The study of constructions and military architecture in the Late Roman and Early Byzantine periods is refl ected 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 period. 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. Th is 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 approach.
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–6th c. 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.
Author(s): Constantin Băjenaru
Series: Natural Museum of Romanian History. The Center for Roman Military Studies, 8
Publisher: Editura Mega
Year: 2010
Language: English
Pages: 358
City: Cluj-Napoca
Acknowledgements 7
I. Introduction 9
II. The Dioceses of Thrace and Dacia: Administrative and Military Organization 13
Administrative organization: dioceses, provinces, cities 13
Military organization 21
III. Roads and Fortifications in the Dioceses of Thrace and Dacia 25
Roads 25
Fortifications – literary and epigraphic sources 32
Fortifications – archaeological sources 40
1. Large fortifications 40
2. Medium-size fortifications 44
IV. Minor Fortifications During the Late Empire 51
Terminology 51
Hellenistic and Early Roman origins 54
The regional evidence 62
1. Western provinces 62
2. Southern Balkans 77
3. Eastern provinces 78
4. Africa 86
V. Minor Fortifications in the Dioceses of Thrace and Dacia 93
Gazetteer 93
Typology, chronology, architectural elements 161
1. Towers ('turres'/'pyrgoi') 161
2. 'Burgus'-type 164
3. 'Quadriburgium'-type 169
4. Small 'castellum'-type 179
VI. Conclusions 183
List of abbreviations 187
Bibliography 191
List of illustrations 217
Illustrations 231