls (Sucidava-Celei, Tomis), especially by archaeological data. Some authors give a certain
interpretation (as a Bauinschrift) to the inscription in Durostorum that mentions the emperors
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
victory against the Carpi, which might connect it to the repairs of the fort of the legio XI
Claudia80. Another inscription, from Callatis, could also be connected to the restoration of this
city during the reign of Aurelian81.
In these inscriptions one can notice the emphasis laid on the rebuilding of civilian
settlements rather than military fortifications, which is in fact also true of other provinces in
the Empire82. In my opinion this observation demonstrates a continuity of most legionary and
auxiliary forts, without essential changes in the appearance of the defence walls. We must not
omit the fact that military roads were constantly maintained during this period, as proven by
the milestones dated to the reign of Decius (249251, discovered at Sinoe and Rasova) and
Gallienus (from Carsium, 255258), therefore it is possible that the forts on the limes were
equally well maintained (as they may have been less damaged). Anyway, the answer to this
problem should be provided by archaeological research, still insufficient as far as the given
period of time is concerned.
2.2. From Diocletian to the reigns of Valentinian I/Valens (284378)
Diocletians new empire is marked from the beginning by an unprecedented construction
effort, tied to the military and administrative reforms implemented in this period. Ancient
authors, such as Lactantius, write about the emperors unlimited passion for constructions.
The same author also mentions that the provinces were compelled to provide manpower, technicians and technical means to sustain this effort83. Special attention was paid to the frontiers
by Diocletian and the Tetrarchs in general, and this is evident in certain texts by Eumenes,
Eunapios and Zosimos84.
The reconstruction effort during the first Tetrarchy is well described by five almost
identical inscriptions, discovered in five key places on the Danube limes: Donje Butorke (dated
294300)85, Sexaginta Prista (298301)86, Transmarisca (297)87, Durostorum (post 297)88 and
Halmyris (301305)89. One cannot exclude the inscription in Seimeni from this category90.
As has already been affirmed91, this is probably a standard text of the imperial chancellery (pro
futurum in aeterno rei publicae praesidium constituerunt), applied to each location according to
the year the construction was finished.
As far as urban restorations are concerned, the inscription in Tomis referring to the porta
praesidaria is equally well-known, dated approximately to 285292 (IGLR, 3). The traditional
view is that this inscription mentions the same Aurelius Firminianus, dux limitis provinciae
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
CIL III, 12456: [quot] Imperator Aurelianus [reginam Ze]nobiam inviso[sque tyrranos et Carpos inter Ca]
rsium et Sucid[avam delevit]. Cf. R.Vulpe, in DID II, 273274; IVANOV R.1997, 588, n. 446.
CIL III, 7586 = ISM III, 96 (year 274, with the mention of a praeses provinciae).
REDD 2004, 159160. The large towns inside the province suffered the most (such as Philippopolis in
250251), as well as those on the West-pontic shore (especially as a consequence of the seaborne attacks in
258, 263 and 267268 see the destruction of Histria and Anchialos, but also the resistance of Tomis).
Lactantius, De mort., VII, 89.
Eumenes, Paneg. Lat. IV, 18; Zosimos, Hist. nova II, 34.
CERMANOVI-KUZMANOVI 19771978, 134135. For the hypothesis on the origin of the inscription
in the fort in Diana (Karata) see VASI 2003, 1819.
J. Kolendo, Eirene 5, 1966, 139154 = A 1966, 357.
CIL III, 6151 = ILS, 641.
I.I. Russu, AISC 2, 19331935, 210212 = A 1936, 10.
ZAHARIADE 1997 b.
CIL III, 7487 = IGLR, 205.
SARNOWSKI 1990, 857; ZAHARIADE 1997 b, 233. For the term praesidium, see below, p. 51.
33
Scythiae, who appears in another inscription in Tomis (IGLR, 2). But recently there have been
doubts to this respect. C. Zuckerman and A. Lewin have contested the identity between the two
characters. The inscription referring to the restoration of the gate seems to imply the initiative
of the city administration (civitas Tomitanorum), and the personage under whose patronage
the work was carried out (C. Aurel.?) may have been a city magistrate92. But he may just as
well have been a praeses of the new province of Scythia, if we take into account the fact that
several inscriptions attest a sustained involvement of civilian governors in the construction
effort during the Tetrarchy and even later93.
From the second Tetrarchy (308) an inscription on brick has been discovered in a solid
wall in Diocletianopolis94, which probably attests the continuation of construction works started
under Diocletian in this city. We must also mention the inscription that attests the name given
by Galerius to the fortified palace he built at Gamzigrad (Felix Romuliana)95. During the joint
rule of Emperors Licinius and Constantine (308324) other important construction projects
were undertaken. The inscription at Tropaeum Traiani attests the building a fundamentis of
the city walls during the joint rule (315317), a very important document for the connection
between the limes and the interior of the province during the Late Roman Period. The expression
ad confirmandam limitis tutelam shows just how important the fortifications inside the provinces
were for the defence of the Danube limes96. To the same period (year 313) belongs an inscription
discovered at Diocletianopolis, which mentions the building of a bath complex97.
Some written sources also mention the effort undertaken by Constantine in building
defences. The construction of the Daphne fortress, on the left bank of the Danube, opposite the
fort in Transmarisca, is a tradition perpetuated up to the 6thc., when Procopius mentions it98.
The construction of the bridge between Palatiolon and Sucidava99, inaugurated in 328, must
also be connected to the emperors policy north of the Danube.
Two epigraphic sources attest the construction of fortifications in province Scythia at
the beginning of Constantius IIs reign. The first one is the inscription in Carcaliu (337340)
that mentions the construction of a fortification (munitio) under the care of Sappo, dux
limitis Scythiae, the reasons for the endeavour being amply presented in the text: to enclose
the location, ensure the local citizens security and stop enemy raids100. It is hard to say what
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
LEWIN 2004, 228229, with the mention that it is not clear that the letter on the stone is an F for Firminianus,
but rather a P or a D, hence a possible C. Aurel. D[], as Gr. Tocilescu, the first editor, opined when he read
the inscription.
For a list of inscriptions mentioning praesides as construction patrons (aqueducts, castra, castella, centenaria in
the provinces Numidia, Mauretania Caesariensis, Mauretania Sitifensis, Tripolitania, Arabia, Phoenice, Raetia
and Britannia) in the period 289/293 315/316 see HOFFMANN 1974, 383384, n. 22. For discussions
regarding the duces, praesides and comites also see MANN 1977.
Iv. Velkov, Izvestija-Sofia 5, 19281929, 379: d.d.n.n. Maximiani et Licini Augg. et Maximini et Constantini
filios [aed]ificatum. Cf. VELKOV 1958, 128.
SREJOVI 1985.
CIL III, 13734 = ILS, 8938 = IGLR, 170. Compare it with the inscription in Paleokastra (Epirus Vetus),
which attests the construction of the fort in 311313 and only mentions Licinius (BAE 1981, 207208,
217; MIKULI 2002, 16).
VELKOV 1958, 128.
Amm. Marcell. XXVII, 5, 23; Procopius, De aedif. IV, 7, 7. Compare with the foundation inscription on
the fort in Divitia (Kln-Deutz), also a bridgehead, this time on the Rhine, on Frankish territory (CIL XIII,
8502 = ILS, 8937).
Aurelius Victor, Caes., 41, 18: Pons per Danubium ductus; castra castellaque pluribus locis commode posita.
CIL III, 12483 = ILS, 724 = IGLR, 238: () locum in parte limitis positum, gentilium Gothorum temeritati
semper aptissimum ad confirmandam provincialium suorum aeternam securitatem erecta istius fabricae munitione
clauserunt latrunculorumque impetum perennis muniminis ()
34
type of fortification it was, but the expression to enclose the location suggests a barrage-wall
or a rampart. The second inscription was discovered in Kaliakra (Tirisis/Acrae) and attests the
construction a fundamentis of a tower by Flavius Hermogenes, magister equitum during the
reign of Constantius II (341342)101.
A fragmentary inscription recently discovered at Iatrus was dated to 340350 and seems
to refer to the restoration of the fortification walls and some sort of work inside the compound102.
A number of literary sources (Claudius Mamertinus and Ammianus Marcellinus) reflect
the attention paid by Emperor Julian to constructions in the dioceses of Dacia and Thrace,
including the ones along the Danube103.
An edict issued by Valentinian in 365, addressed to Tautomedes, dux Daciae Ripensis,
mentions the obligation to restore old towers (turres) and build new ones, therefore highlighting
the interest in reinforcing the Danube frontier as early as the first years of the two Augustis
joint rule104.
One of the most important literary sources for the knowledge of the intense construction
effort undertaken by Valens on the Lower Danube is the work of Themistios, who personally
visited Thrace and Scythia in 368369 when accompanying the emperor on his campaigns
against the Trans-Danubian Goths. The author notices the construction of new forts and the
restoration of old ones (whose walls were heightened or thickened, according to need) and
stresses that the river bank was full of fortifications. He also mentions the restoration of supply
centres, the construction of aqueducts and repair of harbours (among them those at Odessos,
Callatis, Tomis and Histria)105. An inscription (epigram) discovered at Vojvoda, but which seems
to come from Odessos, refers precisely to the restoration of certain ports and is connected by
certain authors to the information provided by Themistios106.
The same construction effort includes a well-known inscription in Cius (Grliciu),
dated to 369, which informs us that, under the supervision of Flavius Stercorius, the provincial
governor, the units of milites primani, led by a tribunus (Marcianus) and a praepositus (Ursicinus),
built a fortification ob defensionem rei publicae after one of the emperors victories against the
Goths107. It is not impossible that the inscription should refer to the same fortification whose
construction is described in detail in another text by Themistios. The author highlights the
importance of the location chosen for the fortification (a small peninsula, where an ancient
fortress had once been erected but left unfinished) and lists all the materials used (stone, bricks
and lime), specifying that it had been brought from another location, as it did not exist in the
respective area. The transport of these material using traction animals fell under the charge of
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
the local population, while the building proper was performed by soldiers, who were assigned
small segments108.
The toponyms Gratiana109 and Valentiniana110, which appear among the fortifications in
Scythia, are edifying regarding Emperor Valens construction policy undertaken in the Lower
Danube area.
A concern for restoring fortifications is also attested within the Balkan provinces. The
inscription in Bargala111, dated to 371, mentions the construction of a gate in this town located
on the border between Dacia Mediterranea and Dardania. The construction was supervised by
the governor of Dacia Mediterranea, Antonius Alypius.
Valens military disaster at Hadrianopolis in 378 concludes a first stage in the history of
construction in the Balkan provinces. The results of the construction policy of 4thc. emperors
are described in detail by Ammianus Marcellinus (XXVII, 4, 6): Hister, qua Romanum
caespitem lambit, urbibus multis et castris contiguus et castellis.
2.3. From Theodosius I to Zenon (379491)
During the Theodosian Dynasty a massive restoration and building effort was undertaken, especially in the province Europa, therefore in the hinterland of Constantinople, obviously
in close connection with the vast construction programme in the Empires capital112 and the
demographic increase probably caused by the influx of population from the areas affected by
barbarian attacks. An inscription in the Byzantine Museum in Thessaloniki, dated to 395
(Arcadius), mentions the construction of a defence wall (). D. Feissel demonstrated that
it came from Panion, a city located on the Propontis shore, now renamed Theodosiopolis113.
Another inscription comes from Perinthos/Heraclea and probably attests the restoration of the
defence wall ( ) during the reign of emperors Arcadius and Honorius (395408)114.
The erection of the cities Arcadiopolis (formerly Bergule, on the imperial road) and Eudoxiopolis
(formerly Selymbria, on the Propontis shore), both mentioned later by Hierocles115, is another
example of imperial involvement in reinforcing the defence system around the capital. The
concern for urban defence walls during the Theodosian Dynasty is also proven by centres close
to the area we focus upon116.
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
Themistios, Or. X, 136 d 138 b. For the hypothesis on its origin in Grliciu, see VELKOV 1958, 131;
BARNEA I. 1967 b, 569; Al. Barnea, in SUCEVEANU, BARNEA 1991, 219. Another hypothesis in
ZAHARIADE 1988, 152, who identifies this fortification with Gratiana and locates it at Dunavu de Jos.
NDOr. XXXIX, 27; Procopius, De aedif. IV, 11.
Procopius, De aedif. IV, 11.
VENEDIKOV 1948, 84, fig.58; MIKULI 2002, 396, Abb. 301: [An]no VII dd. nn. victoriosissimorum /
triumfatorum semper Augustorum / Valentiniani et Valentis Bargalen(si)bus / porta constructa est, disponen/[te A]
ntonio Alypio v(iro) c(larissimo), con(sulari) provinc(iae) D(aciae) Mediterraneae.
CROW 2002, 346: () in Europa the principle factor underpinning revival of urbanism was the empires
needs for defence and more particularly the security of the capital. During the same period the massive
defence wall of Theodosius II (also known as the Landmauer, Land Walls) was built in Constantinople,
but it had in fact been initiated under Arcadius (J. Bardill, AJA 103, 1999, 4, 671696). See recent research
on this issue by M. Ahunbay, Z. Ahunbay, DOP 54, 2000, 227239.
D. Feissel, BCH 100, 1976, 1, 273275; CROW 2002, 345.
Cf. VELKOV 1958, 132, and n. 64 (after Dumont-Homolle). Also see stamped bricks dated to the first half
of the 5thc., discovered in the defence wall of the Lower city (CROW 2002, 343).
Hierocles, Synecd. 631.
See the construction of defence walls at Chersonesos (IOSPE I2, 450 = IOSPE IV, 464, years 383395) and
Thessalonica (VICKERS 1974, probably under Theodosius II).
36
118
119
120
121
122
123
CIL III, 14213.1 = SSIB, 81 (discovered at Plaidol): mo]enia muros [se]d d(omi)n(us) mundi custo[dia]t
hostia porta[e].
SSIB, 86: () [].
SSIB, 75: + m(ense) Iunio k(alen)d(is) zie Lune facta e[st]/eista porta en zies Dani/elo bicario et Probinu/Maiure,
ind(ictione) XIIII SERSONSEBD.
D. Mitova-Donova, tBalk 12, 1976, 1, 142144; V. Velkov, ArhSofia 26, 1984, 4, 28; idem Byzantina 13,
1985, 883886 (dated to 408423). Cf. POULTER 2007 b, 9394, who believes the inscription was reused
in another city in the 6th c.
CTh XI, 17, 4; Nov. Theod. II, XXIV, 5. Cf. VELKOV 1958, 132133.
IGLR, 211. Recent research has not brought to light elements that might attest a restoration of the fortress a
fundamentis, as suggested by the famous text in Procopius. The arguments in favour of an earlier date for the
inscription (end of the 4thc. beginning of the 5th c.) in C. Bjenaru, Sur la date de construction de la fortresse
romaine tardive dUlmetum (forthcoming paper, 2011).
CIL III, 12328 = 142072 = ILS, 8954 = SSIB, 184 (discovered in Aitos).
37
capital124. Located 65 km away from Constantinople, this wall has a length of 45 km and closes
the end of the Thracian peninsula, between the Sea of Marmara and the Black Sea125. Several
ancient authors (Procopius, Agathias and Malalas) mention this wall in the context of numerous
barbarian attacks in the 6thc. and appreciate its sturdiness, even if it was broken down several
times (by the Bulgarians in 540, the Kutrigurs in 558/559 and the Avars in 626). Besides these
destructions, a series of earthquakes affected parts of it, but Justinian and his successors restored
it each time.
The chronicler Ioannes Malalas informs us on the construction endeavours of Emperor
Anastasius: in each city of the Empire various buildings, defence walls and aqueducts were
raised, harbours were cleaned, public baths were newly built and many more126. The information is confirmed by certain epigraphic discoveries in the Balkan area.
An inscription on a limestone block discovered in Ratiaria, in front of the main gate
of the city (Anastasiana Ratiaria semper floreat) was connected by the first editor to the reconstruction of the city during the reign of Anastasius127, a date that was contested by certain
researchers128. In the province Scythia the restorations during the reign of Anastasius are
eloquently illustrated by the discovery of stamped bricks in Dinogetia,129 Histria (an inscription
on brick was also discovered here)130 and Sacidava131, as well as several inscriptions in Tomis,
found in the defence wall132.
The most recent epigraphic source on Anastasius construction effort is the inscription
(Indictione imperii Anastasi) discovered in the fortification at Gradec-Vavovo Kale, located
at the frontier between Moesia Secundaand Haemimontus133.
Regarding the vast construction programme initiated by Justinian in the Balkan
Peninsula, most researchers agree that the information provided by Procopius, especially in De
aedificiis, present a clear description of this programme134. The information provided by the
ancient author is confirmed not only by archaeological discoveries, but also by inscriptions, the
most interesting of which mention the architect Viktorinos and were discovered in Corinth and
the city of Byllis (Ballshi) in Epirus Nova. In one of these inscriptions Viktorinos is credited
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
Most ancient sources credit Anastasius with the construction of this wall. There is also the opinion that the
construction is even older, dating from the 5thc. (cf. HARRISON 1974, 247 and WHITBY 1985, 560f.,
after an hypothesis advanced by E. Stein). For the traditional dating to Anastasius: CROKE 1982, 69 f.;
CROW 1995, 109f.; NAPOLI 1997, 389; CROW, RICCI 1997, 239; CROW 2007, 397 (stamped bricks).
Technical details in HARRISON 1974; NAPOLI 1997, 379389; CROW, RICCI 1997; CROW 2007,
397400.
Malalas, Chron., XVI, 409, 4649. See VELKOV 1958, 133; Al. Barnea, in SUCEVEANU, BARNEA 1991,
171.
V. Velkov, ArhSofia 26, 1984, 23, 9294; idem, Byzantina 13, 1985, 886889.
Vl. Popovi believes that this is a more recent inscription, from the reign of Justinian, interpreting anastasiana as an adjective which refers to resurrection, rebirth, restoration after disaster. This is appropriate
for Justinians reign, as Procopius (De aedif. IV, 6, 24) mentions that the emperor reconstructed everything
that had fallen into ruins at Ratiaria (POPOVI V. 19891990, 283).
IGLR, 112, 113.
IGLR, 246.
SCORPAN 1980, 70, 73.
IGLR, 79. For a synthesis on the situation in Dobrudja during the reign of Anastasius see BARNEA I. 1960
and BARNEA I. 1967 a.
VELKOV, LISICOV 1994, 257265 (the inscription is dated to 498513). See also CROW 2007, for other
evidence on the construction effort during the reign of Anastasius: the new city Anastasiopolis in the province
Rhodope (Procopius, De aedif., IV, 11) and an inscription from Dyrrachium (K. Zheku, Monumentet 3,
1972, 3546).
ARICESCU 1972; IVANOV S.1983; IVANOV S.1984; CURTA 2001, 4749; CURTA 2006, 131146.
38
with having reinforced the cities in Moesia, Scythia, Illyricum and Thrace (
), that is the entire Balkan area,
according to the sketches and methods of Justinian (
)135. It is one of the clearest pieces of evidence
on the massive restoration efforts in the Balkan provinces (the inscription presents the picture
of the three important administrative districts: along with the dioceses of Thrace and Illyricum,
there is mention of Moesia and Scythia too, which at that time were part of the quaestura
exercitus). The inscription in Byllis is probably dated to the second part of Justinians reign (post
548), maybe even after Procopius De aedificiis was written136.
Proof on this process of reconstructing fortifications is also provided by certain inscriptions such as that discovered in the quarry of Ezerovo, near Odessos, in which a fortification named
Theodorias is mentioned (the inscription is dated to 556/557), for which there is no clear location137.
In a period when the bishop had authority not only over the city, but also over the
fortifications on its territory138, the inscription discovered in Izbianj (province Dardania) is
revealing, as it mentions the construction of walls, basilicas, houses, fountains, baths etc. under
the patronage of a bishop139.
At Callatis a fragmentary architrave was discovered, which belonged to a public building
(basilica?) and bears an inscriptions that mentions an emperor, most probably Justinian, as a
construction-lover (philoktistes)140, which supposes a series of massive reconstruction endeavours
in this period, which is also confirmed by Procopius. Also dated to the reign of Justinian are
the stamped bricks in Mesambria (some of them bearing the same epithet philoktistes)141, which
have good analogies in the tegular material in Constantinople and are one more proof of the
involvement of the imperial authority in the reconstruction of important cities. Bricks stamped
with Justinians monogram were also discovered in Scodra142 and Iustiniana Prima143.
In the second half of the 6thc. epigraphic information is scarce. An inscription discovered
near Stara Zagora, dated to 575576, mentions a construction whose function is unclear144,
and the last epigraphic information on the Balkan constructions was discovered in Serdica,
where an inscription mentions the reconstruction of the aqueduct during the reign of Tiberius
II Constantine (year 580), a project initiated by the administrative and ecclesiastical authorities
of the city145.
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
3. FORTIFICATIONS
ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOURCES
Archaeological research remains the main source for the knowledge of Late Roman and
Early Byzantine fortifications in the Balkan provinces. In the following pages we shall present
the map of fortifications which have been researched archaeologically and have offered valuable
chronological data, except, of course, for the minor fortifications which are in fact the object of
our study and will be treated separately.
3.1. Large fortifications (over 5ha)
These are in general urban fortifications, but one must not forget that in practically
all Late Roman towns the military element was present. A very instructive classification of
the cities in the dioceses of Dacia and Thrace was drawn by V. Dinev in a study published in
1999. According to the Bulgarian researcher, an urban settlement in the Late Roman period
can be defined, from an archaeological perspective, by the surface between its defence walls and
the buildings erected on it. Taking into account the available archaeological data, the author
proposes as limit between an urban and a non-urban settlement the surface of 5ha (with a
tolerance of 1ha, as the case may be). Thus, based on the dimensions of the fortified area one
can identify three categories of urban settlements: large (over 30ha), medium (between 30 and
10ha) and small (between 10 and 5ha)146.
The archaeology of urban fortifications in the Balkan provinces has evolved during the
last decades especially due to the preventive excavation of sites superposed by modern cities
such as Sofia, Plovdiv, Stara Zagora, Kjustendil, Constana, Varna and others. Unfortunately
the results are poorly known. In other cases the archaeological research is at its beginning or has
not even started. With the available data we have put together a map of Late Roman Early
Byzantine cities that offer data concerning the architecture of urban defence walls and their
chronology. We have considered this useful precisely because a series of elements of military
architecture developed in these urban settlements can be found in the fortifications which
constitute the object of the present study.
On the West-pontic shore, at Histria, the Late Roman defence wall (phase A) was built
in the second half of the 3rdc. over the ruins of the town destroyed by the Goths, which resulted
in the reduction of the fortified surface to only 7ha. Several phases of reconstruction have been
discovered, the most important being phase B (fig. 3), dated after 295 and characterized by
rectangular towers and bastions and by the inclusion of new spaces into the fortified surface,
such as the so-called economic district. Another important reconstruction phase (phase D)
is dated to the reign of Anastasius (based on the stamped bricks used)147. At Tomis the Late
Roman wall encloses a surface of approximately 60ha (parts of it have since collapsed into the
sea, so the original surface could have surpassed 70ha). The initial construction moment is the
second half of the 3rdc. (Aurelian, Probus, Diocletian). Rectangular towers flank two of the city
gates. One notices the U-shaped towers flanking the Great Gate, the butchers tower (also
U-shaped and dated to the 6th c.), as well as the rectangular towers of the other gates. In the 6thc.
the city expanded westwards with a new defence wall148. At Callatis, the archaeological research
146
147
148
DINEV 1999, 41. On the distinction between urban and non-urban also see DINEV 2000, 65 f.
Regarding the reduction of urban surfaces in the Late Roman Early Byzantine period see KIRILOV 2006.
DOMNEANU, SION 1982. Cf. SUCEVEANU 1982, 8586; TORBATOV 2002, 174182 (dates
phase B to the Constantinian period).
A synthesis of research in RDULESCU 19951996 and TORBATOV 2002, 188193. See also Gh. Papuc,
L. Lungu, Pontica 31, 1998, 201208 for excavations at the main gate of the city.
40
has demonstrated that the Roman defence wall, built during the reign of Marcus Aurelius, was
still in use in the Late Roman and Early Byzantine period. It had entirely protruding rectangular towers (fig. 4). Its reconstructions have been dated to the reigns of Aurelian, Diocletian
or Constantine, and Justinian149.
To the south there is now important data concerning the evolution of defence walls
in Tirisis/Acrae (Kaliakra), where the present-day surface of the promontory, fortified at
three different times, is of 25 ha. The oldest defence wall is the one in the middle, with
protruding circular towers, which has been dated to 272287/289 according to stratigraphical
arguments. Later (beginning of the 4th c.), this defence wall was completed with a rectangular
tower gate. The inner defence wall, which covers the smallest surface, has been dated to the
reign of Constantius II (based on the inscription dated to 341342) and includes a rectangular
tower with an internal pillar on its trajectory. The most recent defence wall is the external one,
researched over a length of 422 m. It is 2.802.90m thick, has external square towers (crossshaped inside) and horse-shoe-shaped towers (two of which flank the main gate and have a
propugnaculum inside). It is dated to the reign of Valens. At a later stage (end of the 4thc.
beginning of the 5th c.) it was reinforced with trapezium-shaped bastions, then in the 6thc. an
outer segment was thickened and completed with a triangular tower150.
If for the 4th 5thc. there is no clear data regarding the defence system in Dionysopolis,
in the 6th c. (most probably during the reign of Anastasius) a new fortification (15 ha) was
built, nowadays covered by the modern district Horizont (fig. 5). It has rectangular, round
and pentagonal towers (two of which flank the main gate), as well as triangular bastions151. The
defence wall investigated archaeologically at Mesembria has several phases of construction,
the oldest dated to the Hellenistic period. The early Roman defence wall (1st 2nd c.) seems to
have still been in use during the 4thc. A major reconstruction took place in the second half of
the 5thc. or beginning of the 6thc. (Leon I, Zenon or more probably Anastasius), when it was
completed with two round towers and a monumental gate flanked by pentagonal towers152.
Passing to the urban centres located inland in the provinces, we start with Ibida in
Scythia, whose plan has been reconstructed according to aerial photographs. It has rectangular
and U-shaped towers on the sides and circular (or rather fan-shaped) ones at the corners. Recent
archaeological excavations have brought arguments in favour of dating the first phase to the
reign of Constantine153. Tropaeum Traiani developed during the Late Roman period inside
the defence wall completed in 316, which enclosed a surface of 9 ha. It had U-shaped and
rectangular towers and an initial, unfinished phase (probably because of the attack in 295) dated
to the reign of Aurelian (even if it could just as well be that of Diocletian). At a later stage,
maybe in the second half of the 6thc., a castellum of approx. 9575m was set against its SE
side, displaying two probably round corner towers and an intermediary tower whose shape has
not yet been ascertained154. Nicopolis ad Istrum, the colony founded by Trajan, continued to
use the defence wall built in the 2ndc. (enclosing a surface of 21.5ha) during the 4thc. and the
first half of the 5thc. A major change took place in the second half of the 5thc., when the old
town was abandoned and a new fortification was built, enclosing 5.74ha, and reinforced with
149
150
151
152
153
154
IONESCU, GEORGESCU 1998; IONESCU, PAPUC 2005, 93100. Cf. TORBATOV 2002, 194197.
DINGOV et al. 1990. Cf. TORBATOV 2002, 226232.
TORBATOV 2002, 263270 (bibliography included).
VENEDIKOV et al. 1969.
TEFAN 1977 b. See also recent excavation reports in CCA, starting with 2002.
BARNEA et al. 1979. Cf. TORBATOV 2002, 301307. Recent research on the secondary fortifications
undertaken by Al. Barnea and M. Ionescu (brief reports in CCA 2001, 2002, 2003 and 2006).
41
triangular and circular towers155. At Abrittus the defence wall encloses a surface of approx. 15ha
(c. 300500m) and has U-shaped towers on three sides, while on the fourth one it has rectangular towers. It also has fan-shaped corner-towers and the gates are flanked by U-shaped towers
(fig. 10). One notices the design of the main gate (halbrund Exedra type), similar to those at
Iatrus and Nicopolis ad Nestum. The defence wall was built at the end of the 3rd beginning of
the 4th c.156, although more probably during the joint reign of Licinius and Constantine, and at
the beginning it was a base for the mobile army, later (5th 6th c.) becoming an urban centre.
The Thracian metropolis, Philippopolis, covered a surface of 80 ha during the Late
Roman period, but during the 6th c. dwelling was limited to the old Hellenistic acropolis
(35ha)157. Augusta Traiana/Beroe continued to function on a fortified area of approx. 48.5ha,
as the defence wall built during the reign of Marcus Aurelius was used up to the 6thc. The wall
is characterised by pillars set on its inner face and an external wall (proteichisma)158.
The new city Diocletianopolis had a quadrangular defence wall, enclosing a surface
of approx. 30ha (fig. 7). It is reinforced mainly by rectangular towers, both on the sides and
at the gates. At two of the corners there are towers, circular at the base and octagonal in their
elevation. It is dated to the end of the 3rd beginning of the 4thc. according to the archaeological
discoveries. At a later stage (5th 6th c.) its northern side was reinforced with a proteichisma159.
Also in the diocese of Thrace, the Late Roman Early Byzantine city Nicopolis ad
Nestum covered a surface of 11ha, its defence wall reinforced by round towers at the corners and
on the sides. It also has a gate pertaining to the halbrund Exedra type (just like those in Abrittus
and Iatrus), flanked by rectangular towers (fig. 9). It is dated to the Constantinian period160.
In the diocese of Dacia, the metropolis Serdica reached a remarkable urban development.
The old defence wall, built during the reign of Marcus Aurelius and enclosing a surface of 18ha
was repaired and consolidated in phase II (290450), when the fortified surface increased to
84ha. In this phase the defence wall had entirely protruding corner- and intermediary towers.
In phase III (Zenon-Justinian) triangular and pentagonal towers were built (fig. 6)161. The
defence wall of Pautalia, built during the reign of Commodus, was still in use in the 4th
5thc., with several changes such as the introduction of rectangular intermediary towers. In the
second half of the 5thc. or rather in the 6thc. (Anastasius or Justinian) a new fortification was
built on the Hisarlk Hill, covering a surface of 2.10ha (fig. 15 a, b). The latter has circular
corner-towers and triangular towers at the main gate162. Bargala had a quadrangular defence
wall (280 185/150 m), enclosing a surface of 4.70 ha and reinforced by 21 rectangular
towers both at the corners and on the sides. The main gate was also flanked by rectangular
towers. In the eastern corner there is an Acropolis of 32 22 m, which probably had a
military role (fig. 8). The fortification is dated to the reign of Licinius and Constantine, and
it naturally underwent reconstructions during the reign of Valentinian I and Valens (see the
above-mentioned inscription)163.
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
POULTER 1995.
IVANOV T. 1980.
BOTUAROVA, KESJAKOVA 1983.
KALTCHEV 1998.
MADAROV K. 1967; MADAROV K. 1982; MADAROV K. 1993. Cf. BIERNACKI 1984.
DIMITROVA-MILEVA 1992; DIMITROVA-MILEVA 2002.
STANEVA 1989; BOBEV 1989.
Roman defence wall: RUSEVA-SLOKOSKA 1989. Late Roman fortification: J. Ivanov, IBAD 7, 19191920,
66123; Z. Goeva, IBID 27, 1970, 233254 (dated according to a coin of Anastasius). Also see the recent
publication of KACAROVA 2005.
MIKULI 2002, 391396 (bibliography included).
42
In Dardania, Ulpiana had a defence wall that enclosed, during the Late Roman Period,
a surface of 35.5ha. Excavations have shown that it had U-shaped towers, even by one of the
town gates. It was probably built in the 4th c.164. The defence wall of Scupi covered a rectangular
surface of approx. 43ha (740600m) in the 4th 5thc., but it has been less excavated (fig. 16
a). The town was destroyed by the earthquake of 518. Afterwards a new fortification was built
at Kale, approx. 280110m (a surface of 2.3ha), reinforced by two round corner-towers
and rectangular and triangular towers on the sides (fig. 16 b)165.
Iustiniana Prima (Cariin Grad), a classical example of imperial foundation, developed
on a surface of approx. 7.25ha. It was formed of a polygonal acropolis reinforced with rectangular and U-shaped towers, and of two other regular-shaped fortified areas, built next to each
other: the Upper City, with corner-towers that are round at the base and octagonal in elevation,
rectangular intermediary towers and a gate flanked by pentagonal towers; the Lower City is
reinforced only with rectangular towers (at the corners, intermediary ones and at the gate)166.
The Danube limes also offers important data regarding urban fortifications. At Bononia
(Vidin) the Late Roman defence wall167 is quadrangular and encloses an area of approximately
23ha. On the sides it has towers that are round at foundation level and decagonal in elevation,
identical to the ones in the castellum at Kula. Based on analogies it is highly probable that it
should be dated to the first decades of the 4thc. (the Tetrarchs or Licinius/Constantine). At
Augustae (Hrlec) the Early Roman fort was extended, during the Tetrarchy or in the first
part of Constantines reign, with a strong fortification (Augustae II, with a surface of approx.
8ha) reinforced by circular corner-towers and U-shaped or rectangular towers on the sides (fig.
11)168. In Oescus (Gigen) the reassignment of the legio V Macedonica to its old barracks had an
important consequence for the local Roman colony, which was reflected mainly by the extension
of the city eastwards until it reached a surface of 28ha. The new defence wall had horse-shoe
shaped corner-towers and U-shaped towers on the sides (fig. 12)169. At Novae (Svitov), apart
from the fort of the legio I Italica (16ha), at the end of the 3rd beginning of the 4thc. a new
fortified area appeared (Novae II, approx. 10ha), its defence wall reinforced with rectangular
towers and a tower-gate. Novae I was reconstructed during the reign of Constantine, when it
had U-shaped towers flanking two of the gates, but also on the sides and at the corners. The
main gate was flanked by two massive rectangular towers (fig. 13)170.
Recent research has brought to light parts of the Late Roman defence wall in
Transmarisca (Tutrakan). The wall, which enclosed a surface of approx. 6.5ha, was dated,
based on stratigraphical data, to the Tetrarchy (between 292 309/310), which is confirmed
by the foundation inscription found there. The wall had rectangular towers on its northern side
and U-shaped ones on its southern side (fig. 14), seemingly added during the Constantinian
period171. At Durostorum (Silistra), the research undertaken by P. Donevski led to the identification of the fort of the legio XI Claudia, which was most probably restored during the reign
of Aurelian or Diocletian (the defence wall was thickened and an entirely protruding, massive
rectangular tower was built at the SW corner.) It seems that in the 5th 6th c. the fort lost
its military function and, together with its canabae, became part of the Late Roman town
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
PAROVI-PEIKAN 1981.
MIKULI 2002, 182186 (bibliography included).
BAVANT et al. 1990; BAVANT 2007; BAVANT, IVANIEVI 2007.
ATANASOVA-GEORGIEVA 1974, 337338; IVANOV R.1997, 538, Abb. 8.
MAOV 1990 (dated to the Severan period!); IVANOV R.1997, 543548.
IVANOV T. 1990; IVANOV R.1997, 548554.
A synthesis of the archaeological results in IVANOV R.1997, 556574.
VAGALINSKI 1999; VAGALINSKI, PETKOV 2006.
43
there; at the same time, on the bank of the Danube a strong fortification was built, displaying
saw-teeth segments and a pentagonal tower172.
Other fortifications of remarkable size have not yet produced proof convincing enough
for specialists to consider them as urban centres, which suggests that a military function was
more likely. This category includes two fortifications in the province of Moesia Secunda.
Vojvoda is a polygonal fortress with a surface of approx. 10ha, fan-shaped corner-towers and
U-shaped towers at the gates. It is dated to the 4thc. (Constantine?) and had a proteichisma
added at a later stage (5th c.)173. Kovaevec is a polygonal fortification too, adapted to the terrain
and enclosing a surface of 5.2ha. The defence wall is 3.20m thick, has 17 towers and two gates.
Archaeological excavations have identified its western gate, flanked by U-shaped towers and
two other similar towers on the sides. It is dated to the reign of Constantine174.
3.2. Medium-size fortifications (between 15ha)
This category includes most of the fortifications identified on the territory of the two
dioceses. Because their typology is not the object of the present study, we have adopted the
geographical criterion in presenting them, starting on the Danube frontier, where in most cases
we are dealing with former Roman auxiliary forts, then continuing with the cities on the Black
Sea coast (and here only the West-pontic shore has provided concrete archaeological data so far)
and concluding with the inland area of the provinces.
Let us review the situation of the different forts which have been researched archaeologically on the Danube limes.
In the Iron Gates sector the Early Roman fort of Novae (ezava) (143 123 m)
continued to function, with changes, during the Severan period. Research has shown that the
principia suffered a series of restoration works, dated according to coins from the reigns of
Gallienus and Aurelian, and the same situation occurred at the porta praetoria. A complete
restoration (which also meant the construction of round towers at the corners and on the
sides, fig.17) most probably took place during the reign of Constantine175. At Taliata (Donji
Milanovac) the Roman fort (134126m) was completely restored in the second half of the
3rdc., and in the 4thc. protruding semicircular corner-towers were added (fig. 18)176. Diana
(Karata) (138123m) underwent several changes during the Late Roman Period; there are
two remarkable entirely protruding rectangular towers at the corners and another one that
blocks the Western gate, as well as horseshoe-shaped towers flanking the Southern gate177.
Drobeta (137.5123m) was restored in the second half of the 3rdc. and again during the
reign of Constantine (fig. 19), receiving fan-shaped corner-towers, as well as rectangular towers
blocking the former gates of the Early Roman fort178.
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
IVANOV R. 1997, 587590 (bibliography included.) The proposal to identify the late fortress with the
praesidium attested by the Tetrarchic inscription brings no valid arguments, especially since the fortress on
the Danube bank evidences a later building technique, which suggests a later moment of construction, most
probably in the 5th 6th c.
MILEV, DAMIANOV 1972; MILEV, DAMIANOV 1984; BIERNACKA-LUBANSKA 1982, 240, no.
93.
DONEVA 2002; RUSEV 2007.
VASI 19821983; VASI 1990.
POPOVI V. 19821983. Cf. VASI, KONDI 1986, 542f., fig.4, 9, 30; VASI 19941995, 46f., fig.6.
J. Rankov, Djerdapske Sveske 1, 1980, 5169; 2, 1984, 714; 4, 1987, 536.
DAVIDESCU 1980 b, 1232 (dates the corner-towers to the end of the 3rd c.); ZAHARIADE 1997 a (reign
of Constantine).
44
In Dacia Ripensis we have archaeological data from Dimum (Belene), where the Early
Roman fort (c. 240180m) underwent fundamental changes in the Constantinian period,
receiving external towers (fan-shaped at the corners, U-shaped on the sides and rectangular at
the gates, fig.20)179. Most probably the walls of the Roman town at Sucidava (Celei) were
restored during the reign of Aurelian. In the same period, if not during the reign of Gallienus, a
strong military fortification (fig. 24) was built in this strategic north-danubian bridgehead, the
new project including half-protruding rectangular towers and a row of pillars along the inner
face of the wall. An important restoration, that included the construction of a defence wall set
against the old one, has been dated to the reign of Constantine. This fortification was destroyed
by the Huns in mid 5thc. and was later rebuilt by Justinian180. Iatrus (Krivina) is one of the
best researched fortification in Moesia Secunda. Dated to the Licinius/Constantine period, it is
the first in the series of fortifications with a massive rectangular tower (phrourion) and has also
U-shaped interval-towers and fan-shaped corner-towers (fig. 23)181.
On the Scythian limes Sacidava (Dunreni) saw a fundamentis reconstruction of the
former auxiliary fort. The southern side has been completely researched (125m), as well as an
important part of the western side with powerful rectangular towers (fig. 21). The new defence
wall is dated to the beginning of the 4thc. (post295 according to C. Scorpan)182. The plan of
the Early Roman fort at Capidava (approx. 130100m) was entirely modified during the
Tetrarchy or later (Licinius/Constantine), when fan-shaped corner-towers were added, as well as
two massive rectangular towers (phrouria) and other U-shaped towers on the sides (fig.22)183.
Of the two ancient fortresses that existed at Troesmis, only the plan of the Eastern one is known
(145120m), and not to full extent184. The fan-shaped corner-towers, the U-shaped intermediary ones and the so-called phrourion have analogies at Iatrus, Capidava and Noviodunum, and
partially at Halmyris and Ulmetum too. Dinogetia (Garvn) is a new fortification of approx.
15280m (surface of 1ha), built probably during the reign of Constantine, with fan-shaped
towers at the corner and U-shaped ones on the sides (fig.25)185. At Halmyris (Murighiol) the
Early Roman fort was replaced by a new fortification (182142m) whose construction started
during the Aurelian-Probus period, but whose final plan (with the classic U-shaped towers)
dates from the time of the Tetrarchy, as is shown by the foundation inscription discovered
during the excavations186.
For the West-pontic coastline, chronological clues concerning the newly-built defence
walls appear in the case of three middle-sized fortifications. At Cape Doloman (Argamum)
the fortification with rectangular towers and bastions that enclosed a surface of approx. 2.5ha
(fig. 26) is dated to the end of the 3rd beginning of the 4th c.187. Kamen Brjag-Jajlata
is a fortification whose present day surface is of 0.45ha (maximal dimensions 10075m),
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
but which seems to have been highly affected by the erosion of the coastline (fig. 27). The
defence wall had rectangular bastions and three inner segments thickened in order to accommodate access stairs. The entrance was made through a tower-gate188. With a preserved surface
of approx. 0.80ha, the fortification at Sveti Nikola-Rusalka was built at roughly the same
time and in the same manner as the one mentioned above. The defence wall has two rectangular bastions and has been dated based on a coin from the reign of Anastasius (post498),
discovered on the construction level189.
In the inland part of the provinces not many middle-sized military and roadside fortifications have undergone archaeological research. We shall offer below an inventory of those
that are best known archaeologically among them.
A group of three fortifications are former Roman auxiliary forts (Timacum Minus,
Sostra, Germania) inside the provinces Moesia Superior, Moesia Inferior and Thrace. At Ravna
(Timacum Minus) the old auxiliary fort (coh. I Thracum Syriaca, followed by the coh. II Aurelia
Dardanorum), dimensions 144 112m (1.7ha), was completely restored at the end of the 3rd
beginning of the 4thc., when entirely protruding rectangular towers were added at the corners
and on the sides (fig. 28)190. The auxiliary fort at Lomec (Sostra), located on the PhilippopolisOescus road, was probably built during the reign of Antoninus Pius (coh. II Mattiacorum, then
coh. I Cisipadensium) with typical dimensions of 125121.5m (surface of approx. 1.50ha).
It was entirely restored in the last quarter of the 3rdc. (terminus post quem provided by coins
from the reigns of Claudius II and Aurelian, discovered in the mortar of the defence wall),
when they added half-protruding round corner-towers and similar rectangular towers at the
gates (fig. 29)191. In the fort of coh. II Lucensium at Sapareva Banja (Germania), with dimensions 180.75139.50m (surface of 2.5ha), only the western gate has been researched, and it
was discovered that it had been flanked by rectangular towers dated to the Severan period and
that it had been blocked at a later stage (4th c.?) by a thick wall set against the outer face of the
defence wall192.
In the same time with the strengthening of the old military camps, some important
economic and commercial sites (emporia) receive defence walls. In the area of the former
Roman emporium at Sliven (Tzoides) appeared in the first half of the 4thc. a rectangular fortification of approx. 4.5 ha, with round-shaped towers at the corners and rectangular towergates in the middle of three curtains (fig. 31)193. The fortified Roman emporium at Gostilica
(Discoduraterae) covers a surface of approx. 1 ha, with round corner-towers (only on one
side.) The defence wall is dated to the 4thc., but it is presumed to have been built on an older
trajectory (dating at least from the mid 3rd c.)194.
Even if it does not have a regular plan, the military character of the fortification in
Mihajlovgrad (Montana) (15070m) is proven by the inscriptions dated to the end of the
3rdc. (which refer to it as castra), and it must have held this function at least throughout the
4th 6thc. The defence wall is 3.20m thick, built in opus mixtum; one notices the massive tower
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
with rounded front and central pillar, as well as the important buildings inside. At a later stage
(5th 6th c.) a proteichisma was added195.
Another group of fortifications were important road-stations. At Kula, in Dacia Ripensis,
in the SW part of a quadriburgium-type fortification a castellum was built (at a later stage?)
covering a surface of approx. 1.8ha, whose defence wall was constructed using a technique
similar to that used in Bononia (towers with round foundation and decagonal elevation)196. It
has been dated to the reign of Constantine, but there is nothing to prevent us from proposing
that the quadriburgium and the castellum functioned at the same time, more precisely during
the Tetrarchy or in the first decade of the 4thc. (Galerius?). The fortress at Komotini, in the
province Rhodope, located near the via Egnatia, is traditionally dated in the Theodosian period
and has a surface of approx. 1.6ha (c. 125125m). The wall has round-shaped corner-towers
and rectangular intermediary ones (fig. 32)197. In Scythia, the fortification in Pantelimonul de
Sus (Ulmetum) is an exception from the strictly rectangular shape as one of its sides accommodates the configuration of the terrain; it has horseshoe- or round-shaped corner-towers,
rectangular towers on the irregular side and U-shaped towers at the gates; also, on the NW
side there is a massive rectangular tower (phrourion) (fig. 33). Recent research has dated the
construction to the end of the 4th beginning of the 5thc. After a period of abandonment,
it was restored during the reign of Justinian, as demonstrated by archaeological discoveries
and the mention Procopius makes of it198. In Moesia Secunda, on the site of an Early Roman
fortification in umen, probably a road station, a new one was built (on a surface of 1.71ha
or 2.80 ha, according to different sources) at the end of the 3rd beginning of the 4th c. It
was reinforced by U-shaped towers, a rectangular one and a tower-gate (fig. 34)199. Rupkite
(Carassura, Diospolis?) is a station on the Philippopolis Augusta Traiana road that gradually
evolved into a semi-urban fortified settlement. If for the 4thc. and the first half of the 5thc. the
station was protected by ancient Thracian walls, in the second half of the 5thc. (or rather in
the 6thc., during the Anastasius-Justinian period) a new fortification was built, covering a large
area on both sides of the Stara Reka river; it had round towers at the corner and polygonal or
rectangular ones on the sides (fig. 35)200.
