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Roman Dacia

Roman Dacia (/ˈdʃə/ DAY-shə; also known as Dacia Traiana, Latin for 'Trajan Dacia'; or Dacia Felix, 'Fertile/Happy Dacia') was a province of the Roman Empire from 106 to 271–275 AD. Its territory consisted of what are now the regions of Oltenia, Transylvania and Banat (today all in Romania, except the last one which is split between Romania, Hungary, and Serbia). During Roman rule, it was organized as an imperial province on the borders of the empire. It is estimated that the population of Roman Dacia ranged from 650,000 to 1,200,000. It was conquered by Trajan (98–117) after two campaigns that devastated the Dacian Kingdom of Decebalus. However, the Romans did not occupy its entirety; Crișana, Maramureș, and most of Moldavia remained under the Free Dacians.

Roman Dacia
  • Provincia Dacia (Latin)
  • Ἐπαρχία Δακίας (Ancient Greek)
Province of the Roman Empire
106–271/275

Roman province of Dacia (125 AD)
CapitalUlpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa
History
Historical eraClassical Antiquity
• Annexed by Trajan
106
• Withdrawal by Roman Emperor Aurelian
271/275
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part of

After its integration into the empire, Roman Dacia saw constant administrative division. In 119, it was divided into two departments: Dacia Superior ("Upper Dacia") and Dacia Inferior ("Lower Dacia"; later named Dacia Malvensis). Between 124 and around 158, Dacia Superior was divided into two provinces, Dacia Apulensis and Dacia Porolissensis. The three provinces would later be unified in 166 and be known as Tres Daciae ("Three Dacias") due to the ongoing Marcomannic Wars. New mines were opened and ore extraction intensified, while agriculture, stock breeding, and commerce flourished in the province. Roman Dacia was of great importance to the military stationed throughout the Balkans and became an urban province, with about ten cities known and all of them originating from old military camps. Eight of these held the highest rank of colonia. Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa was the financial, religious, and legislative center and where the imperial procurator (finance officer) had his seat, while Apulum was Roman Dacia's military center.

From its creation, Roman Dacia suffered great political and military threats. The Free Dacians, allied with the Sarmatians, made constant raids in the province. These were followed by the Carpi (a Dacian tribe) and the newly arrived Germanic tribes (Goths, Taifali, Heruli, and Bastarnae) allied with them. All this made the province difficult for the Roman emperors to maintain, already being virtually lost during the reign of Gallienus (253–268). Aurelian (270–275) would formally relinquish Roman Dacia in 271 or 275 AD. He evacuated his troops and civilian administration from Dacia, and founded Dacia Aureliana with its capital at Serdica in Lower Moesia. The Romanized population still left was abandoned, and its fate after the Roman withdrawal is controversial. According to one theory, the Latin spoken in Dacia, mostly in modern Romania, became the Romanian language, making the Romanians descendants of the Daco-Romans (the Romanized population of Dacia). The opposing theory states that the origin of the Romanians actually lies on the Balkan Peninsula.

Background

 
The Dacian Kingdom around 100 AD, before the Roman conquest

The Dacians and the Getae frequently interacted with the Romans prior to Dacia's incorporation into the Roman Empire.[1] However, Roman attention on the area around the lower Danube was sharpened when Burebista[1] (82–44 BC)[2] unified the native tribes and began an aggressive campaign of expansion. His kingdom extended to Pannonia in the west and reached the Black Sea to the east, while to the south his authority extended into the Balkans.[3]

By 74 BC,[3] the Roman legions under Gaius Scribonius Curio reached the lower Danube and proceeded to come into contact with the Dacians.[4] Roman concern over the rising power and influence of Burebista was amplified when he began to play an active part in Roman politics. His last minute decision just before the Battle of Pharsalus to participate in the Roman Republic's civil war by supporting Pompey meant that once the Pompeians were dealt with, Julius Caesar would turn his eye towards Dacia.[5] As part of Caesar's planned Parthian campaign of 44 BC, he prepared to cross into Dacia and eliminate Burebista, thereby hopefully causing the breakup of his kingdom.[6] Although this expedition into Dacia did not happen due to Caesar's assassination, Burebista failed to bring about any true unification of the tribes he ruled. Following a plot which saw him assassinated, his kingdom fractured into four distinct political entities, later becoming five, each ruled by minor kings.[7][8]

From the death of Burebista to the rise of Decebalus, Roman forces continued to clash against the Dacians and the Getae.[1] Constant raiding by the tribes into the adjacent provinces of Moesia and Pannonia caused the local governors and the emperors to undertake a number of punitive actions against the Dacians.[1] All of this kept the Roman Empire and the Dacians in constant social, diplomatic, and political interaction during much of the late pre-Roman period.[1] This saw the occasional granting of favoured status to the Dacians in the manner of being identified as amicii et socii – "friends and allies" – of Rome, although by the time of Octavianus this was tied up with the personal patronage of important Roman individuals.[1] An example of this was seen in Octavianus' actions during his conflict with Marcus Antonius. Seeking to obtain an ally who could threaten Antonius' European provinces, in 35 BC Octavianus offered an alliance with the Dacians, whereby he would marry the daughter of the Dacian King, Cotiso, and in exchange Cotiso would wed Octavianus' daughter, Julia.[9][10]

 

Although it is believed that the custom of providing royal hostages to the Romans may have commenced sometime during the first half of the 1st century BC, it was certainly occurring by Octavianus' reign and it continued to be practised during the late pre-Roman period.[11] On the flip side, ancient sources have attested to the presence of Roman merchants and artisans in Dacia, while the region also served as a haven for runaway Roman slaves.[11] This cultural and mercantile exchange saw the gradual spread of Roman influence throughout the region, most clearly seen in the area around the Orăștie Mountains.[11]

 
Trajan receives homage from a Dacian chieftain who betrayed Decebalus

The arrival of the Flavian dynasty, in particular the accession of the emperor Domitian, saw an escalation in the level of conflict along the lower and middle Danube.[12] In approximately 84 or 85 AD the Dacians, led by King Decebalus, crossed the Danube into Moesia, wreaking havoc and killing the Moesian governor Gaius Oppius Sabinus.[13] Domitian responded by reorganising Moesia into Moesia Inferior and Moesia Superior and launching a war against Decebalus. Unable to finish the war due to troubles on the German frontier, Domitian concluded a treaty with the Dacians that was heavily criticized at the time.[14] This would serve as a precedent to the emperor Trajan's wars of conquest in Dacia.[12] Trajan led the Roman legions across the Danube, penetrating Dacia and focusing on the important area around the Orăștie Mountains.[15] In 102,[16] after a series of engagements, negotiations led to a peace settlement where Decebalus agreed to demolish his forts while allowing the presence of a Roman garrison at Sarmizegetusa Regia (Grădiștea Muncelului, Romania) to ensure Dacian compliance with the treaty.[15] Trajan also ordered his engineer, Apollodorus of Damascus,[17] to design and build a bridge across the Danube at Drobeta.[16]

Trajan's second Dacian campaign in 105–106 was very specific in its aim of expansion and conquest.[15] The offensive targeted Sarmizegetusa Regia.[18] The Romans besieged Decebalus' capital, which surrendered and was destroyed.[16] The Dacian king and a handful of his followers withdrew into the mountains, but their resistance was short-lived and Decebalus committed suicide.[19] Other Dacian nobles, however, were either captured or chose to surrender.[20] One of those who surrendered revealed the location of the Dacian royal treasury, which was of enormous value: 500,000 pounds (230,000 kilograms) of gold and 1,000,000 pounds (450,000 kilograms) of silver.[20]

It is an excellent idea of yours to write about the Dacian war. There is no subject which offers such scope and such a wealth of original material, no subject so poetic and almost legendary although its facts are true. You will describe new rivers set flowing over the land, new bridges built across rivers, and camps clinging to sheer precipices; you will tell of a king driven from his capital and finally to death, but courageous to the end; you will record a double triumph one the first over a nation hitherto unconquered, the other a final victory.

— Pliny the Younger: Letters (Book VIII, Letter 4: To Caninius Rufus)[21]

Dacia under the Antonine and Severan emperors (106–235)

Establishment (106–117)

Trajan conquered the Dacians, under King Decibalus, and made Dacia, across the Danube in the soil of barbary, a province that in circumference had ten times 100,000 paces; but it was lost under Imperator Gallienus, and, after Romans had been transferred from there by Aurelian, two Dacias were made in the regions of Moesia and Dardania.