Probably also a road-station function had the fortification in Bushati (in the province
Praevalitana), with an almost rectangular plan (surface of approx. 0.70ha, which places it at
the border with minor fortifications), round corner-towers and U-shaped or rectangular towers
on the sides. The gate is flanked by rectangular towers with a rounded front and has a propugnaculum inside (fig. 30). It is dated to the reign of Constantine201. Its plan and dimensions
make it very similar to that in Dinogetia.
Vodno-Markovi Kuli (Dardania, near Scupi) is a fortification of approx. 2ha, formed
of a triangular acropolis whose defence wall had rectangular towers and a terrace fortified with
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
ALEKSANDROV 1987 (the author connects the large tower-donjon with the burgus mentioned in the
inscription from 258).
ATANASOVA-GEORGIEVA 1974; ATANASOVA et al. 2005, 4347.
MOUTSOPOULOS 1979, 216217, fig.1517.
PRVAN 1912; PRVAN 19131914; PRVAN 1915. Cf. Al. Barnea, in SUCEVEANU, BARNEA 1991,
202204; TORBATOV 2002, 288297. Results of the new excavations in CCA (20042009) and also
C.Bjenaru, forthcoming paper 2011, v. supra, n. 122.
ANTONOVA 1973; ANTONOVA 1978. Cf. BIERNACKA-LUBANSKA 1982, 239, fig.53, 142; DINEV
2006 , fig.20.
HERMANN 1992; DHLE 1992; BLOW 1992; SPRAFKE 1992; BTTGER 1992; BUJUKLIEV
2002.
PRZHITA 1986.
47
pentagonal or triangular towers (fig. 37). It is dated with certainty to the 6th c., probably
during the reign of Justinian202. In Moesia Secunda, at Trgovite-Krumovo Kale there is a
polygonal fortification with saw-teeth segments and U-shaped bastions (fig. 36). It is dated
to the 5thc. but reached a maximum development during the 6thc., when a large, three-nave
Christian basilica with an atrium was built inside203. Also in Moesia Secunda is Madara, a
polygonal fortification located on a steep rocky height, enclosing a surface of over 1ha. It has
a rectangular corner-tower and a gate flanked by pentagonal towers (fig. 38). Based on the
typology of the pentagonal towers it is dated to the 5th 6th c.204. At Odrci, in the southern
part of the province Scythia, a fortification of approx. 1.1ha, with rectangular and U-shaped
towers (fig. 39), was built in the Constantinian period and repaired during the 5th and 6th c.205.
The same category of medium-size fortifications also includes the two fortifications in
Dacia Ripensis (Gamzigrad and Vrelo-arkamen), whose plan is typical of Tetrarchic military
architecture, but which also have a strong civilian character (which has led to their classification
as fortified residences). Gamzigrad (Felix Romuliana) is the fortification built by Emperor
Galerius, following the model of Diocletians palace in Split. The defence wall has a quadrangular plan of approx. 225210m (a surface of 4.5ha), it was built in two stages and has
20 massive protruding polygonal towers, of which the ones at the corners are truly gigantic
(external diameter of approx. 20m). Several dwelling complexes have been researched inside, as
well as temples, a horreum etc. The fortification was used throughout the 6thc. and it probably
had a semi-urban status206. The fortified residence from Vrelo-arkamen was probably built by
Emperor Maximinus Daia (305313), naturally after the model used at Split (Diocletian) and
Gamzigrad (Galerius.) It has internal dimensions of approx. 9296m (approx. 0.90ha) and
an over 3 m-thick defence wall with 10 massive polygonal towers (external diameter of almost
16m). Excavations have shown that the fortification was never completed207.
Most middle-size fortifications are actually fortified settlements, inhabited by a civilian
population and many of them built on heights (which led to their being referred to as Hill-top
defences, Hhensiedlungen). The main characteristic of fortified settlements is the more
or less irregular plan of the defence wall and the internal space division, the use of inferior
techniques when building the defence wall (often made of stones bound with earth or nothing
at all), the rare use or even lack of towers or other elements specific to military architecture (such
as barracks.) A series of recent studies208 has shown a high occurrence of this type of fortification
in the Balkans, as well as other regions of the Empire209, their chronological span ranging from
the end of the 4th beginning of the 5thc. to the 6thc., even if there are examples that can be
dated as early as the second half of the 3rdc. According to V. Dinev,210 during the 5th 6thc. a
major change affected dwelling inside fortifications in the Balkan Peninsula. An important part
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
of the fortifications that had clear military features in the 4thc. (as they were used to station
garrisons that defended the limes or mobile armies) bore predominantly civilian characteristics
starting with the end of the 4th and especially during the second half of the 5thc., which led to
their being described as fortified settlements. We cannot rule out the possibility that it was in
these fortifications that flourished the rural dwelling in the Balkans during the 5th 6thc., whose
lack of evidence elsewhere has been highly stressed by specialists211.
Out of the fortified settlements on the territory of the diocese of Dacia, which have
undergone archaeological excavations, several can be singled out: those in Berkovica (fig. 40)212
and Sadovec-Golemanovo Kale213 (both in Dacia Ripensis the former was located in an
important mining area and its construction mentioned in an inscription dated to the beginning
of the 5th c.; the latter was located at the border with Moesia Secunda and was a model
of fortified settlement inhabited by a civilian population with the status of foederati), Pernik
(fig.41, in Dacia Mediterranea, on the Serdica Pautalia road, a rural settlement fortified as
early as the second half of the 3rd c.)214, Potoac-Momilov Grad (in Moesia Prima, on the
Morava Valley, south of Horreum Margi, covering a surface of approx. 2ha and dated to the
6th c.)215, Kraku lu Jordan (fig. 42, in Moesia Prima, a fortification built in one of the most
important gold-mining areas)216, and Ras (in northern Dardania, built as early as the 4thc.,
probably with a semi-urban character)217.
A number of fortifications are also to be mentioned in the provinces of the diocese of
Thrace: Gabrovo in Moesia Secunda (fig. 43, surface of 2.4ha, that, apart from the defence
wall with a rounded tower and another rectangular one, also has a proteichisma; it was dated
to the middle of the 4th c.)218, Batoevo, also in Moesia Secunda (fig. 44, surface approx.
1.5 ha, probably constructed about the end of the 5th-beginning of the 6th c.)219, KipilovoSajganskoto Kale (fig. 45, Haemimontus, a surface of 0.80 ha, a defence wall with one
pentagonal and one triangular tower, dated to the end of the 4th c.)220, Blgari (Haemimontus,
a surface of 1.10ha, dry-set defence wall dated to the end of the 5th beginning of the 6th c.)221,
Panagjurite-Krasen Kale (Thrace, a surface of 2.50ha, with a massive triangular tower,
dated to the 4th c.)222.
To these we add an even higher number of minor fortifications (under 1 ha) with
irregular plans, that were either fortified rural settlements or mere places of refuge, for which
we recommend two recent studies that have analysed such constructions too223.
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
KIRILOV 2007, 334. Other researchers see a militarisation of the rural regions after 382, the moment when
the foederati were integrated in the Empire (POULTER 2007, 378379).
MITOVA-DONOVA 1977. See also the 5thc. building inscription, supra, n. 120.
UENZE 1992.
KIRILOV 2007, 338, Abb. 14.
BRMBOLI 1986.
TOMOVI 2000, 155183.
POPOVI M. 1999.
KOJEVA 2002. Cf. DINEV 2006, 11f., fig.19; KIRILOV 2007, 336, Abb. 9.
MILEV 1983. Cf. DINEV 2006, 2728, fig.30.
LISICOV 1975; OVAROV 1982, 4041, fig.21.
KIRILOV 2007, 329330, Abb. 1.
TOPTANOV et al. 1994; KIRILOV 2007, 336337.
MIKULI 2002, 58f.; DINEV 2006, 4546, 7980; DINEV 2007 a, 528530.
49
IV
Minor Fortifications
During the Late Empire
1. TERMINOLOGY
uring the Late Roman period literary and epigraphical sources use several terms when
refering to fortifications. But in most cases these terms cannot be verified against the
archaeological situation, as they do not have a clear correspondent from a functional or
typological point of view and can sometimes lead to confusion1.
G. Forni, in his synthesis on the limes, identifies the following terms2 used in literary and
especially epigraphical sources when refering to fortifications:
- Castra: is the classical term used to define regular fort, used for sheltering frontier
units along the main communication routes and in other important strategic points. They are
built according to the castrametatio rules (Hyginus, Vegetius) and differ in size, according to
the number of troops they house. In the 1st 3rdc. the castra could be legionary, auxiliary forts
and even forts for numeri (e.g. CIL III, 13796 = ILS 9180, in Dacia Inferior, 140 A.D.: castra
n(umerus) burg(ariorum) et vered(ariorum), from Praetorium).
- Castellum: is the diminutive for castrum, and it refers to a smaller-sized fort (Vegetius,
Epit. II, 8); usually it is to be connected to auxiliary units or numeri forts; it is generally
considered that the Greek correspondent of castellum is phrourion, which in its turn is different
from praesidium or burgus (according to the inscriptions from Thrace, where there is a difference
between praesidia, burgi and phruri, as we will see in comments to follow).
- Praesidium: the term appears in different contexts, usually refering to a garrison
stationed in a fortification, a castra or castellum. The most dwelled upon remain the inscriptions from Donje Butorke, Sexaginta Prista, Transmarisca, Durostorum, Halmyris and possibly
Seimeni3, which all seem to refer to old Roman forts along the Danubian limes, rebuilt during
the Tetrarchy4.
1
2
3
4
TORBATOV 2004 a, 45 remarks the terminological chaos, amplified by ancient authors (even by inscriptions), that often use contradictory definitios for the same site. See also JOUFFROY 1997.
FORNI 19591962, 10861094.
SARNOWSKI 1990; ZAHARIADE 1997 b.
A different interpretation of these inscriptions is put forward by S.Torbatov, which connects them to burgustype fortifications: TORBATOV 2002, 7879; TORBATOV 2004 a, 3637, 4647. The author bases his
theory on the inscriptions from two forts of this type identified at Donje Butorke (Gazetteer, no. 22B) and
probably Seimeni (Gazetteer, no. 41), considering that the inscriptions discovered in the other forts were
brought over from elsewhere as construction material.
51
- Centenarium: the term is used only in the African provinces, in a series of inscriptions
dated to the 3rd4thc., and clearly in connection to a building5; different interpretations have
been put forward, the most widely accepted one relating the centenarium to the centenarius, the
commander of 100 soldiers and the equivalent of the early Roman centurio6.
- Burgus: is mentioned as the castellum parvulum by Vegetius (Epit. IV, 10), and other
sources mention the burgarii (the personnel that resides in a burgus)7, burgus speculatorius and
even a burgus centenarius (see below, note 12); because the inscriptions make a clear distinction
between this fortification and the turris or pyrgos, G. Forni identifies the burgus with una torre
di dimensioni tali da servire anche da habitazione.
- Turris/Pyrgos: the inscriptions mention this term when referring to either towers
belonging to the above-mentioned fortifications or to separate structures; unlike the burgus, a
turris is small in size and is used primarily for signaling or survey.
- Oppidum: defines a fortified centre and is generally used for urban centres and more
rarely for military fortifications.
- Fossatum, Vallum, Praetentura, Clausurae: terms that define linear fortifications,
many of them being used in defensive systems which also contain some of the above-mentioned
fortifications (usually a castellum, burgus or turris).
To this scheme drawn up by G. Forni one can add other terms that often appear in
literary or epigraphical sources, such as munimentum/munitio (e.g. munimentum Robur8,
munitio in an inscription from Carcaliu9) and ochyroma (a Greek term meaning fortification
or precinct wall, used especially by Procopius when referring to a series of fortifications
restored by Justinian)10.
Regardless of the typology of Roman fortification names, we will find out that in the
Late Roman period identified or researched minor fortifications that have a similar plan appear
in written sources under different names. Thus, a fortification with four corner-towers on
the Arabian frontier, which at a first glance should not be named anything but tetrapyrgia or
quadriburgium, is named in its Tetrarchic foundation inscription castra (Qasr Bshir = castra
praetorii Mobeni)11. Also, we have seen that, although the name phrourion is assimilated by
most researchers to the Latin castellum, there are indications that this term is also used for
certain minor fortifications (see below the inscriptions from Thrace that lead us to think that a
5
7
8
9
10
11
IRTrip, 880 (Gasr Duib, dated 244249): con[s]tituto novo centenario; CIL VIII, 20215 = ILS, 6886 (year
293): centenarium Aqua Frigida; CIL VIII, 22763 = ILS, 9352 (Qsar Tarcine, ca. 294306): Centenarium
Tibubuci; A 19421943, 81 (Mdoukal, year 303): centenarium quod Aqua Viva appellatur; CIL VIII, 9010
(Bir Hadada, dated 315316): centenarium Solis; IRTrip, 877: centenare(um); IRTrip, 889: centeinari(um).
Against this interpretation see REDD 1995, 100. Several small fortifications (gsour) researched on the limes
of the province Tripolitania were considered centenaria (especially based on the inscription discovered at
Gasr Duib) and interpreted as fortified farms, inhabited by limitanei (GOODCHILD 1950, 34f.). Recent
research contest their military character and consider them reinforced farms, whose precincts are designed
to protect the inhabitants against banditism and have no direct connection to the limes (MATTINGLY,
HITCHNER 1995, 195; REDD 1995, 95).
CIL III, 13796; IGLR, 172; IGB III, 1690; CTh VII, 14.
Fortification in the province Sequania, on the Rhine limes, mentioned by Amm.Marcell. XXX, 3, 1 and
CTh VIII, 5, 33. Probably located near Basel, on the opposite shore of the Rhine (Kleinbasel, see catalogue
below). Cf. SCHNBERGER 1969, 186; PETRIKOVITS 1971, 217; MOOSBRUGGER-LEU 1974;
FELLMANN 2006 b, 218.
IGLR, 238.
Procopius, De aedif. IV, 6, 1 (Pincus, Cuppae, Novae); 6, 34 (Palatiolum, Sucidava); 7, 17 (Ulmetum).
CIL III, 14149. For research at Qasr Bshir see CLARK 1987.
52
phrourion was smaller than a burgus!). In the meantime, inscriptions that mention fortifications
such as the centenarium which, at a first glance, should constitute a specific architectural type,
are countedicted by the archaeological discoveries showing that this name can hide fortifications of different size and plans12.
I believe that a typology of fortifications up to 1ha drawn up only based on written
sources cannot stand, as an important contribution must be made by confronting it against the
results of archaeological excavations. After combining the written sources with the archaeological ones we can still identify the following distinct types of minor fortifications, generally
separated according to the surface of the fortified area:
1. Towers (turris/pyrgos/phrourion) this is the smallest type of fortification (an average
of 55m, but starting from approx. 33m up to 1010m). In studies dedicated
to this type of defensive structure it appears under different names: Wachtturm, tour
de garde, watchtower, tour de guet, signal-station. A series of studies focusing on
towers13 have shown their importance in the organization of the Roman frontier defense
systems.
2. Burgus-type fortifications (burgus/pyrgos/centenarium) we can include here
towers of over 10 10 m, that were inhabited by a sizeable population. Generally
these structures could house different types of dwelling structures, usually made of light
material, but also of stone walls in the case of larger structures (see type Topraichioi in
the Balkans, but also those gsour in Tripolitania, considered by some authors centenaria).
Many of them are characterized by the presence of a central yard, around which are laid
the dwelling structures. Their surface varies between 0.01 0.05ha, with rare exceptions
below and above these figures.
3. Quadriburgium-type of fortifications (tetrapyrgia / quadriburgium / praesidium
/ centenarium / castra / castellum / phrourion) apart from the classic plan (that
is rectangular with four corner-towers), there is also a whole list of variants (with
intermediary towers, with towers flanking the gates, or even with a non-rectangular plan)
and certainly an evolution in time. The surface of such a fortification varies between 0.05
0.40ha, again with rare exceptions below and above these figures.
4. Small castellum-type (praesidium / centenarium / castra / castellum / phrourion):
this category is typical of the Early Roman period and was usually used for stationing
numeri units; during the Late Empire, though there are different shapes of fortifications,
rectangular or polygonal, that usually serve a military purpose. We consider that in this
category should be included fortifications with a surface of more than 0.40ha and up to
1ha, which constitutes the upper limit of minor fortifications.
12
13
REDD 1995, 100 stresses D. J. Mattinglys observation that the centenarium Aqua Viva (with a plan more
similar to a quadriburgium, with towers inserted in the forts sides) has 0.74ha and is 33 times larger than
the centenarium Tibubuci, that has a surface of only 0.02ha, thus being considered more likely a burgus. For
this also see PRINGLE 1981, 431, n. 6; TORBATOV 2004 a, 82; LE BOHEC 2004, 258. Considering the
attested toponym burgus Centenarius, I think that there is an important similarity between the two terms (see
in province Valeria, NDOcc. XXXIII, 62: tribunus cohortis, ad burgum Centenarium).
GICHON 1974b (limes Palaestinae); TROUSSET 1990 (limes Tripolitanus); GUDEA 1997 (limes Daciae
Porolissensis). Also see ZAHARIADE 2003; JEREMI 2007.
53
2. HELLENISTIC
hat we define as minor fortifications can be found in periods preceeding the one on
which this analysis is focused. When we consider the typology drawn up above, we can
identify ancestors for each and every one of the respective categories. Each types of minor fortifications mentioned above appear in inscriptions or literary texts beginning with the Hellenistic
period, confirmed sometimes by field research or archaeological excavations.
Towers
The Hellenistic period offers a large array of tower types, and apart from the literary and
epigraphical mentions there are numerous examples, some still standing, others set to value by
archaeological excavations. There are still arguments on the function of towers, most opinions
oscilating between their civil, rural, agricultural related function and a military, defensive one.
A recent study of S.Thielemans is dedicated to the study of Hellenistic towers in the mining
regions of Laurion, Syphnos and Thasos, and it tries to connect the numerous towers discovered
in these areas of ancient Greece wit the need for enforcing the security of the mining facilities;
it also highlights their important role in surveillance. The author rightly stresses that their
basic function, regardless of them being located in agricultural, mining, quarrying areas or at
the frontier (including those on the Aegean shores), was that of ensuring the security of that
respective area14. The most recent synthesis on these fortifications in Greece emphasizes the
relation between the towers and the agricultural and artisan exploitations using slave labor15. It
also presents the standard model for the Greek tower (Cheimarrou in the island of Naxos, very
well preserved), which is circular (external diameter of 9.20m and internal diameter of 8.50m)
and whose height is estimated at 15 m. It was located inside a yard of approximately 35 m2 that
contained installations for olive oil production and was delimited by a stone wall16.
We have to mention here the old argument between Al. Suceveanu and Emilia DoruiuBoil, concerning the character of the towers mentioned by two Early Roman inscriptions,
discovered on the western Black Sea shore (Laikos Pyrgos and vicus Turris Muca, to which can
be added the Stratonis Turris recorded on the shield from Dura Europos)17, the former stressing
the towers military role and integrating them in a system for the defense of the seashore, the
latter connecting them to agricultural exploitations. The issue to be raised is not that of the role
that they played (clearly of surveillance of the territory), but whether these towers are the result
of a civilian or a military initiative18. The lack of systematic research on this matter makes it
hard to give a definitive answer at the present moment.
The epigraphical documentation concerning surveillance towers in the Early Roman
period is especially rich in the African provinces, where a series of important inscriptions dated
14
15
16
17
18
THIELEMANS 1999, 154155. See also GRIMAL 1939; YOUNG 1956; OSBORNE 1986; TIENNE
1990, 3134, figs. 12 (circular tower at Smovolon, square at Avdo, connected with the defensive system of
the city of Tenos and its territory, Fig.46); E. Skafida, BCH 124, 2000, 962963, figs. 251252 (the round
towers at Skopelos-Glossa, connected to the local agricultural exploitations).
MORRIS, PAPADOPOULOS 2005. The earliest examples that have been excavated are dated to the 5thc.
B.C.
MORRIS, PAPADOPOULOS 2005, 155156, fig.1.
SUCEVEANU 1974, 229; DORUIU-BOIL 1975.
See for example the situation in Syria for the Late Roman Early Byzantine period, where epigraphic
documentation about pyrgoi, burgi and phrouria attests both civilian and military initiative (SARTRE 2007,
269).
54
to the reign of Commodus were discovered. One of these mentions that during the emperors
reign turres novas instituit et veteres refecit opere militum19.
Archaeological discoveries in the Empires different provinces attest, as it was to be
expected, the frequency of these installations with signalling, guarding and surveillance
functions. A series of special studies is dedicated to their typology and chronology, as well as
to the tactical implications deriving from their layout in the territory. Thus, for the western
provinces we must mention the studies concerning the Rhine and Danube frontiers20, where an
impressive number of such towers have been identified. On the border of Dacia Porolissensis
many towers have been archaeologically and topographically investigated (as well as a series of
burgi and minor castra), as they were part of an advanced line of defence21. Their location
was chosen according to necessity, usually in spots with a good visibility over the territory,
and played the role of signal-stations or watchtowers. We notice the diversity of shapes used
(circular, square) and the constant use of stone as construction material.
Also, some constructions in Palestine reflect local inheritance on one side, and on the
other Roman innovations22. The typical example of watchtower is the one excavated at Migdal
Tsafit, that has a square plan (6.156.15m), an interior staircase for access at the upper level
(Fig.47) and is dated to Trajans reign (with the mention that it was also in use during the 4th c.)23.
In Africa, more precisely on the limes Tripolitanus, circular or square towers are usually
located near the Roman forts, their surveillance and signaling role therefore evident24. The
dimensions of towers in the Lybian provinces vary between 4.54.5m and 6.56.5m (see
the typical example at Guebba25, Fig. 48), but there are also larger ones (Zaviet Msus, in
Cyrenaica, external dimensions 7.56m, with an outer enclosure 26, Fig.50).
Burgus
The origins of this type of fortification can also be found in the Early Roman period. A
series of inscriptions mention the construction of such burgi in different regions of the Empire
(Thrace, Pannonia, Africa, Eastern provinces).
In Thrace there are famous inscriptions that concern the fortification of the territories
of certain cities (Marcianopolis, Augusta Traiana, Serdica, Deultum, Bizye) during Antoninus
Pius reign (152155): praesidia et burgos ob tutelam provinciae Thraciae. The texts mention,
apart from the term praesidium, that of burgus, phrourion or pyrgos27. The most complex is the
inscription from the territory of Serdica28, more exactly from the regio Dyptensium, where it
states that 4 praesidia, 12 burgi29 and 109 phruri were raised. One can clearly see the difference
between these types of structures: if the praesidium can be considered a type of fort or only
a type of roadside fortification, close to a mansio, the burgus is clearly a considerably smaller
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
fortification, but not small enough to be mistaken with a phrurion, which must have represented simply an easy-to-build (thus its largely attested presence) watchtower.
Type
Praesidia
Burgi
Phruri
Number
12
109
3
27
1
9
Dimensions
Surface
26 26 m
675 m2
1515 m
55 m
220 m2
25 m2
Calculation
25 mp27 phruri
220 mp3 burgi
25 mp9 phruri
From the table above several interesting observations can be made. First of all we can see
there is a clear ratio between the three types of fortifications: for every praesidium there are 3
burgi and 27 phruri, and for every burgus there are 9 phruri. If this observation works not only
as a number, but also when it comes to surface ratio, and if we consider the standard dimensions of a tower (phrurion) 55m, that is 25 m2, then every burgus should cover approximately 220m2, which implies a structure of approximately 1515m, and for a praesidium
approximately 675 m2, that is a fort of approximately 2626 m. If this theory is right, then
the praesidium should be included in the category of minor roadside fortifications, as it is
a structure similar to the praetorium. Of course, this calculation is purely speculative in the
absence of archaeological proof, but it represents an interesting direction to be followed in the
study of these minor fortifications from the Early Roman period.
For now there is no clear identification through archaeological methods for the fortifications built during Antoninus Pius reign. We will only mention a recent tentative to identify the
auxiliary fort at Lomec (Sostra) with one of the praesidia mentioned by these inscriptions, theory
which its authors based on the fact that fortification was built during the same emperors reign30.
To the reign of Commodus is dated a group of inscriptions with identical texts,
discovered in the fort at Dunaujvaros (Intercisa), to which we add another inscription from
Szazhalombatta (Matrica), that mention the construction of a chain of burgi and praesidia on
the limes of province Pannonia Inferior (ripa omnem burgis a solo extructis item praesidis per loca
oportuna ad clandestinos latrunculorum transitus oppositis munivit)31. This is another example that
proves the distinction to be made between the praesidium and the burgus in the Early Empire.
We must mention that some of these constructions have been identified through archaeological methods or on aerial photographs, such an example being Budapest-Csillaghegy (59
Kossuth Lajos st.), dimensions 88m (Fig.52), dated to the reign of Commodus based on
the archaeological material32.
Another interesting inscription from Commodus reign was found in Africa, and it
clearly mentions that burgis novis provincia munita miliaria conlapsa vetustate restituit in the
territory of Mauretania Caesariensis33, which highlights the close relationship between the
restoration of the road system and the building of minor fortifications to guard it.
In Africa, more precisely in the province Numidia, two inscriptions mentioning a
burgus speculatorius were discovered near El Kantara (Calceus Herculis). The first one, from
Ksar Sidi el Hadj, is dated to the reign of Commodus and mentions the construction of such a
burgus between two roads34. The second one, found at Loth Bordj (only 3 km away from the
30
31
32
33
34
Tetrapyrgia/Quadriburgium
The term quadriburgium (or quadriburgus) is a neologism invented at the beginning of
the 20 c. by the pioneers of research on the Empires Eastern frontier43 to define a certain type
of small-size fortification, with four towers at its corners, a model often encountered especially
on the Strata Diocletiana in Syria and considered by A. Poidebard a distinctive Diocletianic
type44. This term does not appear in ancient sources except as a 4thc. toponym (Amm. Marc.
XVIII, 2, 4, where, among the civitates occupatae by Franks and Alamanni in 355 on the Rhine
limes, the toponym Quadriburgium is mentioned, identified by most researchers with the
present-day Qualburg ; NDOcc. XXXIV, 6 and 17: equites sagittarii, Quadriburgio, on the
limes of Pannonia I and that of the Noricum Ripense, with an uncertain location; NDOcc.
XXXIII, 60: tribunus cohortis, Quadriborgio, on the limes of province Valeria, also of an uncertain
location)45. For now, there is no positive identification between any of these toponyms and a
fortification with towers located at each of its four corners.
A different situation arises in the case of the Greek term tetrapyrgia46, less used by certain
researchers, but with a certain origin in the name of Hellenistic fortifications of this type. Unlike
the Latin term, the Greek one is found in Syria, where it is used as a toponym that describes a
settlement which contains a fortification with four corner-towers: more precisely Tetrapyrgium,
positively identified with the site at Qusair as-Saila, between Sura and Resafa47. Moreover, the
only explicite mention concerning tetrapyrgia as the name of a fortification with four cornertowers is to be found in Procopius De aedificiis. When describing Justinians homeland, the
author mentions that near the city of Bederiana there was a small market-town called Taurision,
the emperors birthplace, which the latter has reinforced with a small quadrangular fortification
with a tower at each of its corners, whence its name of Tetrapyrgia ()48. Besides these
two archaeologically-confirmed mentions49, there are two such toponyms in Asia Minor50. If we
interpret the term only from a linguistic point of view, it should define only fortifications with
four corner-towers; but the archaeological discoveries demonstrate that in this category one can
also include structures derived from this standard.
Arguments on the Hellenistic origin of this type of fortification were put forward as
early as the first serious studies on the so-called Diocletianic type fortifications. P. Debord
identifies tetrapyrgia in epigraphical texts concerning rural fortifications in Asia Minor51. Also, a
th
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
The term is used for the first time by de A. von Domaszewski when describing the forts at Deir el-Kahf and
Qasr Bshir, both dated by Tetrarchic inscriptions (cf. GREGORY 1996, 193).
Which is different from a so-called pre-Diocletianic type and from another, post-Diocletianic type.
For the inconsistency of this much used classification, see LANDER 1980, 1051; LANDER 1984, 181f.;
REDD 1995, 100.
RE XXIV, 1963, col. 678680, s.v. Quadriburgium. See also the stamped bricks which attest this toponym,
discovered in the same Norico-Pannonian area: A 1908, 53 (Pilismarot/Castra ad Herculem): LEG.
II.AAD(iutrix)//Q(u)ADRIB(urgium); CIL III, 10691a-b (Komarom/Brigetio): QUADRIB(urgium) and
QUADRIBURG(ium); A 1947, 28 (Szentendre/Ulcisia Castra): QUADRIB(urgium).
RE V A 1 , 1934, col. 1089, s.v. Tetrapyrgia. Hellenistic sources: Plutarh, Eum., 8, 5 (in Phrygia); Strabon XVII,
22 (in Cyrenaica); IGRR IV, 1381 = SEG 13, 518 (market days at Tetrapyrgium), for which see DEBORD
1994, 5758; MORRIS, PAPADOPOULOS 2005, 184, 204.
KONRAD 2001 b, 13. The toponym is mentioned in Sts. Sergius and Bacchus martyrical acts (in civitate
Tetrapyrgio). Cf. RE V A 1, 1934, col. 1089, Tetrapyrgia (4) (E. Honigmann).
Procopius, De aedif., IV, 1, 18. Cf. RE V A1, 1934, col. 1089, Tetrapyrgia (2) (M. Fluss).
For Taurision see its possible location at tulac (Gazetteer, No.79).
RE V A 1, 1934, col. 1089, Tetrapyrgia (1) (V. Huys). Cf. Tab.Peut. IX, 3 (Tetrapyrgia in Cilicia, on the road
between Iconium and Pompeiopolis, for which see HILD 1991, 311316).
DEBORD 1994, 5758.
58
text from Plutarch mentions that Eumenes, one of the characters in the fights for succession in
Asia Minor after Alexanders death, rewarded his soldiers after a victory with epauleis (farms)
and tetrapyrgias (fortified domains)52.
The archaeological documentation of tetrapyrgiai in the Hellenistic world is ample
enough. Among the best known examples we mention the fortifications at Theangela (in Caria,
Fig. 57)53 and Prinias (in Crete, Fig. 56)54, both of a regular plan and with square cornertowers55, the fortified residences at Latmos (here with two examples, the so-called Nordfort
Fig.59 and the one from the Inner City Fig.60)56, Demetrias (the so-called anaktoron,
Fig.61)57 and Seuthopolis (Fig.62)58. One can notice their military character as the largest of
them, located in the neighborhood of cities (Demetrias: 6061m, Seuthopolis: 6774m),
served at the same time as residence to the local Macedonian or Thracian chieftains, as the
palaces built inside proove. Another tetrapyrgia is attested in Epirus, at Malathre, inside what
could possibly be a farm (Fig.55). In this case one notices the strong square bastion-towers set
at its corners59.
In the Northern Black Sea area such a structure appears at Panskoye (central area U7,
Fig.63), and it is one of the earliest (end of the 5th beginning of the 4thc. BC), with the
mention that it was partially demolished afterwards (around the middle of the 4thc. BC) and
civilian dwellings were built on its location60.
Some researchers have noticed that there is a hiatus between the last Hellenistic tetrapyrgia
(dated to the 1stc. BC)61 and the first fortifications of this type in the Roman world, built under
Diocletian. The fortification at Eski Hisar (approx. 3535m, rectangular corner-towers and
others flanking the gate, and rectangular bastions on the other three sides, Fig.66) is considered
to be a connection link. Although it was dated by an inscription in 197 AD, Shelagh Gregory
does not agree and dates this tetrapyrgia in the Hellenistic period62, using as arguments other
obvious analogies for this type of fortifications in the East (like the fortress on the island of
Failaka63, see Fig.64).
Worth to mention here is the lesser known fort at Mineralni Bani in Thrace (Fig.348),
construction dated in the 2nd3rdc. AD64, whose plan resembles some Hellenistic tetrapyrgiai
and could be considered an evolution of this type of fortification in the Early Roman period.
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
The missing link between the Hellenistic tradition and the Late Roman period was
found by some researchers in fortifications from the Parthian and Sassanian world, which had
an important influence on quadriburgia that were built on the Eastern frontier of the Late
Roman Empire. This discovery is based on the typical quadriburgium plan of certain fortifications researched, or only topographically investigated, in the Persian world, which also spread
in neighboring areas such as the Arab world. One such example is the fortified residence at
Khirbet Jaddalah, 51 km NE of Hatra (dated to 141142 by an inscription discovered in situ),
which is made up of a building with portico and rectangular corner-towers, surrounded by a
fortification with rectangular corner- and intermediary towers with rounded edges (Fig.67)65.
As there are other similar examples in the Parthian world, such as those at Kish-Tell Bandar
(Fig.68) and Ibn Alwan, rectangular in plan and with corner- or intermediary towers,66 the
conclusion reached by G. Bergamini regarding the Parthian fortifications is the following:
the square fort with rounded towers, inner courtyard and buildings along the fortified line is
fully developed in Parthian Mesopotamia at least in the first half of the IInd century AD; the
plans fits well with medium-size fortresses, or with smaller fortified dwellings, intended to face
disturbances of a feudal state or occasional threats67. The same direction is followed by other
specialists, M. Konrad seeing in it an evolution of the original Hellenistic type that developed
in the buffer zone between the Roman and Parthian, then Sassanian worlds (after 223)68. This
observation is based on the fact that the plans of Sassanian fortifications are in many cases
identical to that of quadriburgium-type fortifications in the Late Roman Empire69.
Small castellum
In the Early Roman period many fortifications on the Rhine and Danube frontiers are
small forts. They appear as early as the first half of the 1stc. and were built of wood and earth.
Some of the earliest examples are the forts at Nersingen (22.2 25.2 m) and Burlafingen
(2829.5m), on the Upper Danube limes, whose construction is dated in the fourth decade
of the 1stc. (Fig.72, 73)70. On the limes of Moesia Superior are attested a series of fortlets,
built either of wood and earth or stone, whose surfaces are under 0.30ha, most of them raised
in wood during the 1stc. AD71. For the Antonine period there is to be mentioned the fort at
Degerfeld72, whose characteristics are similar to that of a burgus, and another fortlets on the
german limes (Fig.7478)73.
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
The typical example of minor Roman fortification is the numerus fort, whose dimensions
are usually around 6060 m. The classical examples are the forts at Hesselbach74 and other such
structures on the Rhine limes and that of the Upper Danube75, as well as a series of fortifications
in Dacia Inferior, such as the numeri forts built during Hadrians reign on the limes Alutanus:
Stolniceni (Buridava), Smbotin (Castra Traiana), Rdcineti Fig.79, Bivolari (Arutela)
Fig.80, Tieti and Copceni (Praetorium I)76. The fort at Tieti77 is representative, with
dimensions of 56.6048.20m, rounded corners and two gates (Fig.81), built probably by
the numerus burgariorum et veredariorum, stationed at Praetorium I (Copceni), a fort with the
same construction characteristics. For most of these forts we notice internal corner-towers, gates
flanked by rectangular towers and the existence of buttresses on the walls inside.
Harlach (limes Raetiae) is a small square fortification (3232m, Fig.82), dated to
the Severan era and considered by some authors as an example of centenarium in the western
provinces78, but which can more likely be interpreted as a fortified mansio.
In Dalmatia we know an example of roadside castellum at Rijeani-Budetina Grada,
near Nikic (on the territory of present-day Montenegro), identified with the Salthua mentioned
in Roman itineraries. The fort is quadrangular (sides of 71676464m), has two rounded
corners and two edged ones, the 2.30 m-thick walls are made of stone bound with mortar and
are pierced by entrances on three sides (Fig.83)79.
Archaeological research has established a continuous functioning of these minor forts
during the 4thc. in places like: Hflein-Kirchenberg in Noricum80 minor fort with rounded
corners (approx. 3959m), used without major transformation also in the 4th c.; Budapest-Pest
(Transaquincum)81, in Pannonia fortification of 7676m, located on the left bank of the
Danube, at the mouth of Rkos River, dated to Commodus reign and rebuilt under Valentinian
I; Schlgen (Ioviacum), also in Noricum auxiliary fort with a surface of 0.65 ha, rounded
corners, reused in the 4thc. without essential changes in its plan82. In the area we focus on a clear
example of continuity is the minor fort at Boljetin (Smorna)83, that had an initial wooden phase
(1stc.), then was rebuilt in stone and was radically modified in the 4thc., when U- or fan-shaped
corner towers appear, as well as square towers that close the two gates of the early fort.
But the most interesting example is a minor fortification (a surface of 0.20 ha) at
Comalu, an emplacement located at Dacia Inferiors north-eastern frontier, which was dated
to the second half of the 3rdc. (N. Gudea). This uses building techniques that announce the
typical Late Roman military architecture: it has an irregular plan, with its northern side adapted
to the terrain, and at three corners, as well as in the middle of two of the sides, there are rectangular towers completely projected towards the exterior (Fig.84)84.
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
SCHNBERGER 1969, 167168, fig.19; LANDER 1984, 85, fig.68; BAATZ 2000, 192193, Abb. 102.
A list for these at SCHNBERGER 1985, 491493. The author places the upper limit for the surface of a
Kleinkastell at 0.60ha. See also BAATZ 2000, Abb.
GUDEA 1997 b, nos. 74, 75, 77, 78, 80, 81. Cf. LANDER 1984, 61f.
POENARU-BORDEA, VLDESCU 1981.
LANDER 1984, 116, fig.102; SCHNBERGER 1985, 493; REDD 1995, 97, fig.11; BAATZ 2000,
298299, Abb. 139.
MIJOVI, KOVAEVI 1975, 4851, fig.44.
KASTLER 1997. Cf. WILKES 2005, 197.
JOHNSON 1983, 186, fig.74; BERTK 1997, 165; WILKES 2005, 204.
BRANDL et al. 1997, 160164, Abb. 5556; HCKMANN 1986, 405, Abb. 16.
Gazetteer, No.11.
GUDEA 1997 b, nos. 41, 6465 (with references). This fortification may also be dated to a later period if we
have in mind the exceptional discoveries made in the same area, such as the golden ingots from Crasna and
Feldioara (IGLR, 431, 432), dated either to 379380 (and connected to the stipends offered by Theodosius
I to the Goths, after the disaster at Hadrianopolis), or in the early 5th (CURTA 1990). Unfortunately the
archaeological data are not so good as we might expect.
61
In Egypt there are a series of fortified roadside stations in the Eastern desert, more
precisely on the road that connect the Nile Valley to the Red Sea (Coptos Myos Hormos,
Coptos Berenice), dated to the end of the 1stc. first half of the 2ndc. The best known are
those at El Mweih (5555m), Tell Al-Zarqa (6060m), El Homra (5659m), Ed Duwwi
(5657m), Badia (4737m) and Wadi Meni el Hir (6050m)85. These fortifications,
mentioned by Plinius under the name hydreumata, mansiones, praesidia or stativa86, considered
to be built during the late Roman period, are characterized by a regular quadrangle plan, with
round or U-shaped corner-towers and usually intermediary towers on the sides or at the gates87.
3. THE REGIONAL
EVIDENCE
The contribution of archaeological research to the knowledge of different types of fortifications during the Late Roman Empire is, without doubt, the most important. In order to
obtain a general image of minor fortifications, their architectural characteristics, dating elements
and even the origins of the building programs, we need to take into account the situation for
each and every region of the Empire.
Obviously, most of the important information comes from sites where archaeological
investigations were conducted in the best of conditions and, unfortunately, such cases are rare
enough. In most cases, excavations were undertaken during the 19thc. or in the first half of
the 20thc., when the stratigraphical method and interpretation of the archaeological material
were still not fully developed. Also, many of these fortifications are known from only a few
soundings that could not offer clear chronological markers. Another category is that of fortifications known only through topographical surveys and the plans drawn starting with the
19thc. (see the research by Ch. Diehl for North Africa), continued in the first half of the 20thc.
(H.C.Butler in Syria, Brnnow and Domaszewski in Arabia), but also through data obtained
by the pioneers of aerial photography (A. Poidebard on the Eastern frontier) and completed
by the modern aerophotogrammetrical research (D. Kennedy and D. Riley). Fortifications in
Africa and in the East are known in great detail also because of their very good state of preservation, as many of them can be seen standing even today.
In the following we thought it necessary to present a selection of the most important
minor fortifications, divided into three large areas (West, East and Africa), to which we added
the south-Balkans area, as it is not covered by the present study. For each region the fortifications are grouped according to typological characteristics, in order to obtain an instrument
capable of identifying analogies for the fortifications in the main area of interest in our research.
3.1. Western provinces
Britannia. The so-called signal stations identified on the coastline in Yorkshire or in
the Channel islands (Huntcliff, Goldsborough and others) have the following characteristic
structure: a central square tower of approx. 1515m, a surrounding courtyard (of an average
85
86
87
territories and North-Western Raetia around 260. The first restoration signs appear in Emperor
Probus reign (see the fortification at BettmauerIsny94), but a systematic restoration of the new
frontier is started only during the Tetrarchy95, when the fort of the Legio I Martia at Kaiseraugst
(Castrum Rauracense)96 and the fortification at Burg bei Stein-am-Rhein (Tasgaetium)97 are
raised, as well as the auxiliary fort at Kellmnz (Caelius Mons), with a surface of under 1ha
and where the cohors III Herculea Pannoniorum (NDOcc. XXXV, 30) was stationed98. We must
mention that the fort of the Legio III Italica at Regensburg (Castra Regina) was still in use,
without important changes of the plan99, and that a series of minor fortification appeared,
such as those at Neuburg and Eining, as well as several burgi on the roads in the interior of the
provinces (Goldberg-Trkheim).
During Constantines reign there was a constant preoccupation with the maintenance
of existent fortifications, as well as with the construction of new ones, such as the one that
surrounds the burgus at Goldberg-Trkheim or the fortification at Arbon (Arbor Felix)100,
the general tendency being that of building polygonal structures, adapted to the terrain. The
discovery of wooden burgi (Schlingen, Baisweil and Meckatz)101 along one of the main arteries
of the province Raetia (Bregenz/Brigantium-Kempten/Cambodunum-Augsburg/Augusta
Vindelicorum), dated generally to the reign of Constantine and his successors, could be linked
to road organization and surveillance, as well as that of the cursus publicus102.
Some epigraphical discoveries and especially the archaeological research have made
an important contribution to the identification of a large-scale construction program under
Valentinian I, both at the frontiers, as well as inside the provinces. This is characterized by the
construction of an impressive series of towers or burgi103, with the aim of improving the control
of the frontier and of communication routes, but also by the building of new horrea (Schaan,
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
Pentagonal fortification with an internal surface of 0.27ha, rectangular corner-towers and gate flanked by
semicircular bastions. In its initial phase there was a complex of barracks parallel to the defense wall, which
was later redone with the structures set against the defense wall. It is dated certainly before 280283 (coins
found in clear stratigraphical contexts), which makes it one of the rare military fortifications in this period
(Gallienus-Aurelianus-Probus). Cf. SCHNBERGER 1969, no. 91; PETRIKOVITS 1971, no. 84 (dated
before 283); LANDER 1984, 181, fig.167, 168; CIGLENEKI 1987, p. 1820, Abb. 9 (dated to Probus
reign); STRIBRNY 1989, 418420; MACKENSEN 1999, 205207, fig.7.4 (dated before 280).
MACKENSEN 1999, 199f.
SCHLEIERMACHER 19431950, 172; PETRIKOVITS 1971, 181, fig. 29.2; FELLMANN 2004,
203204; REDD 2004, 159, fig.4.
Fortification with a rhomboid plan (0.80ha), semicircular towers, dated by an inscription to 293305 (CIL
XIII, 5256): LANDER 1984, 185, fig.170; REDD 1995, 101, fig.24; MACKENSEN 1999, 221.
Fortification at the border between small and medium-sized area (0.86ha, approx. 98.5101.5m), almost
rectangular plan, with the eastern side following the terrains configuration; 3.60m thick defense wall; two
round corner-towers, semicircular and one rectangular towers on the sides; the western side is defended by two
ditches; the buildings inside, planned around a street network, are not set against the defense wall; we must
notice the discovery of a structure raised during the construction phase (wooden building, with hypocaust,
dated by coins to 296/297); it is dated certainly during the Tetrarchy, with 297 as a terminus post quaem.
NDOcc. XXXV, 30. See MACKENSEN 1994 a; MACKENSEN 1995; MACKENSEN 1999, 207213,
223228, figs. 7.8, 7.16.
MACKENSEN 1999, 216218, figs. 7.13.
MACKENSEN 1999, 228.
OHLENROTH 1939; GARBSCH 1967, 5362.
MACKENSEN 1999, 230. A useful comparison can be made between burgi researched on the Bavay-Kln
road in northern Gaul (see above, BRULET 1990) or with the results of excavations at Medvedja (mansio
Idimum) and other sites on the Viminacium Horreum Margi sector of the Trans-Balkan military road (VASI,
MILOEVI 2000).
DRACK 1993. See below the inscriptions from Kleiner Laufen and Rotte Waag.
64
106
107
108
109
Pferrichgraben: slightly rhomboidal tower with dimensions 1112m on the outside, 2.10 m-thick
walls (an interior area of approx. 55 m2), surrounded by a ditch. (Fig.99)
DRACK 1993, 1618, no.4.
Rheinsulz: massive rectangular tower (15.2014.70 m), with 2.70 m-thick walls. (Fig.100)
DRACK 1993, 2425, no.16A.
Rote Waag-Etzgen: A burgus-type fortification existed here, based on the inscription dated to 371
AD (CIL XIII, 11538): [S]alvis ddd(ominis) nnn(ostris) / Valentiniano / [Va]lente et Gratiano / [Victo]
r(ibus) se<m=N>p(er) Aug(ustis) burgum / [in Raur]iaco confine leg(io) octa[va] / [August]anensium
fecit sub cur(a) / ri p(rae)p(ositi) consu(libus) d(omino) n(ostro) Gratiano II / [et Fl(avio) P]robo v(iro)
c(larissimo).