— Festus: Breviarium of the Accomplishments of the Roman People (VIII.2)[22]

With the annexation of Decebalus' kingdom, Dacia was turned into Rome's newest province, only the second such acquisition since the death of Augustus nearly a century before.[23] Decebalus' Sarmatian allies to the north were still present in the area, requiring a number of campaigns that did not cease until 107 at the earliest;[24] however, by the end of 106, the legions began erecting new castra along the frontiers.[25] Trajan returned to Rome in the middle of June 107.[26]

Roman sources list Dacia as an imperial province on 11 August 106.[27] It was governed by an imperial legate of consular standing, supported by two legati legionis who were in charge of each of the two legions stationed in Dacia. The procurator Augusti was responsible for managing the taxation of the province and expenditure by the military.[28] The territory conquered by Trajan was portioned between the newly formed province and the existing provinces bordering imperial Dacia. Moesia Inferior absorbed what eventually became South Moldavia, Muntenia, eastern Oltenia,[29] and the south-eastern edge of the Carpathian Mountains,[30] while Dacia Traiana was composed of the western portions of Oltenia, Transylvania, and Banat.[29]

 
The provinces of the Roman Empire in 117, with Dacia highlighted
 
The lower Danube in Roman times map by Gustav Droysen

To Roman Dacia's east and south was the province of Moesia, which the emperor Domitian had split into two in 86 AD – Moesia Superior, having its capital at Singidunum (modern Belgrade in Serbia), and Moesia Inferior, with Tomis as its capital (modern Constanța, Romania).[31] Along Roman Dacia's exposed western border and stretching towards the vast Pannonian Plain lived the Iazyges, a Sarmatian tribe.[32] Northern Moldavia was the home of the Bastarnae,[33] Roxolani,[34] and Carpi,[35] while the northern section of Transylvania was populated by the remaining non-Romanized Dacians and another Dacian tribe, the Costoboci.[36]

Transforming Dacia into a province was a very resource-intensive process. Traditional Roman methods were employed, including the creation of urban infrastructure such as Roman baths, forums and temples, the establishment of Roman roads, and the creation of colonies composed of retired soldiers.[37] However, excluding Trajan's attempts to encourage colonists to move into the new province, the imperial government did hardly anything to promote resettlement from existing provinces into Dacia.[37]

 
The sanctuaries in the ruined Sarmizegetusa Regia, the capital of ancient Dacia

An immediate effect of the wars leading to the Roman conquest was a decrease in the population in the province.[38] Crito wrote that approximately 500,000 Dacians were enslaved and deported, a portion of which were transported to Rome to participate in the gladiatorial games (or lusiones) as part of the celebrations to mark the emperor's triumph.[24] To compensate for the depletion of the population, the Romans carried out a program of official colonisation, establishing urban centres made up of both Roman citizens and non-citizens from across the empire.[39] Nevertheless, native Dacians remained at the periphery of the province and in rural settings, while local power elites were encouraged to support the provincial administration, as per traditional Roman colonial practice.[40]

Trajan established the Dacian capital, Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa, some 40 kilometers (25 miles) west of the ruined Sarmizegetusa Regia.[41] Initially serving as a base for the Legio IV Flavia Felix,[42] it soon was settled by the retired veterans who had served in the Dacian Wars, principally the Fifth (Macedonia), Ninth (Claudia), and Fourteenth (Gemina) legions.[43]

It is generally assumed that Trajan's reign saw the creation of the Roman road network within imperial Dacia, with any pre-existing natural communication lines quickly converted into paved Roman roads[44] which were soon extended into a more extensive road network.[44] However, only two roads have been attested to have been created at Trajan's explicit command: one was an arterial road that linked the military camps at Napoca and Potaissa (modern Cluj-Napoca and Turda, Romania).[44] Epigraphic evidence on the milliarium of Aiton indicates that this stretch of road was finished sometime during 109–110 AD.[45] The second road was a major arterial road that passed through Apulum (modern Alba Iulia, Romania), and stretched from the Black Sea in the east all the way to Pannonia Inferior in the west and presumably beyond.[44]

Legati Augusti pro praetore under Trajan[46]
Name From To
Julius Sabinus 105 107/109
Decimus Terentius Scaurianus 109 110/111
Gaius Avidius Nigrinus 112 113
Quintus Baebius Macer 114 114
Gaius Julius Quadratus Bassus ? 117

First re-organizations (117–138)

 
Emperor Hadrian (117–138), as depicted in the Antalya Museum
 
Bronze coin of the emperor Hadrian commemorating his visit to Dacia

Hadrian was at Antioch in Syria when word came through of the death of Trajan.[47] He could not return to Rome, as he was advised that Quadratus Bassus, ordered by Trajan to protect the new Dacian territories north of the Danube, had died there while on campaign.[48] As a result of taking several legions and numerous auxiliary regiments with him to Parthia, Trajan had left Dacia and the remaining Danubian provinces below strength.[49][50] The Roxolani allied themselves with the Iazyges to revolt against Rome, as they were angry over a Roman decision to cease payments to which Trajan had agreed.[51] Therefore, Hadrian dispatched the armies from the east ahead of him, and departed Syria as soon as he was able.[50]

By this time, Hadrian had grown so frustrated with the continual problems in the territories north of the Danube that he contemplated withdrawing from Dacia.[52] As an emergency measure, Hadrian dismantled Apollodorus' bridge across the Danube, concerned about the threat posed by barbarian incursions across the Olt River and a southward push between a number of Trajan's colonia and the castrum at Bersobis.[50]

 
Map of Roman Dacia

By 118, Hadrian himself had taken to the field against the Roxolani and the Iazyges, and although he defeated them, he agreed to reinstate the subsidies to the Roxolani.[51][53] Hadrian then decided to abandon certain portions of Trajan's Dacian conquests. The territories annexed to Moesia Inferior (Southern Moldavia, the south-eastern edge of the Carpathian Mountains and the plains of Muntenia and Oltenia) were returned to the Roxolani.[30][53] As a result, Moesia Inferior reverted once again to the original boundaries it possessed prior to the acquisition of Dacia.[29] The portions of Moesia Inferior to the north of the Danube were split off and refashioned into a new province called Dacia Inferior.[29] Trajan's original province of Dacia was relabelled Dacia Superior.[29] It was at this time that Hadrian moved the Legio IV Flavia Felix from its base at Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa and ordered it stationed in Moesia Superior.[54]

By 124, an additional province called Dacia Porolissensis was created in the northern portion of Dacia Superior,[55] roughly located in north-western Transylvania.[29] Since it had become tradition since the time of Augustus that former consuls could only govern provinces as imperial legates where more than one legion was present, Dacia Superior was administered by a senator of praetorian rank.[55] This meant that the imperial legate of Dacia Superior only had one legion under his command, stationed at Apulum.[28] Dacia Inferior and Dacia Porolissensis were under the command of praesidial procurators of ducenary rank.[28]

Hadrian vigorously exploited the opportunities for mining in the new province.[56] The emperors monopolized the revenue generated from mining by leasing the operations of the mines to members of the Equestrian order, who employed a large number of individuals to manage the operations.[57] In 124, the emperor visited Napoca and made the city a municipium.[58]

Consolidation (138–161)

 
Emperor Antoninus Pius (138–161)

The accession of Antoninus Pius saw the arrival of an emperor who took a cautious approach to the defense of the provinces.[59] The large amount of milestones dated to his reign demonstrates that he was particularly concerned with ensuring that the roads were in a constant state of repair.[60] Stamped tiles show that the amphitheater at Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa, which had been built during the earliest years of the colonia, was repaired under his rule.[61] In addition, given the exposed position of the larger of the Roman fortifications at Porolissum (near Moigrad, Romania), the camp was reconstructed using stone, and given sturdier walls for defensive purposes.[62]

Following a revolt around 158, Antoninus Pius undertook another reorganization of the Dacian provinces.[62] Dacia Porolissensis (in what is now northern Transylvania), with Porolissum as its capital, remained as it was. Dacia Superior was renamed Dacia Apulensis (in Banat and southern Transylvania), with Apulum as its capital,[62] while Dacia Inferior was transformed into Dacia Malvensis (situated at Oltenia). Romula was its capital (modern Reșca Dobrosloveni, Romania).[63] As per Hadrian's earlier reorganization, each zone was governed by equestrian procurators, and all were responsible to the senatorial governor in Apulensis.[62]

Marcomannic Wars and their effects (161–193)

 
Statue of Emperor Marcus Aurelius (161–180), on Piazza del Campidoglio, Rome

Soon after the accession of Marcus Aurelius in 161 AD, it was clear that trouble was brewing along Rome's northern frontiers, as local tribes began to be pressured by migrating tribes to their north.[64][65] By 166 AD, Marcus had reorganized Dacia once again, merging the three Dacian provinces into one called Tres Daciae ("Three Dacias"),[66] a move that was geared to consolidate an exposed province inhabited by numerous tribes in the face of increasing threats along the Danubian frontier.[67] As the province now contained two legions (Legio XIII Gemina at Apulum was joined by Legio V Macedonica, stationed at Potaissa), the imperial legate had to be of consular rank, with Marcus apparently assigning Sextus Calpurnius Agricola.[66] The reorganization saw the existing praesidial procurators of Dacia Porolissensis and Dacia Malvensis continue in office, and added to their ranks was a third procurator for Dacia Apulensis, all operating under the direct supervision of the consular legate,[68] who was stationed at the new provincial capital at Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa.[69]

Dacia, with its northern, eastern, and western frontiers exposed to attacks, could not easily be defended. When barbarian incursions resumed during the reign of Marcus Aurelius, the defences in Dacia were hard pressed to halt all of the raids, leaving exposed the provinces of Upper and Lower Moesia.[70] Throughout 166 and 167 AD, barbarian tribes (the Quadi and Marcomanni)[71] began to pour across the Danube into Pannonia, Noricum, Raetia, and drove through Dacia before bursting into Moesia.[72] A conflict would spark in northern Dacia after 167[73] when the Iazyges, having been thrust out of Pannonia, focused their energies on Dacia and took the gold mines at Alburnus Maior (modern Roșia Montană, Romania).[74] The last date found on the wax tablets discovered in the mineshafts there (which had been hidden when an enemy attack seemed imminent) is 29 May 167.[73] The suburban villas at Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa were burned, and the camp at Slăveni was destroyed by the Marcomanni.[53] By the time Marcus Aurelius reached Aquileia in 168 AD, the Iazyges had taken over 100,000 Roman captives and destroyed several Roman castra, including the fort at Tibiscum (modern Jupa in Romania).[75][76]

 
Emperor Pertinax (193). Statue found at Apulum. On display at the National Museum of the Union, Alba Iulia, Romania.

Fighting continued in Dacia over the next two years, and by 169, the governor of the province Sextus Calpurnius Agricola, was forced to give up his command – it is suspected that he either contracted the plague or died in battle.[77] The emperor decided to temporarily split the province once again between the three sub-provinces, with the imperial legate of Moesia Superior, Marcus Claudius Fronto, taking on the governorship of the central sub-province of Dacia Apulensis.[77] Dacia Malvensis was possibly assigned to its procurator, Macrinius Avitus, who defeated the Langobardi and Obii. The future emperor Pertinax was also a procurator in Dacia during this time, although his exact role is not known. Very unpopular in Dacia, Pertinax was eventually dismissed.[77] By 170, Marcus Aurelius appointed Marcus Claudius Fronto as the governor of the entire Dacian province.[77] Later that year, Fronto's command was extended to include the governorship of Moesia Superior once again.[78] He did not keep it for long; by the end of 170, Fronto was defeated and killed in battle against the Iazyges.[78][79] His replacement as governor of Dacia was Sextus Cornelius Clemens.[78]

That same year (170) the Costoboci (whose lands were to the north or northeast of Dacia)[80] swept through Dacia on their way south.[81] The now weakened empire could not prevent the movement of tribespeople into an exposed Dacia during 171,[82] and Marcus Aurelius was forced to enter into diplomatic negotiations in an attempt to break up some of the barbarian alliances.[82] In 171, the Astingi invaded Dacia; after initially defeating the Costoboci, they continued their attacks on the province.[83] The Romans negotiated a settlement with the Astingi, whereby they agreed to leave Dacia and settle in the lands of the Costoboci.[83] In the meantime, plots of land were distributed to some 12,000 dispossessed and wandering tribespeople, in an attempt to prevent them from becoming a threat to the province if they continued to roam at the edges of Dacia.[84]

The Astingi, led by their chieftains Raüs and Raptus, came into Dacia with their entire households, hoping to secure both money and land in return for their alliance. But failing of their purpose, they left their wives and children under the protection of Clemens, until they should acquire the land of the Costoboci by their arms; but upon conquering that people, they proceeded to injure Dacia no less than before. The Lacringi, fearing that Clemens in his dread of them might lead these newcomers into the land which they themselves were inhabiting, attacked them while off their guard and won a decisive victory. As a result, the Astingi committed no further acts of hostility against the Romans, but in response to urgent supplications addressed to Marcus they received from him both money and the privilege of asking for land in case they should inflict some injury upon those who were then fighting against him.

— Cassius Dio: Roman History – Epitome of Book LXXII[85][86]

Throughout this period, the tribes bordering Dacia to the east, such as the Roxolani, did not participate in the mass invasions of the empire.[79] Traditionally seen as a vindication of Trajan's decision to create the province of Dacia as a wedge between the western and eastern Danubian tribes,[79][87] Dacia's exposed position meant that the Romans had a greater reliance on the use of "client-states" to ensure its protection from invasion.[87] While this worked in the case of the Roxolani, the use of the Roman-client relationships that allowed the Romans to pit one supported tribe against another facilitated the conditions that created the larger tribal federations that emerged with the Quadi and the Marcomanni.[88]

By 173 AD, the Marcomanni had been defeated;[89] however, the war with the Iazyges and Quadi continued, as Roman strongholds along the Tisza and Danube rivers were attacked by the Iazyges, followed by a battle in Pannonia in which the Iazyges were defeated.[90] Consequently, Marcus Aurelius turned his full attention against the Iazyges and Quadi. He crushed the Quadi in 174 AD, defeating them in battle on the frozen Danube river, after which they sued for peace.[91] The emperor then turned his attention to the Iazyges; after defeating them and throwing them out of Dacia, the Senate awarded him the title of Samarticus Maximus in 175 AD.[79] Conscious of the need to create a permanent solution to the problems on the empire's northern frontiers,[79] Marcus Aurelius relaxed some of his restrictions on the Marcomanni and the Iazyges. In particular, he allowed the Iazyges to travel through imperial Dacia to trade with the Roxolani, so long as they had the governor's approval.[92] At the same time he was determined to implement a plan to annex the territories of the Marcomanni and the Iazyges as new provinces, only to be derailed by the revolt of Avidius Cassius.[79][93]

 
Emperor Commodus (180–193), as depicted in a museum in Ephesos, Turkey

With the emperor urgently needed elsewhere, Rome once again re-established its system of alliances with the bordering tribes along the empire's northern frontier.[94][95] However, pressure was soon exerted again with the advent of Germanic peoples who started to settle on Dacia's northern borders, leading to the resumption of the northern war.[94][96] In 178, Marcus Aurelius probably appointed Pertinax as governor of Dacia,[97] and by 179 AD, the emperor was once again north of the Danube, campaigning against the Quadi and the Buri. Victorious, the emperor was on the verge of converting a large territory to the north-west of Dacia into Roman provinces when he died in 180.[98][99] Marcus was succeeded by his son, Commodus, who had accompanied him. The young man quickly concluded a peace with the warring tribes before returning to Rome.[94]

Commodus granted peace to the Buri when they sent envoys. Previously he had declined to do so, in spite of their frequent requests, because they were strong, and because it was not peace that they wanted, but the securing of a respite to enable them to make further preparations; but now that they were exhausted he made peace with them, receiving hostages and getting back many captives from the Buri themselves as well as 15,000 from the others, and he compelled the others to take an oath that they would never dwell in nor use for pasturage a 5-mile strip of their territory next to Dacia. The same Sabinianus also, when twelve thousand of the neighboring Dacians had been driven out of their own country and were on the point of aiding the others, dissuaded them from their purpose, promising them that some land in our Dacia should be given them.

— Cassius Dio: Roman History – Epitome of Book LXXIII[100][101]

Conflict continued in Dacia during the reign of Commodus. The notoriously unreliable Historia Augusta mentions a limited insurrection that erupted in Dacia approximately 185 AD.[94] The same source also wrote of a defeat of the Dacian tribes who lived outside the province.[94] Commodus' legates devastated a territory some 8 km (5.0 mi) deep along the north of the castrum at modern day Gilău to establish a buffer in the hope of preventing further barbarian incursions.[102]

The Moors and the Dacians were conquered during his reign, and peace was established in the Pannonias, but all by his legates, since such was the manner of his life. The provincials in Britain, Dacia, and Germany attempted to cast off his yoke, but all these attempts were put down by his generals.

— Historia Augusta – The Life of Commodus[103]

Revival under the Severans (193–235)

 
Emperor Septimius Severus (193–211). Marble bust from the Glyptothek in Munich.

The reign of Septimius Severus saw a measure of peace descend upon the province, with no foreign attacks recorded. Damage inflicted on the military camps during the extensive period of warfare of the preceding reigns was repaired.[104] Severus extended the province's eastern frontier some 14 km (8.7 mi) east of the Olt River, and completed the Limes Transalutanus. The work included the construction of 14 fortified camps spread over a distance of approximately 225 km (140 mi), stretching from the castra of Poiana (situated near the Danube River, in modern Flămânda, Romania) in the south to Cumidava (modern day Brețcu in Romania).[105] His reign saw an increase in the number of Roman municipia across the province,[106] while Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa and Apulum acquired the ius Italicum.[107]

As part of his military reforms, Severus allowed Roman soldiers to live away from the fortified camps, within the accompanying canabae, where they were allowed to tend nearby plots of land.[108] He also permitted the soldiers to marry local women; consequently, if the soldier was a Roman citizen, his children inherited his citizenship. For those soldiers who were not Roman citizens, both he and his children were granted citizenship upon his discharge from the army.[108]

 
Bust of Emperor Caracalla (211–217). Cast in the Pushkin Museum (Moscow) after original in Naples.