DRACK 1993, 2526, no.19. Cf. SCHNBERGER 1969, 186; PETRIKOVITS 1971, no.71.
Unteres Brgli: massive tower, slightly rhomboidal (17.6017.90 m), wall thickness 2.502.80m
in foundation and 2.202.40m in elevation, entrance 1.80m wide; interior divided by a wall in two
chambers. Dated by coins from Valentinian I and Gratian. (Fig.107)
DRACK 1993, 2627, no.20.
Oberes Brgli: square tower, 7.507.50m, wall thickness 1.201.50m (foundation) and 1.25
1.30 m (elevation), approx. 25 m2 internal area. Coin finds from Constantine to Gratian on two
occupational layers. (Fig.87)
DRACK 1993, 2627, no.21.
Jppe: approx. square tower, dimensions 9.70 10 m on the outside, wall thickness between
1.35/1.401.60/1.80m (interior area c. 48 m2). (Fig.88)
DRACK 1993, 28, no.23.
Kleiner Laufen-Koblenz (Summa Rapida): approx. square tower (7.808.10m on the outside),
1.501.60 m thick wall in elevation (1.802.00 m in foundation), 24 m2 interior surface; external
rampart and ditch, which probably formed a square precinct. Inscription from 371374 AD (CIL
XIII, 11537 = A 1908, 142): Salvi[s ddd(ominis) nnn(ostris)] / Valent[iniano] / Valente e[t Gratiano] /
per(petuis) tr(iumphatoribus) se<m=N>p[er Auggg(ustis)] / summa Rapida / fecit sub cura / consul(ibus)
d(omino) n(ostro) Gratiano [II et Probo v(iro) c(larissimo). (Fig.85)
DRACK 1993, 29, no.27. Cf. GARBSCH 1967, no.23; SCHNBERGER 1969, 186; PETRIKOVITS
1971, no.73.
Tgerbach: square tower, c. 99m, 1.50 m-thick wall (approx. surface 36 m2). (Fig.89)
DRACK 1993, 3334, no.31.
Hardwald: square tower, 7.507.50m, c. 1.50 m-thick wall (interior surface c. 20.5 m2), surrounded
by a ditch. (Fig.95)
DRACK 1993, 3435, no.36.
Tssegg: square tower of approx. 11.8012m, 2.203.00 m-thick wall (foundations), central pillar,
surrounded by ditch on three sides. Dated to Valentinian I, in use until the beginning of the 5th c. (Fig.102)
DRACK 1993, 3638, no.41.
66
Rheinau-Kpferplatz: burgus made up of a square tower of 9.90 9.90 m on the outside, with
approx. 1.70m thick walls, central pillar; surrounded by an earth precinct with round corners and a
ditch. Dated to Valentinian I. (Fig.96)
PETRIKOVITS 1971, 217, no.75, fig.28.3; DRACK 1993, 3941, no.43.
Ratihard: square tower, 10.2510.25m, 2.00 m-thick wall, enclosing an area of approx. 40 m2.
(Fig.90)
DRACK 1993, 43, no.50.
Finningen-Neu Ulm: Burgus made of a 11.712m tower, surrounded by a 3.6m wide ditch, located
at the confluence of the rivers Iller and Danube. Dated to the reign of Valentinian I. (Fig.103)
MACKENSEN 1999, 231, fig.7.22.
Passau-Haibach: Square burgus (1212 m) with 1.30 m-thick walls, enclosing an area of 88 m2;
surrounded by a ditch approximately 8m wide. Dated to the second half of the 4th c. (Fig.104)
BENDER 1983; MOOSBAUER 1997, 154157, Abb. 5152.
Ybbs: on the Danube limes in Noricum Ripense, unidentified burgus, mentioned in the inscription
dated to 370 AD (CIL III, 5670a = ILS, 774): DDD(ominorum) NNN(ostrorum) Valentiniani / Valenti/s
et Gratiani perennium Augustor/um saluberrima iussionem hunc / burgum a fundamentis ordinante /
viro clarissimo Equitio comite et / utriusque militiae magistro i/nsistente etiam Leontio p(rae)p(osito) mili/
tes auxiliares Lauriacenses cu/r(a)e eius conmissi consulatus / eorundem dominorum prin/cipumque
nostrorum tertii ad / summam manum perduxserunt / perfectiones.
PETRIKOVITS 1971, nr. 93.
Bacharnsdorf: Burgus of 12.2 12.2 m on the outside; the wall has a foundation 1.50 m thick,
interior surface being of approx. 85 m2; the elevation is preserved on the southern side on a height of
9m, and it has windows on the first floor; dated to Valentinian I (no conclusive material was discovered
though). (Fig.101)
UBL 1997 a.
Esztergom inscription from 371 AD (CIL III, 3653 = ILS, 775 = RIU, 771): Iudicio principali
dominorum nostrorum / Valentiniani Valentis et Gratiani / principum maximorum dispositione etiam /
illustris viri utriusque militiae magistri / equitis comitis Foscanus praepositus / legionis primae Martiorum
una cum / militibus sibi creditis hunc burgum / cui nomen Commercium qua causa et factus / est a
fundamentis et construxit et / ad summam manum operis in diebus XXXXVIII / consulatus / divi
nostri Gratiani Augusti bis / et Probi viri clarissimi fecit pervenire. Probably to be connected to one of the
archaeologically identified towers in the area of Eztergom.
Cf. SOPRONI 1989, 108, Abb. 4; BORHY 1999.
67
Esztergom-Szentgyrgymez 1: located 1.2 km east of the fort at Esztergom (Solva); square tower
(9.629.72m on the outside), 1.00 m-thick wall, interior surface approx. 59 m2; surrounded by a
circular ditch with a diameter of approximately 28 m. Dated in the time of Valentinian I. (Fig.97)
SOPRONI 1978, 2124, no.1, Taf. 4.1; SOPRONI 1985, 28, Abb. 4. Cf. NAGY M. 1999, 133 f., fig.1.
Pilismart-Basaharc 2: located approx. 1.2 km east of the fort at Hideglelskereszt; only the southern
side of the tower is preserved (outside length 9.25m, and was probably square in shape), made of a
1.001.05 m-thick wall, in which a 1.60 m-wide entrance is preserved. Dated to Valentinian I.
SOPRONI 1978, 3031, no.10, Taf. 9.2.
Pilismart-Schiffsstation: square tower (approx. 8.60 8.60 m on the outside) with a 0.93
0.96m-thick wall (interior area 45 m2), access stairs and entrance; surrounded by a ditch that encloses
a surface of 2828 m. Dated to the reign of Valentinian I. (Fig.98)
SOPRONI 1978, 3336, no.16, Taf. 13.1; SOPRONI 1985, 29, Abb. 5.
Dms-Kvespatak: square tower (10.9010.95m on the outside) with a 1.00 m-thick wall and
a 1.50 m-wide entrance; inside a hard floor was discovered, the only treading level; surrounded by a
ditch that encloses a surface of approx. 34(34?) m. Dated with certainty in the time of ValentinianI.
(Fig.105)
SOPRONI 1978, 4950, no.19, Taf. 51.1 (what can be seen on the inside is not masonry, but the remains
of the floor!).
Visegrd-Kbnya (Steinbruch): square tower (9.95 9.95 m on the outside), 1.05 m-thick
wall, massive internal pillar (with no foundation, it was probably built after the destruction of the
68
initial roof ), an entrance with a 1.3 m-wide threshold and access staircase in the eastern corner. Dated
with certainty in the time of Valentinian I, based on the inscription from 372 AD (RIU, 804): Iudicio
principali d(ominorum) n(ostrorum trium) [Valentiniani] / Valentis et Gratiani principum [maximorum] /
dispositionem (!) etiam inlustris viri [utriusque] / [mi]litiae magistri (A)equiti(i) comitis Fo[scanus] / p(rae)
p(ositus) legionis primae Martiorum u[na cu]m / militibus sibi creditis hunc bu[r]gum / a fondamentis
(!) et construxit et ad sum(m)am / manum operis consulatus Modesti et / Arenth(a)ei v(irorum)
c(larissimorum duorum) fecit pervenire. (Fig.106)
SOPRONI 1978, 5155, no. 22, Taf. 54.1. For the foundation inscription also see SOPRONI 1967;
SOPRONI 1989, 108109, no.3, Abb. 56.
Visegrd-Sibrik (Pone Navata): Burgus built in the middle of the western side of the Constantinian
fort, that was rebuilt during the reign of Constantius II (it actually closes the forts ancient gate on this
side); internal dimensions of 11.7511.75m (external of approx. 13.9013.90 m), 1.051.10m-thick
wall, a circular-section massive pillar in the centre (diameter of approx. 2.60 m), against which are set
other rectangular-section pillars. Dated to the postValentinianic period according to S. Soproni, but
without clear proof.
SOPRONI 1978, 5559, Taf. 61.1,2; SOPRONI 1985, 63 f, Abb. 27; SOPRONI 1986, 409410, Abb. 3.
Cf. NAGY M. 1999, 133 f., fig.3.
Dunabogdny (Cirpi): Burgus built in the Roman forts eastern corner; internal dimensions of
1716.5m, 1.60 m-thick wall. Dated by Soproni to the post380 period. (Fig.150)
SOPRONI 1986, 409, Abb. 1. SOPRONI 1978, 62; SOPRONI 1985, 6465, Abb. 36.
Budapest-Csillaghegy (Kossuth Lajos 11): approx. 1010m (on the outside), with an entrance
on the southern side. Dated to the reign of Valentinian I, based only on the stamped bricks (Frigeridus)
discovered there. (Fig.92)
SOPRONI 1978, 71, n. 388, Taf. 77.1.
Slankamen-Humka: tower of 7.757.75m on the outside, with a 0.851.00 m-thick wall. Dated
to the middle of the 4th c., based on coins from the reign of Constantius II. (Fig.93)
PILETI 1964.
Mauthen: on the road to the Adriatic, on the border between Noricum Mediterraneum and Venetia
et Histria; rectangular tower (approx. 9.30 7.70 m on the outside); 1.40 m-thick wall. Uncertain
datation, probably to the second half of the 4th c. (Fig.94)
CIGLENEKI 1987, 47, 112, Abb. 47.
Goldberg-Trkheim (Rostrum Nemaviae): on the Augsburg Kempten road; three separate phases
of construction were identified:
1. Burgus of 1515m (on the outside) with a 3.303.50 m-thick wall, dated to the Tetrarchs (approx.
300); considered by Mackensen a policing station on the public road; destroyed by a fire (coins from
Crispus reign 320/321); surrounded by the Constantinian fortification, when the whole ensemble
was probably redone. (Fig.109)
2. Irregular-plan fortification that covers a surface of approximately 0.16 ha, with walls varying in
thickness between 2.604.20 m, defended by monolith semicircular and rectangular towers; no
buildings were identified intra muros. Its terminus post quem was set by a coin in the foundation level,
dated 335/337; according to Mackensen, it is also a road police station, or maybe a fortification for
limitanei (less probable). (Fig.157)
3. A horreum (15.5033.50 m) was attached to the western side in the period of Valentinian I, dated
by a coin that sets a terminus post quem to 367/375.
MOOSDORF-OTTINGER 1981. Cf. CIGLENEKI 1987, p. 2325, Abb. 14; MACKENSEN 1999,
219, 221, 228230, 236, figs. 7.14, 7.20.
69
Ptuj: Burgus built on the ruins of a paleochristian basilica; it is made of a rectangular tower of
8.209.50m, surrounded by a defense wall of approx. 1821m (this had corner-towers, according to
J. Klemenc, who excavated the site); both tower and defense wall have rather thin walls of about 1.00
1.10m and the entrance in the defense wall is located near the NE corner. According to J.Klemenc,
the basilica should be dated to 375425, and the fortification should be connected to the Ostrogoths
led by Theodoric; J. ael puts forward an earlier datation the basilica should be dated to the reign
of Constantine and the fortification to the reign of Valentinian I this theory is also accepted by
Cigleneki.
CIGLENEKI 1987, 55, 112, Abb. 59 (with previous literature).
Pivka pri Naklem: located at an important crossroads in northern Dalmatia; burgus of approx.
1010m, with 2 m-thick walls, in which many spolia were used; inside a smaller tower? Dated to the
second half of the 4th c.
CIGLENEKI 1987, 81, 112, Abb. 102.
Hulsberg: Burgus rectangular tower (8.8012.20 m), with four supporting pillars inside; a 0.90
1.00m thick wall; gate on the southern side; external ditch and palisade. It was the subject of an old
excavation (1915), is not dated with certainty, although R. Brulet proposes as the construction date the
first half of the 4th c. (Fig.112)
BRULET 1990, 149151, 303, fig.50.
Morlanwelz II: Stone burgus (approximately 20 25 m on the outside), with 3 m thick walls,
with supporting pillars inside. Considered by Brulet a watchtower, dated to the first half of the 4th c.
(Fig.113)
BRULET 1977, 109114, figs. 2, 4; BRULET 1990, 127129, 302303, figs. 34, 35.
Moers-Asberg (Asciburgium): burgus with tetrapylon, external dimensions c. 18 18 m, squaresection pillars, external courtyard and ditch. Dated to the reign of Valentinian I. (Fig.114)
BECHERT 2003. Cf. SCHNBERGER 1969, no.10; JOHNSON 1983, 270, fig.53; BRULET 1990,
303; BRULET 2006 a, 159, fig.153.5.
Stelli: burgus with tetrapylon, dimensions 17.5017.50 on the outside, 2.302.38m thick walls,
square-section pillars; surrounded by a ditch. (Fig.115)
DRACK 1993, 1920, no.9.
viri utriusque militiae magistri Equi/ti comitis Foscianus p(rae)positus legionis prim[ae Mar]tiorum /
una cum militibus sibi creditis h[unc burg]um a fun/damintis et construxit et ad su[mmam man]um
operis / consulatus Gratiano Augus[t]o bis [et Pr]obo viro cla/rissimo fecit pervenire. (Fig.116)
GRF, GRH 19981999; GRF, GRH 2001. For the inscription see also A 2000, 1223.
csny: Burgus with tetrapylon, internal dimensions 17.517.5m, 2.30 m-thick wall, square-section
pillars. Dated to the same period of Valentinian I. (Fig.119)
PTERFI 1999; PTERFI 2003.
Huntcliff: less than half of the structure is preserved; the defense wall has U-shaped corner-towers
doubled on the interior by rectangular rooms. (Fig.120)
HORNSBY, STANTON 1912; WILSON 1991, fig.23.2, upper-left side.
Goldsborough: the only entirely-preserved structure; the defense wall has slightly protruding rounded
corner-bastions; the southern entrance to the central tower is also preserved; in the towers N-W corner
there is a substruction for the internal staircase. (Fig.121)
HORNSBY, LAVERICK 1932; WILSON 1991, 142 f., fig.23.2, upper-right side; PETRIKOVITS 1971,
no.4, fig.28.1.
Ravenscar: a fort of this type is signaled by old data and especially by an inscription (RIB 721).
WILSON 1991, 142.
Scarborough: the structures eastern side is missing, as it fell in the sea; the defense wall is 1.40m
thick and has U-shaped corner-towers. (Fig.122)
WILSON 1991, 142 f., fig.23.2, lower left side.
Filey: the structure is badly damaged by erosion; the central tower has thicker walls than the abovementioned examples. (Fig.123)
WILSON 1991, 142 f., fig.23.2, lower right side; OTTAWAY 1997.
Nunnery-Alderney Island: fortification similar to those on the coastline, with solid bastions at
the defense walls rounded corners; as they were not thoroughly researched, there are no clear dating
elements.
JOHNSTON 1977, 3133, fig.8, but for more concrete data see JOHNSON 1979, 82 and fig.47.
Asperden: burgus on the Cuijk Qualburg road; an earlier wooden construction is restored in
stone under Valentinian I; square tower (15.6015.60 m) with a massive wall and tetrapylon inside,
surrounded by a 1m thick defense wall, with rounded corner-towers and intermediary towers on the
sides, except the eastern one, where the gate is located; two external defense ditches; dated to the reign
of Valentinian I, in use up to the beginning of the 5th c. (Fig.124)
SCHNBERGER 1969, 184185, no. 6; PETRIKOVITS 1971, 188189, no. 23, and 216, fig. 28.2;
BRULET 1990, 346; FISCHER 2006 a, 203205, fig.198200.
71
Zeiselmauer (Cannabiaca?): Burgus with tetrapylon, located in the NE corner of the Late Roman fort
(2.1 ha); external dimensions of 2021m, and a 1.90 m-thick wall; the gate was initially 2m wide, then
it was narrowed down to 1.20 m; the elevation is well preserved, including traces of the windows; inside
there are four L-shaped pillars that create a surface of 3.874.80 m. Dated by H. Ubl to Valentinian I
(stamps with the name Ursicinus and the presumption that the Constantinian fan-shaped tower in this
corner was dismantled). According to Soproni, it was built at the end of the 4th c. But there is nothing to
counterdict a datation during the Tetrarchy, given the fact that forts with fan-shaped corner-towers are
usually dated during Constantines reign (and we have in this case an attached Constantinian fort to the
old Tetrarchic burgus). Analogies with other three Tetrarchic structures on the Iron Gates limes (Donje
Butorke, Ljubievac, Mihajlovac-Mora Vagei) are obvious. The situation is repeated at Wallsee/Locus
Felix and Traismauer/Augustiana, so I think there is a building program through which a Diocletianic
burgus was adapted to the new Constantinian forts. (Fig.148)
UBL 1977; UBL 1997 b, 231236, Abb. 84, 86.
Rusovce (Gerulata): Burgus built in the NW corner of the Roman fort, with a defense wall of
approximately 3030m, 2.40m thick; inside there are pillars (L-shaped at the corners and several
others in between) that delimit an inner court in the middle of which there is a fountain; dated to the
second half of the 4th c. (spolia were used for its construction), but a Tetrarchic datation should not be
excluded because of analogies with Zeiselmauer, Traismauer and Wallsee. (Fig.149)
SNOPKO et al. 1986, 448450, fig.2; VARSIK 1997, fig.1.35; KREKOVIC 1997, 277280, Abb. 104.
Fortified landing-places
Engers: across the Rhine, in front of Koblenz; massive tower (2115m, with four internal pillars)
and attached defense wall. Dated to Valentinian I? (Fig.125)
SCHLEIERMACHER 1942, 191 f. Taf. 33/1; RDER 1952; SCHNBERGER 1969, 185, no. 46;
PETRIKOVITS 1971, no.43, fig.24; HCKMANN 1986, 399 f., Abb. 14.3.
Zullestein: massive rectangular tower, c. 21 15 m; walls with 2.60 m-thick foundation and
2.00m-thick elevation; two square-section pillars inside; the wharf s defense walls have square cornertowers. Dated in the time of Valentinian I. (Fig.126)
JORNS 1974; BAATZ 2006, 227228, fig.232. Cf. HCKMANN 1986, 399 f., Abb. 14.2
Mannheim-Neckarau: across the Rhine, bridgehead for Altrip; rectangular tower (21.5 17 m,
according to Bernhard 1981), defense wall and external ditch. Dated to the reign of Valentinian I
(Schleiermacher) or Constantius II (Soproni). (Fig.127)
SCHLEIERMACHER 1942, 191 f., Taf. 33/3; SCHNBERGER 1969, 185, no.60; PETRIKOVITS 1971,
no.65; HCKMANN 1986, 399 f., Abb. 14.1.
Ladenburg (Lopodunum): on the river Neckar, several kilometers away from Altrip and Mannheim,
in the Roman-controlled area east of the Rhine; massive square tower of approx. 13.4013.40m,
defense wall and external ditch; dated to Valentinian I. (Fig.128)
HEUKEMES 1981; SOMMER 2006.
Verce (former Ngrdverce): on the left bank of the River Danube, a 2318m tower (with a
2.80m-thick wall and two square-section pillars inside), surrounded by a 2.00 m-thick defense wall
with square corner-towers of 55 m. Dated to the reign of Constantius II (Soproni). (Fig.129)
SOPRONI 1978, 78, no.42, Taf. 81.1. MCSY 1974, 191 f., Abb. 46.1; SOPRONI 1985, 7778, Abb. 42;
HCKMANN 1986, 399 f., Abb. 14.5.
Tahittfalu-Balhavr: on the Szentendre island, tower (24.40?m, 2.50 m-thick walls and two
internal pillars) and a defense wall with square corner-towers (Verce-type). Dated to the reign of
Constantius II (Soproni). (Fig.131)
SOPRONI 1978, 7475, no.37, Taf. 78.1. MCSY 1974, Abb. 46.2; HCKMANN 1986, 399 f., Abb.14.6.
72
Szentendre-Dera patak: tower of 2020m (outside dimensions), connected with two walls that
end in two square towers (7.507. 50 m). Dated to the time of Constantius II (Soproni). (Fig.133)
SOPRONI 1978, 7172, no. 32, Taf. 75.2. MCSY 1974, Abb. 46.5; SOPRONI 1985, 69, Abb. 40;
HCKMANN 1986, 399 f., Abb. 14.4.
Szigetmonostor-Horny: tower of 22 16 m (2.50 m-thick wall) and defense wall with square
corner-towers (44m), located on the Szentendre island. (Fig.132)
MCSY 1974, Abb. 46.4; SOPRONI 1978, 7576, no.39, Taf. 80; HCKMANN 1986, 399 f, Abb. 14.7.
Dunafalva (Contra Florentiam?): bridgehead for the fort at Dunaszekcs (Lugio); tower of approx.
2117m, with two internal pillars and defense wall with square corner-towers (two of them, located
on the river bank, are of the monolith type). Dated to the reign of Constantius II and identified by
A.Mcsy with burgus Contra Florentiam (NDOcc. XXXIII, 44: equites sagittarii Altino nunc in burgo
contra Florentiam). (Fig.130)
MCSY 1958; MCSY 1974, 193, Abb. 46.8.
Ba: located on a canal on the Danubes left bank, in connection to the fort at Sotin (Cornacum);
made up of a tower and a defense wall (possibly ended with towers towards the river?). Uncertain
datation (Constantius II?). (Fig.134)
MCSY 1969; MCSY 1974, 193, Abb. 46.9.
Mumpf: rectangular plan, dimensions c. 4817.5m, apsidal ends on the short sides, 3 m-thick walls;
external ditch. Coins from Gratian and Magnus Maximus. A Valentinianic date for this building is very
probable. (Fig.136)
DRACK 1993, 2123, no.12. Cf. JOHNSON 1983, 163, fig.65.
Sisseln: construction with approx. the same dimensions and characteristics as Mumpf. (Fig.137)
DRACK 1993, 24, no.14. Cf. JOHNSON 1983, 163, fig.65.
Quadriburgia
PassauInnstadt (Boiodurum/Boiotro): located at the confluence of the Inn and the Danube,
approximately 1 km west of the Early Roman fort (destroyed at the middle of the 3rd c.); trapeziumshaped fortification (approximately 505020 m), with fan-shaped corner-towers; the defense wall is
sometimes 3.60m thick; on the inside, along the sides, there is a line of pillars that form a portico that
sheltered the soldiers barracks or the supply rooms (horrea); in the S-W corner there is a fountain; on
the outside, the fortification is surrounded by a 8 m-wide ditch. Dated to the end of the 3rd beginning
of the 4th c. The ancient name is known from the Vita Sancti Severini (6th c.), where it is mentioned
that a small monastery was built in loco nomine Boiotro; archaeological research has identified the
monastery in the SE corner of the fortification, over the ruins of the ancient horreum. (Fig.138)
BRANDL 1997, 145150, Abb. 4749 (with previous bibliography). Cf. JOHNSON 1983, 174, 176,
fig.69; SCHNURBEIN, KOHLER 1989, 524.
Visegrd-Gizellamajor: Quadriburgium with dimensions 3838m (= 0.13 ha); 1.65 m-thick wall,
built in opus incertum; fan-shaped corner towers; inside there were barracks built along all the sides; the
73
NW tower had a hypocaust installation; outside the walls there was a fossa; nearby, a necropolis and
kilns were discovered. Dated to the first half of the 4th c. (Constantine or Constantius II, post-340),
based on the archaeological and numismatic material. (Fig.139)
GRF 19871989; GRF et al. 20012002; GRF, GRH 2003; GRF, GRH 2004 .
Wyhlen: fortification (44.544.5 m) on the opposite side of the Rhine, a bridgehead for the fort at
Kaiseraugst; round corner- and intermediary towers; dated to the reign of Valentinian I.
ANTHES 1917, 131; DRACK 1993, 16; NUBER, REDD 2002, 216, fig. 31. Cf. SCHNBERGER
1969, 186, no.75; LANDER 1984, 284, fig.293.
Zurzach: two minor fortifications Kirchlibuck: a small castellum with irregular plan (area
c.0.49 ha), round and U-shaped half-protruding towers, uncertain datation (Tetrarchy?); Sidelen:
quadriburgium-type, c. 4850m (0.15 ha), 2.653.50m thick walls, round corner-towers (8m in
diameter). Connected with the opposite Rheinheim by a wooden bridge dated by dendrochronology in
368 AD. (Fig.140)
DRACK 1993, 3133; FELLMANN 2006 d. Cf. LANDER 1984, 289, fig.294.
Rheinheim: on the opposite bank of the Rhine, a bridgehead for Zurzach. Rectangular plan (c.
4540 m), with square corner-towers and 3 m-thick walls. Valentinianic construction (see dated bridge
above). (Fig.141)
DRACK 1993, 3233; FELLMANN 2006 d. Cf. LANDER 1984, 289, fig.294; NUBER, REDD 2002,
216, fig.31.
WiltenInnsbruck (Veldidena): on the strategic road leading from Augsburg (Augusta Vindelicum)
south towards Italy; quadriburgium of approx. 6060m (covering a surface of 0.36 ha); 1.80m-thick
walls; rectangular corner-towers, several other rectangular towers in the middle of the sides; tower-gate
on the western side. Dated to the reign Valentinian I (it surrounds two of the largest horrea from the
Constantinian period). (Fig.143)
WOTSCHITZKY 1959. Cf. SCHNBERGER 1969, 185, no.114; PETRIKOVITS 1971, no.81, fig.25;
MACKENSEN 1994 b, 507508, fig.15; MACKENSEN 1999, p. 236, fig.7.26. Also see BORHY 1996,
214216, 222.
three poternae; small buildings set against the defense wall. According to Schnberger it is to be dated to
the reign of Valentinian I by analogy to Schaan and WiltenInnsbruck. (Fig.145)
ANTHES 1917, 137140, Abb. 20; MAYER 1969. Cf. SCHNBERGER 1969, 185, no.83; JOHNSON
1983, 164166, fig.66; BORHY 1996, 212 f., Abb. 4; BRULET 2006 a, 158, fig.148.1.
Kleinbasel (Munimentum Robur?): on the opposite side of the Rhine, bridgehead for Basel; small
quadriburgium, approx. 21 21 m on the outside, 4 m-thick walls, round corner-towers (6 m in
diameter). Probably dating to Valentinian I, identified with munimentum Robur of Amm.Marcell. XXX,
3, 1, attested also in CTh VIII, 5, 33 (see above, n. 8) (Fig.146)
MOOSBRUGGER-LEU 1974; JOHNSON 1983, 158161; DRACK 1993, 810; NUBER, REDD
2002, 216, fig.31; FELLMANN 2006 b, 218, fig.218.
Small castella
Haus Brgel-Monheim: quadrangular castellum (6464 m), with round corner towers and other
eight intermediary ones, two gates, external ditch; it is dated to Constantine reign (due to its structural
similarities to the Constantinian fort at Kln-Deutz). (Fig.154)
FISCHER 1999; FISCHER 2006 b. Cf. SCHNBERGER 1969, 185, no. 14; PETRIKOVITS 1971,
no.27; JOHNSON 1983, 148, fig.53.
Dormagen (Durnomagus): in the Roman forts N-W corner a small fortification (5248m interior
dimensions) was built at the beginning of the 4th c., with 3.0 m-thick walls and an external ditch. (Fig.152)
GECHTER 2006. Cf. BRULET 2006 a, 159, fig.149.5.
Altrip (Alta Ripa): trapezium-shaped plan (555711862 m), internal surface of approximately
0.50 ha; the walls have a 3.003.20 m-thick foundation, polygonal and pentagonal corner-towers; two
gates (in the middle of the E and W sides), flanked by rectangular Zwinger-type bastions; barracks set
against the defense wall; defense ditch on three sides; dated certainly to the reign of Valentinian I (even by
dendrochronological data), previous to the year 369, when the emperors presence is attested here (CTh
XI, 31, 4; Amm. Marcell. XXVIII, 2, 14; Symmachus, Or., 2, 20); destroyed in 406/407. (Fig.155)
SCHNURBEIN, KOHLER 1989. Cf. SCHNBERGER 1969, 184, no.61; PETRIKOVITS 1971, no.64,
fig.19; JOHNSON 1983, 154155, fig.58; LANDER 1984, 271273, fig.272; HCKMANN 1986, 404,
Abb. 15; STIRBRNY 1989, 413414.
Sponeck: minor fortification 10 km N of Breisach, on the opposite bank of the Rhine, near a good
ford; surface of approximately 4050m, with a plan adapted to the terrain, a rectangular tower and
two other round bastions. Built in the time of Valentinian I.
NUBER, REDD 2002, 216, fig.31. Cf. JOHNSON 1983, 158; LANDER 1984, 284, fig.292; STRIBRNY
1989, 413414.
Budapest-Pest, Mrcius 15 Square (Contra Aquincum): located on the Danubes left bank;
rectangular fortification that encloses a surface of 86 84 m; it has fan-shaped corner-towers and
U-shaped towers on the sides; it has a 3.40 m-thick wall. The fort was preceded by a larger one dated to
the 2nd c. AD. It is traditionally dated to Diocletians reign and identified with Contra Acinco mentioned
in 294 in the Consularia Constantinopolitana (see also NDOcc. XXXIII, 48). There are also opinions
for a later date (Constantine or even later) (Fig.156)
NAGY T. 1974, 3334; NMETH 2003. Cf. JOHNSON 1983, 185186, fig.73; LANDER 1984, 190,
214, fig.184; BERTK 1997, 167, fig.1.77/a.
Trier-Pfalzel (Palatiolum): road station north of Trier; elaborated rectangular plan (65 56 m),
similar to that of the limes fortification at Oedenburg-Altkirch; 1.20m thick walls; probably an imperial
residence during the reign of Valentinian I.
KUTZBACH 1935. Cf. NUBER, REDD 2002, 230232, Abb. 42.1; NUBER 2005, 766, Abb. 6.
Zrich-Lindenhof: in the hinterland of the Upper Rhine limes, 50 km S-E of Kaiseraugst, the site of
the former Early Roman statio Turicensis; slightly irregular plan (48966080 m), adapted to the
terrain, rectangular and U-shaped half-protruding towers, two tower-gates. Dated in the Constantinian
period. (Fig.158)
FELLMANN 2006 c. Cf. JOHNSON 1983, 164, fig.66; LANDER 1984, 204, fig.205.
Korenica-Markova Kula: Rectangular fortification of approx. 4036m, with a tower built in the
NE corner (107.50m). The construction technique is Hellenistic (large blocks of stone), the wall is
2.40m thick. It is probably a Hellenistic construction, reused in the Late Roman period. The plan is
highly similar to the one of the burgus at Zidinac (Gazetteer, No.6), which is dated though to an entirely
different period. One cannot exclude the possibility of it being in fact a typical Hellenistic tower.
MIKULI 2002, 336, no. 267, Abb. 234.
Louloudies: Fortification located on the Pydna Dion road, which can be identified with Anamum in
the Tabula Peutingeriana (7 km south of Pydna). It is a 8090m structure of the quadriburgium type,
with a complex inside formed of a basilica, a building with perystile (bishops palace?) and installations
for wine and oil production. E. Marki connects the structure with an Episcopal complex. It could be
that it was here that the bishop of Pydna retreated in 479, after the city was occupied by Ostrogoths.
The complex is dated to the 6thc. by E. Marki. According to A. Poulter, the perystile building fits the
characteristics of a military building (principia). Approximately 150m south of there a fortification
of approx. 170 180 m was discovered, that was probably part of the same site. The complex has
convincing analogies in roadside stations such as the one at Idimum (Gazetteer, No. 63), or with
Christian complexes such as the one at Pirdop (Gazetteer, No.72).
E. Marki, AEMT 10 A, 1996, 239258; POULTER 1998.
Kalyva: On the Nestos river valley, at the border between Thrace and Macedonia. Old Hellenistic
fortification (phrourion), reused in the Early and Late Roman periods. It has an irregular trapezium
shape, with circular and square towers. Four phases of functioning were identified, of which the most
developed one is dated to the 4thc. B.C. 3rdc. A.D., after which there is probably in use again in the
6thc. A.D.
D. Triantaphyllos, AEMT 2, 1988, 443458; idem, BCH 122, 1998, 2, 894895, figs. 223225.
110
111
112
113
KARAISKAJ 1971.
MIKULI 2002, 271273, Abb. 165.
BAE 1981.
Along with small rural fortifications and shelters, these are extremely frequent, as the catalogue put together
for northern Macedonia by I. Mikuli proves.
77
115
116
117
BAUZOU 1993, 27 f.: Strata Diocletiana is not a single route, but part of a complex of roads in Syria.
According to the author, () le nom de Strata Diocletiana t donn au niveau local par les autorits
militaries de Palmyre au pistes militaries construites ou ramnages sous Diocltien lintrieur du territoire
dont elles avaient la responsabilit. Dans les secteurs relevant dun autre commandement local, ces routes
taient simplement dnommes Strata, ou meme Istrata. () Le terme prcis de Strata devait avoir alors un
sens technique ou juridique particulier, distinguant ce genre de piste travers la steppe des autres voies de
communication, routes empierres ou pistes caravanires (BAUZOU 1993, 36).
REDD 1995, 106.
Dated by an inscription to 303 (CIL III, 133 = 6661). Cf. FELLMANN 1976; REDD 1995, 117f.
See the so-called khans at Umm el-Walid, Palmyra and El-Lejjun (REDD 1995, 9597, fig.68).
78
Al-Basiri (Avira): Rectangular fortification of 4940m, walls of unfired bricks on a stone foundation,
with round (?) corner-towers and traces of buildings set against the defense wall. Recent researches
suggest a datation to the Ummayad period. NDOr. XXXII, 24 mentions here equites sagittarii indigenae.
LANDER 1984, 240; BAUZOU 1993, 4243 (Ummayad); KOWALSKI 1998, 34, fig.3E; GENEQUAND
2003, 5255, fig.36 (original plan 44.734.6, and restored on a surface of 50.730.9m).
Mleke: square plan, interior dimensions 4545m, 3.80 m-thick walls, excepting the eastern one
(1.80 m-thick, probably rebuilt, with an interval tower), rectangular corner-towers. (Fig.167)
LANDER 1984, 201, fig.201.
Khan Aneybeh (Onevatha): Almost square plan (3940m), rectangular corner-towers and another
one set in the middle of the south-eastern side. The site was not researched, but it is known through
topographical surveys made by Poidebard, Musil and Kennedy/Riley. NDOr. XXXII, 41 places here
cohors V pacata Alamannorum. (Fig.168)
LANDER 1984, 201, fig.202; BAUZOU 1993, 4041; KOWALSKI 1998, 34, fig.3 C; TORBATOV 2004,
36, fig.6/b (after Poidebard).
Khan Abu-Shamat (Thama): 50m square fort, with rectangular corner-towers and interior divided
into several compartments. It was not researched and has an uncertain datation. NDOr. XXXII, 44
places here cohors I Orientalis. (Fig.170)
BAUZOU 1993, 3637; KOWALSKI 1998, 33, fig.3.A (after Musil).
Qasr el-Hallabat: East of the via nova, on a road connecting it to Qasr al-Azraq (towards the Arabian
Desert). Quadriburgium of approx. 3535m on the inside, with square corner-towers. On the inside
were identified several construction phases: an Early Roman structure in the NW corner, fortification
(4th c.), restorations and internal changes up to the Ummayad period. An inscription dated to 212/213
was traditionally put in connection with the construction of this quadriburgium (CIL III, 144192:
novum castellum, Parker, Euzennat and Gregory), but also see the doubts expressed by Lander, Redd,
Bisheh and Arce. Another inscription discovered here is dated to 519 AD. Another remarkable element
is the important number of inscriptions (146) with the edict of Anastasius (considered to have been
brought there from other sites as building material). More recent researches undertaken by J. Arce
established four main phases in the evolution of this site: I Early Roman 17.5m square minor fort
(burgus-type), dated to the 2ndc., extended in the 2nd3rd c.; II construction of the quadriburgium at
the beginning of the 4thc. AD; III 6thc. AD rebuilt quadriburgium, after a major disaster (probably
the earthquake from 551 AD); IV Ummayad phase (Fig.171)
LANDER 1980, 1054, fig.72.3a; LANDER 1984, 138139, figs. 129, 130; BISHEH 1986; PARKER 1995,
252, fig.2 (plan after Butler); REDD 1995, 94, fig.1; GREGORY 1996, 188; ARCE 2006.
Khirbet ez-Zona: East of the via nova, a quadriburgium of approx. 4035m, 2.50m thick wall,
with (monolith?) square corner-towers and rectangular in the middle of each side. See the analogies at
Dionysias in Egypt. (Fig.172)
LANDER 1984, 201, fig.199; PARKER 1995, 253, fig.6 (dimensions 4944m, but not in concordance
with the scale of the published plan).
Muhattet el-Hajj (upper fort): On the via nova, a quadriburgim of 51.7049.50m (area 0.26ha),
2.20m thick wall, with slightly protruding square corner-towers. The gate is flanked by two towers,
81
with other three towers set each in the middle of the sides, all in the same half-projected manner.
It has analogies in the Western series of fortifications at Irgenhausen-Schaan-Wilten, but see also the
larger fortification at Dajaniya. There is no other information apart from the initial plan published by
Brnnow and Domaszewski. (Fig.173)
LANDER 1980, 1051, fig.72.1 c; LANDER 1984, 145, fig.136; PARKER 1995, 253, fig.5.
Qasr ath-Thuraiya: East of the via nova, between the fortlets at Khirbet es-Zona and Qasr Bshir.
Quadriburgium of 3535m (on the outside), with rectangular corner-towers seemingly added at a later
stage (initially there was a towerless defense wall with a gate on the estern side). (Fig.174)
LANDER 1984, 145, 201, fig.198; PARKER 1995, 252, fig.3.
Khirbet El-Khaldi (Praesidium): On the via nova, south of Al-Quwayra. Rectangular plan,c.5433m,
with rectangular corner-towers, barracks set against the wall. Identified with Praesidium in the NDOr.
XXXIV, 6, headquarters of a cohors IV Phrygum. (Fig.175)
GRAF 1995, 260, fig.15; PARKER 1995, 252; FIEMA 1995, 263, 265 (Nabataean origin).
Yotvata (Ad Dianam?): On the road through the Wadi Araba Valley, 45 km N of Aqaba (Aila).
Square quadriburgium of 39.4039.70m on the outside, with rectangular corner towers (6.407.70).
The defense wall is 2.45m thick, it has barracks set against it and there is also possibly a chapel (with
the apse integrated in the defense wall). Extra-muros baths complex. Dated by a Tetrarchic inscription
(293305): alam c(um) osti<o> constituerunt per providentia(m) Prisci pr(a)esidis (text established in
ROLL 1989). But there are also coins from Constantine II and Constans, discovered in the lower level
or beneath (KINDLER 1989, 260). Destroyed by the earthquake of 363 and never rebuilt. (Fig.176)
MESHEL 1989; ROLL 1989; KINDLER 1989; AVNER et al. 2004; AVNER et al. 2005; DAVIES,
MAGNESS 2005, 2006, 2007. Remarks about the inscriptions at ECK 1992; GICHON 1999a, 241 (The
Diocletian inscription speaks of a wing built, not of the construction of the fortress. This tallies with the date
of the earliest of the five coins found, which belongs to Probus).
Bir Madhkur: On the Petra Gaza road, quadriburgium of approx. 3030m, with corner-towers of
uncertain shape. Dated by 4thc. coins and late Roman pottery discovered in field surveys.
SMITH 2005.
En Boqeq: Roadside fortification, located at an oasis on the Dead Seas SW shore, 13 km S of Masada.
It was systematically excavated between 19681976. Quadriburgium-type, of 2020m, with square
corner-towers (6 6 m) and a single gate in the middle of the southern side. Inside there are twostories barracks set along the defense wall. Five dwelling levels have been identified through excavations.
The datation proposed by Gichon (first half of the 4th c.) was recently corrected by R.P. Harper (end
of the 5th c., through an analogy with Upper Zohar) and especially by J. Magness (6th c., based on
the archaeological material, among which coins from the reigns of Justin I and Justinian, discovered
below Phase I). Gichon suggests it should be identified with the Tetrapyrgia mentioned by the monk
Anastasius in the first half of the 7thc. (Fig.178)
GICHON 1971; GICHON 1974 a; GICHON 1993. Cf. HARPER 1995, 115; PARKER 1997, 580583
(uses the datation proposed by Gichon); MAGNESS 1999, 191195.
82
Mount Gerizim: church dedicated to Mary Theotokos, built in 484 AD in a fortified enclosure
(c.7055m) with square corner- and interval towers, as well as with a gate-tower. (Fig.180)
Cf. DINEV 2006, 50, fig.101 (after Y. Magen).
El-Anderin (Androna)-South Church: Mansio on the Palmyra Chalcis road, located in the
vicinity of a larger civilian settlement (kome in an inscription on an early Byzantine mosaic). It is a
quadriburgium-type fortification with square corner- and intermediary towers, very slightly protruding.
In the middle of the eastern and western sides there are two tower-gates. Inside there is a three-naved
basilica and a cistern, dated to 528 AD. (Fig.182)
BUTLER 1969, 207, fig. 209; LIEBESCHUETZ 1977, 493, n. 60 (it dates the basilica to 528 AD and
supposes a prior military function for the complex); MUNDELL-MANGO 2002.
Tamaris Tziche (Losorion): Identified with the Losorion mentioned by Procopius (De aedif. III,
7) and the Lisiris in Iust. Nov. XXVIII. Fortification very similar to the one mentioned above, but
somewhat better preserved. Dimensions: approx. 2020 m. It has two slightly protruding pseudocorner-towers. In another corner there is a rectangular, more protruding monolith-tower. Dated to the
6th 7thc. (Fig.193)
LEKVINADZE 1973, 170f., fig.2.
Mamaj-Kala (Mochora?): Minor fortification located north of Pitiunt (Pityus), known from a
topographical plan made in 1889 by V. Sizov. Only two sides (N and E) are preserved with two round
and two rectangular corner-towers. According to Sizov the fortification had a triangular plan, but
83
Lekvinadze proposes a rectangular plan (quadriburgium-type). Uncertain date. Another theory identifies
it with Mochora mentioned by NDOr. XXXVIII. (Fig.194)
LEKVINADZE 1969, 8889, fig.10.
Small castella
Khan al-Manqoura (Valle Alba): Square fortification (c. 9090m) with circular corner-towers (or
rather wide-open fan-shaped), rectangular on the inside, U-shaped towers in the middle of two sides
of the defense wall and others that flank what seem to be two gates. Uncertain datation, but possible
diocletianic. NDOr. XXXII, 42 mentions here cohors I Iulia Lectorum. (Fig.187)
LANDER 1984, 226f., fig.237; BAUZOU 1993, 3840; REDD 1995, 100, fig.16 (after Poidebard);
KOWALSKI 1998, 34, fig.3B.
Ad-Diyateh: Located in the southern extremity of the Syrian territory; fortification located inside
the perimeter of a civilian settlement (vicus) of 10ha. Dimensions: 71.7051.70 m; it was built in
connection to an ancient square tower (10.5010.50m), dated to the pre-Roman or early Roman
period. It has corner-towers, as well as square intermediary gate towers, slightly protruding. The datation
of the fortification is debated: the Severian age (Lander and Redd), the Tetrarchic period or the middle
of the 4thc. (Villeneuve) or the 6th 7thc. (Gregory). (Fig.188)
LANDER 1984, 145, fig. 137; GREGORY 1996, 179; VILLENEUVE 1986; VILLENEUVE, SADLER
2001.
El-Anderin (Androna)-Kastron: located in the estern territory of Apamea, in the middle of the
late antique village of Androna, rectangular fortification (c. 8080m, 6000 m2 area), hexagonal cornertowers, other two rectangular towers in the middle of two sides, portico on all sides of the interior, small
church in the central area. According to the inscription from the western gate (IGLSyr IV, 1682) the
kastron was built in 558/559 AD under the patronage of a certain Thomas (civil initiative). (Fig.190)
DECKER 2006, 510f., fig.6; GENEQUAND 2006, 21, 24, fig.7/2; STRUBE 20062007.
Stabl al-Antar: at 10 km distance from Androna, square plan (c. 7575m), slightly protruding
rectangular or square corner-towers and another one in the middle of one side, gate flanked by
rectangular towers. Rich decoration inside (mosaics), signs of agricultural activities as well. Dated by an
inscription from 577/578 AD found in situ. (Fig.191)
DECKER 2006, 512f., fig.7; GENEQUAND 2006, 21, fig.6/2.
Deir el-Kahf: Rectangular fortification of approx. 61 61 m (0.37 ha) with square towers (on
three levels), three of them slightly protruding and the fourth entirely restored between 367375,
intermediary towers in the middle of the N and W sides, a single, simple gate on the E side. Barracks
were set along the sides (on two levels), around a large court where later a basilica was built. Dated by
an inscription found in situ to 306 (CIL III, 14380). The original plan was drawn by Butler in 1909,
and there are also aerial photographs (Poidebard, Kennedy/Riley). It has clear analogies with Qasr Bshir
and Qasr al-Azraq. (Fig.185)
LANDER 1980, 1051, fig.72.2a; LANDER 1984, 185, fig.174; PARKER 1995, 253, fig.4; REDD 1995,
101, fig.18 (after Kennedy/Riley); GREGORY 1996, 193, fig.14.a (after Butler and Poidebard).