The next emperor, Caracalla, in order to increase tax revenue and boost his popularity (at least according to the historian Cassius Dio), extended the citizenship to all males throughout the empire, with the exception of slaves.[109] In 213, on his way to the east to begin his Parthian campaign, Caracalla passed through Dacia. While there, he undertook diplomatic maneuvers to disturb the alliances between a number of tribes, in particular the Marcomanni and the Quadi.[110][111] At Porolissum he had Gaiobomarus, the king of the Quadi, killed under the pretext of conducting peace negotiations.[112] There may have been military conflict with one or more of the Danubian tribes.[110][111] Although there are inscriptions that indicate that during Caracalla's visit there was some repair or reconstruction work undertaken at Porolissum[113] and that the military unit stationed there, Cohors V Lingonum, erected an equestrian statue of the emperor,[114] certain modern authors, such as Philip Parker and Ion Grumeza, claim that Caracalla continued to extend the Limes Transalutanus as well as add further territory to Dacia by pushing the border around 50 km (31 mi) east of the Olt River,[115][116] though it is unclear what evidence they are using to support these statements, and the timeframes associated with Caracalla's movements do not support any extensive reorganization in the province.[note 1][117] In 218, Caracalla's successor, Macrinus, returned a number of non-Romanized Dacian hostages whom Caracalla had taken, possibly as a result of some unrest caused by the tribes after Caracalla's assassination.[118]

And the Dacians, after ravaging portions of Dacia and showing an eagerness for further war, now desisted, when they got back the hostages that Caracallus, under the name of an alliance, had taken from them.

— Cassius Dio: Roman History – Epitome of Book LXXIX[119][120]

There are few epigraphs extant in Dacia dating from the reign of Alexander Severus, the final Severan emperor.[104] Under his reign, the Council of Three Dacias met at Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa, and the gates, towers, and praetorium of Ad Mediam (Mehadia, Romania) camp were restored.[121]

Life in Roman Dacia

Native Dacians

 
Cast of a captive Dacian in the early 2nd century presented at the Pushkin Museum

Evidence concerning the continued existence of a native Dacian population within Roman Dacia is not as apparent as that of Germans, Celts, Thracians, or Illyrians in other provinces.[122] There is relatively poor documentation surrounding the existence of native or indigenous Dacians in the Roman towns that were established after Dacia's incorporation into the empire.[123]

Although Eutropius,[124] supported by minor references in the works of Cassius Dio[125] and Julian the Apostate,[126][127] describes the widespread depopulation of the province after the siege of Sarmizegetusa Regia and the suicide of king Decebalus,[29] there are issues with this interpretation. The remaining manuscripts of Eutropius' Breviarium ab urbe condita, which is the principal source for the depopulation of Roman Dacia after the conquest, are not consistent. Some versions describe the depletion of men after the war; other variants describe the depletion of things, or possibly resources, after Trajan's conquest.[40]

There are such interpretations of archaeological evidence which shows the continuation of traditional Dacian burial practices; ceramic manufacturing continued throughout the Roman period, in both the province as well as the periphery where Roman control was non-existent.[40] Differing interpretations can be made from the final scene on Trajan's Column, which either depicts a Dacian emigration, accelerating the depopulation of Dacia,[128] or Dacians going back to their settlements after yielding to Roman authority.[129]

While it is certain that colonists in large numbers were imported from all over the empire to settle in Roman Dacia,[40] this appears to be true for the newly created Roman towns only. The lack of epigraphic evidence for native Dacian names in the towns suggests an urban–rural split between Roman multi-ethnic urban centres and the native Dacian rural population.[40]

On at least two occasions the Dacians rebelled against Roman authority: first in 117 AD, which caused the return of Trajan from the east,[130] and in 158 AD when they were put down by Marcus Statius Priscus.[131]

The archaeological evidence from various types of settlements, especially in the Oraștie Mountains, demonstrates the deliberate destruction of hill forts during the annexation of Dacia, but this does not rule out a continuity of occupation once the traumas of the initial conquest had passed.[132] Hamlets containing traditional Dacian architecture, such as Obreja and Noșlac, have been dated to the 2nd century AD, implying that they arose at the same time as the Roman urban centres.[132]

Some settlements do show a clear continuity of occupation from pre-Roman times into the provincial period, such as Cetea and Cicău.[133] Archaeological evidence taken from pottery show a continued occupation of native Dacians in these and other areas. Architectural forms native to pre-Roman Dacia, such as the traditional sunken houses and storage pits, remained during Roman times. Such housing continued to be erected well into the Roman period, even in settlements which clearly show an establishment after the Roman annexation, such as Obreja.[134] Altogether, approximately 46 sites have been noted as existing on a spot in both the La Tène and Roman periods.[134]

Where archaeology attests to a continuing Dacian presence, it also shows a simultaneous process of Romanization.[129] Traditional Dacian pottery has been uncovered in Dacian settlements, together with Roman-manufactured pottery incorporating local designs.[129] The increasing Romanization of Dacia meant that only a small number of earlier Dacian pottery styles were retained unchanged, such as pots and the low thick-walled drinking mug that has been termed the "Dacian cup". These artifacts were usually handmade; the use of the pottery wheel was rare.[135] In the case of homes, the use of old Dacian techniques persisted, as did the sorts of ornaments and tools used prior to the establishment of Roman Dacia.[129] Archaeological evidence from burial sites has demonstrated that the native population of Dacia was far too large to have been driven away or wiped out in any meaningful sense.[129] It was beyond the resources of the Romans to have eliminated the great majority of the rural population in an area measuring some 300,000 km2 (120,000 sq mi).[40] Silver jewellery uncovered in graves show that some of the burial sites are not necessarily native Dacian in origin, but are equally likely to have belonged to the Carpi or Free Dacians who are thought to have moved into Dacia sometime before 200 AD.[136]

Some scholars have used the lack of civitates peregrinae in Roman Dacia, where indigenous peoples were organised into native townships, as evidence for the Roman depopulation of Dacia.[137] Prior to its incorporation into the empire, Dacia was a kingdom ruled by one king, and did not possess a regional tribal structure that could easily be turned into the Roman civitas system as used successfully in other provinces of the empire.[138] Dacian tribes mentioned in Ptolemy's Geography may represent indigenous administrative structures, similar to those from Moesia, Pannonia, Dalmatia, or Noricum.[139]

Few local Dacians were interested in the use of epigraphs, which were a central part of Roman cultural expression. In Dacia this causes a problem because the survival of epigraphs into modern times is one of the ways scholars develop an understanding of the cultural and social situation within a Roman province.[140][141] Apart from members of the Dacian elite and those who wished to attain improved social and economic positions, who largely adopted Roman names and manners, the majority of native Dacians retained their names and their cultural distinctiveness even with the increasing embrace of Roman cultural norms which followed their incorporation into the Roman Empire.[142][143][144]

As per usual Roman practice, Dacian males were recruited into auxiliary units[145] and dispatched across the empire, from the eastern provinces to Britannia.[38] The Vexillation Dacorum Parthica accompanied the emperor Septimius Severus during his Parthian expedition,[146] while the cohort I Ulpia Dacorum was posted to Cappadocia.[147] Others included the II Aurelia Dacorum in Pannonia Superior, the cohort I Aelia Dacorum in Roman Britain, and the II Augusta Dacorum milliaria in Moesia Inferior.[147] There are a number of preserved relics originating from cohort I Aelia Dacorum, with one inscription describing the sica, a distinctive Dacian weapon.[148] In inscriptions the Dacian soldiers are described as natione Dacus. These could refer to individuals who were native Dacians, Romanized Dacians, colonists who had moved to Dacia, or their descendants.[149] Numerous Roman military diplomas issued for Dacian soldiers discovered after 1990 indicate that veterans preferred to return to their place of origin;[150] per usual Roman practice, these veterans were given Roman citizenship upon their discharge.[151]

Colonists

There were varying degrees of Romanization throughout Roman Dacia. The most Romanized segment was the region along the Danube, which was predominately under imperial administration, albeit in a form that was partially barbarized. The population beyond this zone, having lived with the Roman legions before their withdrawal, was substantially Romanized. The final zone, consisting of the northern portions of Maramureș, Crișana, and Moldavia, stood at the edges of Roman Dacia. Although its people did not have Roman legions stationed among them, they were still nominally under the control of Rome, politically, socially, and economically. These were the areas in which resided the Carpi, often referred to as "Free Dacians".[152]

In an attempt to fill the cities, cultivate the fields, and mine the ore, a large-scale attempt at colonization took place with colonists coming in "from all over the Roman world".[153] The colonists were a heterogeneous mix:[39] of the some 3,000 names preserved in inscriptions found by the 1990s, 74% (c. 2,200) were Latin, 14% (c. 420) were Greek, 4% (c. 120) were Illyrian, 2.3% (c. 70) were Celtic, 2% (c. 60) were Thraco-Dacian, and another 2% (c. 60) were Semites from Syria.[154] Regardless of their place of origin, the settlers and colonists were a physical manifestation of Roman civilisation and imperial culture, bringing with them the most effective Romanizing mechanism: the use of Latin as the new lingua franca.[39]

The first settlement at Sarmizegetusa was made up of Roman citizens who had retired from their legions.[155] Based upon the location of names scattered throughout the province, it has been argued that, although places of origin are hardly ever noted in epigraphs, a large percentage of colonists originated from Noricum and western Pannonia.[156]