Qasr al-Azraq: Oasis in the Arabian Desert. Here was discovered a castellum of approx. 7972m
(0.57ha), with slightly protruding rectangular corner- and intermediary towers built on three levels.
Two-level barracks were set against the defense wall. It underwent major changes during the Arab
period. A partial inscription, dated by some to the Tetrarchic period (Parker) refers to construction
activities undertaken by six legions, four of which were brought from the Lower Danube area. More
recently, Christol and Lenoir date the inscription to the reign of Aurelian and the fortification to the
reign of Constantine. (Fig.186)
84
PARKER 1995, 254255, fig. 8 (two inscriptions from the 4th c. and pottery); REDD 1995, 94, fig. 2
(notices the indiscriminate use of the Ummayad plan visible today, drawn by Butler, for analogies with
other fortifications); PARKER 1999, 231232 (considers the term praetensione colligata in the inscription
as referring to a system of military outposts); CHRISTOL, LENOIR 2001, 163178. For comments on the
inscription see also M. P. Speidel, Historia 36, 1987, 213221.
Qasr el-Baiq: On the via nova, south of Bostra. Square plan (approx. 4141m = 0.17ha), with
narrow gates on three of the sides and three stories high internal corner-towers. Two-stories buildings
inside, a basilica and two small courts. Dated with precision to 411 by an inscription found in situ.
Good analogy for the so-called barracksat Umm el-Jimal (dated to 412), located nearby.
PARKER 1995, 255256, fig.12.
Umm el-Jimal Barracks: East of the via nova, on the road to Deir el-Kahf. Located inside the
civilian settlement. Rectangular fortification of 55 33.75 m (approx. 0.19 ha), with a chapel set
against the eastern walls exterior. One entrance, locted on the eastern side. Inside there are two towers
(one in the SE corner, six stories high, and one in the middle of the western side, 3 stories high) and
buildings set along the defense wall. A large court inside the compound. Dated to 412 by an inscription
(kastellos); it has analogies at Qasr el-Baiq. According to B. de Vries, it replaces the ancient Tetrarchic
castellum and has a larger civilian componence (5th6th c.).
DE VRIES 1981; DE VRIES 1983; DE VRIES 1998. Cf. PARKER 1995, 256, fig.13.
Khirbet es-Samra: On the via nova, identified with Hatita from Tabula Peutingeriana, 37 km SW
of Bostra. It is located inside a civilian settlement. It is an almost trapezium-shaped fortification, with
sides of 65 65 67 70 m, enclosing a surface of approx. 0.39 ha. The defense wall is 1.10 m
thick, it has protruding rectangular corner-towers, two towers flanking the 3.50 m-wide gate and one
rectangular tower in the middle of each of the three other sides. Dated to the Tetrarchic period based on
the archaeological discoveries. NDOr. XXXVII, 31 mentions here cohors I miliaria Thracum. (Fig.189)
HUMBERT, DESREUMAUX 1990, 257258; PARKER 1995, 253; GREGORY 1996, fig.9/c; PARKER
1999, 232; GENEQUAND 2006, 16, fig.6/1.
Qasr Bshir (castra praetorii Mobeni): East of the via nova, around 15 km NE of the fort at El-Lejjun.
Fortification dated by a Tetrarchic inscription (CIL III, 14149, dated 293305 or, according to other
authors, 306). Almost square plan (approx. 5656m) covering a surface of 0.31ha. It has a 1.50m-thick
defense wall, preserved on a height of approx 6.50 m. It has large (approx. 1212m), three-sories high
square corner-towers, slightly protruding and divided into compartments. The gate is flanked by two
smaller rectangular towers, and there is also a poterna. Barracks were set along the defense wall, the
ground floor used as stables (capacity is estimated to 69 horses) and the upper floor as living quarters
for the soldiers. There is also a building interpreted as a command centre. Archaeological excavations
confirm its construction at the beginning of the 4thc. and its abandon during the 5thc. (Fig.184)
CLARK 1987, 457495. Cf. LANDER 1980, 1058, fig.72.2c (dates the inscription to 306 AD); LANDER
1984, 185, fig. 173; PARKER 1986, 644645, fig. 10; PARKER 1995, 252, fig. 1; REDD 1995, 101,
fig.17 (date: 306); GREGORY 1996, 193, fig.14.b (is not typical, dated to approx. 300 AD).
Avdat (Oboda): On the Petra Gaza road, fortification of 6540m, located on the citys citadel,
with rectangular corner- and intermediary towers. There is practically no building inside, except for a
cistern and a small chapel on the northern side. It is traditionally dated to the 5th6thc., but more recent
research proposes a Tetrarchic datation (A. Negev).
GREGORY 1996, 180, 194, fig.9.b (usually dated 5th or 6th c.); GICHON 1999a, 242; PARKER 1999,
234; LEWIN 2007, 471, n. 24.
Nessana: At the Sinai border, a late Roman fortification on the citys citadel. It has a prolonged
rectangular shape (c. 3585m), with rectangular corner- and intermediary towers and barracks set
along the defense wall. The datation is debated: beginning of the 4thc. (A. Negev), beginning of the
85
5th c. (H. D. Colt), 5th c. or later (A. Lewin). Surely in use during the Byzantine period, when the
Nessana papyri (beginning of the 6th c.) mention the presence of a military unit.
GREGORY 1996, 180, fig.9.d; GICHON 1999a, 244; PARKER 1999, 234235; LEWIN 2007, 470, n.
22 (fifth century or later).
Qasr-Qarun (Dionysias): Rectangular fortification of 83 70 m, with square monolith cornertowers and another in the middle of the W side, besides four small U-shaped monolith towers on the
other three sides. Inside the compound there were barracks set against the defense wall and principia.
It is dated to Diocletians reign, but with no certain proof. NDOr. XXVIII, 34 mentions here ala V
Praelectorum. (Fig.195)
CARRI 1974 (proposes a Palmyrene origin); LANDER 1984, 190, 201, fig. 185; REDD 1995, 117,
fig.40; BIDWELL 1998, 60, fig.4; HODGSON 1999, 548.
Tell El-Herr (Magdolum): In the Sinai peninsula, small fort of approx. 90 90 m, with square
monolith towers (corner-, intermediary, as well as gate towers), barracks set against the defense wall, but
also on the inside. Built during the Tetrarchy and used up to the 6thc. (Fig.196)
VALBELLE, CARREZ-MARATRAY 2000. Cf. REDD 2004, 162, fig.9.
Mons Porphyrites: Roadside fortification in the eastern Egyptian desert of 8555m, with semicircular
bastion-towers. Dated probably to the Late Roman period, although one cannot exclude Early Roman
origins for the compound.
REDD, GOLVIN 1987, 32, fig.28.
Mons Claudianus: Initially an early Roman fortification with rounded corners (aprox. 7552m),
reconstructed during the Late Roman Period at a larger scale (almost 7575m) and with the addition of
square and U-shaped monolith towers. Even if there is proof of military presence, the civilian character
of the dwelling is much more pregnant at this site.
REDD, GOLVIN 1987, 4142, fig.35. REDD 1995, 97, fig.10.
Abu Shaar (Myos Hormos?): Rectangular fortification located on the Red Sea shore (77.564m),
with square corner-towers and U-shaped towers in the middle of the sides, as well as barracks located
inside the compound. Recently dated to the 5th 7thc. (Fig.197)
REDD, GOLVIN 1987, 36, fig.30 (plan from the 19thc., with rounded towers); SIDEBOTHAM 1991,
494496.
3.4. Africa
As far as fortifications in the African provinces are concerned, the best known period is
the one ranging between the 6th and 7thc., as Dennis Pringles work123 is a precious instrument
for the knowledge of military architecture during the reign of Justinian and his successors. Even
if there is not enough archaeological data, most of the quadriburgium-type fortifications, as well
as those of irregular plan, are without doubt creations of the reign of Emperor Justinian. This
assumption is mainly based on this periods specific architecture, which is very well illustrated
by the fortification at Timgad, the only one that was systematically excavated. We must also
mention the fact that many minor fortifications are built within the perimeter of ancient
Roman towns and reuse some buildings that belonged to the latter. As a regional characteristic,
123
we can notice the high frequency of the quadriburgium-type in Numidia and Byzacium, the
preference for the irregular plan in Carthago Proconsularis (probably adapted to the terrain)
and for centenaria in Tripolitania.
The theory of M. Euzennat, who dated some fortifications in Mauretania Tingitana to
the Severan period, remains hard to prove without archaeological excavations to support it124.
The same thing applies to a series of fortifications in Numidia (Mdoukal, Bourada, Doucen
and Loth Bordj), who are dated only based on epigraphic sources.
Burgi/Centenaria
Ksar Tarcine (Centenarium Tibubuci): Structure made of a central building (tower?) of approx.
5 6 m and a quadrangular precinct (approx. 15 15 m, covering a surface 0.02 ha). Dated by a
Tetrarchic inscription, 297303 AD (CIL VIII, 22763 = ILS, 9352): Centenarium Tibubuci quod
Valerius Vibianus v(ir) p(erfectissimus) initiari Aurelius Quintianus v(ir) p(erfectissimus) praeses provinciae
Tripolitaniae perfeci curavit. (Fig.199)
LANDER 1984, 188, fig.176.
Henchir El-Gueciret: Quadrangular courtyard (3030m), with pillars and barracks set along the
defense wall. An inscription dates it to the end of the 3rdc. (turris built by M. Manilius Ingenuus and
his family). (Fig.200)
PRINGLE 1981 (2001), 142, fig.47a.
Sbeitla (Sufetula): Two burgus-type fortifications, both surrounding older farms (gsour): SufetulaSouth (20 24 m, 2 m-thick defense wall, surrounding a 10 12 m gsour) and Sufetula-North
(2222m, surrounding a 13.513.5m gsour). Dated to the 6thc. AD. (Figs. 201, 202)
PRINGLE 1981 (2001), 142, fig.48.
Quadriburgia
Mselletin: small quadriburgium (2222m), 1.5 m-thick wall, rectangular corner- and intermediary
towers, barracks built up against the walls. Dated in the 4thc. by Goodchild, but with no arguments.
Much more possible is a 6thc. date, see the close analogies with the palaestinian forts at En Boqeq and
Upper Zohar (Fig.203)
GOODCHILD 1950, 3334, fig.4.
Ksar Sidi el-Hadj (Aquae Herculis): rectangular structure, 52 52 m, with 1.1 m-thick walls,
constructed of unfired bricks on a stone foundation; projecting rectangular corner- and intermediary
towers, barracks built along the walls. Very close analogy with centenarium Aqua Viva, and therefore a
4thc. date is probable (Tetrarchic after Lander). (Fig.204)
LANDER 1984, 190, 208, fig.182.
Zraa (Zarai): Quadriburgium (41.5041.50m on the inside, covering a surface of 0.17ha) located
at a crossroads near the border between Numidia and Mauretania Sitifensis. It has square corner-towers
(99m) with side entrances, a 2.10 m-thick defense wall and a 3.70 m-thick gate. Dated by Pringle
to the reign of Justinian, based on analogies with Diana Veteranorum. But we cannot exclude an earlier
datation (4thc., maybe the Tetrarchic period indicated by an inscription from 305: CIL VIII, Suppl.,
22490 = ILS, 8933). (Fig.205)
PRINGLE 1981 (2001), 277278, fig.43.
124
An Schkour and Sidi Moussa bou Fri, in the territory of Volubilis, rectangular fortifications, both with an area
ofc. 0.78ha , with rectangular, half-protruding corner- and intermediary towers: EUZENNAT 1986, 373;
EUZENNAT 1989, 271272, fig.200/1, 2. Cf. REDD 1995, 101, n. 56 (le plan est une reconstitution et
ne prsente aucune certitude); VILLAVERDE VEGA 2004, 302, n. 25 (cronologia indefinida).
87
Bordj Ibrahim (Agbia): Irregular-plan fortification (36.1030.60m on the inside, covering a surface
of 0.10ha), located 5 km from Thugga. It has rectangular corner-towers and a simple gate (poterna?).
It has features similar to the fortification at Ksar Lemsa, which also suggests a possible datation to the
reign of Mauricius. (Fig.211)
PRINGLE 1981 (2001), 253255, figs. 5, 16.
Ksar Lemsa (Limisa): One of the best preserved fortifications (31.1528.85m, covering a surface
of 0.09 ha) in Africa. It belongs to the quadriburgium type, has a 2.202.25 m-thick defense wall,
except for the SE side (1.30 m-thick), that is actually built on the wall of a former, reused cistern. It has
rectangular corner-towers, different in size and aspect, with different types of entrances (normal, lateral
and Z-shaped). Dated by an inscription from the reign of Mauricius (post 585), but which refers to the
construction of a tower (turris). We cannot exclude an earlier datation (Justinian), even though Pringle
prefers the traditional date. (Fig.212)
PRINGLE 1981 (2001), 212214, figs. 4, 7, 16.
Mdaourouch (Madauros): Fortification built in the central area of the Roman town, whose initial
plan (38.40 63.30 m on the inside, covering a surface of 0.24 ha) was abandoned in favour of a
smaller fortification (approx. 0.17ha) that used the hemicycle of the former theatre as a foundation
for its northern side. At the latters western corner the initial plan is visible, with a rectangular cornertower from which the sides of the defense wall start, one of them (thicker) reinforced with pillars. The
final fortification has two rectangular corner-towers with side entrances, and a tower-gate. According
to Pringle, the initial plan could be dated to the first commission of Solomon (534536), which was
interrupted by revolts in 536537. An inscription discovered in situ dates the final construction to
539544. (Fig.214)
PRINGLE 1981 (2001), 214217, figs. 11, 12.
Bordj Younga (Iunci Sofiana): Fortification (4047m, covering a surface of 0.19ha) located on
the road along the seashore, in the permeter of the former Roman town Macomades (Iunci starting with
the 5thc., reconstructed under Justin II and Sophia in 574578, which explains the new name of Iunci
Sophiana). Trapezium-shaped, it has circular corner-towers, three of which stand on a polygonal base. In
the middle of the sides there are three rectangular towers and one pentagonal (?). We must notice that
it was built over the ruins of a Roman cistern. It was massively restored during the Arab period. Even
though Pringle contests the fortifications Byzantine origin, most researchers see an initial phase during
the 6thc. (Saumagne, Poinssot and Trousset). (Fig.216)
PRINGLE 1981 (2001), 202203, pls. LXXXI a LXXXII b; TROUSSET 1991, 350352, fig.66.6.
Baghai (Bagai): Against the NW side of the towns defense wall are set two smaller fortifications. The
first one (2626m on the inside, covering a surface of 0.07ha) has a 1.15 m-thick defense wall and
89
two small square towers at the corners located towards the towns interior, and on the side of the larger,
older defense wall it is defended by the latters rectangular towers. The second fortification (7063m
on the inside; surface of 0.44ha) encloses the first, has a 1.40 m-thick defense wall and rectangular
corner-towers (3.50 4.00 m) and intermediary towers in the middle of the three sides inside the
town. Both minor fortifications seem to have been built at the same time with the towns defense wall,
dated by an inscription to the reign of Justinian (539544). At a later period, outside these fortification
appears a proteichisma.
PRINGLE 1981 (2001), 183185, fig.21.
Small castella
Mdoukal (Centenarium Aqua Viva): Quadrangular fortification of 86.8085.90m on the inside
(an area of 0.74 ha), with 1.0 m-thick walls, made of unfired bricks on a stone foundation; halfprotruding square corner-towers (66m), other rectangular towers in the middle of the sides and two
others flanking the gate. The datation is ensured by a Tetrarchic inscription from 303 (A 19421943,
81): Impp(eratoribus) dd(ominis) nn(ostris) Diocletiano et Maximiano aeternis Augg(ustis) et / Constantio
et Maximiano fortissimis Caesaribus principib(us) / iuventutis centenarium quod Aqua Viva appellatur
ex praecepto / Val(eri) Alexandri v(iri) p(erfectissimi) agent(is) vic(es) praeff(ectorum) praet(orio) et Val(eri)
Flori v(iri) p(erfectissimi) p(raesidis) p(rovinciae) N(umidiae) a solo fabricatum curante Val(erio) Ingenuo
praep(osito) limit(is) dedicatum / dd(ominis) nn(ostris) Diocletiano VIII et Maximiano VII Augg(ustis)
conss(ulibus). (Fig.217)
LESCHI 1941; LESCHI 1943. Cf. LANDER 1984, 188, 208, fig.177; EUZENNAT 1989, 270, fig.200/5;
REDD 1995, 100101, fig.19.
Bourada: Rectangular fortification of approx. 8077m, with rectangular corner- and intermediary
towers, a gate flanked by two elongated rectangular towers, divided into compartments (analogy at
Gornea, see Gazetteer, No.5). Dated by J. Guey to the reign of Constantine (324330) based on a
fragmentary inscription (AE 1940, 125) that mentions a Victor Triumfator semper Aug(ustus), as well as
on coins. (Fig.218)
GUEY 1939, 192f. Cf. LANDER 1984, 193, 208, fig.189; EUZENNAT 1989, fig.200/6; REDD 1995,
101 (who contests the date proposed by Guey).
Doucen: Quadrangular fortification of approx . 6060m, with square corner-towers and a gate
flanked by rectangular towers. M. Euzennat puts forward the year 242 as a datation, based on several
inscriptions (CIL VIII 8779 = 17988, 17989), whose place of discovery is uncertain though.
EUZENNAT 1989, fig.200/4 (after the Baradez aerial photograph).
Seba Mgata: slightly rhomboidal fort (c. 6084m), with the same chracteristics as the fortifications
Aqua Viva and Aquae Herculis, built probably in the Tetrarchic period. (Fig.219)
LANDER 1984, 208, fig.212.
90
Tobna (Tubunae): Fortification (6280.50m on the inside, covering a surface of 0.50ha) built on
the ruins of the former town and located at an important crossroads. It has a 1.902.05 m-thick defense
wall, rectangular corner-towers (of approx. 77m, with Z-shaped entrances) and other intermediary
ones (with a simple entrance), as well as a square tower-gate (8.308.30m). Dated with certainty to
the 6thc., probably to the reign of Justinian. (Fig.221)
PRINGLE 1981 (2001), 274276, figs. 3, 5, 6, 42.
91
Minor fortifications
in the dioceses of thrace and dacia
1. GAZETTEER
2. RAM (LEDERATA)
A quadriburgium-type fort (5060m) has been discovered in the NE part of the Roman
castrum (200140m, identified with Lederata of the 2nd 4th c.). The corner-towers may have
been circular and the entrance is on the southern side. No archaeological excavations have been
conducted. Taking into account the topographic configuration, this fortification can be dated to
the 6thc., as it was built over the ruins of the Roman fort abandoned during the 5th c.
Bibliography: DEROKO 1950, 169173, fig.6; DIMITRIJEVI 19821983, 5556, 62, fig.11;
JOVANOVI 1996; BENEA 1996, 7374.
3. SAPAJA ISLAND
Sapaja Island, near Stara Palanka, is located between the confluences of the rivers Cara
and Nera with the Danube. This fortification is a North-Danubian bridgehead of the fort in
Lederata (Ram). Archaeological excavations were conducted here in 19661970.
The fortification was identified by D. Dimitrijevi with the Late Roman Lederata
(NDOr. XLI, 8: castellum Laederata; XLI, 17: cuneus equitum sagittariorum, Laedenatae; XLI,
36: Praefectus militum Vincentiensium, Laedemata), the authoress considering that its name had
been taken over from the homonymous Early Roman Lederata, located on the southern bank
of the Danube (and which has been identified with the fort in Ram). Al. Jovanovi (1996)
supposes that the fortification on Sapaja may have been named Nova Lederata.
Prior elements: The remnants of a watchtower (in the southern sector of the western
side) and those of a horreum (outside the fortification), as well as older discoveries and some
made during excavations (a gold and silver coin hoard with pieces from Tiberius to Trajan,
bricks with the stamps of the legio VII Claudia) prove the military presence of the Romans on
the island as early as the end of the 1st or beginning of the 2ndc., when this fort was one of the
main crossing points for the Roman armies during the Dacian Wars.
Architecture: Almost square fortification (92.5 92 93 92 m on the outside,
88.5888989m on the inside), with four corner-towers. The defence wall has a 2.30m
thick foundation and 1.90m thick elevation. It was built of fashioned stones bound with white
mortar containing fine gravel. The corner-towers were square and completely protruding in the
first phase (the NE tower is 6.206.20m on the outside), and later (6th c.) replaced with round
ones. Three other rectangular towers appeared on the inner face of the wall (out of which two
measure 7.806.20m on the outside and 5.304.80m on the inside), built approximately
in the centre of the E, W and S sides.
Intra muros buildings: Along the entire defence wall there are elements from an
open portico, made of pillar-buttresses set against the defence wall (built in the opus listatum
technique) and column bases that supported a wooden roof.
Stratigraphy (according to Dimitrijevi 19821983, who unfortunately did not publish
a stratigraphic profile):
- A layer directly above the sandy soil, dated to the 4thc. based on abundant archaeological
material, including coins. Over 50% of the archaeological material is attributed to the
Sarmatians, which implies their presence here as foederati or limitanei (the author tends
to date their presence here as early as Constantine, post332). This layer was violently
destroyed, as is shown by a massive layer of ash and charred remains identified especially
94
inside the porticoes and near them. The destruction is attributed to the Huns at the
middle of the 5th c.;
- A layer of barbarian dwellings (Gepids and Sarmatians) in the second half of the 5th
beginning of the 6thc. for which see the dwelling discovered in the W portico, as well
as the objects attributed to the Eastern Germans;
- A layer corresponding to the 6th c. reconstruction (Justinian), discovered in all the
sectors that were excavated. At an architectural level the Byzantine reconstruction was
identified only in the NE tower;
- Above an alluvial layer formed over approx. five centuries there surges the mediaeval
layer (14th 15th c.), which corresponds to the restoration of the defence wall on the
same trajectory and the building of new complexes inside the compound.
Archaeological material: Pottery, lamps, iron weapons and tools, jewels, spindlewhorls, etc. One notices that, among other stamped bricks, there is one bearing the mark LEG
VII CL S(ub)C(ura) AVR(elii), which attests a new praepositus of the Legio VII Claudia.
Coins: Claudius II 1, Aurelian 9, Probus 6, Maximian 3, Galerius 1, Constantine
I 6, Crispus 1, Constantine II 1, Constans 5, Constantius II 8, Constantius Gallus
2, Julian 2, Valentinian I 2, Valens 1, Gratian 1. For the 6thc. there are coins from
Anastasius 1, Justin I 2, Justinian 2, Justin II 2, Mauricius 1.
Chronology: The construction moment has been dated to the reign of Constantine
(D. Dimitrijevi bases this theory on the internal architecture with pillars in opus listatum and
porticoes, but also on analogies with other fortifications such as Sucidava, Drobeta, Hinova
or Gamzigrad). Then there was the destruction caused by the Huns, followed by the Gepidic
dwelling and the reconstruction during the reign of Justinian. The last coin is from Mauricius
and suggests that the fortification was destroyed by the Avars. A 7thc. grave has been discovered
inside the abandoned compound.
Bibliography: DIMITRIJEVI 19821983, 2962 (previous bibliography included). Cf. VASI,
KONDI 1986, 551, 553, fig.20; VASI 19941995, 44, fig.1; JOVANOVI 1996, 6972;
BENEA 1996, 73; BONDOC 2009, 4042, 182.
5. GORNEA
Quadriburgium-type fortification North of the Danube, bridgehead of the fort in ezava
(Novae). Preventive excavations conducted by Nicolae Gudea in 19681969.
95
Architecture: Dimensions on the outside: 41.50 41.50 m. The defence wall has a
1.802.10 m thick foundation and an elevation varying between 1.30 m (E side), 1.50 m
(Nand W sides) and 1.70m (S side). The elevation was built in opus mixtum (three courses
of bricks). The square corner-towers (approx. 9.209.20m on the outside) have walls whose
thickness has an average of 1.10 m. The entrances to the towers (of different width: 1.60, 1.30,
1.00m) were built along the N and S sides. The entrances and the towers internal corners were
built of bricks.
The gate is on the S side. It was 5.55m wide and was flanked by two rectangular towers
of approx. 3.509.15m (on the outside), with 0.750.85m thick walls. At a later stage the
W bastion was modified, its original entrance blocked and its inner space divided into two by
a wall. This new space was equipped with a hypocaust heating system.
Intra muros buildings: Research has shown that, inside, dwelling was concentrated
along the defence wall, on a maximal width of 3.50 m. The walls of the dwellings were made of
adobe (0.40m wide). Out of approx. 1824 m2, around 600 were used as dwelling space, which
corresponds, according to N. Gudea, to a number of 100150 soldiers and their families. There
was also an intense rate of dwelling in the towers (where a lot of archaeological material has
been discovered).
Stratigraphy (inside the towers): I vegetal (0.200.30); II stone debris and plaster
rubble (0.40m); III stone debris, roof tiles, burn traces (0.30m); IV layer containing roof
tiles, rare pottery sherds, but less stone (0.40m); V layer containing an important quantity
of pottery and other objects (0.40m); VI the dwelling level proper, reddish, containing a lot
of ash, pottery, metal objects and coins (0.30m); VII natural earth layer, whose upper part
contains coins and metal objects from the layer above.
Archaeological material is abundant: pottery (mostly glazed), lamps (mostly glazed),
weapons, tools, glass, spindle-whorls and millstones. Stamped bricks: LEG(io) V[II Cl(audia)?];
EQ(uites) SACI(ttarii) S(ub) C(ura) ITALICI P(rae)P(ositi); S(ub) C(ura) BVBALI P(rae)
P(ositi) LEG(io) VII CL(audia) MVIT, plus a brick on which there is a cursive inscription.
Coins: 107 pieces, many of which were destroyed by secondary burns. The following
(79 pieces) have been identified with certainty:
1st 3rd
c.
317
320
330
337
337
341
341
346
346
351
351
361
361
364
364
378
378
383
383
395
395
402
13
12
18
20
Chronology: N. Gudea (1977, 6869) considers that it was built undoubtedly during
the Tetrarchy, more precisely between 294300 and bases this theory on analogies throughout
the Empire, as well as on its construction technique. The author believes that the lack of coins
from the beginning of the century must be interpreted as the result of the coin crisis and must
not be connected to a possible construction of the fortification during the third decade of
the 4th c. (Gudea 1977, 74). But a more plausible date of construction would be the reign of
Constantine, as is strongly suggested by the numismatic material (Benea 1996, 79). The violent
end of the complex should be placed somewhere at the end of the 4th beginning of the 5th c.
Bibliography: GUDEA 1970; GUDEA 1974, 175176, Abb.2/1; GUDEA 1977; GUDEA 1982,
107108, no. 21. Cf. LANDER 1984, 206207; BENEA 1996, 7679; BONDOC 2009, 4749.
96
6. ZIDINAC
It is located on a plateau near the mouth of the Zidinac stream, between the fort in
ezava-Novae (7.5 km to the W) and the fortification in Saldum (2.5 km to the E). Excavated
by Petr Petrovi in 1969.
Architecture: Square burgus (17.5017.50m). The foundation and elevation are made
of stones bound with mortar. The outer face is made of large blocks, the emplecton of small
stones. The wall has a 1.50m thick elevation, and was preserved on a height of up to 1.50 m.
In the NE corner of the inner space there is a small watchtower with walls that merge with the
defence wall (3.503.50m on the inside), with a southern entrance 0.80m wide. Inside the
tower, left of the entrance and set against the southern wall, a kiln (hearth) has been discovered.
The rare remnants found inside seem to support the hypothesis of sporadic dwelling,
function of the needs of the moment. P. Petrovi put forward the idea that it was used by the
troops stationed at Saldum.
Archaeological material (very poor): fragmentary pottery, one iron gladius, bronze
fibula (not illustrated).
Chronology: According to the author of the excavation it was built at the end of the 3rd
beginning of the 4thc. It was destroyed at the end of the 4thc., probably during the Hunnic
invasion (see a thick layer of burn).
Bibliography: KONDI 1974, 4546; PETROVI P. 19821983 a, 127128; PETROVI M.
1996, 254, fig.7; BENEA 1996, 79; GUDEA 2001, 6566 (does not take into account the late
dating); JEREMI G. 2007, 307, fig.2/7.
7. DOBRA-SALDUM (CANTABAZA?)
Fortification located near the confluence of the Koica River and the Danube, in one
of the latters numerous fords (Saldum actually means ford in Turkish), between Zidinac
(3 km to the W) and Bosman (1.5 km to the E). Identified by some authors with Cantabaza
mentioned by Procopius (De aedif. IV, 6, 5), placed right next to Novae. Archaeological excavations were conducted by Petr Petrovi in between 19661970.
Prior elements: Sporadic traces of prehistoric dwelling (layer F), then two Early Roman
levels:
- layer E (= level 5), dated to the second half of the 1stc. or to the end of the 1st beginning
of the 2ndc., in connection either with a small earthen fort with palisades (Petrovi 1982
1983 b, who also postulates a reconstruction in stone during the reign of Trajan; Vasi,
Kondi 1986, 543544: un petit fortin a palissades (...), restes mobiliers pourraient
dater le camp a la priode flavienne), or with a civilian settlement (G. Jeremi);
- layer D (= level 4), dated to the 2nd 3rdc., to which correspond the walls of a stone
fortification partially superposed by the N and E sides of the 6th c. quadriburgium
(Jeremi G. 2003, 39: in der Anfang des 2. Jh. eine Befestigung unbekannter Grundlage
errichtet wurde). According to P. Petrovi (19821983 b, 130), it should be dated to
the beginning of the 3rdc. based on coins from Severus onwards (Aurelian, Probus).
Dwelling later interrupted for several decades.
There follows a dwelling level (layer C = level 3) concentrated almost exclusively in the
eastern part of the site, which is dated to the second half of the 4th c. A rich archaeological
97
material was discovered on this level (pottery, lamps, agricultural tools, fibulae, glass objects),
including 116 bronze coins that cover the period between 351383, over 80% of them from
the time of Valentinian I, Valens and Gratian. Based on these discoveries, P. Petrovi considered
that the fortification was built during the reign of Valentinian I (and identifies it with Gratiana
mentioned by the Notitia Dignitatum), but later observations dismissed this chronology (Kondi
1984; Vasi 19941995; Jeremi G. 2003). According to G. Jeremi, we are faced with ein
bedeutender militrischen Sttzpunkt with dwelling accommodation in wooden barracks. We
cannot rule out the possibility that a burgus-type fortification also functioned during that period,
but it has never discovered, or that the dwelling space was inside the old minor Roman fort.
Architecture: The fortification (43.50 31.20 m on the inside, covering approx.
0.14ha) has a 1.90m thick defence wall (2.20m at foundation level). The long N and S sides
are thickened on the inside (on a length of approx. 23.50m on the N side and of 21.80m on
the S one) and, at their ends, they have stairs of access to the upper part of the wall, increasing
the thickness in the middle sector to 3.20 m (in elevation). The elevation of the thickened
sectors is made by pillars set against the defence wall. There is a simple entrance on the W side,
near the NW tower.
Three of the corner-towers are round, with entrances en entonnoir (semicircular
entryways), while the fourth one (NE) is rectangular and rounded on its E side. The SW and
SE towers are round only inside (3.70m in diameter, with walls 1.50m thick in elevation),
while outside their front has a pronounced tendency to bend towards the U-shape. The NW
corner-tower is also round on the outside (7.50m in diameter), but it is different from the
others in its monolithic appearance (it is practically a compact mass of masonry), a solution
chosen probably because of the unstable ground, very close to the Danube bank.
Stratigraphy: two dwelling levels have been discovered:
- Level 2 (layer B) construction level dated to the 6thc. (based on coins from Justinians
age), continuing under Justin II (according to the coins); it is the level that corresponds
to the plinth of the defence wall (this is one of the arguments in favour of dating it to the
later period);
- Level 1 (layer A) sporadic dwelling in the second half of the 6thc., or rather towards the
end of the same century.
Archaeological material: pottery specific for the 6th c., especially amphoras, lamps,
weapons, tools, glass objects.
Coins: five pieces from the reigns of Justinian and Justin II, one piece from Mauricius
(592/593), the latter representing a useful element in dating the destruction of the fortification.
Chronology: Built in the 6thc. (Justinian) and destroyed twice, the second time probably
by the Avar attack in 595/596 AD.
Bibliography: PETROVI P. 19821983 b (previous bibliography included); JEREMI G. 2003.
Cf. KONDI 1984, 142143, fig.7; VASI, KONDI 1986, 555, 557, fig.25 a; VASI 1994
1995, 45f., fig.3; BENEA 1996, 7980; MILOEVI G. 1996, 249, 252, fig.4; GUDEA 2001, 66.
8. BOSMAN
The fortification is located in one of the most difficult and dangerous spots for navigation,
on a wide strip between the Danube and a steep mountain mass along the river bank. The river
has very strong currents in this area. The fort is located between Saldum (1.5 km to the W) and
98
Gospodijn Vir (2.5 km to the SE). Its identification with Ad Scrofulas mentioned by the Tabula
Peutingeriana between Novae and Taliata (Mirkovi 1968, 107) has not been archaeologically
confirmed yet, as no pre6thc. material has been discovered. Archaeological excavations were
conducted by Vladimir Kondi in 19681969.
Architecture: Triangular fortification adapted to the terrain measuring 45.545.546m
(towers included) on the outside and approx. 373736m (covering a surface of approx.
0.06ha) on the inside. One of the sides (the E one) was adapted to the configuration of the
river bank, which resulted in a slightly concave shape. It seems that when the river level grew, it
reached this side and the solution they found the concave shape left enough manoeuvring
space and prevented the flooding of the fort; it also diminished the eroding power of water.
The thickness of the defence wall varies between 2.202.50 m. The foundation is made of stone
bound with mortar, the elevation is built in opus mixtum (with 5 courses of bricks). The E side
is thickened in the middle sector up to 3.50m and has two stairs of access to the upper part at
its N and S ends. At the centre of the thickened sector there is an entrance a central pillar-type
gate (the pillar is 1.50m wide), with a maximal width of 4.60 m. The corner-towers are round,
with corridor-entrances en entonnoir (external diameter of approx. 9m, and an internal one
of approx. 4.50m).
Intra muros buildings: Some light buildings (btiments en treillis et liant), brick
pavements, a circular fountain with stone and brick walls right in the middle of the fort.
Stratigraphy: Two dwelling levels in the 6thc., which could not be clearly differentiated
from a chronological point of view. The initial level is very thin and suggests that it lasted for a
short time.
Archaeological material: not illustrated.
Coins: A hoard was discovered in 1968 during the excavation of the E side, in a
destruction level containing a great quantity of ash. It contains 17 bronze coins (Justin II 7,
Tiberius II 1, Mauricius 9), the last coin dated to 595/596, an important clue in dating
the destruction of the fortification (and also, it seems, in dating the limes downfall in the Iron
Gates area). Published by V. Kondi, Numizmatiar 7, 1984, 5154 (= Trsors, no. 260), cf. V.
Popovi, MFRA 87, 1975, 1, 484.
Chronology: The fortification was built during the reign of Justinian and was destroyed
by the Avar invasion of 595/596.
Bibliography: KONDI 19821983 a, 137145 (previous bibliography included). Cf. KONDI
1974, 46; KONDI 1984, 141142, fig.6; VASI, KONDI 1986, 555, 557, fig.26; VASI
19941995, 47f., fig.7; BENEA 1996, 80 (who classifies it, without any grounds, among 4thc.
fortifications); MILOEVI G. 1996, 251, fig.9.
9. PESAA
The fortification is located at the mouth of the Pesaa River, in a valley surrounded by
high cliffs, accessible only through the Danube valley, between Manastir (2 km to the NW) and
Velike Livadice (a 1stc. AD castellum, 4 km to the SE). It was excavated in 19681969.
Architecture: Square watchtower (7.507.50m on the outside, 55m on the inside),
with walls made of stone bound with mortar, 1.20m thick (1.50m at foundation level). The
1.00m thick entrance is located in the middle of the southern side and leads to the ancient
road. It was later included in a lower quality defence wall (dry set masonry with no foundation)
of approx. 3634.50m, with 0.800.90m thick walls.
99
and the archaeological layers that have been identified (unfortunately no archaeological profile
has ever been published).
Construction stages:
- Phase I a: small earthen castellum (approx. 5050m), built in the first half of the 1stc.
(most probably under Tiberius) and maybe destroyed around 69/70 (Vasi, Kondi
1986, 542).
- Phase I b: Reconstruction in stone, on the same trajectory, in the second half of the
1stc. A.D. It has round corners, gates on all four sides and buildings inside (command
post, barracks and horreum). It was possibly destroyed in 8586 (Vasi, Kondi 1986,
544, 548), but it was certainly in use during the reign of Trajan. It seems that during the
reign of Hadrian the fort was abandoned and was reoccupied after the troops left Dacia
under Aurelian.
- Phase II: Restoration including the construction of internal rectangular towers at the
corners, with the mention that two of these corners are no longer rounded, but rightangled. Inside the excavations uncovered remnants from several wooden buildings with
foundations made of stone bound with earth and hearths inside them. According to
Zotovi, this phase should be dated to the reign of Aurelian, but Vasi and Kondi put
forward the reign of Trajan as construction date for the internal towers and a restoration
in the second half of the 3rd c.
- Phase III: A new restoration including the construction of four corner-towers (two
horse shoe- and two fan-shaped) and two other rectangular towers on the NW and SE
sides. Also, the defence wall was then rebuilt in opus mixtum.
Architecture (phase III): It is precisely this third phase that interests us, because it is dated to
the Late Roman and Early Byzantine period. The dimensions of the complex in this phase are
of approx. 6050m on the outside (or 5746m on the inside, that is 0.26ha). The horseshoe-shaped towers were built on the edged corners and the fan-shaped ones on the rounded
ones. According to the published plan, access to the N and S towers was possible by piercing
the corners of the defence wall; we do not know how the access was possible to the other two
towers (the architectural details are missing). The two rectangular towers enclose the old gates
in the middle of the sides. The gate on the NE side (with access to the Danube) is the only one
left, even if slightly modified (it was narrowed). A staircase led to the upper part of the defence
wall north of the gate (Zotovi 19821983, T. II/1, where the two construction phases are
visible, the first one probably to be dated to the reign of Constantine, the second one to the
reign of Justinian), and the SW side was thickened in its middle sector, probably also for the
construction of access stairs.
Intra muros buildings: Several modest dwellings, made of stones bound with earth
(deux huttes en pis recouvertes des tuiles, according to Stare kulture, 106; plusieurs
constructions faites en torchis et aux sols en mortier, according to Zotovi 19821983, 225;
also see Vasi 19941995, 4748) and a Christian basilica (with three construction phases:
initially mono-nave, in the second phase a narthex and a southern annex were added, and
finally several of its entrances were blocked, cf. Vasi 19941995, 49).
Archaeological material: rich, but unfortunately poorly illustrated (we must mention
a storage of iron tools from the second phase).
Coins: phase II is dated by coins from the reigns of Septimius Severus, Severus Alexander,
Gordianus III, Philip I, Philip II, Trebonianus Gallus, Gallienus, Probus, Diocletian, Maximian,
Licinius, Constantine I, Constans, Constantius II, Julian, Jovian, Valentinian I, Valens, Gratian,
Valentinian II, Theodosius I, Arcadius, Theodosius II, and phase III by coins from the reigns of
101
Anastasius, Justin I, Justinian, Justin II and Mauricius, among which a hoard whose terminus
post quem is established by a coin minted in 577/578 (V. Popovi, CRAI, 1978, 7172).
Chronology: The dating of the third phase to the reign of Justinian, proposed by
L.Zotovi, was rightly corrected by M. Vasi, who puts forward the reign of Constantine. His
arguments are given by the shape of the corner-towers and certain stratigraphic observations (in
one of the older internal towers the eastern tower a pottery kiln was discovered, dated to the
age of Constantine according to the material found inside, which means that at that time the
internal towers had lost their defensive role to the new, external towers). Anyway, the external
towers, as well as the entire defence wall, were reconstructed in the 6th c.
The fort was also dwelt in during the early mediaeval period (9th 10th c.), while during
the 12th15thc. part of the intra muros area was used as an inhumation necropolis.
Bibliography: ZOTOVI 19821983 (previous bibliography included); ERCEGOVIPAVLOVI 1986, 744, 95101 (mediaeval necropolis). Cf. KONDI 1984, 153155, fig.11;
VASI, KONDI 1986, 542f., figs. 5, 10, 23; VASI 19941995, 45f., fig.4; MILOEVI G.
1996, 251, fig.8; BENEA 1996, 8081; GUDEA 2001, 6769.
Phase III: the defence wall was completely rebuilt, the NW side even from the foundation
level, with its gate blocked by a rectangular tower (2.802.10m, with 1.20m thick
walls). The sides which had been thickened in the previous phase were equipped
with staircases which provided access to their upper parts. The NE tower was rebuilt
on the foundations of the old rectangular tower and was enlarged (it now measured
4.703.50m on the inside). The other three corner-towers were entirely rebuilt: the SE
tower is U-shaped (or is rather a rectangular tower with a rounded front), 9.704.70m
on the inside; the NW tower has the same shape but different dimensions (86m); the
SW tower is also U-shaped, but very short (internal dimensions: 65.5m). The walls
of the two towers are 1.30m thick, unlike the rectangular tower that has 1.50m thick
walls on the two external fronts.
Intra muros buildings: some of the rooms in the previous complex (more precisely
those located inside the fortification) were reused and even completed with new annexes, but
only during the 4thc. After a destruction dated to 378, but still during phase II, the intra muros
space was levelled and new dwellings were built out of light material (wood, adobe). Light
constructions also appeared in phase III.
Stratigraphy: according to V. Kondi the following correspondences are to be made:
- Phase I is dated according to coins from the reigns of Diocletian, Maximian, Maximinus
Daza and Constantius II.
- For phase II two distinct levels have been identified, the first one dated according to
4thc. pottery and coins (its final moments were around 378, based on coins from Valens
and Valentinian I) and the second one dated to the last decades of the 4th first half of
the 5thc.
- Phase III corresponds to a dwelling level dated according to coins from the reign of
Justinian.
It must be mentioned that dwelling inside the compound is also attested for the 9th10thc., and
in the 14th 15thc. a necropolis appeared there (whose graves disturb the 6thc. level).
Archaeological material: publications mention that it is very rich, but unfortunately
do not present it.
Coins: besides those mentioned above there are no complete statistics.
Chronology: V. Kondi was tempted to date the construction of the quadriburgium
to the 3rdc., mistakenly interpreting the relation between the Roman building and the fortification (he was convinced that the building was an intra muros construction raised at the same
time as the defence wall). The new archaeological interpretation (Tomovi 1996) proved the
fortification was raised over the former Roman building and therefore could be dated to the
end of the 3rd beginning of the 4thc., probably being a Tetrarchic construction. Phase II can
be dated roughly to the 4th and first half of the 5thc., while phase III undoubtedly corresponds
to the period when the limes was reconstructed during the 6thc.
I believe that even this interpretation can be nuanced: apart from the coins that were
mentioned as belonging to phase I (for which there is no presentation of the stratigraphic
context in which they were discovered) there are no arguments in favour of dating phase I to
the Tetrarchy. This chronological moment could actually belong to the phase when the Roman
building was extended. For the second phase there are no convincing arguments either, since
the thickening of defence walls (as is the case of the NW and SE sides) is specific to the reign
of Justinian and should be attributed to phase III. Considering the analogies with the cornertowers of the fortifications at Gornea and Hinova, both built during the reign of Constantine,
it is more likely it should be dated to the Constantinian period.
103
Dacia Ripensis
13. POREKA REKA
Strategic place on the border between the provinces of Moesia Prima and Dacia Ripensis,
at the mouth of Poreka River. It is located at the crossroads: the Danube road to Dierna
continues northwards, the road to Egeta continues eastwards (through the Miro Massif ) and
a road that leads inland to the rich mining area of Dacia Ripensis continues southwards. Two
km to the W there lies the fort in Donji Milanovac (Taliata). Archaeological soundings were
performed in 1962, then preventive excavations in between 19671970.
Prior elements: cremation necropolis dated to the 1st 2ndc. A.D.
Architecture: quadriburgium-type fortification set against a blocking wall (clausura)
defending the access on the River Poreka Valley towards the inland area of the province. The
clausura has a length of over 450 m, a thickness that varies between 1.502.00 m, it has a
circular tower at its left end (near the Danube), a rectangular one at its right end (on the etae
hill) and a sort of reinforcement tower at the corner where the wall changes its trajectory (from
NW-SE towards WSW-ENE).
The fortification is set against the above-mentioned wall, on the right side of the Poreka
Valley. The dimensions are approx. 6060m, based on the length of the E side, the only one
that has been entirely preserved; the trajectory of the W side is not clear, as it seems to have
been destroyed by floods (even if it cannot be ruled out the possibility that the fortification
had not been completed, according to Petrovi P. 1977, 265; Vasi 2003, 19). It is slightly
trapezium-shaped, as the S side of the fortification is not parallel to the N one (= the blocking
wall). The defence wall is 2.50m thick (2.80m at foundation level). The entrance is on the S
side, 4m wide and flanked by two walls that are perpendicular on the defence wall; to it there
corresponds a 2m wide breach in the blocking wall on the N side. It has rectangular cornertowers; the NE one is set against the blocking wall and encloses a rectangular internal area of
about 42m, and the SE one is square (internal dimensions of 44m and external ones of
7.207.20m). The entrances to the towers are parallel to the defence wall and are 0.90m wide.
104
The elevation of the tower walls is only 1.501.60m thick and is raised on monolithic foundations (compact masonry platforms).
The intra muros space, as far as it has been researched, has not provided any data
concerning dwelling structures. Moreover, the archaeological material is almost non-existent.
Chronology: a small thermal building built over the E side and which uses the SE
corner-tower as a praefurnium provides an excellent terminus ante quem in dating the fortification. According to Petrovi a coin hoard places the closing of the baths around 378, and the
construction moment is accordingly dated to the middle of the 4thc.