Specialist miners (the Pirusti tribesmen)[157] were brought in from Dalmatia.[57] These Dalmatian miners were kept in sheltered communities (Vicus Pirustarum) and were under the jurisdiction of their own tribal leadership (with individual leaders referred to as princeps).[157]

Roman army in Dacia

 
Roman walls in Dacia
 
A sestertius minted to commemorate the province of Dacia and its legions

An estimated number of 50,000 troops were stationed in Dacia at its height.[158][54] At the close of Trajan's first campaign in Dacia in 102, he stationed one legion at Sarmizegetusa Regia.[54] With the conclusion of Trajan's conquest of Dacia, he stationed at least two legions in the new province – the Legio IV Flavia Felix positioned at Berzobis (modern Berzovia, Romania), and the Legio XIII Gemina stationed at Apulum.[54] It has been conjectured that there was a third legion stationed in Dacia at the same time, the Legio I Adiutrix. However, there is no evidence to indicate when or where it was stationed, and it is unclear whether the legion was fully present, or whether it was only the vexillationes who were stationed in the province.[54]

Hadrian, the subsequent emperor, shifted the fourth legion (Legio IV Flavia Felix) from Berzobis to Singidunum in Moesia Superior, suggesting that Hadrian believed the presence of one legion in Dacia would be sufficient to ensure the security of the province.[54] The Marcomannic Wars that erupted north of the Danube forced Marcus Aurelius to reverse this policy, permanently transferring the Legio V Macedonica from Troesmis (modern Turcoaia in Romania)[159] in Moesia Inferior to Potaissa in Dacia.[54]

Epigraphic evidence attests to large numbers of auxiliary units stationed throughout the Dacian provinces during the Roman period; this has given the impression that Roman Dacia was a strongly militarized province.[54] Yet, it seems to have been no more highly militarized than any of the other frontier provinces, like the Moesias, the Pannonias, and Syria, and the number of legions stationed in Moesia and Pannonia were not diminished after the creation of Dacia.[160][161] However, once Dacia was incorporated into the empire and the frontier was extended northward, the central portion of the Danube frontier between Novae (near modern Svishtov, Bulgaria) and Durostorum (modern Silistra, Bulgaria) was able to release much-needed troops to bolster Dacia's defences.[162] Military documents report at least 58 auxiliary units, most transferred into Dacia from the flanking Moesian and Pannonian provinces, with a wide variety of forms and functions, including numeri, cohortes milliariae, quingenariae, and alae.[54] This does not imply that all were positioned in Dacia at the same time, nor that they were in place throughout the existence of Roman Dacia.[54]

Settlements

When considering provincial settlement patterns, the Romanized parts of Dacia were composed of urban satus settlements, made up of coloniae, municipia, and rural settlements, principally villas with their associated latifundia and villages (vici).[163] The two principal towns of Roman Dacia, Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa and Apulum, are on par with similar towns across the Western Roman Empire in terms of socio-economic and architectural maturity.[164]

The province had about 10 Roman towns,[165][166] all originating from the military camps that Trajan constructed during his campaigns.[167] There were two sorts of urban settlements. Of principal importance were the coloniae, whose free-born inhabitants were almost exclusively Roman citizens. Of secondary importance were the municipia, which were allowed a measure of judicial and administrative independence.[168]

Dacia Superior
  • Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa was established by Trajan, was first to be given colonia status, and was the province's only colonia deducta.[169] Its pre-eminence was guaranteed by its foundation charter and by its role as the administrative centre of the province, as well as its being granted Ius Italicum.[170]
  • Ulpianum
  • Singidava
  • Germisara
  • Argidava
  • Bersovia
  • Alburnus major
  • Apulum (predecessor of Alba Iulia) began as one of Trajan's legionary bases.[169] Almost immediately, the associated canabae legionis was established nearby, while at some point during the Trajanic period a civilian settlement sprang into existence along the Mureș River, approximately 4 km (2.5 mi) from the military encampment.[170] The town evolved rapidly, transforming from a vicus of Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa into a municipium during Marcus Aurelius' reign, with the emperor Commodus elevating it to a colonia.[171] Transformed into the capital of Dacia Apulensis region within Dacia Superior, its importance lay in being the location of the military high command for the tripartite province.[63] It began to rival Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa during the reign of Septimius Severus, who allocated a part of Apulum's canabae with municipal status.[171]
  • Napoca was the possible location of the military high command in Dacia Porolissensis.[172] It was made a municipium by Hadrian, and Commodus transformed it into a colonia.[159]
  • Potaissa was the camp of the Legio V Macedonica during the Marcomannic Wars.[172] Potaissa saw a canabae established at the gates of the camp.[159] Granted municipium status by Septimius Severus, it became a colonia under Caracalla.[159]
     
    The reconstructed gateway of the castrum in Porolissum
  • Porolissum was situated between two camps, and laid alongside a walled frontier defending the main passageway through the Carpathian Mountains. It was transformed into a municipium during Septimius Severus' reign.[173] Within Dacia Superior, Porolissum was a center of Dacia Prolissensis as Apulum for Dacia Apulensis.
  • Dierna/Tierna (modern Orșova, Romania)
  • Tibiscum (Jupa, Romania)
  • Ampelum (Zlatna, Romania) were important Roman towns.[174] Although the biggest mining town in the region, Ampelum's legal status is unknown.[175] Dierna was a customs station which was granted municipium status by Septimus Severus.[176]
  • Sucidava (modern Corabia, Romania) was a town located at the site of an earthwork camp. Erected by Trajan, Sucidava was neither large enough nor important enough to be granted municipium or colonia status. The town remained a pagus or perhaps a vicus.[176]
Dacia Inferior
  • Drobeta was the most important town of Dacia Inferior. Springing up in the vicinity of a stone camp housing 500 soldiers and established by Trajan to guard the northern approaches to Trajan's Bridge across Ister (The Danube), the town was elevated by the emperor Hadrian to a municipium, holding the same rights as an Italian town.[177] During the middle 190s, Septimius Severus transformed the town into a full-fledged colonia.[178]
  • Romula was possibly the capital of Dacia Malvensis. It held the rank of municipium, possibly under the reign of Hadrian, before being elevated to colonia status by Septimius Severus.[179]

It is often problematic to identify the dividing line between "Romanized" villages and those sites that can be defined as "small towns".[180] Therefore, categorizing sites as small towns has largely focused on identifying sites that had some evidence of industry and trade, and not simply a basic agricultural economic unit that would almost exclusively produce goods for its own existence.[181] Additional settlements along the principal route within Roman Dacia are mentioned in the Tabula Peutingeriana. These include Brucla, Blandiana, Germisara, Petris, and Aquae.[182] Both Germisara and Aquae were sites where natural thermal springs were accessible, and each are still functioning today.[183] The locations of Brucla, Blandiana, and Petris are not known for certain.[183] In the case of Petris however, there is good reason to suppose it was located at Uroi in Romania. If this were the case, it would have been a crucial site for trade, as well as being a vital component in facilitating communication from one part of the province to another.[184]

It is assumed that Roman Dacia possessed a large number of military vici, settlements with connections to the entrenched military camps.[184] This hypothesis has not been tested, as few such sites have been surveyed in any detail. However, in the mid-Mureș valley, associated civilian communities have been uncovered next to the auxiliary camps at Orăștioara de Sus, Cigmău, Salinae (modern Ocna Mureș), and Micia,[184] with a small amphitheatre being discovered at the latter one.[61]

During the period of Roman occupation, the pattern of settlement in the Mureș valley demonstrates a continual shift towards nucleated settlements when compared to the pre-Roman Iron Age settlement pattern.[185] In central Dacia, somewhere between 10 and 28 villages have been identified as aggregated settlements whose primary function was agricultural.[186] The settlement layouts broadly fall between two principal types.[186] The first are those constructed in a traditional fashion, such as Rădești, Vințu de Jos, and Obreja. These show generally sunken houses in the Dacian manner, with some dwellings having evolved to becoming surface timber buildings. The second settlement layout followed Roman settlement patterns.[186]

The identification of villa sites within central Dacia is incomplete, as it is for the majority of the province.[187] There are about 30 sites identified throughout the province which appear on published heritage lists, but this is felt to be a gross underestimation.[187]

Economy

With the Roman army ensuring the maintenance of the Pax Romana, Roman Dacia prospered until the Crisis of the Third Century. Dacia evolved from a simple rural society and economy to one of material advancement comparable to other Roman provinces.[158] There were more coins in circulation in Roman Dacia than in the adjacent provinces.[188]

The region's natural resources generated considerable wealth for the empire, becoming one of the major producers of grain, particularly wheat.[129] Linking into Rome's monetary economy, bronze Roman coinage was eventually produced in Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa[165] by about 250 AD (previously Dacia seems to have been supplied with coins from central mints).[188] The establishment of Roman roads throughout the province facilitated economic growth.[165]

Local gold mines provided another incentive for Dacia's incorporation into the empire.[105] Dalmatian miners were brought in to operate the gold mines in the Bihor Mountains, adding to the imperial coffers.[129] At Alburnus Maior, the gold mines flourished between 131 and 167 AD, but over time they began to see diminishing returns as the local gold reserves were exploited.[57] Evidence points to the closure of the gold mines around the year 215 AD.[176]

Dacia also possessed salt, iron, silver, and copper mines dating back to the period of the Dacian kings.[129] The region also held large quantities of building-stone materials, including schist, sandstone, andesite, limestone, and marble.[57]

Towns became key centres of manufacturing.[189] Bronze casting foundries existed at Porolissum, Romula, and Dierna; there was a brooch workshop located in Napoca, while weapon smithies have been identified in Apulum.[189] Glass manufacturing factories have been uncovered in Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa and Tibiscum.[189] Villages and rural settlements continued to specialise in craftwork, including pottery, and sites such as Micăsasa could possess 26 kilns and hundreds of moulds for the manufacture of local terra sigillata.[189]

Religion

Inscriptions and sculpture in Dacia reveal a wide variety in matters of religion. Deities of the official state religion of Rome appear alongside those originating in Greece, Asia Minor, and Western Europe;[190] of these, 43.5% have Latin names.[39] The major gods of the Roman pantheon are all represented in Dacia:[190] Jupiter, Juno, Minerva, Venus, Apollo, Liber, Libera, and others.[191] The Roman god Silvanus was of unusual importance, second only to Jupiter.[192] He was frequently referred to in Dacia with the titles silvester and domesticus, which were also used in Pannonia.[193]

About 20% of Dacian inscriptions refer to Eastern cults such as that of Cybele and Attis, along with more than 274 dedications to Mithras, who was the most popular among soldiers.[194] The cult of the Thracian Rider was imported from Thrace and Moesia.[194] The Gallic horse goddess Epona is attested in Dacia, as are the Matronae.[194]

While the Dacians worshiped local divinities,[138] there is no evidence of any Dacian deity entering the Roman pantheon of gods,[138] and there is no evidence of any Dacian deity worshiped under a Roman name.[195] It is conjectured that the Dacians lacked an anthropomorphic conception of deity,[190] and that the Thraco-Dacian religion and their art was characterized by aniconism.[196] Dacian citadels dated to the reigns of Burebista and Decebalus have yielded no statues in their sanctuaries.[190] With the destruction of the main Dacian sacred site during Trajan's wars of conquest, no other site took its place. However, there were other cult sites of local spiritual significance, such as Germisara, which continued to be used during the Roman period, although religious practices at these sites were somewhat altered by Romanization, including the application of Roman names to the local spirits.[138]

Highly Romanized urban centres brought with them Roman funerary practices, which differed significantly from those pre-dating the Roman conquest.[197] Archaeological excavations have uncovered funerary art principally attached to the urban centres. Such excavations have shown that stelae were the favoured style of funerary memorial. However, other more sophisticated memorials have also been uncovered, including aediculae, tumuli, and mausoleums. The majority were highly decorated, with sculptured lions, medallions, and columns adorning the structures.[198]

This appears to be an urban feature only – the minority of cemeteries excavated in rural areas display burial sites that have been identified as Dacian, and some have been conjectured to be attached to villa settlements, such as Deva, Sălașu de Sus, and Cincis.[197]

Traditional Dacian funerary rites survived the Roman period and continued into the post-Roman era,[40] during which time the first evidence of Christianity begins to appear.[190]

Last decades of Dacia Traiana (235–271/275)

The 230s marked the end of the final peaceful period experienced in Roman Dacia.[199] The discovery of a large stockpile of Roman coins (around 8,000) at Romula, issued during the reigns of Commodus and Elagabalus, who was killed in 222 AD, has been taken as evidence that the province was experiencing problems before the mid-3rd century.[200] Traditionally, the accession of Maximinus Thrax (235–238) marks the start of a 50-year period of disorder in the Roman Empire, during which the militarization of the government inaugurated by Septimius Severus continued apace and the debasement of the currency brought the empire to bankruptcy.[201] As the 3rd century progressed, it saw the continued migration of the Goths, whose movements had already been a cause of the Marcomannic Wars,[202] and whose travels south towards the Danubian frontier continued to put pressure on the tribes who were already occupying this territory.[203] Between 236 and 238, Maximinus Thrax campaigned in Dacia against the Carpi,[204] only to rush back to Italy to deal with a civil war.[205] While Gordian III eventually emerged as Roman Emperor, the confusion in the heart of the empire allowed the Goths, in alliance with the Carpi, to take Histria in 238 AD[206] before sacking the economically important commercial centres along the Danube Delta.[207]

 
Emperor Philip the Arab (244–249)

Unable to deal militarily with this incursion, the empire was forced to buy peace in Moesia, paying an annual tribute to the Goths; this infuriated the Carpi who also demanded a payment subsidy.[206] Emperor Philip the Arab (244–249) ceased payment in 245 AD[208] and the Carpi invaded Dacia the following year, attacking the town of Romula in the process.[200] The Carpi probably burned the castra of Răcari between 243 and 247.[105] Evidence suggests the defensive line of the Limes Transalutanus was probably abandoned during Philip the Arab's reign, as a result of the incursion of the Carpi into Dacia.[105] Ongoing raids forced the emperor to leave Rome and take charge of the situation.[209] The mother of the future emperor Galerius fled Dacia Malvensis at around this time before settling in Moesia Inferior.[210]

But the other Maximian (Galerius), chosen by Diocletian for his son-in-law, was worse, not only than those two princes whom our own times have experienced, but worse than all the bad princes of former days. In this wild beast there dwelt a native barbarity and a savageness foreign to Roman blood; and no wonder, for his mother was born beyond the Danube, and it was an inroad of the Carpi that obliged her to cross over and take refuge in New Dacia.

— Lactantius: Of the Manner in which the Persecutors Died – Chapter IX[211]

At the end of 247 the Carpi were decisively beaten in open battle and sued for peace;[212] Philip the Arab took the title of Carpicus Maximus.[213] Regardless of these victories, Dacian towns began to take defensive measures. In Sucidava, the townspeople hurriedly erected a trapezoidal stone wall and defensive ditch, most likely the result of a raid by the barbarian tribes around 246 or 247 AD. In 248 AD, Romula enhanced the wall surrounding the settlement, again most likely as an additional defensive barrier against the Carpi.[200] An epigraph uncovered in Apulum salutes the emperor Decius (reigned 249–251 AD) as restitutor Daciarum, the "restorer of Dacia".[214] On 1 July 251, Decius and his army were killed by the Goths during their defeat in the Battle of Abrittus (modern Razgard, Bulgaria).[215] Firmly entrenched in the territories along the lower Danube and the Black Sea's western shore, their presence affected both the non-Romanized Dacians (who fell into the Goth's sphere of influence)[216] and Imperial Dacia, as the client system that surrounded the province and supported its existence began to break apart.[217]

Decius appeared in the world, an accursed wild beast, to afflict the Church, – and who but a bad man would persecute religion? It seems as if he had been raised to sovereign eminence, at once to rage against God, and at once to fall; for, having undertaken an expedition against the Carpi, who had then possessed themselves of Dacia and Moesia, he was suddenly surrounded by the barbarians, and slain, together with great part of his army; nor could he be honored with the rites of sepulture, but, stripped and naked, he lay to be devoured by wild beasts and birds, – a fit end for the enemy of God.

— Lactantius: Of the Manner in which the Persecutors Died – Chapter IV[218]
 
Emperor Gallienus (260–268)

Continuing pressures during the reign of the emperor Gallienus (253–268 AD) and the fracturing of the western half of the empire between himself and Postumus in Gaul after 260 meant that Gallienus' attention was principally focused on the Danubian frontier.[219] Repeated victories over the Carpi and associated Dacian tribes enabled him to claim the title Dacicus Maximus.[220] However, literary sources from antiquity (Eutropius,[221][222] Aurelius Victor,[223] and Festus[22]) write that Dacia was lost under his reign.[224] He transferred from Dacia to Pannonia a large percentage of the cohorts from the fifth Macedonica and thirteenth Gemina legions.[203] The latest coins at Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa and Porolissum bear his effigy,[225] and the raising of inscribed monuments in the province virtually ceased in 260 AD,[226] the year that marked the temporary breakup of the empire.[227]

Even the territories across the Danube, which Trajan had secured, were lost.

— Aurelius Victor: De Caesaribus[223][228]
 
Emperor Aurelian (270–275)

Coins were minted during the restoration of the empire (c. 270) under Aurelian which bear the inscription "DACIA FELIX" ("Fertile/Happy Dacia").[229] The pressing need to deal with the Palmyrene Empire meant Aurelian needed to settle the situation along the Danube frontier.[230] Reluctantly, and possibly only as a temporary measure, he decided to abandon the province.[230] The traditional date for Dacia's official abandonment is 271;[231] another view is that Aurelian evacuated his troops and civilian administration during 272–273,[232] possibly as late as 275.[233]

The province of Dacia, which Trajan had formed beyond the Danube, he gave up, despairing, after all Illyricum and Moesia had been depopulated, of being able to retain it. The Roman citizens, removed from the town and lands of Dacia, he settled in the interior of Moesia, calling that Dacia which now divides the two Moesiae, and which is on the right hand of the Danube as it runs to the sea, whereas Dacia was previously on the left.