The baths are contemporary with two other nearby structures (buildings A and B, of
169m and 159m respectively, probably horrea, the first of which is dated by coins from the
reigns of Constantius II and Valens) and two structures made of monolithic masonry (55m)
located at the confluence of the Gradanica stream and the Poreka Reka and disposed 15m
away from each other. They are considered watchtowers by the author of the research, but these
rectangular structures could in fact represent the pillars of a bridge that crossed the Gradanica
stream and that was probably part of the ancient road (also see the alignment of the other buildings
on an approx. N-S direction, as well as the position of the entrances of the quadriburgium, which
correspond to the trajectory of the Roman road). Therefore, the construction could be dated to
the Tetrarchy or as late as the reign of Constantine and his successors.
Bibliography: PETROVI P. 1977; PETROVI P. 19821983 c (with previous bibliography).
Cf. KONDI 1974, 48; PETROVI P. 1980, 757 f.; VASI, KONDI 1986, 551 (dating to
the reign of Constantine); PETROVI, VASI 1996, 2122 (dating to the reign of Constantine);
BENEA 1996, 8182; NAPOLI 1997, 104, 286290; VASI 2003, 19 and n. 29.
external length of approx. 58 m. According to the same plan, the thickness of the defence walls
is of approx. 2.002.20 m. There are round corner-towers with a typical corridor-entrance en
entonnoir (semicircular entryway). The NE tower has an external diameter of 5.40 m, the
interior is paved with bricks and very little has been preserved of the elevation. The elevation of
the NW tower is much better preserved and it is built in opus mixtum with 5 courses of bricks.
In the middle of the N side, on a length of approx. 12m, there is a 1m thickening where there
is a staircase that provided access to the upper part of the wall.
Intra muros buildings: we do not know whether the multiple buildings that have been
discovered in some of the soundings are to be connected to the fortification or were built earlier.
Some of these walls were 1.501.90m thick!
Stratigraphy: no data or profiles have been made available.
Archaeological material: pottery, fibulae, glass objects (none of the discoveries are
illustrated).
Chronology: even if the author of the excavation dates the fortification to the 4thc., it
is clear that the plan corresponds to a typical 6thc. fortification, with very good analogies on the
limes in Dacia Ripensis.
Bibliography: POPOVI L. 19821983 (with previous bibliography). Cf. KONDI 1974, 48; VASI,
KONDI 1986, 555, fig.25 b; PETROVI M. 1996, 256.
restoration was undertaken under the rule of Justin II (according to the first coin dated to his
reign, in 569/570) and the compound continued to function up to the last decade of the 6thc.
(the last coin from the age of Mauricius is dated to 589/590), when it may have been destroyed
by the great Avar attacks in 593/594 or 595/596. The fortification was also intensely inhabited
during the mediaeval period.
Bibliography: JOVANOVI 19821983 (previous bibliography included); ERCEGOVIPAVLOVI 1986, 4591, 103110 (mediaeval settlement and necropolis). Cf. JANKOVI 1981,
32, fig.4 (not convincingly identified with Ducepratum!); KONDI 1984, 138140, fig.5; VASI,
KONDI 1986, 551, 555, fig. 15; MILOEVI G. 1996, 250251, fig. 6; BENEA 1996, 82
(does not distinguish between the initial tower and the 6thc. fortification); ZAHARIADE 1996;
ZAHARIADE 1999, 12; JEREMI G. 2007, 308, 312, fig.2/2.
them (B, C and D) were filled with a compact mass of rubble (stone, mortar, broken bricks), and
the entrances to all four towers were walled up. During the same phase a gate was built on the NW
side (towards the Danube). It was 1.75m wide on the inside and 1.20m wide on the outside, and
had a sewer outside. The location of the entrance during the first two phases is still unknown.
There is no data concerning intra muros buildings because no excavations have been
conducted in that respective area.
Stratigraphy: has not been clearly established; according to the 19821983 report, the
end of the first phase was marked by a layer of burn, as well as by the remnants of a roof that
collapsed inside the N tower and was later covered by the debris produced during the second
phase.
Archaeological material: pottery, glass and metal objects plus a series of stamped bricks,
some of them discovered in situ in the defence wall (DARDIANA, DIANA, DRP DIERNA, DRP).
Coins: only three pieces were discovered Licinius (?), Gratian (367375) and
Anastasius (512517).
Chronology: According to the authors of the monograph published in 2004 the fortification was initially built during the reign of Diocletian, after which a second phase was dated
to the reign of Licinius or Constantine (in the 19821983 report the end of the first phase is
dated to 376378). The third phase is dated to the reign of Anastasius Justinian.
This chronology is not based on concrete evidence. The presence of brick stamps specific
to the second half of the 4th c., some of which were discovered in situ in the lower part of
the walls, weighs rather in favour of the dating of the construction moment to the reign of
Constantius II. Support for the late dating of the quadriburgium-type fortification is given by
the chronology of the Early Roman fort on the other side of the Tekija River, which could be
dated as late as the Diocletian Constantine period.
The units stationed at Transdierna in the 4thc. were made of milites exploratores (NDOr.
XLII, 29). I believe that by the toponym Zernes (=Dierna), mentioned among the fortifications
rebuilt by Justinian south of the Danube, Procopius (De aedif. IV, 6, 5) referred to the fortification in Tekija, which had a strong connection to the North-Danube nucleus at Orova.
Bibliography: CERMANOVI-KUZMANOVI 19821983; CERMANOVI-KUZMANOVI,
JOVANOVI 2004 (previous bibliography included). Cf. VASI, KONDI 1986, 551; BENEA
1996, 8283.
the passage was built entirely out of bricks. The gate has not been identified, but is presumed
to have been located on the southern side. On the eastern side, a 30m long extension of the
fortification was discovered, which ended with square towers and is presumed to have been the
harbour. Unfortunately this extension has never been recorded on any published plan.
There is no data concerning intra muros buildings. Near the fortification several dwelling
complexes that belonged to the civilian settlement (4th c.) have been excavated.
Stratigraphy: everything we know on this subject is that the SE and SW towers had two
dwelling layers, both bearing the marks of destruction by fire: between 1.602.00(2.20)m
there is a layer of brown earth, containing a lot of roof tiles and brick fragments, then between
2.202.70(3.00)m there is a yellow-brownish layer, containing traces of burnt wood and ash.
Underneath these two layers there is the 3rdc. Roman layer (that continues down to 4.10m
in depth).
Archaeological material: Pottery, lamps, weapons, stamped bricks (LEG XIII G, LEG
XIII R, LEG XIII G P S, DIER TRA, DIERNA and DRP DIERNA, the latter type being
preponderant).
Coins: out of the rich numismatic material, only the coins discovered in 1967 have
been published, the rest remaining unpublished. Leaving aside the material dated to the 1st
3rdc. (belonging to previous complexes to a great extent), the chronological order of the Late
Roman coins that have been dated with precision (207 pieces) is the following:
294
313
17
313
324
17
324
330
3
330
337
24
337
341
24
341
346
23
346
351
3
351
361
36
361
364
1
364
378
44
378
395
23
395
402
3
To these should be added a gold coin from Theodosius II, discovered in the NW corner of the
fortification (Bujor 1974, 61).
Chronology: According to N. Gudea and D. Benea it should be dated to the 4thc., with
two phases (Diocletian, then Constantine); it was destroyed at the end of the 4th beginning of
the 5thc. and the usual 6thc. reconstruction has not been discovered yet. But taking into account
the discovery of Constantius II (341346) coins in S IX a, when the wall was uncovered and
especially a posthumous piece from the age of Constantine (337340) in S IX d, 0.80m, in
the mortar of the defence wall, as well as the discovery of stamped bricks typical of the second half
of the 4thc., I believe that a more plausible construction date should be the time of Constantius
II. This date is corroborated by the very close analogies with the corresponding fortification in
Tekija. The Tetrarchic coins or those from 313324 are probably to be connected to previous
Roman complexes that were superposed by the fortification.
Bibliography: BUJOR 1974; GUDEA 1974, 177, Abb. 2/3; CHIESCU, POENARU-BORDEA
19811982; GUDEA 1982, 109, no. 33; BENEA 1996, 8394, fig.7/2; BONDOC 2002, 167;
BONDOC 2009, 5356.
A clue for the location of the fortification is offered by a Constantine I coin (dated
306307) discovered during the excavations in between 19671968 in the modern layers. The
lack of archaeological remnants from the Roman period can be explained by their destruction
during the modern period, especially by the construction of the Austrian Vauban-type fortification in the 18thc.
Some authors have proposed that this is the location of Ducepratum, a toponym
mentioned by Procopius, De aedif. IV, 6, 5 (V. Kondi, Starinar 4344, 19921993, 4952;
M. Garaanin, Starinar 4546, 19941995, 3539).
Bibliography: BONDOC 2002, 168; BONDOC 2005; BONDOC 2009, 5760.
connects to the imperial cult (!) are entirely wrong and are the result of a flawed interpretation of
the archaeological context due to the lack of stratigraphic criteria in the research of the complex.
Extra muros structures: I believe that the ditch identified approx. 8m away from the
SE side of the later quadriburgium (Jankovi 1981, fig.28) actually belongs to the first fortification. Thus, the fort was surrounded by a defence ditch at a distance of approx. 25 m. The fort
in Mihajlovac-Mora Vagei has a nearly identical plan: there, the second defence ditch was dug
precisely 25m away from the defence wall (and the first 15m away. This may also have been
the case in Donje Butorke, and such a ditch might have been uncovered if the intra muros area
of the late fortification had been researched in more detail.
The inhumation necropolis nearby was connected to this burgus.
Archaeological material: pottery and lamps, including glazed material, Zwiebelknopf
brooches, bricks stamped DIANA and DARDIANA.
The most important discovery was an honorary foundation inscription dated to 294300
(it was found among the spolia used in building the 6thc. fortification): Imp(eratores) Caes(ares)
C. Val(erius) Aur(elius) Diocletian / et M. Aur(elius) Val(erius) Maximianus Pii Felices / Invicti
Aug(usti) et Fl. Val(erius) Constantius / et Galerius Val(erius) Maximianus / nobilissimi Caesares
Germanici / Maximi Sarmatici Maximi pro / futurum in aeterno Rei publicaes / praesidium
constituerunt.
Coins: Probus, Galerius.
Chronology: Even in the absence of clear archaeological proof, the Tetrarchic dating is
almost certain, as indicate the nearly identical analogies in Ljubievac and Mora Vagei or that in
Zeiselmauer. A decisive proof for the Tetrarchic dating could be the above-mentioned foundation
inscription (the first of a series of five or six such inscription discovered on the Danube limes).
Even if the stone may have been brought from elsewhere (the fort in Diana-Karata perhaps,
VASI 2003, 1819) and reused in the 6thc. in the construction of the quadriburgium-type
fortification, we cannot exclude the possibility that the inscription should actually refer to this
very burgus (a hypothesis postulated by Torbatov 2002, 7879 and Torbatov 2004 a, 37, 47).
In the 6thc. the tower was surrounded by the quadriburgium-type fortification and was
used as dwelling space.
22 B. Donje Butorke Quadriburgium
Architecture: It encloses an area of approx. 4645m (around 0.24ha). The defence
wall is 2.002.20 m thick at foundation level and 1.852.10 m at elevation level. On the
SE and SW sides it was coated on a length of 21 and 23m respectively. The two wall areas
thickened to accommodate access staircases reach 3.40 and 3.70m respectively. The elevation of
these thickened segments is made of pillars, 41m at the ends and 1.51m in the centre. The
entrance to the round corner-towers is the typical corridor en entonnoir, with semicircular
entryways. The almost identical S and W towers have been researched better (external diameter
of 6.30m or 6.55m at elevation level, internal diameter of 3.20 m; the wall thickness is of
1.65m at foundation level and 1.40m at elevation level). The access was made through the
typical 3 m long passage en entonnoir, with semicircular entryways; the entrance itself is
1.20m wide. The interior of the S tower is paved with bricks. The towers towards the Danube
are reinforced with 11.5m external buttresses (partially uncovered at the E tower). As in the
case of the site in Hajduka Vodenica, there is a fifth tower, in this case in the middle of the E
side, rectangular with a round front (5.503.20m on the inside, 7.206.40m on the outside;
the thickness of the wall is 1.60m at foundation level and 1.25m at elevation level).
113
Archaeological material: none has been published, apart from a few pottery fragments
illustrated by Dj. Jankovi in 1981.
Chronology: Undoubtedly a 6thc. construction (Justinian).
Bibliography: JANKOVI 19731974; CERMANOVI-KUZMANOVI 19771978;
JANKOVI 1981, 35, fig.6 and especially 9199, fig.2830. Cf. KONDI 1984, 145147, fig.8;
VASI, KONDI 1986, 551, 557; TOMOVI 1987, 93, fig.2; MILOEVI G. 1996, 250251,
fig.5; PETROVI M. 1996, 254, fig.6; BENEA 1996, 96; VASI 2003, 1819; JEREMI G.
2007, 312, fig.3/4 (the last two authors date the burgus to the reign of Valentinian I and regard the
inscription as spolia).
23. HINOVA
North-Danube fortress located 15 km away from Drobeta, at the foot of a cliff, on the
first terrace of the Danube (where the river turns southwards). It has a South-Danube equivalent in the fortification in Rtkovo-Glamija. Salvage excavations undertaken in between
19761981 (Iron Gates II project). There is a proposal of C.C. Petolescu to identify the
site with the toponym Theodora, mentioned by Procopius, De aedif. IV, 6, 15 (accepted by
D.Bondoc).
Prior elements: It was built over a cremation necropolis from the end of the Bronze Age
and beginning of the Iron Age (the famous gold hoard was discovered here).
Architecture: Rectangular quadriburgium (45.8539.80m measured on the N and W
sides, the only ones entirely preserved). Identification of the other sides was done using the sand
and gravel traces on the trajectory of the former foundations. The surface enclosed is of approx.
0.17ha. The thickness of the defence wall varies between 1.351.50 m. The towers on the N
side have been excavated: the NW corner-tower (3.703.95m on the inside, with a 1.05m
wide entrance) and the NE corner-tower (3.503.82m, with a 1.05m wide entrance) and
a middle tower (3.903.80m, with a wider entrance of 1.48m). The same type of towers
approximately square is present at the SE and SW corners. The entrance gate is in the middle
of the S side, flanked by two rectangular towers (the E one is divided into two compartments).
The gate is 3.65m wide.
The construction technique: river stones, sometimes limestone blocks levelled by courses
of bricks. The foundation is several centimetres thicker than the elevation. The mortar contains
lime mixed with sand.
Intra muros buildings: The soldiers barracks are along the defence wall and 3.603.80m
away from it. The buildings were delimited by a wall 0.50m wide at foundation level (and only
0.300.35m at elevation level, where it is made of brick); here and there, at distances between
4.104.65m, there are rectangular brick pillars (the ones at the corners 1.201.15m and
the rest 1.120.90m). The holes discovered in the pillars and in the defence wall prove the
use of wooden beams in the structure of all the walls, which were then completed with adobe.
Hearths were discovered in each of the dwellings (made of entire or fragmentary bricks or of
roof tiles turned upside down). According to the number of pillars it was established that there
were approximately 16 rooms. Above these structures there may have been wooden attics. The
towers were also inhabited and the NE one was probably used by a blacksmith.
The commanders house was located right in front of the middle tower on the N side.
It is rectangular (53.45m) and the entrance is towards the tower. The wall is 1m thick, with
114
a foundation made of stones bound with earth. The construction belongs to the forts second
dwelling phase. A large and gold-plated Zwiebelknopf fibula was discovered inside.
The inner yard evidenced traces of light constructions, probably used for storage
warehouses, as well as garbage pits.
Extra muros structures: On the outside the fort was defended by three ditches to the
north (dug 4, 11.5 and 23m away from the defence wall). These are 4m wide and up to 2m deep.
Stratigraphy: there are two layers, delimited by the street gravel; both bear burn traces.
Archaeological material: pottery (predominantly glazed) and lamps; spindle-whorls,
millstones, (rare) glass objects, lead weights, brooches, garments; the umbo of a Germanic
shield, fragments of a Hunnic cauldron discovered in the burn layer; bricks stamped L(egio)
V M(acedonica), DIANA, DARDIANA, DRVBETA. Numerous tools discovered there prove
intense agricultural and blacksmith activity. Fishing, cattle raising and hunting are also proven
by the analysis of the animal remains.
Coins: According to the statistics, out of the 489 coins discovered on the site 362 have
been identified, and they are dated as follows (Davidescu, Stng 1986; Benea 1996):
2nd
3rd c.
4
284
305
4
313
330
2
330
335
26
337
346
43
346
361
61
361
363
9
364
378
121
378
383
53
383
402
24
402
408
2
Chronology: According to M. Davidescu the complex must have been built during the
Tetrarchy, based on a coin from the reign of Maximian (304305) discovered in the mortar
of the walls of the northern barracks. This date coincides with Diocletians third trip to the
Danube limes in 303. D. Bondoc also agrees with this theory. I believe that it is this coin that
should rather be considered a terminus post quem for the construction moment, which may just
as well have been during the Constantinian period, as suggests the period of progress after 330
(reflected in the high number of coins from Constantine and Constantius II).
The destruction of the first phase took place in 376378 (as a result of a violent fire that
left a continuous layer of burn). The reconstruction is demonstrated by the second dwelling
level, by the closing of the entrances to the barracks that led to the inner yard and by the
installation of new hearths. There are coins from the whole span of time until the beginning
of the 5thc. (the last pieces dated to 402408). The final destruction is attributed to the Huns
during the first quarter of the 5th c.
Bibliography: DAVIDESCU 1978; DAVIDESCU 1980a; DAVIDESCU 1980b, 186203;
DAVIDESCU, STNG 1986; DAVIDESCU 1989; EL SUSI 1993; STNG 2003. Cf.
PETOLESCU 1997; BONDOC 2009, 6870.
115
24 A. Rtkovo-Glamija Burgus
Architecture: Burgus-type fortification with tetrapylon. It has a square plan (18.518.5m
on the outside, 14.514.5m on the inside). The walls are 2.92m thick at foundation level,
above which there is a 2.30/2.40m wide socle and an elevation of 1.92 m. It was built in opus
mixtum. The gate has been localised on the W side. In the NE corner there are traces of the
access staircase. The four central pillars are rectangular, with one of the corners rounded, and
they enclose a space of approx. 6.106.10 m.
Stratigraphy: two dwelling phases have been identified:
A layer of burn directly on the virgin soil, dated according to coins from the reigns
of Valentinian I, Gratian, Theodosius I, Honorius, Arcadius; the other two successive
burns are part of the same layer.
Reconstruction layer and another burn layer, dated by coins from Anastasius and Justin
I.
Archaeological material: very rich on the first level (Zwiebelknopf brooches, lamps,
varied pottery, weapons, agricultural and fishing tools, spindle-whorls and womens garments,
glass objects for the latter category see V. Han, Djerdapske Sveske 3, 1986, 9294), poorer
on the second level (pottery, one fibula). The high quantity of iron nails proves the existence
of a superstructure made of wood. Also, discoveries indicate a roof made of tiles. Osteological
analyses were performed and a series of mammals, fish and birds were identified.
Chronology: Based on the archaeological data, the complex must have been built in
the second half of the 4thc. (most probably during the reign of Valentinian I), then destroyed
at the beginning of the 5thc. The construction technique, similar to that used in the burgi at
Ljubievac, Mihajlovac-Mora Vagei and Kladovo-Donje Butorke, could indicate an even
earlier date, during the Tetrarchy. It was partially reconstructed during the 6thc., when it was
surrounded by a quadriburgium.
24 B. Rtkovo-Glamija Quadriburgium
Architecture: Fortification of 5551m (surface of 0.28ha) on the inside. The defence
wall, which has only been researched with testboxes in some areas, reaches a thickness of
2.40m. Its elevation is made of brick. Only three round corner-towers have been excavated:
the NW one has an internal diameter of 4.40m and an external one of 7.00 m; the SW one
has an internal diameter of 4.40m and an external one of 7.50 m; the NE tower has an internal
diameter of 2.70m and an external one of 5.30m). The entrances to the towers are corridors
en entonnoir, with a semicircular entryway (see the brick pavement at the entrance of the
NW tower).
Archaeological material: almost none has been discovered. According to M. Gabricevi
this suggests that the fortification was never finished.
Chronology: It is a typical 6thc. fortification, probably left unfinished. The proposed
dating at the end of the 6thc. (M. Gabricevi) is based on no concrete proof. But if we take into
account the dwelling registered inside the old burgus in the first half of the 6thc., we can suppose
that it took place when the quadriburgium was built. Therefore, I cannot exclude the possibility
that the old tower was partially restored and inhabited by the people who tried to build the new
fortification, but eventually never finished it.
Bibliography: GABRICEVI 1986. Cf. KONDI 1984, 145; VASI, KONDI 1986, 551,
557, fig.16; TOMOVI 1987, 93, fig.3; MILOEVI G. 1996, 250, 252, fig.3; PETROVI M.
1996, 254; JEREMI G. 2007, 312, fig.3/5.
116
25. KORBOVO
Site at a location called Zbradila, on a promontory set over the terrace of the Danube,
where a rectangular construction (4.20 3.20 m, with 0.600.70 m wide walls) has been
excavated. The pottery and coins (Claudius II, Florian) discovered there suggest a construction
date during the second half of the 3rdc. It was used throughout the 4thc. and probably restored
in the 6thc. The structure was interpreted by the author of the report as a watchtower, but the
poor state of conservation of the walls cannot help us determine the precise use of the building.
Bibliography: BABOVI 1990. Cf. JEREMI G. 2007, 312, fig.2/4.
Sometimes the builders used the opus pseudomixtum. Two thickenings appear on the NW and
SE sides (the total thickness of the coated NW side is of 3m). The corner-towers are round
(we only know the internal diameter of the N tower, approx. 3.00m, and the thickness of the
wall 1.501.60m).
Intra muros buildings: apart from the certitude of the dwelling inside the old burgus,
there is no other data.
Stratigraphy: the limited area of research did not allow the identification of any other
dwelling levels. The only certainty is a destruction layer dated to the last decades of the 6thc.
Archaeological material: pottery and other discoveries, dated exclusively to the 6thc.
(not illustrated).
Coins: Justinian (one piece, dated 548) and Justin II (one piece, dated 576). We do not
know if the pieces from Justinian dated to 527537 and 559 (and presented in Kora 1996,
fig.5) were discovered during the test excavations conducted on the trajectory of the fortification or inside the old burgus.
Chronology: built during the reign of Justinian (coin from 548, found on the foundation
level of the S tower), used until the end of the 6thc. (years 584585, according to Kora). A
mediaeval necropolis covers the entire surface of the old fortification.
Bibliography: PAROVI-PEIKAN 1984; RADOSAVLJEVI-KRUNI 1987; KORA 1996.
Cf. KONDI 1984, 144145; VASI, KONDI 1986, 551, 557; TOMOVI 1987, 9394,
fig.4; PETROVI M. 1996, 255256, fig.9; ZAHARIADE 1999, 12.
Chronology: The lack of clear chronological data prevented P. Petrovi from dating the
complex. The elongated rectangular plan, similar to that of the fortification in Puinei, on the
territory of Drobeta, suggests the 4thc. The rather abundant mediaeval material probably illustrated its reuse during that period.
28 B. Brza Palanka Castellum III
At a distance of approx. 100m N of Castellum II there is a triangular fortification
(the W side is around 70m long), not mentioned in the works of Marsigli or Kanitz, of which
only a round corner-tower and a segment of the defence wall have been partially excavated. The
latter is 3.40m thick and was built in opus mixtum.
Dated to the 6thc. through analogy with the fort at Bosman.
28 C. Brza Palanka Quadriburgium?
Rectangular fortification recorded by Marsigli, with round corner-towers. It is probably
to be identified with fortification C seen by F. Kanitz in the northern part of the settlement,
now destroyed (Petrovi P. 1984, 161, n. 10 and 11).
Bibliography: PETROVI P. 1984; ERCEGOVI-PAVLOVI, MINI 1984.
Prior elements: a settlement dated to the 1st c. B.C. 1st c. A.D. and faint traces
of dwelling at the end of the 3rd beginning of the 4thc., connected to an open settlement
identified in the vicinity.
Architecture: internal dimensions of 6644.5 m. It was built in opus mixtum, mostly
with 5 courses of bricks. The defence wall is 2.202.30m at elevation level and 2.602.70m at
foundation level, with thickened segments on three sides (up to 3.203.40m at elevation level).
Those on the N and S sides have 5 pillars in their elevation (opus latericium), and the thickening on the E side is slightly smaller. The round corner-towers have en entonnoir entrances
(of different dimensions), but there is also a small rectangular tower (bastion) on the NE side
(added at a later stage).
Intra muros buildings: close to the S and W sides of the defence wall structures have
been discovered, made of light material, with hardened clay floors and hearths.
Stratigraphy: two 6thc. layers have been identified, separated by a layer of burn.
Archaeological material: pottery and Danube lamps, typical of the 6th c.
Coins: Anastasius (1 piece), Justin I (2 pieces), Justinian (3 pieces). Coin hoard,
discovered in a layer of burn inside a building, made of 22 coins from the reigns of Justinian
and Justin II, the last one dated to 575/576.
Chronology: Construction typical of the 6th c., most probably from the reign of
Justinian. Based on the coin hoard found the destruction was dated to 578/579 or 584/585,
and then a restoration took place during the reign of Mauricius. It was abandoned at the end
of the 6th c.
Bibliography: JOVANOVI, KORA 1984; JOVANOVI, KORA, JANKOVI 1986, 380
384. Cf. KONDI 1984, 135137, fig. 3; VASI, KONDI 1986, 555, fig. 27; TOMOVI
1987, 94, fig.5; MILOEVI G. 1996, 249, 252, fig.2; JEREMI G. 2007, 312, fig.3/1.
the W side of the outer defence wall is too narrow. The analogies (see especially the fortification
in Budakalsz-Lupa Csrda, on the Pannonian limes) illustrate symmetry in the positioning
of the two defence walls. As far as the difference in construction techniques between the two
defence walls is concerned, I do not believe that it proves that the outer defence wall was built
at a later stage. The report mentions the inner face of the defence wall of the burgus was also
built in opus incertum (also see Tomovi 1986, fig.3 and fig.6). As for the external face, apart
from the fragmentary bricks used in the three plinth socle, there are no elements to prove that
opus mixtum was used, but rather that opus incertum was used there too.
The stratigraphy of the site is the following:
- Layer IV (virgin soil);
- Layer III (second half of the 4thc., with burn marks);
- Layer II (end of the 4th first half of the 5thc., with burn marks left by a devastating
fire and followed by the collapse of the tower);
- Layer I (6thc., very poor in archaeological material).
The archaeological material is relatively abundant: brooches (including the
Zwiebelknopf type), iron objects (it is interesting to note the domestic rather than military
use of knives!), circular bronze belt buckle (typical of the 4th c.), bone objects, mill stones,
Pannonian-type glazed lamps, varied pottery from the same period (second half of the 4th first
half of the 5th c.). We must also mention the discovery of bricks stamped DRP. The discoveries
made inside the tetrapylon prompted M. Tomovi to presume that it served as a warehouse, but
also as a forge to produce iron or lead objects or as a mill.
Coins: very few and badly preserved; two pieces from Valens and Valentinian II could
be identified.
Chronology: the archaeological material and the analogies allow the dating of the
construction moment to the third quarter of the 4thc. (almost surely the ValentinianValens
period). The first destruction is believed to have taken place around 376, followed by a restoration (and probably the construction of the outer defences), then a total collapse during the
first half of the 4thc. There is no new proof of a 6thc. restoration.
Bibliography: TOMOVI 1986 (with previous bibliography). Cf. VASI, KONDI 1986, 551,
fig.17; TOMOVI 1987, 9495, fig.6; PETROVI M. 1996, 255, fig.8; JEREMI G. 2007,
312313, fig.3/2.
in fact the upper part of this shelter, reinforced with thick wooden beams and supported by
wooden poles. The calculated height reaches 1.92 m. The staircase set in the NW corner of the
defence wall was used to descend into this shelter.
The burgus is surrounded by two 3.30m wide ditches on the outside. The first was set
15m away from the defence wall, while the second was set 23.63m away. They have not been
researched on all sides, only by a test trench in the western side.
The stratigraphy inside the burgus led to the identification of two burn and destruction
levels: the first one is connected to the events in between 376378 (Germanic pottery), while
the second is connected to the Hunnic attacks. A very thin 6th c. layer has been identified,
including a pile of stones and 6 pithoi in the SE corner of the defence wall.
The archaeological material was found especially inside the underground shelter
(which seems to have served as a horreum). It evidenced a large quantity of pottery and metal
objects, the latter especially agricultural, shepherding or fishing tools. Other (mostly glazed)
pottery and lamp fragments, typical of the 4thc., have been collected from the perimeter of
the fortification. Osteological analyses have shown the preference for the domestic pig rather
than the sheep or the goat. Concerning the numismatic discoveries no data is provided by the
authors of the report published in 1986.
Chronology: built starting with the end of the 3rdc. beginning of the 4thc. (Tetrarchic),
used until the first half of the 5thc.
Bibliography: CERMANOVI-KUZMANOVI, STANKOVI 1986. Cf. VASI, KONDI
1986, 551, fig.18; TOMOVI 1987, 9596, fig.8; PETROVI M. 1996, 254, fig.5; GUDEA
2001, 90; JEREMI G. 2007, 313, fig.3/6.
32. BOREJ
Site located 12 km upstream from Aquae (Prahovo). Burgus with tetrapylon researched
through three test excavations in 1980. Its equivalent on the opposite bank is the fortification
on Ostrovul Mare.
Architecture: The ideal reconstruction shows that the complex was square (19.619.6m)
and the walls were 1.80 m thick (at elevation level?) Only two pillars of the central tower
(87m) have been excavated, whose cross-section is approximately square (1.802.00m).
The defence wall and the tower were built in opus mixtum.
The outer defence wall (in fact a simple precinct) hypothetically circumscribes a surface
of 3636 m. The wall is only 0.70m thick and seems to have been built in a rather careless
manner, which prompted the authors of the report to believe that it was built at a later stage
(together with a support wall identified along the southern side of the burgus, which could be
the substruction of a staircase that gave access to the upper level of the defence wall).
Archaeological material: a surprisingly high number of stamped bricks (around 160
pieces in only three test excavations!) The most frequent stamps are DRP, AQVIS, DIERNA
and CO(hors) I. DIIANA and DA.RIP.AQVIS are rarer. In some cases the bricks bear several
stamps (such as DRP, AQVIS and CO I or DRP and AQVIS). Within the archaeological
material collected we must mention glazed pottery, a lamp, as well as a Germanic bone comb.
The coins discovered are from Valens, Valentinian I and Justinian.
Chronology: the authors tend to date the construction to the reign of Diocletian, but the
analogies and the archaeological material, including the coins, indicate the reigns of Valentinian
IValens as more likely. We cannot rule out a restoration during the reign of Justinian.
123
34. RADUJEVAC
Quadriburgium-type fortification built right on the bank of the Danube, on a site called
Karamizar, halfway between Aquae/Prahovo (7 km to the W) and the mouth of the Timok
124
River (7 km to the S), near a loop made by the Danube as it changes its direction from W-E to
N-S.It was partially excavated through several test excavations in 1960.
Architecture: its approximate dimensions are 5050m, the defence wall is 2.40m
thick at foundation level and the thickenings on the N and S sides reach almost 3.50m at
foundation level and 3.10 3.20m at elevation level. The corner-towers are round; only the
SE one has been excavated (internal diam. of 3.15m, external one of 6.70 m; the walls approx.
thickness is of 1.75m). In the middle of the N side (on the bank of the Danube) an external
rectangular tower has been researched through test excavations (its front side is 5.10m long and
the wall is 2.10m thick at elevation level). The tower encloses an inner space that was 1.85m
wide, but whose length remains unknown. The published plan suggests that similar towers
existed on all sides.
Chronology: It has a shape typical of the 6thc. The existence of a prior fortification is
not excluded (Jankovi).
Bibliography: JANKOVI 1981, 45, 94, 208 and fig.17.
Moesia Secunda
37. BATIN
Site located 8 km E of Iatrus and 3 km W of the fortification in Batin, identified with
Scaidava (It. Ant. 222, 1). Salvage excavations were conducted there in 1979.
Architecture: approximately square tower, of c. 10 10 m on the outside (approx.
77m on the inside), with 1.201.60m thick walls. A defence wall is attached to the SW
corner of the tower. Only its W half 17m long on the outside has been preserved, and it
seems to have enclosed an inner surface of approx. 12.5 m; the other half was destroyed by
the Danube. The defence wall is 1.90m thick. It is most probably a fortified landing-place
125
38. RUSE-SELITE
On this site an Early Roman watchtower has been excavated (2nd 3rdc. coins, stamps
of the legio I Italica). The discovery of a (Rumo)RID(us) stamp prompted the authors of the
excavations to presume the tower to have been in use as late as the 5thc., but there is no further
evidence to support this theory.
Bibliography: GEORGIEV, ANGELOV 1957, 4245. Cf. ZAHARIADE, GUDEA 1997, 7475.
we are dealing with an initial quadriburgium, probably to be dated to the Tetrarchy or as late as
the reign of Constantine. S.Torbatov prefers the last variant, based on the numismatic material.
We cannot propose a precise date for its destruction (probably during the 5th c.?) In the 6thc.
the structure was systematically dismantled so that the stones might be used in the construction
of a larger fortification.
39 B. Nova erna Castellum
The fortification surrounds the old quadriburgium, whose walls were dismantled so that
the stones might be used.
Architecture: rectangular, almost square structure (approx. 9085m). Only segments
of the S and E sides have been excavated. The defence wall is up to 3.40m thick at foundation
level and it reaches 2.60m at elevation level. At the corner of the two above-mentioned sides
there is a rectangular tower, and approximately in the centre of the E tower there is another
rectangular tower, interpreted by the first researchers as a tower-gate (based on no conclusive
proof though). From the aerial photographs and the description given by K. korpil it results
that there were towers at the other corners too, as well as another one in the middle of the W
side.
Stratigraphy: according to the observations made by S.Torbatov, the foundation trench
of the E wall intersects a level marked by a light construction (interpreted as a workshop due
to the presence of several pottery kilns, one of which has been dated according to a coin from
the age of Justinian).
Archaeological material: abundant and varied: pottery, lamps (most of them of the
Danube type), glass, metal (brooches, weapons, tools) and bone objects.
Coins: 4th 6thc., including Justinian.
Chronology: according to the new stratigraphic interpretations, the 6thc. is the obvious
choice. It is most probably a fortification from the period of Justinian. A terminus post quem is
provided by the Justinian coin (unfortunately not dated with precision) present in the previous
level, marked by kilns. According to S.Torbatov the construction should be dated to the second
half of Justinians reign, probably after 551.
Bibliography: MILEV, ANGELOVA 1969; MILEV, ANGELOVA 1970; MILEV,
ANGELOVA 1971; MILEV 1977; TORBATOV 1998. Cf. IVANOV T. 1974, 68, Abb. 8;
BIERNACKA-LUBANSKA 1982, 58, 60, 228, fig.21; IVANOV R.1997, 583585, Abb. 42.
127
Scythia
41. SEIMENI
South of Seimenii Mari field research and test excavations conducted by Gr. Florescu in
1924 led to the identification of a small fortification of approx. 2020 m. The construction
technique seems to have been opus quadratum similar to the defence wall at Capidava. It is most
probably a burgus, maybe even one with a tetrapylon (see the similar dimensions).
A Tetrarchic fragmentary inscription discovered at Seimeni (CIL III, 7487 = IGLR, 205)
was connected to the construction of a fortification at this site. We must stress that the so-called
Roman fortress defended by a ditch, identified by Polonic mentioned as such in specialized
literature, was actually dated to the Early Mediaeval Period (Protobulgarians?). The inscription
could therefore be connected to the construction of this burgus, if it was not in fact brought
from another site (Capidava or Axiopolis). See a similar situation at Donje Butorke, on the
Dacia Ripensis limes.
Bibliography: FLORESCU 19271932, 495; Gr. Florescu, in FLORESCU et al. 1958, 25. Cf.
TIR, L 35, 65; IGLR, 205 (comments); SCORPAN 1980, 6; TORBATOV 2002, 101102.
From the description made by P. Polonic it results that we are dealing with an irregular
rectangular-shaped fortification, adapted to the terrain, with three 64 m-long sides and a fourth
(the W side, towards the Danube) 30m long. On the W side in 1898 one could see a square
protruding tower. On the outside (on the E side) the fortification was defended by a 10 m-deep
and 15 m-wide ditch.
The fortification was superposed by a rich layer of mediaeval dwelling. Recent archaeological research (19982002) conducted by D. Paraschiv did not lead to conclusive results
concerning the Late Roman Early Byzantine fort. He discovered several segments of the
defence, which seemingly collapsed before habitation was resumed in the 10th c. Also, the
above-mentioned tower proved to be in fact a water-collection basin.
Bibliography: C. Moisil, BCMI 4, 1911, 4546; POLONIC 1935, 22; COMA 1959, 761; TIR,
L 35, 33; A. Petre, A. Apostol, SCIV 21, 1970, 1, 165182 (geophysical survey); SCORPAN
1980, 33; ZAHARIADE 1988, 128, fig.21 (aerial photograph); ZAHARIADE, GUDEA 1997,
80; TORBATOV 2002, 118120. See recent research in CCA 1999, 72; CCA 2000, 173; CCA
2001, 225226.
44. PECENEAGA
3 km south of the village lie the ruins of a square fortification (approx. 36 36 m
according to Polonic), very probably a quadriburgium. No archaeological excavations were
conducted on the site.
Bibliography: POLONIC 1935, 22; TIR, L 35, 57; ZAHARIADE 1999 b, 14, fig. 4.26;
TORBATOV 2002, 120121.
45. TRAIAN
Quadriburgium type fortification known since the end of the 19thc. According to P.
Polonic it was square, of approx. 6060 m. Based on the aerial photographs we can see that
the plan was actually rather rhomboidal, with a side approx. 45m long. The corner-towers seem
to have been round. Here was discovered a coin hoard made of 25 pieces from Justinian, which
suggests that the fortification was used at least as late as the 6th c.
Bibliography: POLONIC 1935, 22; TIR, L 35, 73; TEFAN 1974, 108, pl. 23.2; ZAHARIADE
1999 b, 14, fig.4.27; TORBATOV 2002, 121.
46. JIJILA
Field research conducted at the end of the 19thc. identified a quadriburgium-type fortification of approx. 2627 m. Judging from the plan drawn by Polonic, it had round cornertowers, but only archaeological excavations can confirm this theory.
Bibliography: POLONIC 1935, 22; TIR, L 35, 48; SCORPAN 1980, 6; ZAHARIADE 1999 b,
fig.4.28; TORBATOV 2002, 131.
129
48. RACHELU
P. Polonics field research has led to the discovery of a minor fortification on a rocky
promontory 1 km E of the village. At the present moment it is mostly covered by modern houses
and gardens. Salvage excavations were conducted in 1991 by M. Zahariade and G.Jugnaru.
Quadriburgium-type fortification of an undetermined surface (according to Polonic
approx. 45m in diameter, according to Zahariade 4545m). Only the NE round tower
(3m in diameter) was researched, which was made of medium-sized blocks of stone bound with
white mortar. There are no clear dating elements.
Bibliography: POLONIC 1935, 24; TIR, L 35, 60; ZAHARIADE 1999 a, 202; ZAHARIADE
1999 b, 14; TORBATOV 2002, 143144.
49. NUFRU
Approx. 10 km W of Aegyssus there is an important Byzantine city dated to the 10thc.,
inside which were signalled traces of Late Roman and Early Byzantine habitation. A clear proof
130
of the Roman military presence during the 4th 6thc. are the two watchtowers excavated on the
Danubes bank during several archaeological campaigns (19781979, 1983, 19851988 and
19971999).
49A. Nufru La Piatr. At this site was excavated a rectangular building with three
sides preserved and the N side destroyed by the Danube. The S side (approx. 11m long) was
entirely identified and the E and W sides only partially, on lengths of up to 8 m. The ideal
restitution contains a square tower (1111m on the outside and approx. 6.506.50m on
the inside) whose surface is about 42 m2. The walls are made of stone bound with mortar and
are 2.30m thick; the foundations were set directly on the rock or on a layer of yellow sandy
earth. The inside was divided into two rooms by a 1.10m thick wall (see a close analogy on
the Raetian limes at Unteres Brgli, cf. Drack 1993, no. 20). It seems that a possible entrance
was also discovered. Two dwelling levels were identified: one largely dated to the 4th 6thc. and
one from the mediaeval period (10th 12th c). The coins discovered on this site (Constantine,
Constantius II, Valens, but also a 5thc. coin) could indicate that this small burgus-type fortification was built in the 4th c.
49B. Nufru Proprietatea Ioan Butuza. Approx. 100m W of the previous location
a tower was partially excavated in 1997 and 1999. It has the semicircular side oriented northwards, with a 4.50m side and 1.30 m-thick walls. It was superposed by mediaeval dwelling
complexes. Apart from two 4th c. coins (Maximinus Daza, Valens) there are no clear dating
elements.
Bibliography: S. Baraschi, N. Moghior, SMMIM-MMC 12, 1979, 186191; 13, 1980,
123134; 1718, 19841985, 144151; DAMIAN et al. 2003, 239, fig. 12, 13; MNUCUADAMETEANU et al. 20052006, 377378 (with previous bibliography). Cf. ZAHARIADE
1999 a, 202203; TORBATOV 2002, 155156.
it was located close to a gulf of the Black Sea (the present day Lake Razelm), but it probably
accomplished the task of guarding the entrance to the Danube. It was identified by certain
authors (M. Zahariade) with the Gratiana mentioned by Notitia Dignitatum (Or. XXXIX, 27,
where the milites primi Gratianenses were stationed) and later by Procopius (De aedif. IV, 11).
S.Torbatov identifies this site with the toponym Ad Stoma. It was examined by E. Desjardins
in 1868, then by P. Polonic towards the end of the 19th c. Archaeological excavations were
conducted in between 19871993 by Al. Barnea and M. Zahariade.
Architecture: Trapezium-shaped, slightly irregular due to the terrain, its dimensions
are 46m (N)56 (E)28.15 (S)66m (V). The defence walls elevation is 2.66m thick. It
has a gate on the N side, flanked by two 12m long U-shaped towers. According to the plan
published by M. Ionescu and Gh. Papuc (after Al. Barnea), the fortification had round towers
at the NW and NE corners, a rectangular tower at the SW corner and three other rectangular
towers on the W and E sides.
No stone walls were discovered inside; it is presumed that there existed wood and adobe
buildings. Outside the W side was identified a pavement made of limestone slabs, that ensured
the access to a possible landing-place or harbor.
Stratigraphy: three successive Late Roman layers (Al. Barnea, SCIVA 43, 1992, 4, 435).
Archaeological material: small quantity of pottery, bronze military insignia (with
heraldic analogies figured in the Notitia Dignitatum).
Chronology: according to M. Zahariade, a terminus post quem for dating the fortification
would be the 4thc. inscription used as construction material (seemingly brought from Halmyris).
Based on this observation dating the complex to the reign of Valens seems the correct choice.
Bibliography: C. Moisil, BCMI 2, 1909, 9092; POLONIC 1935, 25; TIR, L 35, 39; ZAHARIADE
1988, 121122, 141142; Al. Barnea, SCIVA 40, 1989, 3, 300; 41, 1990, 34, 317318; 42,
1991, 34, 258; 43, 1992, 4, 435; 45, 1994, 4, 379; ZAHARIADE 1999 a, 204; TORBATOV
2002, 164165; M. Zahariade, in SUCEVEANU et al. 2003, 15, 7980; IONESCU, PAPUC
2005, 113, fig.XIX.
B. WEST-PONTIC SHORE
Scythia
52. ENISALA PALANCA
Site located 600m NE of the Late Roman fortress at Enisala, at a location called Petera
(Constantiana?). From the notes of P. Polonic and based on the aerial photographs interpreted
by Al. S.tefan at this location there used to be a small rectangular fortification, probably a
burgus. Its dimensions were of approx. 3025m (Polonic) or approx. 3040m (tefan). At
the present moment it has been destroyed by modern interventions.
Bibliography: TEFAN 1977 a, 459460, fig.7; TEFAN 1977 c, 15f., fig.2, 8, 9. TORBATOV
2002, 168170, fig.25.
has indicated the presence of two (?) facing triangular fortifications (approx. 959038m and
approx. 413664m respectively), with round corner-towers. The towers have a diameter of
9.00m in the smaller fortification and 8.10m in the larger one. The construction technique is
opus quadratum.
The NW-SE side of the smaller fortification is 2.35m thick at the foundation level and
1.90m thick at the elevation level. Intra muros dwelling structures were set against the defence
wall. It is supposed that there existed a basilica (hence the name of the island).
The archaeological material dates the structure to the 5th 6thc. It was largely dismantled
during the mediaeval period and was damaged by erosion.
Bibliography: Al. Barnea et al., in CCA 2000, 123, pl. 31; IONESCU, GMUREAC 2006. Cf. TIR, L 35,
27; Al. Barnea, in SUCEVEANU, BARNEA 1991, 192; SUCEVEANU 1992, 204; IONESCU, PAPUC
2005, 119.
54. OVIDIU
The archaeological site at Ovidiu is located about 10 km N of Tomis, on the shore of the
present day Lake Siutghiol, in ancient times a gulf of the Black Sea. Systematic excavations were
conducted there in between 19791985 and from 1993 to the present day.
Prior elements: Habitation traces from the Greek Archaic to the Hellenistic period
(period A, 6th 2ndc. BC), Early Roman dwelling (period B, 2nd 3rdc. AD, connected to
the stone aqueduct that supplied Tomis), a Late Roman dwelling level (period C, 5thc. AD),
illustrated first by a mono-nave paleochristian basilica (the so-called building C, 178.5m
on the outside) and by two other stone buildings (A and B), which together formed a religious
complex whose exact purpose will hopefully be cleared by future research.
Ovidiu I unfinished fortification, probably of the quadriburgium-type, located
closer to the ancient gulf. Only the W side was identified, along with the round SE and NW
corner-towers and the beginning of the N and S sides. The defence wall is 2.85m thick. A gate
existed in the middle of the W side, flanked by two rectangular monolith towers. On the inside
of the same side, on a length of 25.30m, there is a 0.90 m-wide thickening for the access stairs.
A terminus post quem for dating the construction moment is ensured by a 5thc. coin hoard
discovered on the floor of one of the buildings from period C, whose last pieces are from Zenon
(474491).
The preservation of the structure only at the foundation level, the incomplete plan and
the lack of an archaeological level that can be connected with certainty to this fortification
shows us that we are dealing with an attempt to build a quadriburgium closer to the former
gulf, rapidly abandoned and followed by the construction of a fortification of the same type, set
to the West and which used as a foundation for its Eastern side the existent foundation of the
first fortification.
Ovidiu II fortification located to the W of the previous attempt and which uses the
entire West side of the latter as a foundation for its Eastern side.
Architecture: rectangular quadriburgium of 53.00 41.30 m on the inside
(59.00 47.20 m on the outside), covering a surface of approx. 0.22 ha. The defence wall
is 3.003.10m thick at the foundation level (and 2.702.80m at the elevation level) on the
three sides built a fundamentis and of 2.85m on the Eastern side (in fact the Western side of
the unfinished fortification). Even if no brick courses from the elevation were preserved, the
133
construction technique is very probably opus mixtum, with a crepida made of massive limestone
blocks. As an emplecton was used a mix of earth with carved stone sherds and mortar. We must
mention the internal thickening on the W side, built with the clear purpose of providing
access to the upper level. This thickening, about 16m long and 1.30m wide, is set against
the defence wall (whose thickness thus reaches 4.30m at the foundation level).
The two eastern rectangular towers have only two protruding sides, with the eastern one
prolonging the defence wall, a rare peculiarity for this type of fortification. Tower A in the SE
corner is 8.806.70m on the outside (at the foundation level), and on the inside it encloses a
surface of 4.104.60 m. The entrance, as it was preserved, is in the shape of a hallway and is
set along the S side (= the towers N side), larger (1.80m) on the outside and narrower (1.30m)
towards the towers interior. The inside pavement was laid directly upon the circular wall of the
initial fortifications tower. Tower B, in the NE corner, has an external front of 8.956.90m and
measures 3.754.65m on the inside, where a hardened clay pavement was discovered. Very little
is preserved from the fortification, including the entrance (the same type as the one of tower A).
The Western towers are circular and highly protruding. Tower C, in the NW corner,
has an outside diameter of 8.70m and an inside one of 3.90 m. The walls thickness at the
foundation level varies between 2.302.50 m. Only the first course from the elevation was
preserved (in the NE corner), as well as part of the entrance. This is in fact the same as the
entrances of the rectangular towers, shaped as a hallway and of similar dimensions same width
(in two steps, 1.80m and 1.30m), but slightly longer (3.80m). We must remember that the
entrance is perpendicular on the defence walls monolith foundation, which does not form a
right angle at the fortifications corners, but unites by a diagonal the trajectory of the respective
sides. The fourth tower (D), in the SW corner, is slightly smaller than the other round tower
(external diameter of 7.80m and internal diameter of 3.25m, with a 2.10- 2.20 m-thick wall),
but its entrance was not preserved. On the other hand the inside pavement, made of bricks laid
on their face, was preserved on a large surface.
The gate was identified on its S side, about 7 m west of tower A. Blocks from the
elevation are missing, therefore we cannot provide the dimensions other than based on the
traces of the external threshold, which is slightly protruding. The latter is 2.60m wide and
made of two large blocks fashioned in order to support the gates wooden structure.
Intra muros buildings: a rectangular building (approx. 253m) built of stones and
bricks bound with earth, set against almost the entire length of the defence walls northern side.
Compared to the treading level inside the fortress, the building is set around 0.600.70m lower
and therefore, instead of a foundation, the walls just coat the margins of the foundation pit.
Two internal divisions were identified, very probably made at two different moments, each with
its own entrance on the South side.
Extra muros: a somewhat more consistent level of dwelling was identified outside
the compound to the E, near the ancient gulf. This dwelling level is concentrated around the
basilica. A dwelling complex is located immediately south of it, and it extends almost up to an
older street. It is a house that rests mostly on the basilicas southern side and it has the same
orientation as the new fortification. Two rooms were identified, with walls of stone bound with
earth, with shallow foundations. With some changes and additions (a stone socle for a kiln
and a new drain), the dwelling was still in use in the second half of the 6thc. Following recent
research (20072008) were discovered the walls of several houses set against the N and E side
of the basilica, structures with a different orientation, aligned to the quadriburgiums defence
wall. A coin from Justin II was found in the layer of debris and proves it was still in use during
the second half of the 6thc.
134
Stratigraphy: in the sites general stratigraphy two dwelling levels were identified for
period D (6th c.): N 2 (first half of the 6th c.) and N 1 (second half of the 6th c.).
Archaeological material: pottery, lamps, as well as glass, metal, bone and horn objects.
Coins: for the period that concerns us there are only six pieces identified with certainty
for the reign of Justinian (three pieces from 527538 and three post 538, of which the most
important is a coin dated to 539/540, discovered in the burn layer on the pavement of tower A,
and which ensures a terminus post quem for the fortifications destruction) and two pieces from
Justin II.
Chronology: the dating of the fortification at Ovidiu to the 6thc. is supported by the
stratigraphic observations, by the pottery and coins discovered on the single dwelling level that
corresponds to the period when it served defensive purposes. The initial construction attempt
(Ovidiu I) must be connected to a moment when the two buildings from period C stopped being
used (they are effectively cut by the defence wall) and before the construction of the fortification
visible at the present moment. We cannot make a clear distinction between the two construction
moments, because for now there is no archaeological level that can be dated with certainty and
that can be connected with the first defence wall. But starting from the certain terminus post
quem (the coin hoard dated to the reign of Zenon), for dating on stratigraphical bases the initial
attempt (Ovidiu I) and the completed fortification (Ovidiu II) there are three variants:
1. The construction attempt was immediately followed by the construction completed
during the reign of Anastasius;
2. The same scenario, but during the first years of the reign of Justinian (527537);
3. The initial attempt is dated to the reign of Anastasius, and the second fortification was
completed during the reign of Justinian.
Taking into account the numerous examples of reconstructions during Justinians reign of fortifications built by Anastasius (see the classic case of Dara cf. Croke, Crow 1983), it is possible
that the third variant is closest to the truth.
The complex destruction in the middle of the 6thc. is confirmed by the Justinian coins
discovered on the burnt pavement of tower A and in the debris of the building set against the
northern side of the defence wall. We suppose that the fortification was destroyed following the
Kutrigur attack in 559, of which we know it affected most of the territory of Dobroudja. In the
second half of the 6thc. dwellings functioned only aligned to the defence wall, especially outside
the E side, in the perimeter of the Christian basilica. The lack of a level from this period inside
the towers shows that the fortifications defensive purpose was abandoned.
Bibliography: BUCOVAL, PAPUC 1980; BUCOVAL, PAPUC 1981; BUCOVAL, PAPUC
1984; BUCOVAL, PAPUC 1986; BUCOVAL, PAPUC 1993; BJENARU 20022003 (the
state of the research up to 2002); PAPUC, BJENARU 2003. Cf. TORBATOV 2002, 182187
(who notices the presence of a previous fortification and not just a simple Severan period tower);
IONESCU, PAPUC 2005, 122130. For the research in between 20032008 see CCA 2003,
Bucureti, 2004, 227228; CCA 2005, Bucureti, 2006, 250251; CCA 2007, Bucureti, 2008,
214215; CCA 2008, Trgovite, 2009, 162.
Bibliography: BUCOVAL, PAPUC 1981, 215; IONESCU 1988, 319, no. 5; SUCEVEANU
1992, 212; TORBATOV 2002, 187; IONESCU, PAPUC 2005, 130.
57. TUZLA
Site positioned 2 km S of Cape Tuzla (Stratonis Turris?), at a location called Mnstirea,
where field research has identified a rectangular structure, approx. 3015m, with small rooms
(= towers?) at the corners. We cannot exclude the possibility of a quadriburgium. Another possibility is a fortified basilica, as is attested by the Christian artefacts discovered there. In this case
the smaller rooms could in fact be annexes.
Bibliography: SLOBOZIANU 1959, 736737; SUCEVEANU 1992, 218219; IONESCU,
PAPUC 2005, 133.
Archaeological material: the publication mentions a lamp dated to the end of the 4th
beginning of the 5thc., which dated the destruction of the fortification.
Coins: besides the earliest one (Constans, 337346) and the latest one (Theodosius II,
425450), no statistical data are mentioned by the publications.
Chronology: The lack of certain data prompted S. Torbatov to date largely the
construction in the first half of the 4thc., without excluding the possibility of its being built
during the reign of Constantine. The moment of destruction is better documented the second
quarter of the 5thc. (based on the archaeological and numismatic material).
58 B. abla 2 (Kreas?)
Fortification built on roughly the same emplacement, but with a different configuration, which used as foundation part of the old quadriburgium walls.
Architecture: rectangular fortification 65m long on a N-S trajectory and preserved on
only 25m on a E-W trajectory. The defence wall is 1.902.00m thick at the elevation level
(2.20m at the foundation level), was built in opus implectum at the base and very probably opus
mixtum or pseudomixtum in the upper part. The N side was raised over the foundations of the
old quadriburgiums N wall. In the NW corner there is a round tower that was only partially
researched but whose internal diameter can be approximated at 8.75 m. The W side was built
a fundamentis, slightly retreated E of the old quadriburgiums side; on the researched segment
was identified a small opening in the wall (poterna?), 1.59m wide and narrowed on the outside
down to 1.00 m. On the emplacement of the former quadriburgiums SW corner-tower was
raised a new rectangular tower, with a 3.12m wide entrance (narrowed down to 2.65m towards
the interior) and a 1.00 m-wide poterna in the southern wall.
Intra muros buildings: the remains of five stone buildings from different periods were
identified.
Stratigraphy: in the sites general stratigraphy three dwelling levels correspond to this
period (levels 35):
1 The first level (= level 3) has a terminus post quem provided by a coin from Justinians
reign (543/544), and the destruction moment is marked by a coin hoard (discovered on
the floor of building no. 2) made of 36 pieces, whose last coins are dated to 563/564.
To this level are connected buildings no. 2, 4 and 5.
2 The second level (= level 4) is marked by the construction of new buildings (no. 1, 3, 6)
that illustrate, according to S.Torbatov, the moment when the site became a fortified
settlement; this level was destroyed by fire, whose terminus post quem is provided at the
present moment by coins from 558/559.
3 The third level (= level 5) contains traces of only sporadic habitation, especially inside
the rectangular tower; the last coins are from Mauricius (583/584 and 588/589).
Archaeological material: pottery, lamps and metal objects (some of which were illustrated by Vasilin).
Coins: besides the coins presented as proof of the stratigraphic succession, there is no
statistic for the numismatic material.
Chronology: Fortification built in the 6thc., certainly during the reign of Justinian, with
a certain terminus post quem ensured by the coin from 543/544, discovered in the construction
level (the levelling layer). According to S.Torbatov the construction moment should be dated
after 551 (according to his hypothesis for dating Justinians construction program in the Balkans
between 551560/561).
Bibliography: VASILIN 1994; TORBATOV 1994; TORBATOV 2002, 197215, fig.3641.
137
Moesia Secunda
60. KORPILOVCI
Archaeological complex located on the road along the sea shore, between Odessos and
Templum Iovis (Obzor), at the mouth of the river korpilovska.
Architecture: Rectangular plan,c. 4873m (according to Ovarov), it covers a surface
of approx 0.35ha. The defence wall is 2.20m thick. Round corner-towers, of which only the
NW and NE ones were researched (the external diameter is 8m, and the internal one 5m);
the entrances to the towers are typical corridors en entonnoir, with semicircular entryways.
The entrance is about 3m wide and has on the inside two zwinger-type thickenings, and on the
outside it is preceded by a square gate-tower (approx. 55m).
In the SE part of the fortification was excavated as early as 1917 (K. korpil), then in
19661967 (M. Mirev), a basilica of 26.0017.60m with three naves, a narthex and an atrium.
It has a remarkable mosaic that pertains of the oriental tradition, which can be dated to the end
of the 5th beginning of the 6thc. A baptisterium was also discovered, separated from the church.
A civilian settlement developed south of the fortification.
Chronology: Concrete data are missing for a more refined chronology. D. I. Dimitrov,
the author of the research, dates it to the 4th 6thc. and considers that the fortification was
abandoned in the middle of the 6thc. The architectural details plead more for a 6thc. (even late
5th c.) date of the construction moment, when it would have been contemporary to the basilica.
Bibliography: MIREV 1969; DIMITROV D. I. 1977; DIMITROV D. I. 1983, 3637;
DIMITROV D. I. 1988; MINEV 19961997. Cf. DIMITROV D. I. 1980, 454; RAEV 1982,
31, 4448, Tabl. III/4; OVAROV 1982, 25; DIMITROV M. 1985, 125; TEREVA et al. 2001,
9093, fig.102, 103; DINEV 2006, 27, 49, 80; DINEV 2007 a, 511, 532 (proposes a possible
monastic function in the 5thc. and at the beginning of the 6th c.).
Haemimontus
61. VLANOVO KALE (RANULI?)
A small fortification, covering a surface of 0.30ha was identified at the Lvskata Glava
site, located 2 km away from the Ropotamo River, on the sea-shore road. It is located on the
site of a Thracian settlement.
Bibliography: BIERNACKA-LUBANSKA 1982, 259, no. 182.
138
C. INTRA PROVINCIAM
Moesia Prima
63. MEDVEDJA (IDIMUM)
Important roadside station mentioned in the ancient itineraries in the sector between
Viminacium and Horreum Margi on the great Transbalkan military road. F. Kanitz noticed near
the Roman road the ruins of a quadriburgium-type fortification. The archaeological research
conducted there in between 19601962 by Branka Jelii did not manage to identify the walls
of the fortification. In the sites monographic study M. Vasi and Gordana Miloevi attempt
its restitution.
Prior elements: in the northern part (at the Bedem site) was registered an intense
dwelling, with a bath complex and other buildings that pertained to a mansio, and in the
southern part (Popov air) were identified the traces of a vicus. Even if we cannot rule out
as a starting moment for the settlement the 3rdc., the numismatic material suggests that the
development of this mansio started with the reign of Constantine (post317).
Architecture: F. Kanitz uncovered the E and part of the N and S sides, identifying two
round corner-towers (NE and SE); based on this data the fortified area should have covered
approx. 100100 m. At the present moment the W side is superposed by the villages cemetery,
the S one by the modern road and the E one plus the NE corner-tower were completely destroyed
by modern interventions.
The information from the aerial photographs, as well as the results of the archaeological
research prompted M. Vasi and G. Miloevi to restitute the fortification in the shape of a
rhomboid, with the internal dimensions of approx. 7281m (0.58ha). At the corner there
must have stood round towers with an internal diameter of approx. 3.604.20 m. Taking into
account the layout of the internal buildings, the main entrance was hypothetically placed on the
W side, near the Roman road (located 20m away).
Intra muros buildings: four buildings were excavated, among which the bath complex
(building A) and a structure interpreted as a praetorium (building B).
Stratigraphy: a single dwelling level dated to the 4thc. was identified at both of the sites
researched, with small traces of the successive restoration of certain floors.
Coins: the discoveries can be grouped as follows:
1st2nd c.
200268
268292
305312
313337
337363
364375
388392
13
65
87
22
139
The absence of coins from the first Tetrarchy and scarcity of those from 305312, a
situation common on most sites in Moesia Prima, is explained by M. Vasi by the more intense
circulation of the gold coin!
Chronology: according to the authors of the monograph we are dealing with a mansio
from the Constantinian period, fortified during the reign of Valentinian I. An argument in
support of this theory is the change in the trajectory of the ancient road, which now crosses the
fortified area.
Bibliography: VASI, MILOEVI 2000.
Dacia Ripensis
64. PUINEI
Fortification located 7 km NE of Drobeta, undoubtedly under the control of the units
stationed there. It probably ensured the security of the military territory of Drobeta during the
4thc., as an outpost that blocked the access through the Vlcan Pass. It was discovered in a bad
state of preservation, as an important part of it was destroyed by the Pleuva River. Test excavations were conducted in 1968.
Prior elements: Early Roman remains, including graves.
Architecture: rectangular fortification of approx. 10040 m. The 1.601.75 m-thick
defence wall was built of river stones and bricks, but also using a series of older Roman
monuments. It has rectangular corner-towers of approx. 77m and with 1.40 m-thick walls.
Archaeological material: pottery, Zwiebelknopf brooch.
Coins: 3 coins from the Constantinian period and one of Valentinian I.
Chronology: it is a 4thc. structure, to be probably dated to the reign of Constantine.
Bibliography: BENEA 1977. Cf. TUDOR 1978, 290292; DAVIDESCU 1980, 182184,
fig.183; GUDEA 1982, 110, no. 40; BENEA 1996, 106107; BONDOC 2002, 168; BONDOC
2009, 6768.
65. VIDROVGRAD
Fortification located 8 km SW of Aquae (Prahovo), at a crossroads of secondary roads in
the above-mentioned citys territory, one of which led to the imperial palace at Vrelo-arkamen.
Identified by Dj. Jankovi with the toponym Sculcoburgo mentioned by Procopius (De aedif. IV,
4), but on no solid proof. It was only partially excavated.
Slightly irregular fortification that covers a rectangular surface of approx 5740 m.
Two corner-towers (E and W) are square, approx. 77m, and the other two (N and S) are
trapezium-shaped, of approx. 69 m. The defence wall is 2.75m thick and is thickened on the
inside on two of the sides up to approx. 3.50 m.
The dating to the 6thc. (Dj. Jankovi) remains only a hypothesis, as no ample archaeological excavations were conducted.
Bibliography: JANKOVI 1981, 49, 108, 110 and figs. 19, 38.
140
66. KULA
Site located in the central area of the modern town of Kula (32 km SW of Bononia
Vidin), on the left bank of the river iilska. It occupies a favourable strategic position at the
entrance into the Vraka uka Pass, on the road connecting Bononia to the Timok Valley and
further on to the fortified palace of Galerius at Romuliana (Gamzigrad). A complex made up of
a quadriburgium and a castellum. It is supposed that the first was buit during the Tetrarchy, while
the second (surface of 1.6ha), which is set against the formers W side, was built several decades
later. Excavations were conducted by Iordanka Atanasova in between 19641972. Traditionally
identified with the ancient city Castra Martis, but see above the inconsistency of this opinion.
Architecture: the quadriburgium-type fortification of 34 34 m on the inside has
circular corner-towers, each 12.50m in diameter, very well preserved up to about 2.20m in
height (but the SE tower reaches 16.30m in height and represents today the emblem of the
modern city). The walls are 2.20m thick. There is only one gate (3m wide) located in the
middle of the S side. Also on the S side there is a staircase that leads to the upper part of the
defence wall (it is supported by an arcade built on three pillars set against the wall). As can be
seen in the case of the SE tower, the corner-towers had three floors, divided by solid wooden
beams and arcaded windows. The construction technique was opus vittatum mixtum (three
courses of bricks and several courses of stones).
On the S side, at a later stage contemporary to the building of the castellum, a proteichisma
was added a narrower wall that connected the towers in the SW and SE corners and delimited
two rooms on both sides of the gate (whose width was reduced to 1.70m by a mass of masonry
and was transformed into a two-door gate).
Intra muros buildings: two rows of five rectangular pillars parallel to the W and E sides
of the defence wall. They probably supported light wooden buildings, with several floors, that
must have served as military barracks. The main building is made up of three parts: a double
vestibule, a central yard and the building-proper (with three rooms, among which the middle
one was the largest: 9.207.75m). In the brick-paved courtyard there is also a fountain. In the
second vestibule there was a staircase that led to the upper floor.
Stratigraphy three main levels were identified:
- The lower level (end of the 3rd / beginning of the 4thc. beginning of the 5th c.) is the
richest in archaeological material: many iron objects, agricultural tools, lamps, spindlewhorls, mill stones, brooches and pottery (mostly glazed);
- An intermediary level, interpreted as a cultural hiatus, a filling made up of earth and
collapsed masonry;
- The upper level with few discoveries (only pottery) and harder to determine due to the
destruction caused by the modern layers.
In the profiles published in the 2005 monograph can be seen at least three destruction moments
corresponding to the so-called lower level; therefore it could be possible a first destruction
before the beginning of th 5th c.
Archaeological material: potttery, lamps, metal objects etc. There are a lot of 4th c.
discoveries, while little 6thc. material was discovered and very few pottery types were identified.
Coins (K. Dimitrov, in Atanasova et al. 2005, 221239): 1st3rdc. (7 pieces), Maximianus
(1 piece, 291), Galerius (1 piece, 301), Maximinus Daza (1 piece, 312313), Licinius (1 piece,
313317), Constantin (4 pieces, 313324), Constantine/Constantius II/Constantinopolis (4
pieces, 330337), Constans/Constantius II (5 pieces, 337361), Julian (3 pieces, 361363),
141
67. PODVIS
Fortification built on the Timacum Minus (Ravna) Naissus road, 15 km SW of Ravna,
at a site named Kulite, located on a promontory near the Svrljiki Timok river, on the latters
left bank. In Antiquity the area was known for its mining industry. Field surveys conducted by
the Archaeological Institute in Belgrade in 1981 led to the identification of two minor fortifications on this site, located 20m apart:
1. A quadriburgium (?) of approx. 2020m, with round corner-towers;
2. A rectangular building of 1510m with only two round corner-towers.
The absence of archaeological excavations made it impossible to be dated and does not allow a
connection to be made between the two fortifications.
Bibliography: PETROVI P. 19941995, 60, fig.4.
68. OREAC
Site located on a promontory on the right bank of the Svrljiki Timok river, immediately near the same ancient road between Naissus and Timacum Minus, in a mining area. Square
fortification of approx. 3535m (or 3537m), with round corner-towers. The defence wall
is approx. 1.80m thick and was built in opus mixtum. Outside, about 20m NE there is a small
basilica of 156 m.
Bibliography: PETROVI P. 19941995, 5960, fig.3; PETROVI P. 1995, 200, Abb. 8.
142
Dacia Mediterranea
70. KOSTINBROD (KRATISKARA)
Site located in the territory of Serdica, in a low plain. The first excavations were
conducted in 19731978 (Violeta Boilova) and were continued by V. Dinev in 19901994.
It was identified with the Kratiskara mentioned by Procopius (De aedif., IV, 1, 32).
Prior elements: The Early Byzantine fortification was built on the emplacement of
a Late Roman residential complex (villa), most probably Constantines imperial residence,
which was near a station (mutatio Scretisca, according to the Itinerarium Burdigalense) of the
Transbalkans road, in the Serdica-Naissus sector. At the beginning it was considered to be a
last phase in the evolution of this residence. V. Dinevs more recent research has clarified the
situation, as it became obvious that there was no continuity between the old residence and the
fortification as far as the character of the dwelling is concerned.
Architecture: The plan is that of an irregular quadrangle. Length of the sides: E = 95 m;
W = 65.5 m; N and S = approx. 107 m. The structure encloses a surface of approx. 0.85ha. The
walls were built in opus mixtum and used massive quantities of spolia from the former imperial
residence. The walls thickness at the elevation level varies between 1.80 and 2.10m (with the
exception of a part of the W sector of the S side, which reaches 2.60m); the foundation is even
wider, as is proven by the 0.150.35 m-wide plinths. On the W side there is a small semi circular
buttress (2.300.95m). Three of the corner-towers are circular; in the NE corner there is no
similar tower, but about 7.5m to the W (therefore on the trajectory of the N side) was used as a
semicircular tower the apse of a building that pertained to the former imperial residence.
Dimensions of the towers: -SE: internal diameter 4.70 m, 1.20 m-thick wall; -SV:
internal diameter 4.00 4.60m (deviated from the original shape because it reused an older
wall); -NV: internal diameter 3.50m, 1.20 m-thick wall, 1 m-wide entrance; -NE (semicircular): external diameter 14m, 2.40 m-thick wall.
The gate is on the N side, protected by a rectangular tower (external dimensions
of 10 3.5 m). The space between the two entrances (propugnaculum) measures almost
7.502.20m. The external entrance is 3.50m wide, the internal one (which is in fact an
opening of the defence wall) is 2.70m wide and has a massive threshold.
Three staircases that led to the upper levels of the walls were discovered: one on the
western part of the S side (= where the defence walls thickness reaches 2.60m), the second at
the semicircular NE tower and the third at the gate-tower.
Intra muros buildings: several dwelling complexes were excavated:
- III/1III/5: laid along the E side; the foundations and lower part are made of stone and
reused bricks bound with earth, while the elevation was made of adobe; the roof had a
single slope; dolia were discovered inside. It was certainly a dwelling complex.
143
III/6: built on the E side, towards the SE corner; dimensions: 14.40 4.80 m; the
mortar was used to build the walls; it could have had an upper floor; the entrance was
from the north, after an anteroom paved with bricks (an obvious analogy with the
situation at Ovidiu). It very probably had a military use; the ground floor was used as
stables.
- III/7: on the S side; the same construction technique was used, of stones and bricks
bound with earth; two phases (the initial space of 4.403.40m was enlarged at a later
stage). Possibly a horreum.
- III/8: on the W side; only partially excavated; the length is over 6 m; construction
technique similar to III/1III/5 and III/6; brick pavement; coin from Justinian (16
nummia, 527538).
To these we can add building III/9, which is in fact the old apsed hall of the imperial residence,
reused (it seems) in the 6thc. and whose exact function cannot be established.
Chronology: according to Dinev the coin from Justinian proves that the fortification
existed already in between 527538 (the argument used is that the coins with a nominal value
of 16 nummia were not in use anymore at that time!). The same author puts forward the
hypothesis that the fortification was destroyed following the Slavs invasion in Thrace and
Greece in 577581.
Bibliography: BOILOVA 1987; DINEV 2003. Cf. DINEV 2006, 19, fig.36, 50; DINEV
2007 a, 504, fig.28.
The construction technique is opus mixtum, with five courses of bricks. On the inside the wall
is thickened near the main gate and on the SE side, left of the entrance to the triangular tower;
both thickenings supported staircases that gave access to the defence walls upper level.
The main gate is located on the NW side and has a maximum length of 2.80m, as
it became narrower towards the outer end. On the inside it has the shape of a 4.80m long
tunnel, formed by the thickenings of the defence wall, united by an arcade. On the outside it
is flanked by two pentagonal towers, whose shape becomes rectangular inside, with a circular/
apsed side corresponding to the pointed external front (dimensions: 2.855.80m, without
the apse or 2.857.65m with the apse). The pentagonal towers with internal apse are identical
to the ones that flank the main gate at Mesembria. A third tower is located in the middle
of the smaller SE side and is triangular (with the two external sides 10 m long). We must
mention that, apart from the entrances proper (1.20m wide), all the towers also have a poterna
(1.45m wide in the pentagonal towers and 1.60m wide in the triangular tower). The other
two poternae are located on the N side (1.26m wide) and the S side (1.60m wide) and were
preserved almost intact, their height being of around 1.83/1.80 m. All the entrances to the
towers and the poternae are narrower (the external ends of the poternae and the internal ends
of the entrances to the towers). From the N part of the E side of the defence wall starts (and
continues underneath the defence wall) a tunnel that leads to a water source at the foot of the
rocky mountain.
Intra muros buildings: along the sides of the defence wall an open portico was built,
with brick pillars raised 4.5 m away from the defence wall. The dimension of these pillars
varies between 1.10/1.501.00/1.20m, and the distance between them is of 1.802.30 m.
In its second phase the portico was completely restored: it received a new set of pillars (approx.
0.80/1.000.80m) set against the defence wall, and the pillars from the initial phase were
doubled on the inner side by a set of smaller ones (1.00/1.101.10/1.20m). The porticos
ground floor was used for storage (as proven by the many dolia buried there), and the upper
floor must have served as barracks for the soldiers.
Stratigraphy: two dwelling levels, delimited by a layer of burn 0.300.40m thick.
Archaeological material: on both dwelling levels were discovered an important number
of dolia, as well as their stone covers. An important quantity of pottery, metal objects etc. was
also discovered.
Coins: There is no clear statistics. Two gold coins from Anastasius and Tiberius II
Constantine are mentioned, as well as two bronze hoards (one contains 107 pieces, with the
first pieces from Anastasius and up to Justin II, the second contains 64 coins, ranging from
Anastasius to Tiberius II Constantine).
Chronology: The construction is dated to the reign of Anastasius, and its second phase
to that of Justinian. The final destruction is connected to the Slavs invasion in 581582.
Bibliography: MITOVA-DONOVA 1994. Cf. DINEV 2006, 3738, no. 45, fig.89; DINEV
2007 a, 524526, fig.46.
72. PIRDOP
The archaeological complex is located near the town of Pirdop (6.5 km to the NW),
on the right bank of the river Elenska. Quadriburgium-type fortification that protects a
paleochristian basilica. Excavations were conducted by P. Mutafiev in 1913.
145
73. DRENKOVO
The site is located approx. 11 km W of Blagoevgrad and around 5 km away from the
Delcevski Pass (1085m), close to the border between Bulgaria and Macedonia. Salvage excavations were conducted in 20062007 on the trajectory of a major gas pipeline.
Rectangular fortification of 28.9028.40m on the outside, with slightly protruding
semicircular corner-bastions and an approx. 2 m-thick wall. Around the inner courtyard there
are four rooms that surely had two floors. Many dolia were discovered, storage pits, a wine press
and 6thc. coins (Justin I, Justinian).
The dating of this small road side fortification (?) remains for now uncertain, until the
analysis of the entire material collected is finalized. It surely functioned in the 6thc., but we
cannot exclude an earlier date for the construction moment (3rd 4th c.). This fortified structure
was probably guarding a secondary provincial road, but which must have been especially
important if we consider that during the second half of the 5th and in the 6thc. the new border
between the provinces of Dacia Mediterranea and Macedonia Secunda (MIKULI 2002,
2224, Beil. 3) passed through here.
146
The fortification at Drenkovo represents for now a unique situation for the BalkanDanubian area and it represents a mixture of burgus and quadriburgium. From an architectural
point of view it resembles a series of fortifications in the Sassanid area, but also the Egyptian
hydreumata. Another analogy could be the fortification at Bistrica (No.76), as well as Kleinbasel
and Untersaal on the Raetian border.
Bibliography: BOINOVA 2008.
74. SOFIJA-ORLANDOVCI
Site located in the present-day Orlandovci district in Sofija, 45 km NE of the walls of
Serdica. Archaeological excavations between the World Wars have identified a dwelling complex
generally interpreted as a fortified villa rustica or even a military fort. More recently it was
considered as one of the earliest monastic complexes in the Balkans.
Architecture: Rectangular fortification of 34 31 m on the outside, with
0.650.70m-thick walls which enclose a surface of only 592 m2. It has two circular and two
rectangular corner-towers. Inside there are three buildings set against the N, S and W sides, as
well as a central building with a room with an eastwards-oriented apse, which is considered a
Christian basilica.
The coins range from Maximinus Daza (305313), Constantine, Constantius II and
up to Theodosius II.
Chronology: the construction moment remains unknown. The identification of the
complex with a fortified monastery would indicate a post-Constantinian date. According to
V. Dinev it should be dated to the middle or the second half of the 4thc. and represents a
monastic complex of the coenobium-type. Other authors (Sv. Popovi) consider that we are
dealing with a villa rustica transformed in a monastic complex at the end of the 4th beginning
of the 5thc. The dwelling stops at the middle of the 5thc., following the Huns invasions.
Bibliography: VELKOV I. 1938; DREMSIZOVA-NELINOVA 1969, 510, fig.9 (recognizes the
type tetrapyrgia); NIKOLOV 1976, 68, fig.118.14 (admits the military character and is tempted to
date it, like Bistrica, during the reign of Antoninus Pius, based on the inscriptions concerning the
fortification of Thracia); HENNING 1987, 139, no. 371, Taf. 9.1 (type F); POPOVI S.1998,
143144, fig.5B; VLLING 2000, 3640 (identified with a military fort); DINEV 2006, 47
48, no. 37, fig.94, DINEV 2007 a, 530532, fig.49.
75. SOFIJA-LOZENEC
The site is now in the Lozenec disctrict of Sofija, 5 km S of the ancient city. Excavations
conducted in 20002001 have identified an archaeological complex that developed in two
different periods.
During the first phase, dated to the second half of the 4thc., a mono-naved paleochristian
basilica was built here. In the second phase another basilica was built (this time much larger,
with one nave and two aisles, narthex and atrium) and a series of buildings, all incorporated in a
quadriburgium-type fortification (with rectangular corner-towers) covering a surface of approx.
0.25ha. The authors of the research date the construction moment for phase II to the first years
of Theodosius II (408423).
147
The complex is interpreted as a monastery (coenobium) with close analogies in the fortifications at Pirdop and korpilovci.
Near the fortification there is a mausoleum-martyrium (S.Bojadiev, AMV 4, 2006, 129).
Bibliography: DASKALOV et al. 2001; DASKALOV et al. 2002. Cf. DINEV 2006, 48;
DINEV 2007 a, 532.
76. BISTRICA
Fortification located near the village of Bistrica, in the region of Dupnica, probably on
the road between Pautalia and Germania. The regular plan, with four rectangular corner-towers
is named villa rustica in some specialized works (L. Mulvin), but the typical quadriburgium plan
suggests this complex should be considered a minor military road side fortification (Th. Vlling).
It is of approx. 29.5026.50m (including the towers front) and has an inner surface
of 1716.50m, more precisely 280 m2. The rectangular corner-towers (6.507.50m on
the outside, approx. 4 5 m on the inside) are completely protruding. The defence wall is
1.201.50m thick. A 1.50m entrance (with a granite threshold) opens towards a 2.00 m-wide
corridor that divides the intra muros area into three compartments.
There are no conclusive informations to date this complex. Some authors date it to the
Early Roman Period (Dodov, Nikolov), others to the 4th 5thc., the latter a more plausible
hypothesis.
Bibliography: DODOV 19261927. Cf. DREMSIZOVA-NELINOVA 1969, 510, fig. 10
(recognize the tetrapyrgia type); NIKOLOV 1976, 68, fig.117.8 (military character and datation
during the reign of Antoninus Pius!); HENNING 1987, 116, no. 44, Taf. 9.6 (type F); VLLING
2000, 3336, Abb. 1/1; MULVIN 2002, 76, fig.5 (wrongly located in the environs of Sofia).
78. BREGOVINA
Fortification located on the territory of Iustiniana Prima, more precisely approx.
15km NW of Cariin Grad. Archaeological excavations were conducted there in 19571962
(Dj.Strievi).
148
80. BRZA-MANASTIRITE
Fortification located around 20 km SE of Cariin Grad, known only by field surveys
conducted in 1977. It covers a surface of approx. 5550m, has a 0.90m wall made of stone
and brick bound with mortar. Even if no other details are known, we cannot exclude the possibility of a quadriburgium.
Bibliography: ERCEGOVI-PAVLOVI, KOSTI 1988, 39, no. 17.
81. KOZJAK-CVILIG
Site located 3 km SE of the city Bargala, in an area that represented in the 4th 5thc.
the border between the provinces Dacia Mediterranea and Macedonia. It was also an important
mining district. Field surveys were conducted.
149
Watchtower of 10.008.60m on the outside, with dry set masonry, outside face made
of large basalt blocks and the emplecton made of small stones. The wall is 1.902.00m thick
and on the NE side can be seen a thickening (?) of the wall, considered by I. Mikuli as a
repair, but should rather be considered the substruction of a staircase. In the SE part was added
a rectangular courtyard of approx. 20/1814/11m, whose 1 m-thick walls are made of dry set
masonry using smaller stones.
Based on the pottery the complex is dated to the Late Roman Period (4th c.).
Bibliography: MIKULI 2002, 397398, no. 335, Abb. 305.
82. RADANJA
Site located in the same border area between Dacia Mediterranea and Macedonia,
around 3 km S of the tower at Kozjak-Cvilig, with which it seemingly formed a pair. The area
is known for its ancient mining industry. Field surveys were conducted.
Watchtower of 55m on the outside (approx. 8.608.60m on the outside, based on
the walls thickness). In the northern part a 2828m rectangular courtyard was added, with
walls made of stone bound with mortar.
The pottery collected was dated to the Late Roman Period (4th c.).
Bibliography: MIKULI, 401402, no. 339, Abb. 310.
Dardania
83. RAS
An anterior watchtower was discovered in the perimeter of the Late Roman-Early
Byzantine fortified settlement at Ras, located at the crossing of important roads from northern
Dardania. It measures 4.802.90m on the outside and has 0.50 m-thick walls. It was largely
dismantled and superposed by the walls of the late fortification.
Even if the discoveries inside the tower are very poor, they were dated to the second half
of the 3rdc. based on dwelling traces that preceded the construction of the fortification in the
4thc., as is shown by the archaeological and numismatic material.
Bibliography: POPOVI M. 1999, 6970, 396, fig.20.
The archaeological material was dated to the 4th 6thc. (pottery, Zwiebelknopffibel and
other metal objects). Coins from Diocletian, Constans, Theodosius I, Anastasius and Justinian
were discovered.
Bibliography: MIKULI 2002, 166168, no. 35, Abb. 58.
85. LJUBANCI
Site also located in southern Dardania, about 18 km N of Scupi, near the Crna Gora
Massif (ancient mining area).
Triangular fortification of 728443m (approx. surface 0.40ha). The defence wall
is 2.60m thick, has a pentagonal tower at the NE corner (107m) and another (whose shape
remains unclear) at the NW corner. The 2.60 m-wide entrance was on the N side and on the
inside were barracks set against the W side of the defence wall.
The complex was dated to the 6thc. based on the archaeological material collected during
the field survey, as well as on the construction technique.
Bibliography: MIKULI 2002, 171172, no. 42, Abb. 62, 63.
86. ZELENIKOVO
Located on the Vardar valley (Axios), not far from the Roman road between Scupi and
Stobi, around 3 km SE of the fortification at Taor. The area is rich in ancient mines. Field
surveys were conducted and isolated discoveries were made in connection to this site.
Polygonal fortification of approx. 11055m, which covers a surface ofc. 0.40ha. The
defence wall is 1.70m thick and has a pointed front defended by a triangular tower (88m),
while on the other sides it has six rectangular towers (5.505.80m). On the inside were built
barracks set against the defence wall and a 2212m Christian basilica with one nave and two
aisles. The archaeological and numismatic (coins from Justinian and Justin II) material, as well
as the construction technique indicate that the complex was built in the 6th c.
Bibliography: MIKULI 2002, 197, no. 60, Abb. 92.
87. PAKOEVO
Fortification located in the same mining area, 4 km S of the fortification at Taor, on the
Vardar valley. Field surveys were conducted.
Rectangular fortification of 32 20 m, with a triangular projection (tower?) in the
middle of one of the sides and a 1.501.60 m-thick defence wall. On the inside there are
barracks set against the defence wall. The complex was dated to the end of the 4th 6thc. on the
basis of the pottery discovered there.
Bibliography: MIKULI 2002, 178180, no. 49, Abb. 69, 70.
151
Scythia
88. SLAVA RUS (IBIDA)
Watchtower located on the Fetea Hill near the Late Roman Early Byzantine city
(approx. 200m SW of the annex-fortification). The restitution by Al. S.tefan based on the
aerial photographs proposed a rectangular fortification of approx. 2015m (on the outside).
The complex was dated to the 4thc. based on the material discovered there.
Bibliography: TEFAN 1977 a, 458; TEFAN 1977 b, 3f.
89. BABADAG-TOPRAICHIOI
Site located on an important road inside the province, on the Taia Valley that connected
the Black Sea shore to the Danubian limes, especially with the legionary forts at Troesmis and
Noviodunum. Salvage excavations were conducted in 1978 (A. Opai), then systematic archaeological excavations were conducted in between 19791983 (A. Opai and M. Zaharide).
Architecture: rectangular fortification of 4420.40m on the outside and 3814m
on the inside, which covers a surface of 532 m2. The defence wall is 3.40m at the elevation
level and 3.80m at the foundation level; it was built in opus quadratum. The entrance on the E
side was built as a protruding tower-gate (approx. 10.104.60m). The external entrance was
3.75m wide and the internal one 2.50m wide. The entrance was blocked in phase B and in
the same phase was added a mass of masonry on the inside of the tower-gates N side (I believe
it could be interpreted as a substruction for a staircase to the upper level, where one entered the
fortification).
Intra muros buildings: the superstructure of the entire construction rests on 12
central pillars laid symmetrically in 6 pairs. The first and last pair is each flanked by a pair of
lateral pillars (totalling 4) which are set against the defence wall on the E and W sides. Both
central and lateral pillars are built in opus mixtum, but not at a standard measure. Generally
the distance between the pillars is of approx. 3.50 m. In the fortifications second phase the
entire intra muros area was divided by walls made of stone bound with earth (adobe was
probably used for the elevation). We do not know exactly what was initially the configuration
of the intra muros area. The authors of the research suppose that in phase A they were wooden
barracks set against the defence wall and the pillars, on whose foundations will later (in phase
B) be built the stone walls.
Extra muros: several dolia were excavated near the defence wall, along with other
dwelling structures that belonged to a civilian settlement. We must mention a rectangular
building set against the N wall of the tower-gate in phase B.
Stratigraphy: The complete excavation of the fortification revealed a clear stratigraphic
succession that, corroborated with the construction changes and the analysis of the numismatic material led to the conclusion that there existed two main phases, each containing three
dwelling levels (A. Opai, M. Zahariade, in OPAI et al. 1991, 191193).
Phase A:
- N I: construction level with a fine layer of mortar at the base; it was destroyed by a fire
(fine layer of burn); dated to 369/372 378 (but in the same final report in 1991,
152
92. CASTELU
Salvage excavations conducted by Tr. Cliante in 1980 have led to the discovery of
remains of a fortification with thick walls made of stone bound with mortar, located in the SE
extremity of the village. For a long time it was considered to be a quadriburgium.
The plan kindly provided to us by our colleague Tr. Cliante shows that an approx. 38
m-long segment of the defence wall was excavated, which had a protruding rectangular tower.
The defence wall has a foundation made of successive plinths (3.603.80 m thick) and an
154
elevation made of fashioned blocks that have a 2.752.80 m-wide crepida. The tower measures
11.809.00m on the outside and 6.204.00m on the inside; the walls are as thick as those of
the defence wall, and the entrance was 1.60m wide. Traces of stone buildings were discovered
intra muros.
The topographic and constructive characteristics allow us to propose the existence of a
fortification larger than a simple quadriburgium, with intermediary towers on the sides. Until
new excavations are conducted we put forward the hypothesis of a minor castellum with an
internal surface of under 1ha. The site is approx. at the middle of the road between Tomis
and Axiopolis.
93. POIANA
Fortification located most probably on the same road between Tomis and Axiopolis,
recently identified on aerial photographs (1994) and satellite images (2007). It is located around
2 km S of the village of Poiana, on a dominant position that controls the area in several directions. Field surveys were conducted by C. Bjenaru and C. Nopcea in 2007.
Quadriburgium of approx. 4040m, probably with round corner-towers. The field
survey results indicate that the fortification was surely used during the 6th c. (based on the
pottery collected on the surface), even if we cannot exclude a construction date during the
Tetrarchy by analogy with the fort at Mircea Vod.
A linear structure visible on approx. 1.4 km on a NW direction ends on the W side of
the complexs defence wall. Cristina Crciun interprets this structure as a clausura that connects
the fortification at Poiana with that at Castelu. The hypothesis needs to be supported by results
of proper investigations though.
Bibliography: CRCIUN 2008, 357359.
155
Moesia Secunda
97. KOTEL-HAJDUT VRBAN
Quadriburgium-type fortification located close to the southern border of province
Moesia Secunda, near the Kotel Pass, on a road connecting it to province Haemimontus. The
structure is connected to a solid barrage-wall (clausura), approx. 1400m long, which blocked
the passage towards the Kotel Pass. It is also known from K. korpils reports, where it is
mentioned by the name of Kale Kalabak. It was never excavated.
It is a rectangular fortification (38384842m, surface of approx. 0.17ha), probably
with round corner-towers. The walls were built in opus mixtum and are approx. 2.60m thick.
On the inside were discovered traces of a rectangular construction of 2615m, which could
be a basilica (V. Dinev believes that tey are in fact barracks). On the outside it was protected
by a rampart with ditch.
The pottery collected at the site during the field surveys indicates two distinct levels
of dwelling: the 4th 6thc. and the 13th 14thc. St. Lisicov and N. Markov date the complex
during the reign of Justinian.
Bibliography: LISICOV, MARKOV 1981, 65, 68, fig.13. Cf. DINEV 2007 a, 519.
98. SVALENIK
Recently excavated fortification near Ruse (Sexaginta Prista), on the bank of the Malki
Lom river, in the place called Dolan boaz. It pertains to the burgus category and was located
on a provincial semita, with connections to the Danubian cities of Iatrus and Sexaginta Prista,
but also to Kovaevec and Abrittus inside the province.
The southern wall of the fortification (10.50m) is 2m thick and built in opus vittatum.
Two periods of construction were recorded: 4th c.beginning of the 5thc. and late 5th 6th/early
7th c.
Bibliography: TORBATOV, DRAGOEV 2008.
Haemimontus
99. PANICOVO-FIDAN PUNAR
On the N bank of the river Erkeka, 1 km NW of the fortification at PanicovoGraditeto (recently identified with Scatrae), located on the military road between Anchialos
and Marcianopolis. Quadriburgium-type fortification covering a surface of approx. 0.10 ha,
probably with round corner-towers, the entrance on the W side and a 2 m-thick defence wall. It
has a direct connection to a barrage-wall located between the rivers Erkeska and Kuru Kamija,
which closed the entrance to the Djulino Pass.
Bibliography: RAEV 1982, 55; PRESHLENOV 2001, 40, fig.11.