— Eutropius: Abridgement of Roman History[221][222]

The end result was that Aurelian established a new province of Dacia[232] called Dacia Aureliana with its capital at Serdica, previously belonging to Lower Moesia.[234][235] A portion of the Romanized population settled in the new province south of the Danube.[236]

After the Roman withdrawal

Settlement of the Tervingi

 
Emperor Diocletian (284–305)

The emperor Galerius once declared a complaint which the Romans were aware of: the Danube was the most challenging of all the empire's frontiers.[237] Aside from its enormous length, great portions of it did not suit the style of fighting which the Roman legions preferred.[238] To protect the provinces south of the Danube, the Romans retained military forts on the northern bank of the Danube long after the withdrawal from Dacia Traiana.[121] Aurelian kept a foothold at Drobeta, while a segment of the Thirteenth Legion (Legio XIII Gemina) was posted in Desa until at least 305 AD.[121] Coins bearing the image of emperor Gratian (reign 375–383 AD) have been uncovered at Dierna, possibly indicating that the town continued to function after the Roman withdrawal.[239]

In the years immediately after the withdrawal, Roman towns survived, albeit on a reduced level.[240] The previous tribes which had settled north of the Danube, such as the Sarmatians, Bastarnae, Carpi, and Quadi were increasingly pressured by the arrival of the Vandals in the north, while the Gepids and the Goths pressured them from the east and the northeast.[238] This forced the older tribes to push into Roman territory, weakening the empire's already stretched defences further. To gain entry into the empire, the tribes alternated between beseeching the Roman authorities to allow them in, and intimidating them with the threat of invasion if their requests were denied.[238] Ultimately, the Bastarnae were permitted to settle in Thrace, while the Carpi which survived were permitted to settle in the new province of Pannonia Valeria west of their homeland.[237] However, the Carpi were neither destroyed by other barbarian tribes, nor fully integrated into the Roman Empire. Those who survived on the borders of the empire were apparently called Carpodacae ("Carps from Dacia").[241]

By 291 AD, the Goths had recovered from their defeat at the hands of Aurelian, and began to move into what had been Roman Dacia.[242] When the ancestors of the Tervingi migrated into north-eastern Dacia, they were opposed by the Carpi and the non-Romanized Dacians. Defeating these tribes, they came into conflict with the Romans, who still attempted to maintain control along the Danube. Some of the semi-Romanized population remained and managed to co-exist with the Goths.[152] By 295 AD, the Goths had managed to defeat the Carpi and establish themselves in Dacia, now called Gothia;[243] the Romans recognised the Tervingi as a foederatus.[244] They occupied what was the eastern portion of the old province and beyond, from Bessarabia on the Dniester in the east to Oltenia in the west.[245] Until the 320s, the Goths kept the terms of the treaty and proceeded to settle down in the former province of Dacia, and the Danube had a measure of peace for nearly a generation.[244]

Around 295 AD, the emperor Diocletian reorganized the defences along the Danube, and established fortified camps on the far side of the river, from Sirmium (modern Serbia) to Ratiaria (near modern Archar, Bulgaria) and Durostorum.[246] These camps were meant to provide protection of the principal crossing points across the river, to permit the movement of troops across the river, and to function as observation points and bases for waterborne patrols.[247]

Late Roman incursions

 
Emperor Constantine I (306–337)

During the reign of Constantine I, the Tervingi took advantage of the civil war between him and Licinius to attack the empire in 323 AD from their settlements in Dacia.[248] They supported Licinius until his defeat in 324; he was fleeing to their lands in Dacia when he was apprehended.[248] As a result, Constantine focused on aggressively pre-empting any barbarian activity on the frontier north of the Danube.[249] By 328 AD, he had constructed at Sucidava a new bridge across the Danube,[250] and repaired the road from Sucidava to Romula.[251] He also erected a military fort at Daphne (modern Spanțov, Romania).[252]

In early 336, Constantine personally led his armies across the Danube and crushed the Gothic tribes which had settled there, in the process recreating a Roman province north of the Danube.[253] In honor of this achievement, the Senate granted him the title of Dacicus Maximus, and celebrated it along with the 30th anniversary of his accession as Roman Emperor in mid 336.[253] The granting of this title has been seen by scholars such as Timothy Barnes as implying some level of reconquest of Roman Dacia.[254] However, the bridge at Sucidava lasted less than 40 years, as the emperor Valens discovered when he attempted to use it to cross the Danube during his campaign against the Goths in 367 AD.[250] Nevertheless, the castra at Sucidava remained in use until its destruction at the hands of Attila the Hun in 447 AD.[250]

Driven off their lands in Oltenia, the Tervingi moved towards Transylvania and came into conflict with the Sarmatians.[255] In 334, the Sarmatians asked Constantine for military help, after which he allowed the majority of them to settle peacefully south of the Danube.[256] The Roman armies inflicted a crushing defeat on the Tervingi.[255] The Tervingi signed a treaty with the Romans, giving a measure of peace until 367.[257]

The last major Roman incursion into the former province of Dacia occurred in 367 AD, when the emperor Valens used a diplomatic incident to launch a major campaign against the Goths.[258] Hoping to regain the trans-Danubian beachhead which Constantine had successfully established at Sucidava,[259] Valens launched a raid into Gothic territory after crossing the Danube near Daphne around 30 May; they continued until September without any serious engagements.[260] He tried again in 368 AD, setting up his base camp at Carsium, but was hampered by a flood on the Danube.[261] He therefore spent his time rebuilding Roman forts along the Danube. In 369, Valens crossed the river into Gothia, and this time managed to engage the Tervingi, defeating them, and granting them peace on Roman terms.[262]

This was the final attempt by the Romans to maintain a presence in the former province. Soon after, the westward push by the Huns put increased pressure on the Tervingi, who were forced to abandon the old Dacian province and seek refuge within the Roman Empire.[263] Mismanagement of this request resulted in the death of Valens and the bulk of the eastern Roman army at the Battle of Adrianople in 378 AD.[264]

Controversy over the fate of the Daco-Romans

 
Linguistic map of the Balkans (4th–7th century). Pink areas indicate territories in which a Romance language is spoken; shaded pink areas represent the possible distribution of the Proto-Romanian language.

Based on the written accounts of ancient authors such as Eutropius, it had been assumed by Enlightenment historians such as Edward Gibbon that the population of Dacia Traiana was moved south when Aurelian abandoned the province.[265][266] However, the fate of the Romanized Dacians, and the subsequent origin of the Romanians, became mired in controversy, stemming from political considerations originating during the 18th and 19th centuries between Romanian nationalists and the Austro-Hungarian Empire.[267][40]

One theory states that the process which formed the Romanian people began with the Romanization of Dacia and the existence of a Daco-Roman populace which did not completely abandon the province after the Roman withdrawal in 275 AD.[268] Archaeological evidence obtained from burial sites and settlements supports the contention that a portion of the native population continued to inhabit what was Roman Dacia.[269] Pottery remains dated to the years after 271 AD in Potaissa,[159] and Roman coinage of Marcus Claudius Tacitus and Crispus (son of Constantine I) uncovered in Napoca demonstrate the continued survival of these towns.[270] In Porolissum, Roman coinage began to circulate again under Valentinian I (364–375); meanwhile, local Daco-Romans continued to inhabit Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa, fortifying the amphitheatre against barbarian raids.[225] According to this theory, the Romanian people continued to develop under the influence of the Roman Empire until the beginning of the 6th century, and as long as the empire held territory on the southern bank of the Danube and in Dobruja, it influenced the region to the river's north.[268] This process was facilitated by the trading of goods and the movement of peoples across the river.[268] Roman towns endured in Dacia's middle and southern regions, albeit reduced in size and wealth.[240]

The competing theory states that the transfer of Dacia's diminished population overlapped with the requirement to repopulate the depleted Balkans.[271] Although it is possible that some Daco-Romans remained behind, these were few in number.[272] Toponymic changes tend to support a complete withdrawal from Roman Dacia, as the names for Roman towns, forts, and settlements fell completely out of use.[273] Repeated archaeological investigations from the 19th century onwards have failed to uncover definitive proof that a large proportion of the Daco-Romans remained in Dacia after the evacuation;[274] for example, traffic in Roman coins in the former province after 271 show similarities to modern Slovakia and the steppe in what is today Ukraine.[275] On the other hand, linguistic data and place names[276] attest to the beginnings of the Romanian language in Lower Moesia, or other provinces south of the Danube of the Roman Empire.[277] Toponymic analysis of place names in the former Roman Dacia north of the Danube suggests that, on top of names which have a Thracian, Scytho-Iranian, Celtic, Roman and Slavonic origin, there are some un-Romanized Dacian place names which were adopted by the Slavs (possibly via the Hungarians) and transmitted to the Romanians, in the same way that some Latin place names were transmitted to the Romanians via the Slavs (such as "Olt").[278]