157
Thracia
100. SOPOT HISSARLK
Site located 25 km N of Diocletianopolis (Hisar), near the mediaeval fortress Kopsis
(Anevsko kale). In the ancient period the site was near the road that connected Philippopolis
to Oescus, several kilometres away of Sub Radice (Hristo Danovo). Excavations were conducted
in 1988 (M. Madarov) and 20012002 (I. Dambov).
Quadrangular fortification measuring 93.50m (N), 100m (S), 98m (E) and 32.80m
(V). It is in fact an adaptation of an approx. 9090 rectangular plan to the terrain, with a
surface of approx. 0.600.70 ha. At the NW and SE corners there are external rectangular
towers. On the outside, on all sides a proteichisma (or a new fortification?) was built, for which
there is no precise information yet. It seems that this defence wall had corner-towers. Coins
from Justinian are also mentioned.
Chronology: there are no clear elements for a precise date; therefore the fortification is
largely dated to the 5th 6thc. based on the archaeological material. It was contemporary to a
monastic complex located nearby, near the mediaeval city.
Bibliography: DAMBOV 2005.
101. POMOTNIK
Recently excavated Roman tower located in the Glbovo region, in the territory near the
town of Simeonovgrad (Constantia). It measures 7.507.50m on the outside (4.304.30m
on the inside) and has a 1.60 m-thick wall.
West of the tower was almost entirely excavated a building (A) that actually started
from the towers wall, covering a surface of approx. 375 m2. It is divided into seven rooms and
has yielded a rich archaeological material and coins from the 4thc. (the last one was dated to
367370).
Chronology: the construction of tower and building A was dated to the 4thc. based on
the archaeological material discovered at the site.
Bibliography: DINEV 2007 b; DINEV 2008 a.
Chronology: the complex is dated to the Early Roman Period (2nd 3rd c.), reused in
the 6th c and in the mediaeval period.
Bibliography: ALADOV 1969, 249252; ALADOV 1987, 7576. Cf. RAEV 1982, 148,
Tabl. LVI/2; BORISOV 2001, 86, fig.8; DINEV 2006, 33, no. 99, fig.78; DINEV 2007 a,
516, fig.38.
103. LJUBENOVO
Fortification located in the same area south of the Marica river, in the territory of
Constantia (Simeonovgrad), about 15 km SW of the latter and 15 km SE of Mineralni Bani,
very probably on a secondary road in the province Thracia. The fortification at the site called
Kaleto was excavated in 1968.
Architecture: rectangular quadriburgium-type fortification measuring approx.
7059m on the inside and covering a surface of approx 0.41ha. The defence wall is 2.00m
thick and there are three round corner-towers (internal diameter of approx. 5.205.30m, 1.30
m-thick wall, entrances in the shape of a simple corridor), the northern corner-tower being
rectangular (approx. 4.003.50 on the inside, with an entrance in the shape of a corridor with
a rectangular anteroom). Two other rectangular towers are set in the middle of the NE and SW
sides. The main gate is on the NW side, closer to the rectangular corner-tower. On the SE side
there is a poterna.
Intra muros buildings: stone walls bound with earth that form several rooms set
against the defence wall; in front of the rectangular corner-tower to the north several dolia were
discovered.
Extra muros: a mono-naved basilica with a baptisterium was excavated and is dated to
th
the 5 c.
Archaeological material: pottery, lamps, different metal, bone and horn objects.
Coins: 3rdc. 1 piece; Constantine 2; Constantius II 1; 4th 5thc., unidentifiable
2; Justinian 1; Justin II 3; Tiberius II Constantine 1.
Chronology: even if the authors of the excavations consider that the fortification was
built in the 4thc., I believe it should rather be dated to the 6thc. based on the construction
technique and the archaeological and numismatic material discovered there, typical of that
period. We cannot exclude a dating to the Anastasius-Justin I period (see the analogies with the
fortifications at Kostinbrod, Balik-Tuzlata), but it might just as well be a construction from the
period of Justinian. It was also used during the mediaeval period (9th 11th c.).
Bibliography: ALADOV, BALABANJAN 1972; ALADOV 1987, 76. Cf. RAEV 1982, 148,
150, Tabl. LVII/1; OVAROV 1982, 25; BORISOV 2001, 86, fig.7.
104. ZNAMENOSEC
Fortification located on the site called Alekov bair, covering a surface of approx.
0.62ha. The defence wall is approx. 2m thick and has round corner-towers (internal diameter
of 8m and 1.40 m-thick walls).
159
Dated to the 6thc. based on the archaeological and numismatic material collected there
(Anastasius 1 piece; Justinian 27 pieces; Justin II 4 pieces), as it was probably a creation
of the age of Justinian.
Bibliography: KARAILIEV 2007; KARAILIEV 2008.
105. DJADOVO
Fortification located at an important crossing of important roads (Augusta Traiana
Kabyle and Constantia Tuida). Archaeological excavations were conducted in 19771984.
Previous structures: Neolithic tell of impressive dimensions.
Architecture: Rectangular fortification measuring 68.50 52.50 m and covering a
surface of approx. 0.36ha. The defence wall is 2m thick and was built in opus mixtum. The
gate is located approximately in the middle of the E side and is in fact a tower-gate (108m).
On the W side there are traces of a thickening of the defence wall that supported the staircase
that led to the walls upper level. The pentagonal corner-towers are protruding more on one of
the sides, and have an interior divided in two: a rectangular room of 6.757.40m and another
triangular one of 2.505.20 m. The authors of the research suppose that in the first phase the
towers were rectangular, while in the second a triangular front was added to them.
Intra muros buildings: traces of stone buildings were discovered in the fortifications
SE corner. There is also a cistern.
Archaeological materials: pottery, fibula.
Coins: 50 % of the ancient archaeological material is dated to the 527582 period. The
last coins are from Tiberius II Constantine.
Chronology: Fortification dated by J. De Boer to the 6thc. The last coins can be tied
to a destruction caused by the Slavs invasion in 580/581. On its ruins there developed a rich
mediaeval dwelling (12th c.).
Bibliography: DE BOER 19881989. Cf. BORISOV 2001, 8384, 88, fig.5; DINEV 2006,
36, no. 103, fig.85; DINEV 2007 a, 521522, fig.42.
Europa
106. KUUK BEDESTEN
Quadriburgium-type fortification which is part of the Long Wall, built as a protective
barrier for Constantinopolis most probably during the reign of Anastasius. Within the framework
of the Anastasian Wall Project of the University of Newcastle, under the supervision of James
Crow field surveys were conducted and a topographic plan was drawn.
Rectangular structure, measuring 64 32 m, with two square corner-towers of
10.5010m on the outside and two others on the Long Wall. Pillars that support arcades are
set against the inner face of the defence wall. Two entrances are made in the middle of the E
and W sides (the latter corresponding to the Long Wall), which indicates that these forts were
supposed to control the traffic across the Long Wall.
Bibliography: CROW, RICCI 1997, 251, fig.9; NAPOLI 1997, 383384, figs. 275, 277.
160
2. TYPOLOGY ,
1. TOWERS
We divided into three groups according to the internal dwelling surface the 13
towers that were researched or simply identified in the territory of the dioceses of Dacia and
Thrace (only eight of which have an entirely known plan):
- small surface towers (up to 10 m2): Nufru Proprietatea Ioan Butuza (No. 49B)
around 4 m2, Korbovo- Zbradila (No.25) approx. 6 m2, Ras (No.83) approx. 7 m2
and Lepenski Vir (No.10) with a surface of 9 m2;
- medium surface towers (1530 m2): Pomotnik (No.101) with 18.5 m2, Gornja Kamenica
(No.69), Radanja (No.82) and Pesaa (No.9) all have around 25 m2, and Kozjak-Cvilig
(No.81) which has 27 m2;
161
large surface towers (3550 m2): Malo Golubinje Nein potok (No.15) and Nufru
La Piatr (No.49A) both of around 42 m2.
When considering their plans, we can identify square towers (Lepenski Vir, Pesaa,
Pomotnik) and other rectangular-shaped towers (Korbovo and Ras). The round shape, popular
during the Hellenistic and Early Roman periods1, seems to have been abandoned during the
Late Roman Period.
Based on the results offered by the archaeological research and function of the dating of
the construction moment we can also differentiate between:
- former Early Roman watchtowers, reused during the 4thc. and even later: Nos. 10, 25, 38
and 83 (Fig.354);
- new towers, built during the 4th c.: Nos. 9, 15, 49A, 49B, 56(?), 81, 82 and 101 (Fig.355).
Early Roman towers were small sized (up to 55m on the outside) and had thin walls,
of an average of 0.70m at the elevation level. A typical example for this type is the completely
excavated structure at Lepenski Vir (No. 10), whose external dimensions (4.90 5.10 m)
integrates it into the standard type of watchtower. Even if no clear chronology could be established following the excavations (the archaeological material was very poor), its shape and
analogies with other similar towers on the limes of Dacia Porolissensis, in Crimea, North Africa
or Palestine (Fig.4850)2 date it surely to the Principate, almost certainly to the 3rdc. There
is no information concerning the plan and construction characteristics for the tower at Ruse
Selite (No. 38), dated by the authors who discovered it to the 2nd 3rd c., the only
certain aspect being that it was reused in the 4thc. (a Rumoridus stamp was discovered there).
Arguments for a datation to the second half of the 3rdc. were discovered in the rectangular
towers at Korbovo Zbradila (No.25) and Ras (No.83), which could indicate a preference
for this shape in that specific period.
As far as the towers constructed during the 4thc. are concerned, they are characterized
by larger dimensions of both the external surface (over 77m and up to 1010m) and the
internal one (of an average of 25 m2 for the medium sized ones), as well as by the thickness of the
defense wall (over 1.00m and reaching up to 1.902.00m or even 2.50m). Among them one
notices a group of three towers that have a sort of external defense wall (more of a precinct, or
a yard) made of lower quality masonry (Fig.356). One of these the tower at Pesaa (No.9),
on the limes of Moesia Prima, measuring 7.507.50m (on the outside) and 55m (on the
inside) could have been built at the end of the 3rd beginning of the 4thc. It is individualized
by a pseudo-precinct built in a careless manner (dry set masonry with no foundation) and is
considered by the author of the research (D. Mini) to have been added at a later stage. But
it might as well be built during the first stage, if we consider the fact that this precinct had
no defensive role, but rather that of delimiting a surface. A similar situation is that of the two
towers identified in the border-zone between the provinces Dacia Mediterranea and Macedonia
(more precisely in the territory of the city of Bargala): Kozjak Cvilig (No.81, where the
precinct, as well as the tower itself are built in dry set masonry!) and Radanja (No.82), both
not excavated, but dated to the 4thc. based on the material collected on the surface. A close
parallel could be made also with the tower at Zaviet Msus in Cyrenaica, dated probably to the
-
1
2
1stc. AD (Fig.50)3. The situation of Pomotnik (No.100) is approximately the same, with the
difference that we have here an important edifice connected to the tower, instead of a courtyard.
Even if there is no clear data concerning the structures plan, the information provided
by the field survey on the tower at Gornja Kamenica (No.69) the thickness of the defense
wall (2.50m) an the internal surface of approximately 25 m2 places it in the same category
as the towers in Dacia Mediterranea mentioned above. Analogies for these towers were found
especially on the so-called RheinIller-Donau limes, most of them dated with certainty during
the reign of Valentinian I: Au-Hard4 (Fig.86), Oberes Brgli5 (Fig.87), Hardwald6 (Fig.95),
Rheinau-Kpferplatz7 (Fig.96). A similar construction is the one at Mauthen8 (on the border
between Noricum Mediterraneum and Venetia et Histria, dated to the second half of the 4th c.)
(Fig.94).
In a discussion concerning the distinction to be made between towers and burgi one
must mention the tower at Kleiner Laufen-Koblenz (Fig. 85), on the limes of the Upper
Rhine, measuring 7.808.10m on the outside andc. 4.705.00m on the inside, that is a
surface of approx. 24 m2. This was dated during the reign of Valentinian I based on a foundation
inscription dated to 371374 in which, contrary to the well-known contemporary inscriptions
that mention burgi, only the toponym Summa Rapida is mentioned, with no further information concerning the type of fortification this name refers to9. This tower can be considered
representative for minor fortifications smaller than a burgus, more precisely under the limit of
approx. 50 m2 of dwelling space inside the compound (at most a 77m internal space).
The fortification at Malo Golubinje-Nein potok (No.15) can be placed somewhere
at the limit between tower and burgus, as it measures 8.538.53m on the outside, has a defense
wall only 1m thick at the elevation level, which provides an internal surface to approx. 42 m2.
This surface surely allowed a more developed dwelling inside the compound. Also, based on
the thickness of the defense wall we can also determine the height of the tower. If there are no
supporting elements on the inside, such as masonry pillars or massive wooden structures, the
height of a tower with a large internal surface and thin walls has to be reduced, which can be the
case of the tower at Malo Golubinje. The closest analogies are on the limes in Pannonia, where
such constructions are frequent: Esztergom-Szentgyrgymez (3)10, Esztergom-Bbnatvlgy (2)
(Fig.91)11, Pilismarot-Schiffsstation (Fig.98)12, Slankamen-Humka13, and with some structures from the limes Raetiae, as those discovered at Jppe (Fig.88)14, Tgerbach (Fig.89)15 and
Ratihard (Fig.90)16, all with an internal surface smaller than 50 m2. They are usually dated to
3
4
5
6
7
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
the reign of Valentinian I, but we cannot exclude the presence of certain structures as early as the
reign of Constantine. This type of tower can be considered a transitional stage towards the burgus.
2. BURGUS-type
As we have mentioned above, the structure at Kleiner Laufen-Koblenz, which is not
mentioned as a burgus in the foundation inscription, proves that this term should be applied
to fortifications larger than simple towers. The best method to define a structure that can be
described as a burgus in the Late Roman period is to consider a fortification excavated on the
limes of province Valeria, at Viegrad-Kbnya (Steinbruch). A foundation inscription from
372 explicitly mentions the term burgus as the name of the structure built by the soldiers of
the legio I Martia17. It is a square tower of 9.959.95m on the outside, 1.05 m-thick walls,
an entrance with a 1.30 m-wide door step and access stairs at one of the internal corners. At a
later stage a massive internal pillar (with no foundation) was added to better support the roof.
It was dated to the reign of Valentinian I based on archaeological and numismatic discoveries18.
Therefore this burgus is nothing else than a larger tower that encloses a surface of approx. 62 m2,
more than double the regular medium-sized tower. If we apply a margin of 1015 m2, we can
define as a burgus a rectangular tower or fortification with an internal surface of at least 50 m2.
If we consider these calculations and the construction characteristics we can distinguish
five main types of burgi in the dioceses of Dacia and Thrace:
Type 1: Simple burgus (large tower). This type of construction is actually a large tower, that
probably also had a considerable dwelling area inside (Fig.357). The only example of such a
fortification known up to the present moment is the burgus at Hajduka Vodenica (No.16A),
which measured 12.5011.80m (on the outside) and 9.108.70m (on the inside), had
1.50 m-thick walls and enclosed a surface of 79 m2. It was dated to the second half of the
4thc. (most probably during the Valentinian/Valens period) based on the archaeological and
numismatic material. This chronology is also supported by the analogies provided by similar
burgi on the limes of province Raetia Finningen-Neu Ulm, at the junction of river Iller
and the Danube, dated to the reign of Valentinian I19 (Fig.103) and especially those on the
Noricum-Pannonian limes, at Passau-Haibach (12 12 m)20 (Fig. 104) and Bacharnsdorf
(12.2012.20m)21 (Fig.101), as well as an almost identical burgus discovered at VrhnikaTurnove, near Nauportus, on the road between Emona and Aquileia (11.5011.50m on the
outside)22 (Fig.110). In the Eastern part of the Empire a similar burgus (approx. 10.5010.85m
on the outside) was identified at Qasr abu-Rukba, in the province Arabia23 (Fig.160). To the same
category pertains a burgus located inside province Raetia, at Goldberg-Trkheim (1515m
on the outside), which was dated to the Tetrarchic period based on stratigraphical data and is
characterized by the remarkable thickness of the defense wall (3.303.50m)24 (Fig.109). A
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
RIU 804. Cf. SOPRONI 1967; SOPRONI 1989, 108109, no. 3, Abb.56.
SOPRONI 1978, 5155, no. 22, Taf. 54.1.
MACKENSEN 1999, 231, fig.7.22 (11.7012.00m, surrounded by a ditch).
MOOSBAUER 1997, 154157, Abb. 5152.
UBL 1997 a, 203206, Abb. 7476.
CIGLENEKI 1987, 90, Abb. 124.
PARKER 2006,549, fig.2.11. Cf. TORBATOV 2004 a, fig.14 a.
MACKENSEN 1999, 219f., fig.7.14. During the Constantinian period (terminus post quem 335337) it was
surrounded by an irregular-plan fortification.
164
similar burgus, again with large-thickened wall (2.70m), is Rheinsulz (15.2014.70m) on the
limes Raetiae (Fig.100).
Type 2: Burgus with an internal corner tower. This type is illustrated by the fortification
at Zidinac (No.6) Fig.358 that covers an internal surface of 14.5014.50m (210 m2),
has a 1.50 m-thick defense wall and a rectangular structure of approx. 3.503.50m in its
NE corner, interpreted as a watchtower. If this is the case, then this tower must have been
significantly taller than the burgus defense wall. But we cannot exclude the possibility that
this structure was actually just a small internal construction, maybe a staircase25 as tall as the
defense wall (in this case the structure itself must have been in fact a massive tower). The limited
excavations of this site prevent us from finding out exactly how could the roof of a rather large
tower (17.5017.50m on the outside) be supported without a central pillar26.
Type 3: Burgus with landing-place. (Fig.359) Known also as Lnde-burgi (O. Hckmann),
these fortifications were investigated especially on the Rhine limes and the Pannonian sector
of the Danubian limes and in most cases represent bridgeheads on the right bank of the Rhine
and the left bank of the Danube. The only construction in the Lower Danube area that can
interpreted as a fortified landing-place with tower is the one at Batin (No.37), which is dated
to the second half of the 4thc. (but one can refine the chronology to the Valentinian IValens
period based on the RVMORID stamps discovered there). In comparison to the almost
standard series of Lnde-burgi in the West (Engers, Zullestein, Mannheim-Neckarau, Verce,
Tahitotfalu-Balhavar, Szigetmonostor-Horanyi and Dunafalva, all with a massive rectangular
tower and internal support-pillars see Figs. 125132)27, the complex at Batin is characterized
by the reduced size of the tower (1010m on the outside, near the limit between a tower
and a burgus) and by the different positioning of the wharf s wall. It has a closer analogy in
the fortification at Szentendre-Dera patak (Fig.133), even if the latters tower is much larger
(approx. 20 20 m)28 and especially in the fortified landing-place discovered in the sector
north of the Danube (that belonged to Pannonia Secunda) at Ba (Fig.134), which had a tower
similar to the one at Batin (approx. 1010m on the outside)29.
If we consider certain differences in the construction technique (especially in the size
and architecture of the tower), as well as the data provided by the archaeological excavation,
we can assume a later construction moment for the landing-places with a simple tower with no
pillars, namely the reign of Valentinian I.
Type 4: Burgus with tetrapylon. It is probably the best represented type for this category of
minor fortifications. The excavations on the Danubian limes, both in the sector under scrutiny
25
26
27
28
29
See the examples at Pilismart-Schiffsstation (SOPRONI 1978, 3336, no. 16, Taf. 13.1; SOPRONI 1985,
29, Abb. 5), Visegrd-Kbnya (Steinbruch) (SOPRONI 1978, 5155, no. 22, Taf. 54.1) or VrhnikaTurnove (above, n. 22).
Such a pillar must have existed, but the central area of the burgus was not excavated (see the excavations plan
in PETROVI P. 19821983, 128, fig.1). On the Pannonian limes burgi larger than 1212m all have a
central pillar (see the examples at Pilismart-Malompatak and Visegrd-Sibrik in SOPRONI 1978, 3646,
no. 17, Taf. 18, 22 and 5559, Taf. 61.1,2).
The chronology of these constructions is not well-defined yet: SCHLEIERMACHER 1942, p. 191f. (the
reign of Valentinian I); JORNS 1974 (the Diocletian-Constantine period); MCSY 1974 a, 191196,
Abb.46 (Constantine or Constantius II); SOPRONI 1978, 9192, no. 32, 37, 42 (Constantius II, probably
the closest to the truth if we consider the OF ARN stamps). Cf. HCKMANN 1986, 399f., Abb. 14.
SOPRONI 1978, 7172, no. 32, Taf. 75.2.
MCSY 1969; MCSY 1974 a, Abb. 46.8.
165
here (where 10 examples were identified), as well as in the Noricum-Pannonian sector, but
also certain discoveries in the western provinces interior allow us to distinguish two types of
construction from the manner the internal pillars were built and the way the extra muros space
was organized30.
Type 4 a: L-shaped pillars and external defense ditches. (Fig.360) To this type pertain
the fortifications excavated at Kladovo-Donje Butorke (No.22 A), Ljubievac (No.27 A)
and Mihajlovac-Mora Vagei (No.31), to which we may add the yet un-excavated fortification
at Seimeni (No.41). Apart from the two main characteristics, we can add the walls thickness,
which is greater than 1.902.00m at the elevation level, reaching up to 3.003.30m, as well as
the predilection for the use of opus mixtum as a construction technique.
As far as the chronology of these fortifications is concerned, there are several arguments
for dating them to the Tetrarchic period. First of all, the excavations at Ljubievac have lead
to the discovery of two coins one in the W wall and the other on the treading level
that support this chronology: the first is from Probus (279) and the other from Diocletian,
dated to 289290, which ensures a terminus post quem for the construction moment31. The
second dating element is the similar fortification on the limes of province Noricum Ripense,
at Zeiselmauer32. Here the context for building the burgus is completely different from what
we have documented on the Middle and Lower Danube, as it was raised in the NE corner of
an old Roman auxiliary fort, rebuilt during the reign of Constantine. The authors that have
studied it consider that it was built in the second half of the 4thc., either during the reign of
Valentinian I (according to H. Ubl), or after 380 (according to S.Soproni), based especially
on the presumption that it superposed a fan-shaped corner-tower of the Constantinian fort.
But the traces of the supposedly demolished corner-tower have yet to be uncovered and the
only other ruins there are dated to the 1stc. A.D. This is why we cannot exclude the possibility
that the burgus was constructed in fact in the corner of the Early Roman fort and there is no
argument to deny that this happened during the reign of Diocletian, when the three highly
similar analogies on Iron Gates limes were raised. The situation is repeated in the case of two
nearby forts, at Wallsee (Locus Felix?)33 and Traismauer (Augustiana)34, but can be supposed
also for other locations35. This situation leads us to the conclusion that a local construction
30
31
32
33
34
35
The first indications of the differences between the two variants in TOMOVI 1987, 97f., where the author
incorrectly includes Borej in the Tetrarchic subtype and Ljubievac and Rtkovo-Glamija in the Valentinianic
subtype.
KORA 1996, 105109. This first treading level ends with a fire, dated by coins from Constantius II
(341346), which constitutes further proof that the burgus could not have been built later than the second
half of the 4thc. A similar date (end of the 3rd beginning of the 4th c.) was proposed for the fortification
at Mihajlovac-Mora Vagei, the only one to be completely excavated (CERMANOVI-KUZMANOVI,
STANKOVI 1986, 453466).
UBL 1977, 251262; UBL 1997 b, 231236, Abb. 84, 86. Cf. SOPRONI 1986, 411, Abb. 6, 7; JOHNSON
1983, 179, fig.69.
UBL 1997 c, 196201, Abb. 72.
UBL 1997 d, 221225, Abb. 80.
Such as the forts at Schlgen (Ioviacum), Almsfzit (Odiavum/Azaum) or Dunabogdny (Cirpi). SOPRONI
1986, 409f., dates them in the postValentinianic period. A burgus located in the NW corner of the fort
at Rusovce (Gerulata) seems to fit the same pattern and, even if it has a slightly more complex shape, it also
has the typical L-shaped pillars at the corners (SNOPKO et al. 1986, 446452, fig.2). A further argument
for the way early forts were used during the Tetrarchy is the case of the fortification at Eining (Abusina),
this time on the limes of province Raetia, where a smaller fortification similar to a quadriburgium was
built in the Roman forts SW corner. Its construction during the Tetrarchy is now certain (MACKENSEN
1999, 214216, fig.7.12) and the hypothesis put forward by S.Soproni (the postValentinianic period, cf.
SOPRONI 1986, 410) is already out of date.
166
program was applied in this sector, which supposed the adaptation of Tetrarchic burgi to the
new Constantinian fan-shaped corner-towered forts.
When discussing the dating elements, we should also mention a recent hypothesis
put forward by S.Torbatov, which proposes that the term praesidium, which appears in the
famous Tetrarchic inscriptions from the Lower Danube, should be connected to burgus-type
fortifications36.
Another element that helps refine the chronology of the Diocletianic type of burgus is the
manner in which the defensive capacity was improved by digging two concentric ditches around
the fortification. Starting from the results of the excavation of these ditches at Mihajlovac-Mora
Vagei and Ljubievac, we have identified a similar construction technique at Kladovo-Donje
Butorke37 too. This technique is also used in roadside fortifications from northern Gallia, such
as those at Morlanwelz II and Liberchies I38. Another construction technique typical for this
period is the walls remarkable thickness and a close analogy is given by the Tetrarchic burgus at
Goldberg-Trkheim (Raetia)39.
Type 4 b: Rectangular pillars and external stone precinct. (Fig.361) To this category
pertain the burgi discovered on the limes of Dacia Ripensis at Ue Slatinske reke (No.29 A),
Mihajlovac-Blato (No.30), Borej (No.32) and maybe Malo Golubinje (No.14A), with
the mention that there is no sufficient data on the latter. The differences from the previous
type are not only the shape of the pillars, but also the walls thickness, which varies between
1.60 and 1.80m, as well as the use of the opus incertum (with the exception of No.32 where
a different opus mixtum was used, with 5 courses of bricks). Also, one notices that the space
in-between the four pillars is larger than that in burgi with L-shaped pillars. As far as the
external precinct which substitutes the ditches present in the previous type is concerned, we
must mention that such a structure was only identified at Mihajlovac-Blato and Borej40 and
covers a square (approx. 3636m at Borej) or rectangular area (at Mihajlovac-Blato), with
a 1.001.10m-thick wall (or 0.70m at Borej). The quality of its masonry is usually inferior
to that of the burgus, but it also uses the opus incertum. The theory which sees the external wall
as a later addition41 is not based on concrete arguments. If we consider the walls thinness, it is
more probable that they played the role of a precinct and therefore were probably built at the
same moment as the burgus itself.
The closest analogies for this variant of burgus with tetrapylon are found on the Pannonian
limes (province Valeria), in four locations: Budakalsz,42 Lenyfalu43, Visegrd-Lepence44 and
csny 45 (see Figs. 116119). The first two are known from earlier excavations and were dated
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
TORBATOV 2002, 7879; TORBATOV 2004 a, 37, 47. The author bases his theory primarily on the
inscription at Donje Butorke, which he considers belonged to the initial burgus-type fortification, but also
on another fragmentary inscription from Seimeni, where a fortification of the same type is supposed to have
existed. But only an archaeological excavation on the latter site could confirm this hypothesis. A second
possibility is that the inscriptions were brought from the forts nearby (Diana, Capidava or Axiopolis respectively) and reused in the construction of the more recent fortifications, such as the quadriburgium at Donje
Butorke. But there is no conclusive evidence for this case either.
See the comments in the Gazetteer, No.22 A.
BRULET 1990, 127129, 302303, fig.34, 35 (Morlanwelz II) and 130133, fig.37 (Liberchies I).
See above note 24.
The excavations at Ue Slatinske reke were actually only several test trenches in the burgus.
TOMOVI 1986; CERMANOVI-KUZMANOVI, STANKOVI 1984.
NAGY L. 1937, 271. Cf. SOPRONI 1978, 66, Taf. 75.3; SOPRONI 1985, 36, Abb. 26.
SOPRONI 1978, 6366, no. 30, Taf. 67; SOPRONI 1985, 36, Abb. 19.
GRF, GRH 19981999; GRF, GRH 2001. See also A 2000, 1223.
PTERFI 1999; PTERFI 2003.
167
reign of Constantine. Based on these analogies I suggest with caution a dating for the burgus
at Dinogetia to the Constantinian period, as it probably was a construction that preceded the
well-known fort.
Type 5: Burgus with divided internal space. (Fig.364) In this category must be included the
larger structures (internal surface between 250500 m2) such as the representative example at
Babadag-Topraichoi (No.89). Even if it was supposed that its initial function was that of a
horreum, excavations have later shown that the fortifications internal space was divided in order
to allow dwelling inside the compound. The fact that many weapons were found indicates that
it was a military post that at the same time supplied the units inside the province with products
brought via the Black Sea.
Other fortifications on the territory of the two dioceses that can be included in this
category, but for which there is no archaeological data at the present moment, are those at
Constana-Palazu Mare (No.55) and Slava Rus (No.88), both with a rectangular plan
and a surface that can be estimated at between 300 and 500 m2. Also, maybe the fortification
at Enisala-Palanca (No.52), now destroyed, had the shape and dimensions that could have
placed it somewhere at the limit between a burgus and a minor castellum.
Analogies for this type of burgus are found especially in the Western provinces Eisenberg
and Bad Drkheim-Ungstein (in the hinterland of the Rhine limes, both dated during the reign
of Valentinian I)53, Frauenberg-Weltenburg (on the limes of the province Raetia, dated to the
same period)54.
The construction of these fortifications, especially along the important roads, indicates
that they can be considered roadside fortifications that controlled the traffic (some of them even
played the role of supply bases).
3. QUADRIBURGIUM-type
From a typological point of view we can distinguish a variety of plans for these fortifications. I do not believe that it helps to distinguish between all the types of plans or defensive
architecture styles, because these differ from one structure to another, as well as from one period
to another. But in order to draw a typological picture to serve as a starting point for dating the
monuments, we believe two main types can be distinguished:
- The standard type, with four corner-towers and a simple gate;
- Variants with intermediary or gate towers.
Most fortifications investigated in the area under scrutiny can be included in the standard
type. On the Danubian limes there are the fortification at Dobra-Saldum (No. 7), Tekija
(No.17), Orova (No.18), Sip (No.20), Hajduka Vodenica (No.16B, with the mention that
the pentagonal intermediary tower was added at a later date), Ljubievac (No.27B) and Ue
Slatinske reke (No.29B). Even if they were only partially or not at all excavated, the fortifications at Veliko Grdite (No.4), Peceneaga (No.44), Traian (No.45) and Jijila (No.46) can be
included in the same category. On the west shore of the Black Sea there is the representative fort
at Ovidiu (No.54) and maybe in the same category could be included the one at Cape abla
1 (No. 58A). Much more standardized appear to be the quadriburgia discovered inside the
provinces, among which the one at Kula can be considered as a prototype for other fortifications
53
54
of this category not only in the Balkans, but in other parts of the Empire too. The fortifications at Medvedja (No.63), Puinei (No.64), Vidrovgrad (No.65), Oreac (No.68), Pirdop
(No.72), Sofija-Orlandovci (No.74), Pernik-Bela Voda (No.77), tulac (No.79), Mihai
Bravu (No.90), Mircea Vod (No.91), Poiana (No.93), Kotel-Hajdut Vrban (No.97) have
the same plan, most use round corner-towers, even if there are some rectangular or fan-shaped.
The same simple plan was also used for the fortifications that are part of barrage-walls
(clausurae), such as the one at Poreka reka (No.13), Panicovo-Fidan Punar (No.99) and the
three quadriburgia identified on the trajectory of the Long Wall (Nos. 106108).
The fort at Bistrica (No. 76) is more difficult to define from a typological point of
view, as it was considered for a long time to be a villa; its small internal surface (280 m2)
points towards a burgus, but the presence of the four corner-towers plead for its definition as
a quadriburgium. In the same category should be included also the fort at Podvis (No.67). A
close analogy for this mixture of burgus and quadriburgium characteristics (Fig.365) can be
found on the Rhine limes at Kleinbasel (Fig.146) and Untersaal (Fig.147), both enclosing
approx. 170 m2 and with round corner-towers55. For a definition as a quadriburgium plead the
small forts discovered in Palestine at En Boqeq (Fig.178) and Upper Zohar (Fig.179)56, both
dated to a late period, most probably the first half of the 6thc. The fort at Bistrica was dated to
the 5thc., but with no certain arguments, and the one at Podvis is not excavated.
A rare occurrence in the Balkan area is the fortification recently discovered at Drenkovo
(No. 73), which has architectural features (see the corner-bastions) similar to the fortifications in the East, such as the Egyptian hydreumata, dated to the Early Roman period57, or the
Sassanid fortifications58.
A variant of the standard type is the quadriburgium at Gornea (No.5) that, apart from
the four corner-towers, also has two gate towers. The fortification at Hinova (No.23) has gatetowers, as well as intermediary towers. The fortification at Ravna (No.12) also has intermediary
towers, as well as a tower-gate (the same at korpilovci, No.60); the same situation can be seen
at Kladovo-Donje Butorke (No.22B), which has a rectangular apsed tower in the middle of
one of the sides.
I believe that a more useful typology should be based on a scheme that sees a chronological evolution of this category. Even if such a scheme will be modified in the future, as
archaeological excavations will progress, I believe that using this scheme we can distinguish
two main types of quadriburgia, more precisely some specific for the 4thc. (Late Roman) and
others bearing the characteristics specific for the 6thc. (Early Byzantine).
Late Roman quadriburgia (4thc. early 5th c.)
The detailed analysis of the construction technique, the architecture of the defense wall
and the towers, the archaeological and numismatic material all allow us to identify a series o
constructions that can be certainly dated to the 4thc. It is true that in most cases there are no
clear chronological elements (inscriptions, literary sources etc.) and no complete and published
55
56
57
58
Kleinbasel: MOOSBURGGER-LEU 1974, 161f. 1983, 158161; DRACK 1993, 810; NUBER, REDD
2002, 216, fig. 31; FELLMANN 2006 b, 218, fig. 218. Untersaal: GARBSCH 1967, 62 f.; JOHNSON
1983, 172, fig.65.
GICHON 1993 (En Boqeq, erroneously dated to the 4th c.); HARPER 1995 (Upper Zohar, dated to the end
of the 5th c.). For both forts see a detailed analysis and clear chronological indications in MAGNESS 1999,
189f. (who dates them to the middle of the 6th c.).
REDD, GOLVIN 1987, 5455; REDD 1995, 97, fig.9.
KLEISS 1991, Abb. 3 (Bad Qaleh), see above Fig.71.
170
archaeological excavations. In very few cases there are a minimum lot of archaeological and
numismatic artifacts that can constitute a terminus post quem for dating the construction
moment. There are 13 fortifications that have been archaeologically researched and can be
dated with certainty to the 4thc. First of all there are the quadriburgia on the Danubian limes,
located either south of the river, such as those at Ravna (No.12), Poreka Reka (No.13),
Tekija (No.17), Nova erna (No.39A), or north of it at Gornea (No.5), Orova (No.18) and
Hinova (No.23), then there is one on the western Black Sea coast (Cape abla, No.58A) and
several inside the provinces: Puinei (No.64), Kula (No.66), Sofija-Orlandovci (No.74),
Pernik-Bela Voda (No.77) and Mihai Bravu (No.90). To this we may add other two fortifications inside the provinces Medvedja (No.63), for which there are only indirect elements
that can date it to the second half of the 4thc., and Sofija-Lozenec (No.75), which is dated
at the beginning of the 5th c.
When analyzing these fortifications one notices that many were raised on previously
uninhabited locations, with the exception of those at Ravna, Tekija, Orova and Cape abla,
which were built over the ruins of Early Roman structures (2nd3rd c.) and that at Medvedja,
which surrounds a Constantinian mansio.
The plan is generally quadrangular, usually square (Gornea, Kula) or almost square
(Ravna, Orova, Sofija-Orlandovci), but also rectangular (Mihai Bravu, Hinova, Medvedja)
or even rhomboidal (Tekija). The internal surface59 usually varies between 0.060.07ha (SofijaOrlandovci, Tekija) and 0.17ha (Hinova), with three remarkable exceptions (Poreka Reka,
Puinei and Medvedja) where the internal surface is twice as large as the one at Hinova. The
latter appear in special contexts: either as an auxiliary fort for a barrage-wall (clausura), such as
the one at Poreka Reka, as an outpost in the territories controlled by the Empire north of the
Danube (Puinei), or as a structure that evolved into a fortified mansio (Medvedja). An intermediary surface (0.25ha) has the fort at Sofija-Lozenec, more similar to the standardized plans
of the Early Byzantine quadriburgia, but this is due probably to its late date at the beginning
of the 5th c.
The thickness of the defense wall at the elevation level varies between 0.650.75 m
(Sofija-Orlandovci, Pernik-Bela Voda), 1.101.25m (Ravna but only in the case of the
four towers), 1.301.70 m (Gornea, Hinova, Puinei, Nova erna), 1.802.10 m (Tekija,
Orova, Cape abla), 2.202.50m (Kula, Poreka Reka) and a maximum of 3.00m (Mihai
Bravu, even if maybe only at the foundation level).
From an architectural point of view these quadriburgia pertain to the standard type 1,
with four corner-towers (Kula, Mihai Bravu, Orova, Tekija, Puinei, Poreka Reka and SofijaOrlandovci, the latter being a variant with the towers added at a later stage), as well as to type
2, with further towers built on the sides, flanking the gate or with gate-towers (Ravna, Nova
erna, Gornea, Hinova). A remarkable characteristic is the large width of the gate (in the cases
where it was excavated): 3.00m at Kula, 3.65m at Hinova, 4.00m at Poreka Reka and up to
5.55m at Gornea. The towers are generally square, with the exception of those at Kula (round),
Mihai Bravu (fan-shaped) and Tekija (rhomboidal).
The chronology of the quadriburgia in the 4thc. presents several problems due to the
absence of dating elements and an insufficient interpretation of the archaeological material.
Even so, we can distinguish three main construction stages:
59
Ordered by size (inha): 0.06 Sofija-Orlandovci / 0.07 Tekija / 0.09 Orova / 0.10 Mihai Bravu,
Nova erna / 0.12 Kula, Ravna / 0.15 Gornea / 0.17 Hinova / 0.25 Sofija-Lozenec / 0.34 Poreka
Reka / 0.40 Puinei / 0.58 Medvedja.
171
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
KOWALSKI 1998, 34, fig.3E; GENEQUAND 2003, 5255, fig.36. Cf. BAUZOU 1993, 4243 (proposes
an Ummayad date).
Gastal: PRINGLE 1981 (2001), 258259, fig, 38; Bordj Younga: PRINGLE 1981 (2001), 202203,
pl.LXXXI a LXXXII b; TROUSSET 1991, 350352, fig.66.6. The dimensions of the towers in the two
cases mentioned above are much smaller than the ones at Kula, a characteristic for 6thc. constructions.
SREJOVI et al. 1980; SREJOVI 1985; SREJOVI 1993.
TOMOVI et al. 1995; SREJOVI et al. 1996; TOMOVI, JOVANOVI 2000; VASI, TOMOVI 2005.
ATANASOVA-GEORGIEVA 1974, 337338; IVANOV R.1997, 538, Abb. 8. In this case we have interval
round towers.
MAOV 1990; IVANOV R.1997, 543548.
VASI 19821983; VASI 1990.
MIKULI 2002, 271273, Abb. 165.
LANDER 1980, 1054, fig.72.3/d; KOWALSKI 1998, 34, fig.3 F; TORBATOV 2004, 36, fig.6/a (after
Poidebard).
REDD 1995, 100, fig.15; GREGORY 1996, fig.14.f (left); KOWALSKI 1998, 34, fig.4 A.
KONRAD 2001 a, 153154, Abb. 7, 8; KONRAD 2001 b, Beil.
172
Visegrd-Gizellamajor, where a recently excavated quadriburgium was dated largely to the first
half of the 4th c.71. A good dating element can be the fan-shaped corner-towers often used for
these constructions (Fig.377), with a large arched front and a rather large internal surface72.
Three other fortifications that were dated by their discoverers to the reign of Constantine,
but were not sufficiently excavated in order to have a definitive verdict, are the following: Cape
abla 1 (No.58 A), that could also be dated to a later period, Puinei (No.64), where the
datation was based on the emperors activities north of the Danube and Nova erna (No.39
A), correctly interpreted by S.Torbatov as a fortification that preceded the 6thc. castellum, but
for which unfortunately there are no clear dating elements. The latter has typical architectural
characteristics such as an intermediary rectangular tower and especially the pillars that were built
along the defense walls inner face, an element often encountered in Tetrarchic or Constantinian
fortifications (Qasr Bshir73, Eining74, Sapaja Island No.3, Sliven75), but also in a series of
minor constructions from the reign of Anastasius (Trajanova Vrata Markova Mehana
No.71, Kuuk Bedesten No.106) or the beginning of Justinians reign (El-Anderin76).
As far as a group of fortifications in the Iron Gates area are concerned Gornea (No.5),
Ravna I (No.12), Hinova (No.23) and the two at Orova (No.18) Tekija (No.17) ,
which the authors of the excavations dated to the Tetrarchy, at a closer inspection we notice
architectural and construction details, as well as archaeological and numismatic material that
can date these structures to the end of the reign of Constantine (post 332) or during the
reign of his successors (337350). The absence of Tetrarchic coins at Gornea, which prompted
the specialists to invoke a monetary crisis, is contrary to the one at Dierna (where 17 coins
from 294313 were discovered) and the fact that the circulation of coins is frequent only after
337 indicates the period of Constantine or his direct successors as a construction moment.
At Hinova the coin from Maximianus, found in the wall of one of the barracks, cannot be
considered anything but a terminus post quem for the construction moment. The analysis of
the numismatic material reveals a major discrepancy in the period 294330 (therefore a period
of over 30 years), for which only 6 coins were discovered, and that after 330 (26 coins from
330337 were discovered, 17 from 337341, another 26 from 341346, in total 69 coins
for a period of 17 years). The two quadriburgia also have a similar plan with towers flanking
their gates77 (at Hinova there is also an intermediary tower) and corner-towers with a lateral
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
GRF 19871989, Taf. 1; GRF et al. 20012002; GRF, GRH 2003; GRF, GRH 2004, 5357.
The prototypes of this shape could be the corner-towers of the legionary fort at El-Lejjun (Betthorus), dated
to the last years of the first Tetrarchy (PARKER 1995, 258, fig.14; PARKER 2006, 111f., fig.3.3). But
fan-shaped corner-towers with a smaller internal surface and an almost triangular shape (due to the smaller
arched front) were used in Tetrarchic constructions in the western Empire, such as those at Boiodurum/Boiotro
(BRANDL 1997, Abb. 48), Contra Aquincum (NMETH 2003), Gorsium (J. Fedk, Alba Regia 25, 1994,
321f., Abb. 1, 5), the early phase at Alshetny (SOPRONI 1978, Taf.89.2), but also in the diocese of Thrace
(Abrittus, IVANOV T. 1980, fig.10, 12) or on the eastern Black Sea shore (Pityus, LEKVINADZE 1969,
fig.8). See also a useful separation in three categories of the fan-shaped tower type at LANDER 1984, 246f.,
fig.265.
CLARK 1987. Cf. LANDER 1980, 1058, fig.72.2c; PARKER 1986, 644645, fig.10; PARKER 1995, 252,
fig.1; REDD 1995, 101, fig.17.
MACKENSEN 1999, 214216, 236, figs. 7.12, 7.25.
TEREVA et al. 2001, general plan.
BUTLER 1969, 207, fig.209. Cf. LIEBESCHUETZ 1977, 493, n. 60 (dates the basilica to 528 and supposes
a possible previous military function).
A close analogy for the towers of the gates at Gornea: Bourada, in North Africa, dated to 324330 (GUEY
1939, 192f., fig.1; LANDER 1984, 193, 208, fig.189; EUZENNAT 1989, fig.200.6). To be compared
to the situation at Umm el-Jimal, on the limes Arabicus (PARKER 1995, 255256, fig.10, 13, dated to the
beginning of the 4th c.). See Fig.380.
173
entrance78. Considering these details, we can suppose that the two fortifications were built
north of the Danube at the same period, most probably after the foedus with the Goths in 332,
which agreed among other things to the stationing of 40.000 mercenaries in border areas in
exchange for subsidies given by the Empire and the right to trade in certain points along the
Danubian border79.
The fortifications at Tekija/Transdierna and Orova/Dierna, located one in front of
the other, have similar architectural elements, the only difference being the rhomboidal shape
at Tekija, imposed by the terrain. Unlike those at Gornea and Hinova, here the fortifications
were built over the ruins of significant Early Roman buildings80. They were dated based on
coins discovered in stratigraphic contexts at Orova (high frequency for the period 330346)
and stamped bricks typical for the reign of Constantius II (some of which were found in situ in
the defense wall at Tekija). As far as the architecture of the two quadriburgia is concerned, we
notice the two entirely protruding rectangular towers with diagonal entrances81.
As far as there are no conclusive data regarding their chronology, the fortified structures
at Sofija-Orlandovci (No.74) and Pernik-Bela Voda (No.77) could be only hypothetically integrated in the same large-scale building activity of the Constantinian period.
III The Valentinian I/Valens period (364378): unlike in other areas82, in the dioceses
of Dacia and Thrace there are, for now, no elements to date any construction a fundamentis to
this period. The only proposal for this period (with no conclusive arguments for now) is the
fortification at Medvedja (No.63), that enclosed a Constantinian mansio.
A fourth construction period, corresponding to the Theodosian dynasty (379450),
could be taken into consideration, as far as the construction moment of the insuficiently
known fortification at Sofija-Lozenec (No.75) is dated in the first years of the reign of
TheodosiusII.
Early Byzantine quadriburgia (late 5th 6th c.)
A massive group of 17 Balkan fortifications clearly differ from the 4thc. quadriburgia by
their architectural characteristics and dimensions (Figs. 370, 371). Archaeological excavations,
among which those in the Iron Gates area are the most significant, have brought conclusive
arguments for dating these structures to the 6th c. Most of them were identified on the
Danubian limes 9 of them, which prove a remarkable stylistic homogeneity, with only slight
architectural variations: Dobra-Saldum (No.7), Malo Golubinje (No.14 B), Hajduka
Vodenica (No.16 B), Kladovo-Donje Butorke (No.22 B), Rtkovo-Glamija (No.24 B),
Milutinovac (No.26), Ljubievac (No.27 B), Ue Slatinske reke (No.29 B), Radujevac
78
79
80
81
82
The towers are protruding only . Identical protruding towers, which also have specific lateral entrances along
one of the walls sides, are encountered in the contemporary quadriburgia at Poreka Reka (No.13) and Ravna
(No.12), but also in certain fortifications in the East: Qasr el-Hallabat (4thc., REDD 1995, 94, fig.1),
El-Habbat (6th c.?, GREGORY 1996, 194, fig.16.c), El-Anderin (6thc., BUTLER 1969, 207, fig.209). See
Fig.378.
BENEA 1996, 5960; IVANOV R.1997, 530531
We cannot exclude the possibility that they also functioned in the second half of the 3rdc. and the first decades
of the 4thc., as indicated by the numismatic material from Orova (34 coins from 294324).
Not often encountered in 4th c. fortifications. The only clear analogies were found in Africa, at Uppenna
and Tubernuc, both dated to the 6thc. PRINGLE 1981 (2001), 276277, fig.13 and 249250, fig.17. See
Fig.379.
The best known case is inside the provinces Sequania and Raetia, where three fortifications with very similar
plans were excavated (Irgenhausen, Schaan and WiltenInnsbruck) and recently re-dated to the reign of
Valentinian I. Cf. BORHY 1996, 212f., Abb. 4; MACKENSEN 1999, 234f., fig.7.24, 7.26.
174
The defense walls thickness is generally larger than that of 4thc. quadriburgia. Most
have an elevation between 1.90/2.002.20/2.30 m, more precisely 67 Byzantine feet87. In
three cases (Ovidiu, Ostrovul Mare and Vidrovgrad) the walls are 2.702.80m thick, but at the
socles level. The foundations thickness varies between 23m according to the configuration
of the terrain and in some cases there are variations in the thickness of the different sides of the
same fortification (e.g. Ovidiu, Milutinovac, Kladovo-Donje Butorke). If in the case of 4thc.
quadriburgia the elevation is rarely thicker than 2.00m (Poreka reka, Orova, Kula and Mihai
Bravu), in the 6thc. there are very few examples with walls thinner than 1.90 m. One of these
exceptions is Pirdop (1.601.70m), where the wall played not only a military role, but also
acted as a peribolos for a Christian basilica.
The architecture of the defense wall is characterized by an element specific almost exclusively for this period, more precisely the thickening of one or several of the sides on the interior,
in order to support staircases that lead to the upper level of the wall, usually at both sides of
the thickening, and more rarely at only one end (Fig.381). In most cases, this thickening was
made in the middle of the sides and was set against the defense wall. In some cases (Saldum,
Donje Butorke and Ue Slatinske reke) the elevation of the thickening was marked by pillars.
This thickening for the staircases seems to have been a Balkan characteristic and appeared both
in new fortifications and in restorations a fundamentis of the old ones: Karasura, Iustiniana
Prima (the acropolis), Pautalia (acropolis), Scupi (Kale), Madara, Kamen Brijag, Sveti Nikola,
Dionysopolis (the late fortification in the Horizont district), Novae-ezava88, and is seldom
encountered in new fortifications in African provinces (Madauros the abandoned phase,
Ammaedara)89 or in the Eastern provinces (Resafa)90.
The corner-towers most frequently used by 6th c. Balkan quadriburgia are circular
(Fig.382) and have a slightly smaller diameter than those of 4thc. quadriburgia (see the case
at Kula). According to G. Miloevi91, the average internal diameter of the towers of fortifications in the Iron Gates area is 13 Byzantine feet (approx. 4m). A distinctive characteristic of
these towers is the manner the entrance was constructed in. It had a very wide foundation (the
diagonal that unites the corners of two of the sides) and was built in the shape of a corridor with
two distinct parts: a larger (1.802.00m) rectangular (Ovidiu, Milutinovac) or more frequently
semicircular entryway (so-called en entonnoir, present in almost all cases on the Danubian
limes, as well as at korpilovci, on the Black Sea coast), then the much narrower (1.201.30m)
entrance proper. Analogies for this type of entrance can be found in urban or military fortifications in the Balkans (Scupi-Kale, Iustiniana Prima, Karasura)92 or in North Africa (here
especially in rectangular or square towers: Thamugadi, Anastasiana and Thamallula)93. In some
cases (Saldum, Milutinovac, Ue Slatinske reke) these corner-towers were built as a masonry
monolith due to the instability of the terrain caused by the proximity of the Danube. We can
assume that these monolith-towers upper level was inhabited and was accessed through the
upper level of the defense wall.
A rare occurrence in the Balkan area (and exclusively inside the provinces or on the Black
Sea shore) are the square (Kuuk Bedesten, Byk Bedesten and Vidrovgrad) or rectangular
(Pirdop, Djadovo?, Ljubenovo and Ovidiu) corner-towers. In some of the rectangular towers
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
(Ovidiu, Ljubenovo) the entrance is also in the shape of a corridor with anteroom (Fig.383).
The two above-mentioned examples are also remarkable by the positioning of their towers:
at Ovidiu one of the towers sides is a prolongation of the defense wall (a similar situation at
Kuuk Bedesten) and at Ljubenovo the only rectangular tower has its main front parallel to the
diagonal that unites the corners of the defense walls sides. Both structures use a combination
of round and rectangular corner-towers. The towers at Pirdop have a lateral entrance along one
of the sides. The same situation is encountered at Djadovo, with the difference that here the
rectangular towers are transformed in a pentagon by adding a triangular masonry element on
the main front. The lateral-type entrance is used both in 4thc. fortification towers (Yotvata)94, as
well as in 6thc. ones such as the African fortifications at Madauros, Gadiaufala, Ksar Graouch
and Diana Veteranorum95 (Fig.384).
A type of corner-tower rarely used in fortifications is the rectangular one with an apsidal
front (Fig.385), such as the NE tower in the fortification at Dobra-Saldum. Even if some
authors doubt the apses Christian character (which in this case has an eastward orientation),
we should not exclude the possibility of it being used as a chapel. An identical tower, but built
in the middle of one of the sides, can be seen at Kladovo-Donje Butorke. The same characteristics can be seen in one of the apsed corner-towers at Ravna (6thc. phase). The only analogy for
this type of tower is the fortification at Apsarus, on the Eastern Black Sea coast96.
There are not many fortifications that use intermediary towers. In these cases the towers
are rectangular or square and were built to reinforce and stabilize a part of the defense wall that
was threatened by the terrains instability. Such examples are the quadriburgia at Milutinovac
and Ue Slatinske reke (both with monolith towers), but also at Radujevac. Rectangular intermediary towers also appear in the 6thc. phase at Ravna, as well as on two of the sides of the
fortification at Ljubenovo.
A tower typical for the 5th6thc. is the pentagonal tower (Fig.387) that appears in its classic
shape in two quadriburgium-type fortifications on the Danubian frontier: Hajduka Vodenica
(probably added after the initial construction moment) and Ostrovul Mare. The corner-towers at
Djadovo are also pentagonal, but in this case the specific shape was obtained by adding a triangular mass of masonry to the rectangular towers front. Pentagonal towers frequently appear in
Balkan fortifications during the Anastasius-Justinian period97, as well as in the eastern Empire98.
The access gate is, in most cases, just an opening in the side of the defense wall. The
tower-gates are rarely used in Balkan fortifications. The only examples are the ones at korpilovci
(rectangular), Djadovo (built in two phases) and Ravna (probably inherited from the 4th c.
structure). Tower-gates were more frequently used by fortifications in North Africa (Madauros,
Anastasiana, Tubunae and Thamugadi), Syria (El-Anderin) and Palestine (Avdat)99 (Fig.386).
94
95
96
97
98
99
101
102
103
This way of hiding the entrance seems to be Balkan characteristics, as it is rarely seen in other parts of the
Empire. The only analogies can be found at Uppenna, in North Africa (PRINGLE 1981 (2001), fig.13) and
at El-Habbat, in Syria (GREGORY 1996, fig.16.c).
In other areas in the Eastern provinces such constructions could also be dated in the 5thc. see the example
of Mount Gerizim, dated to 484 AD (DINEV 2006, 50, fig.101).
Procopius, De aedif. IV, especially in connection with the toponyms Iudaeus, Mocatiana, Tricesa, Putedis, Onus
and Lucernariaburgu (former towers transformed into forts).
PRINGLE 1981 (2001), 280281: The fort encloses a smaller enceinte, measuring about 1215m and
with walls about 1.0m thick, whose sides are not quite parallel to those of the fort. Even if Pringle dates the
quadriburgium to the 6thc. (PRINGLE 1981 (2001), 78) based on a late inscription written on an earlier one
from the reign of Caracalla, one cannot exclude the possibility of an earlier, 4thc. date. M. Euzennat thinks
that the burgus speculatorius in that inscription (CIL VIII, 2494 = ILS, 2636) actually refers to the fortification
with four corner-towers (EUZENNAT 1989, 274, fig.200/3, after the plan by Baradez).
178
attempts abandoned at the foundation level are also documented in other regions. In Numidia,
the fortification at Madauros was initially planned as a rectangular quadriburgium, as proven by
its western corner and the adjoining sides, one of which was thickened in order to fit in one of the
staircases. At a certain moment, probably during the construction works, the plan was abandoned
in favor for a smaller complex, which incorporated the hemicycle of the old Roman theatre104.
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
PRINGLE 1981 (2001), 214217, fig. 11, 12 (the author dates the initial attempt to 534536, and the
finished fortification to 539544). Other cases where the structures plan was changed were identified in the
larger fortifications at Calama and Lepcis Magna, cf. PRINGLE 1981 (2001), 188191 and 209. Also see a
construction attempt during the reign of Valentinian I at Gd-Bcsajtelep, in the Transdanubian territory of
province Valeria (MRV 2005).
We also stress the fact that the salvage excavations undertaken here have lead to the discovery of only two
comer-towers, while the others are only presumed.
POPOVI, IVANIEVI 1988, 125f., fig.1, 2. Cf. MIRKOVI 1998, fig.1; MILOEVI 2002, fig.4. It
is presumed that it is a 6thc. fort, built probably during the reign of Justinian.
NAGY T. 1974, 3334.
DAUTOVA-RUEVLJAN, PETROVI 1994.
LANDER 1984, 226f., fig.237; REDD 1995, 100, fig.16; KOWALSKI 1998, 34, fig.3B.
PARKER 1986, 644, fig.9; PARKER 1995, 254, fig.7; GREGORY 1996, 194.
PARKER 1995, 255256, figs. 10, 13; GREGORY 1996, 184, fig.9.e.
CARRI 1974. Cf. REDD 1995, 117, fig.40.
VALBELLE, CARREZ-MARATRAY 2000. Cf. REDD 2004, 162, fig.9.
EUZENNAT 1989, 271272, fig.200/1.
EUZENNAT 1989, 272, fig.200/2.
VILLAVERDE VEGA 2004, 302; EUZENNAT 1986, 374, n. 2 (dates it to the Severan period).
LESCHI 1941; LESCHI 1943. Cf. LANDER 1984, 188, 208, fig.177; EUZENNAT 1989, 270, fig.200/5;
REDD 1995, 100101, fig.19.
GUEY 1939; EUZENNAT 1989, fig.200/6. REDD 1995, 101 (contests the chronology proposed by Guey).
179
(over 0.50ha and up to the limit of 1ha that separate them from middle-sized fortifications).
Most of the fortifications that make the transition from quadriburgia to middle-size fortifications can be dated to the Tetrarchy (Khirbet el-Fityan, Umm el-Jimal, Mdoukal, Tell el-Herr
and very probably Qasr Qarun) or to the reign of Constantine at the latest (Tabernae, Bourada
and very probably Khan al-Manqoura). M. Euzennats datation of the the two fortifications in
Mauretania Tingitana (An Schkour and Sidi Moussa bou Fri) to the Severan period (205215)
still has to be confirmed by archaeological excavations. The two fortifications built by Justinian
in Africa Timgad (Thamugadi)119 and Tobna (Tubunae)120 are two late examples that illustrate very well the evolution of quadriburgium-type fortifications towards a type of regular-plan
minor castellum with corner- and intermediary towers.
The fortification at Boljetin is a clear example of evolution from a small Early Roman fort
(approx. 6050m) towards a typical Late Roman fortification (which could even be included
in the quadriburgium category). This most probably happened during the reign of Constantine,
when the structure received the four horse shoe- and fan-shaped corner-towers and two of
the gates were blocked by rectangular towers. This happened in many cases, especially with
auxiliary forts in different sectors of the Danubian limes121.
A second category of rectangular fortifications is represented by the structures discovered
at Nova erna (No.39 B) and Cape abla (No.58 B), both dated to the reign of Justinian
and the one at Sopot-Hissarlk (No.100), whose chronology covers a larger time span (5th
6th c.). For the first two, which are located on the Danubian limes and on the western Black
Sea coast, there is proof they were built over 4th c. quadriburgium-type fortifications, which
means that they kept their military role. At Sopot, where the archaeological data is still unclear,
it is highly probable that we are dealing with a roadside fortification located on the road that
went along the southern slopes of the Haemus Mountains. In these fortifications we notice the
continuing use of rectangular or round corner-towers and of intermediary towers, as well as an
internal space with no clear divisions.
Polygonal fortifications can be divided in two variants according to the number of
sides and the way the latter are adapted to the shape of the terrain or previous architectural
elements.
First there are structures that try to maintain a regular plan (Fig.373), such as those at
Kostinbrod (No.70), Trajanova Vrata-Markova Mehana (No.71), Bregovina (No.78),
Debrene II (No.96) and probably Tvrdica (No.94). The first four examples are dated with
certainty to the 6thc., while the last one, even if it was not excavated, could have been built in
the 4th c.
The fortification at Trajanova Vrata-Markova Mehana, located on the border between
the dioceses of Thrace and Dacia, is a good example of a militarized road post. It was most
probably built during the reign of Anastasius and has analogies at Korenica-Kula, in
Macedonia (it is interesting that the toponym Stenes is also connected to this site, probably to
be related to a barrage-wall located near the border between the provinces Macedonia Prima and
Macedonia Secunda)122. Kostinbrod (Kratiskara) is one of the new fortifications built during the
119
120
121
122
reign of Justinian over the ruins of an imperial residence from the time of Constantine. There
we can see the integration of a previous structure, which lead to a deviation from a regular plan.
Such situations are common in Byzantine Africa, where many of the fortifications were built
by Justinian over the ruins of the old Roman towns and were adapted to previous buildings123.
The forts at Bregovina and Debrene II were also built during the reign of Justinian and they are
remarkable by the presence of a Christian basilica built against the defense wall.
The fortification at Tvrdica is trapezium-shaped, a common occurrence in other
provinces, especially in the 4th c., during the Tetrarchy (PassauInstadt)124 and the reigns of
Valentinian/Valens (Altrip)125.
The second variant are the fortifications that completely adapt to the terrain, such as
the one at Dunavu de Jos (No.51) and Obroiste (No.95), both with two or three straight
sides and another that follows the shape of the terrain, or the ones at Gorno Svilari (No.84)
and Zelenikovo (No.86), which completely adapt to the terrain.
The castellum discovered at Dunavu de Jos (No.51) is representative for military structures during the reign of Valens. We notice the fact that one of the sides was adapted to the
terrains configuration, as well as the presence of massive U-shaped gate-towers as a reminiscence of the military architecture in the Diocletian-Constantine period. The fortification at
Obroiste, located at province Scythias southern border and which cannot be dated with
certainty for now, has two round corner-towers and a further intermediary round tower. The
fortification at Gorno Svilari is a regular polygon (almost oval) with five rectangular towers and
was dated by I. Mikuli to the 4thc., while the one at Zelenikovo (with six rectangular towers
and a Christian basilica inside) was dated to the 6thc.
A rare type is the triangular fortification, considered by some specialists as typical for
the Early Byzantine period (6th c.). The best known example, which is also dated with certainty
to the 6th c., is the castellum at Bosman (No. 8), whose constructive details (especially the
shape of the towers and the thickening of the defense wall on the inside) make it highly similar
to the quadriburgia built during the same period on the limes of Moesia Prima and that of
Dacia Ripensis. In the same category can be included the less researched fortifications at Insula
Banului (No.21), Brza Palanka-Castellum III (No.28B), Bisericua Island (No.53) and
Ljubanci (No.85). The plan is adapted to the terrain in most of the cases.
For now we do not know any analogy for triangular fortifications in other areas of the
Empire126, which we believe constitutes an argument for a late datation and at the same time
a Balkan characteristic. What we do now about this type of fortification is that it was recommended by an anonymous 6thc. writer (Anonimus Byzantinus) as one of the most efficient in
case of siege127.
123
124
125
126
127
The rule also works for minor fortifications such as the ones at Madauros, Thugga and Tubernuc, but also for
larger ones, such as the one at Ammaedara. Cf. PRINGLE 1981 (2001), passim, figs. 11, 13, 17, 18.
BRANDL 1997, 145150, Abb. 4749.
SCHNURBEIN, KOHLER 1989, 517f., Abb. 6.
An older restitution of the fortification at Mamaj-Kala (on the east coast of the Black Sea) proposed a triangular plan, but was rejected by other specialists (LEKVINADZE 1969, 8889, fig.10).
Most probably written during the reign of Justinian, it represents one of the most important sources on
Byzantine military tactics. VELKOV 1961, 149151; VELKOV 1977, 204205; MILOEVI G. 1996,
251. A recently published study date this compendium in a later period (RANCE 2007).
181
Conclusions
of structures belong to the second stage, dated to the reigns of Constantine and his successors
(308/311340/350). First there is the fortification at Mihai Bravu, with fan-shaped cornertowers, that has almost identical analogies dated to the reign of Constantine. Then there are
the two bridgeheads north of the Danube, at Gornea and Hinova, whose initial datation to the
Tetrarchic period is less credible (especially due to the feeble coin circulation during the first
three decades of the 4th c.) and which must have been built after 332. Both could be connected
to Constantines policy for the territories north of the Danube. Finally, there are the highly
similar fortifications at Tekija and Orova, located on both sides of the River Danube, which
were dated to a later period probably the reign of Constantius II. The third chronological stage
is the period of Valentinian I and Valens, for which there are no clear fortifications constructed
a fundamentis, only restorations.
The Early Byzantine quadriburgia have several general architectural characteristics, most
important of which are the preference for a rectangular plan, a larger internal surface (of an
average of between 0.150.30ha), the thickening of one or several of the sides on the inside (in
order to built staircases leading to the upper level of the defense wall), the towers with entrances
in the shape of corridors with rectangular or semicircular entryways and the gates hidden in
the first third of the length of one of the sides, closer to one of the corner-towers. These characteristics also appear in larger contemporary fortifications, which suggest an architectural model
specific for this period. We also notice that inside these quadriburgia there are virtually no stone
structures, sometimes none at all. In terms of absolute chronology some of them can be dated to
the reign of Anastasius (the best examples are the fortifications along the Long Wall), but most
were built during the reign of Justinian, both in border areas and inside the provinces, along
the main communication routes.
In the fourth category of fortifications (small castella) we included all those under 1ha
and whose plan is different from that of a burgus or quadriburgium. Two main groups can be
distinguished in this type. First, there are the rectangular fortifications that evolved either from
small Early Roman forts (Boljetin), or were newly-built (Sapaja in the 4thc., Nova erna in
the 6th c.). The latter are characterized by a large surface (over 0.75 ha) and the compulsory
presence of intermediary towers. A second group is that of polygonal fortifications of a large
variety of shapes, adapted more or less to the terrains configuration. Among these one notices
several 6thc. fortifications that integrate previous residential buildings (Kostinbrod) and castella
containing Christian basilicas built against the defense wall (Bregovina, Debrene II). A type of
fortification specific for the 6thc. is the triangular one, recommended even by ancient authors for
its defensive capabilities. The best example for this type is the fort at Bosman, which has architectural elements almost identical to those of 6thc. quadriburgia built on the Iron Gates limes.
If we integrate the results of the research on minor fortifications in the chronological
frame of Late Roman Early Byzantine defensive constructions, the conclusion is that the
first quadriburgia in the Balkan area were built during the Tetrarchy, along with burgi with
tetrapylon (with L-shaped pillars) and external defensive ditches. Many minor fortifications
were built during the period of Constantine and his successors, especially quadriburgia located
north of the Danube, as well as roadside fortifications inside the provinces. Small castella were
built at the same time, either rectangular or polygonal. During Valentinian I Valens period
there was a return to the construction of burgi with tetrapylon (now with square-section pillars
and an external precinct), but polygonal fortifications adapted to the shape of the terrain were
also constructed. Few minor fortifications dated with certainty between the last quarter of the
4thc. and that of the 5thc. have been discovered up to the present moment. One exception is
probably the structure from Sofija-Lozenec. The construction effort started in the first half
185
of the 6thc. by Anastasius and continued by Justinian focused on small fortifications, the most
frequently used type being the quadriburgium that sometimes surrounded an old 4thc. burgus
or was built over the ruins of previous buildings. A special category is that of fortifications that
defended Christian basilicas or monastic communities. It is a well-known fact that, during
this period, one of the greatest construction programs in the Balkan area was under way and
the inscription of Viktorinos demonstrates its unitary character in all provinces of the dioceses
Illyricum and Thrace.
186
List of abbreviations
Volumes
A
AOR
CCA
CIL
DID II
Djerdapske Sveske
IGB
IGLR
IGLSyr
ILB
ILS
Limes 6 Basel
Limes 8 Durham
Limes 9 Mamaia
Limes 10 Xanten
Limes 11 Szkesfhervr
Limes 12 Stirling
Limes 13 Aalen
Limes 14 Carnuntum
Limes 15 Exeter
Limes 16 Kerkrade
Limes 17 Zalu
Limes 18 Amman
Limes 19 Pcs
MCA
Ratiariensia
RE
RIU
SSIB
Stare kulture...
TIR
Trsors...
Periodicals
ABSA
ActaAntHung
ActaArchHung
ADAJ
AISC
AJA
Alba Regia
AMI
AMN
Anali
AnatArch
Anatolia Antiqua
AnnArchSyr
AnTard
AntJournal
AP
ArchBulg
Archrt
ArchIug
ArchJournal
ArchKorr
ArchRoz
ArchWarszawa
AfO
Arctos
ArhSofia
ARMSI
AV
BalcPosn
Banatica
BASOR
BCH
BCMI
BJ
BMI
BulMMN
BRGK
Britannia
BSNAF
BSNR
BudRg
BVgbl
Byzantinobulgarica
Byzantina
Byzantion
ByzForsch
ByzZ
CCARB
CRAI
Creta Antica
Dacia (NS)
DHA
Dobruda
DOP
Drobeta
BPB
tBalk
Expedition
FoliaArch
FreibUniv
FundberBaden-Wrtt
GDA
Germania
GlasnikSAD
GNPM
GRBS
GSUIF
GSU-FIF
HA-ESI
HelvArch
IBAD
IBID
IEJ
Iliria
IMJuB
IMJugB
IMSevZapB
Istros
Izvestija-Sofia
Izvestija-Stara Zagora
Izvestija-umen
Izvestija-Varna
Izvestija-Veliko Trnovo
JAI
JRA
JRGZM
JRS
Karthago
Klio
KlnerJahrb
Latomus
MAA
MFRA
Mesopotamia
MittArchInst
Nyrvk
NPZ
Peuce
Pontica
RadMV
RB
RA
RSEE
RevAfr
RMM-MIA
Rodopski Zbornik
RRH
SaalbJahrb
SCIV(A)
SLSAFA
SMMIM-MMC
SpecNova
Starinar
StBalc
StCl
wiatowit
Syria
TravMm
VDI
VizVrem
VVM
ZfA
ZNM
ZPE
iva Antika
190
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216
List of Illustrations
217
218
219
220
221
38. Gazetteer
222 (1) Panevo the quadriburgium on 18th c. maps (BONDOC 2009, fig.1-4).
39. Gazetteer
223 (2) Ram/Lederata and (3) Sapaja Island evolution of the fortification system (JOVANOVI 1996, fig.1-3).
224 (2) Ram/Lederata plan (DIMITRIEVI 19821983, fig.11).
40. Gazetteer
225 (3) Sapaja Island plan (DIMITRIEVI 19821983, fig.3).
226 (3) Sapaja Island NE corner-tower (DIMITRIEVI 19821983, fig.4).
41. Gazetteer
227 (3) Sapaja Island section of the western portico (DIMITRIEVI 19821983, fig.6).
228 (4) Veliko Gradite/Pincum plan according to Marsigli (apud GUDEA 2001, p. *59).
42. Gazetteer
229 (5) Gornea plan (GUDEA 1977, fig.2).
230 (5) Gornea graphic restitution (GUDEA 1977, fig.2a).
43. Gazetteer
231 (5) Gornea towers and gate: a) NW tower; b) SW tower; c) SE tower; d) gate (GUDEA 1977, fig.710).
44. Gazetteer
232 (6) Zidinac situation plan according to V. Kondi (apud GUDEA 2001, p. *65).
233 (6) Zidinac (PETROVI P. 19821983 a, fig.1).
45. Gazetteer
234 (7) Dobra-Saldum/Cantabaza? situation plan (PETROVI P. 19821983 b, fig.3).
235 (7) Dobra-Saldum/Cantabaza? plan (PETROVI P. 19821983 b, fig.2).
236 (7) Dobra-Saldum/Cantabaza? NE corner-tower (PETROVI P. 19821983 b, fig.4).
46. Gazetteer
237 (8) Bosman plan (KONDI 19821983, fig.1).
238 (8) Bosman fountain (KONDI 19821983, fig.8).
47. Gazetteer
239 (9) Pesaa plan (MINI 19821983, fig.1).
240 (10) Lepenski Vir plan (SREJOVI 19821983, fig.1).
48. Gazetteer
241 (11) Boljetin/Smorna situation plan (ZOTOVI 19821983, fig.1).
242 (11) Boljetin/Smorna plan of the fortification (ZOTOVI 19821983, fig.2).
222
49. Gazetteer
243 (12) Ravna/Campsa situation plan (ERCEGOVI-PAVLOVI 19821983, fig.1).
244 (12) Ravna/Campsa plan (KONDI 19821983, fig.2).
50. Gazetteer
245 (12) Ravna/Campsa phases according to V. Kondi: a) 3rd c. AD; b) 4th c. AD; c) 6th c. AD (VASI, KONDI
1986, fig.24, 14, 32).
246 (12) Ravna/Campsa phases according to M. Tomovi: a Roman building; b Late Roman and Early Byzantine
fortification (TOMOVI 1996, maps IV & I).
51. Gazetteer
247 (13) Poreka Reka situation (PETROVI P. 1977, fig.2).
248 (13) Poreka Reka plan of the quadriburgium (PETROVI P. 1977, fig.3/1).
249 (13) Poreka Reka baths built over SE tower (PETROVI P. 19821983, fig.6).
52. Gazetteer
250 (14) Malo Golubinje situation plan after L. Popovi (apud GUDEA 1982, no. 30).
251 (14) Malo Golubinje plan of excavated remains (POPOVI L. 19821983, fig.1).
252 (15) Malo Golubinje-Nein potok plan (JEREMI G. 2007, fig.2.3).
53. Gazetteer
253 (16) Hajduka Vodenica/Translucus? situation plan (ERCEGOVI-PAVLOVI 1986, fig.1).
254 (16) Hajduka Vodenica plan (JOVANOVI 19821983, fig.1).
54. Gazetteer
255 (17) Tekija/Transdierna situation plan (CERMANOVI-KUZMANOVI 19821983, fig.3).
256 (17) Tekija/Transdierna plan (CERMANOVI-KUZMANOVI, JOVANOVI 2004, fig.4)
55. Gazetteer
257 (18) Orova/Dierna plan (GUDEA 1974, Abb. 2.3, scale absent).
258 (18) Orova/Dierna another plan (GUDEA 1982, no. 32).
56. Gazetteer
259 (19) Ada-Kaleh Island a) situation plan (military map, 1962); b) map by Joseph Deharo; c) map by Avon von
Bellavich (BONDOC 2009, fig.99101).
57. Gazetteer
260 (20) Sip plan according to Dj. Jankovi (JANKOVI 1981, fig.39).
261 (20) Sip plan according to P. Miloevi (MILOEVI P. 19821983, fig.1).
58. Gazetteer
262 (21) Insula Banului plan according to Al. Brccil (DAVIDESCU 1977, fig.4).
263 (21) Insula Banului plan according to M. Davidescu (DAVIDESCU 1977, fig.6).
59. Gazetteer
264 (22) Kladovo-Donje Butorke plan according to Al. Cermanovi-Kuzmanovi (CERMANOVIKUZMANOVI 19771978, fig.1).
265 (22) Kladovo-Donje Butorke plan according to Dj. Jankovi (JANKOVI 1981, fig.28).
60. Gazetteer
266 (23) Hinova plan (DAVIDESCU 1989, fig.1).
267 (23) Hinova ditches on the N side (DAVIDESCU 1980, pl. II).
268 (23) Hinova graphic restitution (DAVIDESCU 1989).
61. Gazetteer
269 (24) Rtkovo-Glamija plan (GABRIEVI 1986, plan I, scale absent).
270 (25) Korbovo plan (BABOVI 1990, fig.2, scale absent).
62. Gazetteer
271 (26) Milutinovac plan (MILOEVI, JEREMI 1986, fig.1).
223
63. Gazetteer
272 (26) Milutinovac Western tower (MILOEVI, JEREMI 1986, fig.3).
273 (26) Milutinovac Southern tower (MILOEVI, JEREMI 1986, fig.5).
274 (26) Milutinovac plan and graphic restitution of the central part of the SE wall (MILOEVI, JEREMI
1986, fig.8).
64. Gazetteer
275 (27) Ljubievac plan of the excavations (RADOSAVLJEVI-KRUNI 1987, pl. 1).
276 (27) Ljubievac plan (KORA 1996, fig.3).
65. Gazetteer
277 (28) Brza Palanka/Egeta situation plan (PETROVI P. 1984, fig.141, scale absent).
278 (28) Brza Palanka/Egeta Castellum II (PETROVI P. 1984, fig.142, scale absent).
66. Gazetteer
279 (29) Ue Slatinske Reke situation plan (JOVANOVI et al. 1986, fig.1).
280 (29A) Ue Slatinske Reke burgus (JOVANOVI et al. 1986, fig.7).
281 (29B) Ue Slatinske Reke quadriburgium (JOVANOVI et al. 1986, fig.12).
67. Gazetteer
282 (30) Mihajlovac-Blato plan (TOMOVI 1986, fig.1, scale absent).
283 (30) Mihajlovac-Blato plan and section of the NW inner-pillar (TOMOVI 1986, fig.14, scale absent).
68. Gazetteer
284 (31) Mihajlovac-Mora Vagei excavation plan with the position of the Early and Late Roman burgi
(CERMANOVI-KUZMANOVI, STANKOVI 1986, fig.1).
285 (31) Mihajlovac-Mora Vagei plan of the Late Roman burgus (CERMANOVI-KUZMANOVI,
STANKOVI 1986, plan I).
69. Gazetteer
286 (31) Mihajlovac-Mora Vagei walls in section (CERMANOVI-KUZMANOVI, STANKOVI 1986,
plan III).
287 (31) Mihajlovac-Mora Vagei underground structure along the Northern wall (CERMANOVIKUZMANOVI, STANKOVI 1986, plan II).
70. Gazetteer
288 (32) Borej plan (CERMANOVI-KUZMANOVI, STANKOVI, fig.208).
289 (32) Borej Eastern wall detail (CERMANOVI-KUZMANOVI, STANKOVI 1984, fig.209).
71. Gazetteer
290 (33) Ostrovul Mare plan (DAVIDESCU 1989, fig.36, scale absent).
291 (34) Radujevac plan (JANKOVI 1981, fig.17).
72. Gazetteer
292 (37) Batin plan (STANEV 1999, Abb. 1).
293 (39) Nova erna/Kynton? plan (MILEV 1977, Abb. 1).
73. Gazetteer
294 (42) Grliciu/Cius plan acording to Gr. Tocilescu (ZAHARIADE, GUDEA 1997, fig.58).
295 (44) Peceneaga plan according to P. Polonic (ZAHARIADE 1999, fig.4.26, scale absent).
74. Gazetteer
296 (45) Traian plan according to P. Polonic (ZAHARIADE 1999, fig.4.27, scale absent).
297 (46) Jijila plan according to P. Polonic (ZAHARIADE 1999, fig.4.28).
75. Gazetteer
298 (47) Garvn/Dinogetia fort plan with the position of the burgus (BARNEA AL. 1986, fig.3).
299 (47) Garvn/Dinogetia burgus, detailed plan (TORBATOV 2002, fig.15).
76. Gazetteer
300 (51) Dunavu de Jos plan according to Al. Barnea (IONESCU, PAPUC 2005, fig.XIX).
224
225
91. Gazetteer
331 (84) Gorno Svilari plan (MIKULI 2002, Abb. 58).
332 (85) Ljubanci plan (MIKULI 2002, Abb. 62).
92. Gazetteer
333 (86) Zelenikovo plan (MIKULI 2002, Abb. 92).
334 (87) Pakoevo plan (MIKULI 2002, Abb. 70).
93. Gazetteer
335 (88) Slava Rus/Ibida restitution after aerial photography (TEFAN 1977 b, fig.2).
94. Gazetteer
336 (89) Babadag-Topraichioi plans (ZAHARIADE, OPAI 1986, fig.5-6).
95. Gazetteer
337 (90) Mihai Bravu plan (OPAI 2004, 109).
338 (91) Mircea Vod plan (COMA 1957, fig.1).
96. Gazetteer
339 (92) Castelu plan of excavated area (T. Cliante).
340 (93) Poiana aerial photography (CRCIUN 2008, fig.2b).
97. Gazetteer
341 (94) Tvrdica/Timogitia plan according to K. korpil (TORBATOV 2002, fig.92).
342 (95) Obroite plan (TORBATOV 2002, fig.109).
343 (96) Debrene II plan (TORBATOV 2002, fig.97).
98. Gazetteer
344 (97) Kotel-Hajdut Vrban situation plan (LISICOV, MARKOV 1981, fig.13).
345 (99) Panicovo-Fidan Punar situation plan according to K. korpil (PRESHLENOV 2001, fig.11).
99. Gazetteer
346 (100) Sopot-Hissarlk plan (DAMBOV 2005, fig.2, scale absent).
347 (101) Pomotnik plan (DINEV 2008, fig.1).
348 (102) Mineralni Bani plan, redrawn after D. Aladov (DINEV 2006, fig.78 = DINEV 2007 a, fig.38).
100. Gazetteer
349 (103) Ljubenovo plan (BORISOV 2001, fig.7).
350 (105) Djadovo plan, redrawn after B. Borisov (DINEV 2006, fig.85 = DINEV 2007 a, fig.42).
101. Gazetteer
351 (106) Kk Bedesten, (107) Byk Bedesten plans according to C. Schuchhardt (NAPOLI 1997, fig.275).
352 (106) Kk Bedesten, (107) Byk Bedesten, (108) Bedesten Tepe plans according to F. Dirimtekin
(NAPOLI 1997, fig.277).
353 (106) Kk Bedesten plan according to J. Crow and A. Ricci (redrawn by DINEV 2006, fig.83).
226
227
228
229
Pl. 1
231
Pl. 2
232
3 Histria phase B
4 Callatis
5 Dionysopolis
Pl. 3
233
8 Bargala
7 Diocletianopolis
10 Abrittus
9 Nicopolis ad Nestum
Pl. 4
234
11 Augustae
12 Oescus
14 Transmarisca
13 Novae
Pl. 5
235
18 Taliata
17 Novae-ezava
20 Dimum
19 Drobeta
22 Capidava
21 Sacidava
Pl. 7
237
23 Iatrus
25 Dinogetia
24 Sucidava-Celei
27 Kamen Brjag-Jajlata
26 Argamum
Pl. 8
238
29 Lomec/Sostra
28 Ravna/Timacum Minus
30 Bushati
31 Sliven
32 Komotini
33 Ulmetum
Pl. 9
239
34 umen
35 Rupkite-Carassura
36 Trgovite-Krumovo Kale
37 Vodno-Markovi Kuli
38 Madara
39 Odrci
Pl. 10
240
40 Berkovica
41 Pernik
42 Kraku lu Jordan
44 Batoevo
43 Gabrovo
45 Kipilovo-Sajgansko Kale
Pl. 11
241
46 b Tenos-Avdo
46 a Tenos-Smovolon
47 Migdal Tsafit
48 Guebba
49 Kavkaz Bair
50 Zaviet Msus
Pl. 12
242
51 Mihajlovac-Mora Vagei
54 Gasr Duib
53 Kazackaja
Pl. 13
243
55 Malathre
56 Prinias
57 Theangela
58 Yeniky
Pl. 14
244
59 Latmos-Nordfort
60 Latmos-innere Zitadelle
61 Demetrias
62 Seuthopolis
Pl. 15
245
63 Panskoye
64 Failaka
66 Eski Hisar
65 Pella
Pl. 16
246
67 Khirbet Jaddalah
69 Farrashband
71 Bad-Qal'eh
70 Abu Sh'af
Pl. 17
247
72 Nersingen
73 Burlafingen
Rtelsee
Degerfeld
Haselburg
77 Petersbuch
75 Hinteren See-Berg
76 Hnehaus
80 Bivolari
79 Rdcineti
81 Tieti
82 Harlach
83 Rijeani
84 Comalu
Pl. 19
249
78 Robern
85 Koblenz-Kleiner Laufen
89 Tgerbach
93 Slankamen-Humka
87 Oberes Brgli
86 Au-Hard
90 Ratihard
91 Esztergom-Bbnatvlgy 2
88 Jppe
94 Mauthen
96 Rheinau-Kpferplatz
95 Hardwald
98 Pilismart-Schiffsstation
97 Esztergom-Szentgyrgymez 1
Pl. 20
250
100 Rheinsulz
101 Bacharnsdorf
99 Pferrichgraben
105 Dms-Kvespatak
106 Visegrd-Steinbruch
104 Passau-Haibach
Pl. 21
251
109 Goldberg-Trkheim
110 Vrhnika-Turnove
108 Pilismart-Malompatak
112 Hulsberg
111 Braives
113 Morlanwelz II
Pl. 22
252
116. Visegrd-Lepence
115. Stelli
114. Moers-Asberg/Asciburgium
117. Lenyfalu
118. Budakalsz
119 csny
120.
121.
124. Asperden
122.
123.
Pl. 23
253
126. Zullestein
125. Engers
127. Mannheim-Neckarau
128. Ladenburg
129. Verce
130. Dunafalva
131. Tahittfalu-Balhavr
132. Szigetmonostor-Horny
134. Ba
136. Mumpf
137. Sisseln
135. Aegerten
Pl. 24
254
141
138. Passau-Instadt
139. Visegrd-Gizellamajor
140
142. Liberchies II
140-141. Zurzach-Sidelen and Rheinheim
144. Schaan
143. Wilten-Innsbruck
145. Irgenhausen
146. Kleinbasel
Pl. 25
255
147. Untersaal
148 b. Zeiselmauer/Cannabiaca?
150. Dunabogdny/Cirpi
148 a. Zeiselmauer/Cannabiaca?
149. Rusovce/Gerulata
151. Almsfzit/Odiavum
152 a. Dormagen/Durnomagus
152 b. Dormagen/Durnomagus
153 a. Eining/Abusina
153 b. Eining/Abusina
Pl. 26
256
155. Altrip
157. Goldberg-Trkheim
159. Mogorjelo
158. Zrich-Lindenhof
Pl. 27
257
161 Kfellusin
162 Kerratin
Pl. 28
258
167 Mleke
Pl. 29
259
176 Yotvata
178 En Boqeq
Pl. 30
260
181 El-Habbat
Pl. 31
261
188 Ad-Diyateh
190 El-Anderin-Kastron
Pl. 32
262
192 Suhumi/Sebastopolis
194 Mamaj-Kala
198 Ed Deir
Pl. 33
263
203 Mselletin
Pl. 34
264
207 Chigarnia/Uppenna
208 Ksar Graouch
Pl. 35
265
213 An Tebournok/Tubernuc
214 M'daourouch/Madauros
Pl. 36
266
218 Bourada
217 M'doukal/Centenarium Aqua Viva
220 Timgad/Thamugadi
221 Tobna/Tubunae
Pl. 37
267
Pl. 38
268
2nd c.
6th c.
Late Roman
Early Byzantine
Mediaeval
Pl. 40
270
Pl. 41
271
a. N-W tower
b. S-W tower
d. gate
c. S-E tower
Pl. 43
273
Pl. 44
274
fountain
Pl. 46
276
Pl. 47
277
Phase I
Phase II
Phase III
Pl. 49
279
b
246. [12] Ravna/Campsa
c
245. [12] Ravna/Campsa
Pl. 50
280
Pl. 51
281
Pl. 52
282
Pl. 54
284
10
30
20
Pl. 55
285
40
50
c
259. [19] Ada-Kaleh Island
Pl. 56
286
Pl. 57
287
Pl. 58
288
Pl. 59
289
Pl. 61
291
Pl. 62
292
Pl. 63
293
Pl. 64
294
Pl. 65
295
Pl. 67
297
Pl. 68
298
Pl. 69
299
Pl. 70
300
Pl. 71
301
Pl. 72
302
Pl. 73
303
Pl. 74
304
nespat
nespat
Pl. 75
305
Pl. 76
306
Pl. 77
307
5th c. buildings
6th c.
Abandoned fortification
Quadriburgium
Pl. 78
308
Pl. 79
309
b
309.[60] korpilovci
Pl. 80
310
Pl. 81
311
Pl. 82
312
Pl. 83
313
Pl. 84
314
later rebuilding
Pl. 86
316
Pl. 87
317
Pl. 88
318
Pl. 89
319
BURGUS
Pl. 93
323
Pl. 94
324
Pl. 95
325
Pl. 96
326
Pl. 97
327
Pl. 98
328
6th c.
Pl. 99
329
Pl. 100
330
[25] Korbovo
[83] Ras
[9] Pesaa
[101] Pomotnik
[82] Radanja
[81] Kozjak-Cvilig
Koblenz-Kleiner Laufen
Oberes Brgli
Au-Hard
Mauthen
Jppe
Tgerbach
Ratihard
Zaviet Msus
[9] Pesaa
[82] Radanja
[81] Kozjak-Cvilig
[101] Pomotnik
Finningen-Neu Ulm
Passau-Haibach
Bacharnsdorf
Rheinsulz
Vrhnika-Turnove
[6] Zidinac
[37] Batin
0
0
20 m
Ba
20 m
Szentendre-Dera patak
[27 A] Ljubievac
Zeiselmauer
[32] Borej
[30] Mihajlovac-"Blato"
Visegrd-Lepence
Stelli
csny
Lenyfalu
Budakalsz
Asperden
Moers-Asberg
[24 A] Rtkovo-Glamija
[47] Garvn/Dinogetia
Hulsberg
Pl. 108
338
[89] Babadag-Topraichioi
[87] Pakoevo
Eisenberg
Frauenberg-Weltenburg
[76] Bistrica
[67] Podvis
Kleinbasel
Untersaal
En Boqeq
Upper Zohar
[73] Drenkovo
[66] Kula
Vrelo-arkamen
Gamzigrad
Visegrd-Gizellamajor
Qusair as-Saila/Tetrapyrgium
Khan el-Abyad
Khan el-Hallabat
[23] Hinova
[5] Gornea
[18] Orova/Dierna
[17] Tekija/Transdierna
[12] Ravna
[74] Sofija-Orlandovci
[7] Dobra-Saldum
[27 B] Ljubievac
[24 B] Rtkovo-Glamija
[12] Ravna
[34] Radujevac
[[65] Vidrovgrad
[54] Ovidiu
[72] Pirdop
[105] Djadovo
[103] Ljubenovo
[11] Boljetin
[58 B] Cape abla B
[100] Sopot-Hissarlk
[78] Bregovina
[70] Kostinbrod
[94] Tvrdica
[95] Obroite
[51] Dunavu de Jos
[86] Zelenikovo
[8] Bosman
[85] Ljubanci
[66] Kula
Dolenci/Castra Nicaea
ezava/Novae
Gamzigrad
Visegrd-Gizellamajor
Qusair as-Saila
Khan el-Abyad
Khan el-Hallabat
El-Lejjun
Passau-Instadt/Boiotro
Contra Aquincum
Gorsium
Alshetny
Abrittus
Pl. 121
351
[23] Hinova
[23] Hinova
[5] Gornea
[12] Ravna
Qasr el-Hallabat
El-Habbat
El-Anderin-South Church
[17] Tekija
[17] Tekija
Uppenna
[18] Orova
Tubernuc
[5] Gornea
Bourada
Pl. 122
352
Umm el-Jimal
Karasura period C
Pautalia-Hissarlk
Madara
Dionysopolis (Balcik-Horizont)
Kamen Brjag-Jajlata
Madauros
381. Wall thickening for access staircase (late 5th 6th c.)
Pl. 123
353
Ammaedara
[7] Dobra-Saldum
[24 B] Rtkovo-Glamija
[60] korpilovci
[26] Milutinovac
[54] Ovidiu
Skopje-Kale
Iustiniana Prima
[103] Ljubenovo
[54] Ovidiu
Thamugadi
Anastasiana
Thamallula
Madauros
[72] Pirdop
Gadiaufala
Ksar Graouch
Diana Veteranorum
384. Rectangular corner-towers with lateral-type entrance (late 5th 6th c.)
Pl. 125
355
[7] Dobra-Saldum
Apsarus
[12] Ravna
[60] korpilovci
[105] Djadovo
Tubunae
Thamugadi
Pl. 126
356
Madauros
El-Anderin-South Church
[105] Djadovo
Mesembria
Madara
Iustiniana Prima
Resafa
Onhezmos