According to those who posit the continued existence of a Romanized Dacian population after the Roman withdrawal, Aurelian's decision to abandon the province was solely a military decision with respect to moving the legions and auxiliary units to protect the Danubian frontier.[279] The civilian population of Roman Dacia did not treat this as a prelude to a coming disaster; there was no mass emigration from the province, no evidence of a sudden withdrawal of the civilian population, and no widespread damage to property in the aftermath of the military withdrawal.[279]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Caracalla's activities in Dacia need to be placed within the verified dates in his progress to the east. On 11 August 213, Caracalla crossed the frontier at Raetia into Barbaricum, while in 8 October 213, his victories over the Germanic tribes were announced at Rome, and sometime between 17 December 213 and 17 January 214, he was at Nicomedia – see Opreanu 2015, pp. 18–19

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Bibliography

Ancient

  • Anonymous (c. 395). Historia Augusta [Augustan History] (in Latin).
  • Aurelius Victor (c. 361). De Caesaribus [Book of the Caesars] (in Latin).
  • Cassius Dio (c. 220). Historia Romana [Roman History] (in Ancient Greek).
  • Eutropius (c. 364). Breviarium ab urbe condita [Abridgement of Roman History] (in Latin).
  • Festus (c. 379). Breviarium rerum gestarum populi Romani [Breviarium of the Accomplishments of the Roman People] (in Latin).
  • Julian (c. 362). The Caesars (in Ancient Greek).
  • Lactantius (c. 320). De Mortibus Persecutorum [Of the Manner in Which the Persecutors Died] (in Latin).
  • Pliny the Younger (c. 109). Epistulae [Letters] (in Latin).

Modern

Preceded by
Dacia
History of Romania Succeeded by
Early Middle Ages

Coordinates: 45°42′00″N 26°30′00″E / 45.7000°N 26.5000°E / 45.7000; 26.5000

roman, dacia, this, article, about, province, dacia, traiana, territory, present, romania, small, parts, hungary, serbia, what, known, later, roman, province, dacia, aureliana, territories, modern, bulgaria, serbia, dacia, aureliana, other, uses, dacia, dacia,. This article is about the province of Dacia Traiana on the territory of present day Romania and small parts of Hungary and Serbia For what was known later as the Roman province of Dacia Aureliana on the territories of modern Bulgaria and Serbia see Dacia Aureliana For other uses of Dacia see Dacia disambiguation Roman Dacia ˈ d eɪ ʃ e DAY she also known as Dacia Traiana Latin for Trajan Dacia or Dacia Felix Fertile Happy Dacia was a province of the Roman Empire from 106 to 271 275 AD Its territory consisted of what are now the regions of Oltenia Transylvania and Banat today all in Romania except the last one which is split between Romania Hungary and Serbia During Roman rule it was organized as an imperial province on the borders of the empire It is estimated that the population of Roman Dacia ranged from 650 000 to 1 200 000 It was conquered by Trajan 98 117 after two campaigns that devastated the Dacian Kingdom of Decebalus However the Romans did not occupy its entirety Crișana Maramureș and most of Moldavia remained under the Free Dacians Roman DaciaProvincia Dacia Latin Ἐparxia Dakias Ancient Greek Province of the Roman Empire106 271 275Roman province of Dacia 125 AD CapitalUlpia Traiana SarmizegetusaHistoryHistorical eraClassical Antiquity Annexed by Trajan106 Withdrawal by Roman Emperor Aurelian271 275Preceded by Succeeded byDacian Kingdom Dacia AurelianaHunnic EmpireToday part ofRomania SerbiaAfter its integration into the empire Roman Dacia saw constant administrative division In 119 it was divided into two departments Dacia Superior Upper Dacia and Dacia Inferior Lower Dacia later named Dacia Malvensis Between 124 and around 158 Dacia Superior was divided into two provinces Dacia Apulensis and Dacia Porolissensis The three provinces would later be unified in 166 and be known as Tres Daciae Three Dacias due to the ongoing Marcomannic Wars New mines were opened and ore extraction intensified while agriculture stock breeding and commerce flourished in the province Roman Dacia was of great importance to the military stationed throughout the Balkans and became an urban province with about ten cities known and all of them originating from old military camps Eight of these held the highest rank of colonia Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa was the financial religious and legislative center and where the imperial procurator finance officer had his seat while Apulum was Roman Dacia s military center From its creation Roman Dacia suffered great political and military threats The Free Dacians allied with the Sarmatians made constant raids in the province These were followed by the Carpi a Dacian tribe and the newly arrived Germanic tribes Goths Taifali Heruli and Bastarnae allied with them All this made the province difficult for the Roman emperors to maintain already being virtually lost during the reign of Gallienus 253 268 Aurelian 270 275 would formally relinquish Roman Dacia in 271 or 275 AD He evacuated his troops and civilian administration from Dacia and founded Dacia Aureliana with its capital at Serdica in Lower Moesia The Romanized population still left was abandoned and its fate after the Roman withdrawal is controversial According to one theory the Latin spoken in Dacia mostly in modern Romania became the Romanian language making the Romanians descendants of the Daco Romans the Romanized population of Dacia The opposing theory states that the origin of the Romanians actually lies on the Balkan Peninsula Contents 1 Background 2 Dacia under the Antonine and Severan emperors 106 235 2 1 Establishment 106 117 2 2 First re organizations 117 138 2 3 Consolidation 138 161 2 4 Marcomannic Wars and their effects 161 193 2 5 Revival under the Severans 193 235 3 Life in Roman Dacia 3 1 Native Dacians 3 2 Colonists 3 3 Roman army in Dacia 3 4 Settlements 3 5 Economy 3 6 Religion 4 Last decades of Dacia Traiana 235 271 275 5 After the Roman withdrawal 5 1 Settlement of the Tervingi 5 2 Late Roman incursions 5 3 Controversy over the fate of the Daco Romans 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Bibliography 9 1 Ancient 9 2 ModernBackground EditMain article Dacia See also Dacian Wars Burebista and Decebalus The Dacian Kingdom around 100 AD before the Roman conquest The Dacians and the Getae frequently interacted with the Romans prior to Dacia s incorporation into the Roman Empire 1 However Roman attention on the area around the lower Danube was sharpened when Burebista 1 82 44 BC 2 unified the native tribes and began an aggressive campaign of expansion His kingdom extended to Pannonia in the west and reached the Black Sea to the east while to the south his authority extended into the Balkans 3 By 74 BC 3 the Roman legions under Gaius Scribonius Curio reached the lower Danube and proceeded to come into contact with the Dacians 4 Roman concern over the rising power and influence of Burebista was amplified when he began to play an active part in Roman politics His last minute decision just before the Battle of Pharsalus to participate in the Roman Republic s civil war by supporting Pompey meant that once the Pompeians were dealt with Julius Caesar would turn his eye towards Dacia 5 As part of Caesar s planned Parthian campaign of 44 BC he prepared to cross into Dacia and eliminate Burebista thereby hopefully causing the breakup of his kingdom 6 Although this expedition into Dacia did not happen due to Caesar s assassination Burebista failed to bring about any true unification of the tribes he ruled Following a plot which saw him assassinated his kingdom fractured into four distinct political entities later becoming five each ruled by minor kings 7 8 From the death of Burebista to the rise of Decebalus Roman forces continued to clash against the Dacians and the Getae 1 Constant raiding by the tribes into the adjacent provinces of Moesia and Pannonia caused the local governors and the emperors to undertake a number of punitive actions against the Dacians 1 All of this kept the Roman Empire and the Dacians in constant social diplomatic and political interaction during much of the late pre Roman period 1 This saw the occasional granting of favoured status to the Dacians in the manner of being identified as amicii et socii friends and allies of Rome although by the time of Octavianus this was tied up with the personal patronage of important Roman individuals 1 An example of this was seen in Octavianus actions during his conflict with Marcus Antonius Seeking to obtain an ally who could threaten Antonius European provinces in 35 BC Octavianus offered an alliance with the Dacians whereby he would marry the daughter of the Dacian King Cotiso and in exchange Cotiso would wed Octavianus daughter Julia 9 10 Trajan s Column in 1820 Although it is believed that the custom of providing royal hostages to the Romans may have commenced sometime during the first half of the 1st century BC it was certainly occurring by Octavianus reign and it continued to be practised during the late pre Roman period 11 On the flip side ancient sources have attested to the presence of Roman merchants and artisans in Dacia while the region also served as a haven for runaway Roman slaves 11 This cultural and mercantile exchange saw the gradual spread of Roman influence throughout the region most clearly seen in the area around the Orăștie Mountains 11 Trajan receives homage from a Dacian chieftain who betrayed Decebalus The arrival of the Flavian dynasty in particular the accession of the emperor Domitian saw an escalation in the level of conflict along the lower and middle Danube 12 In approximately 84 or 85 AD the Dacians led by King Decebalus crossed the Danube into Moesia wreaking havoc and killing the Moesian governor Gaius Oppius Sabinus 13 Domitian responded by reorganising Moesia into Moesia Inferior and Moesia Superior and launching a war against Decebalus Unable to finish the war due to troubles on the German frontier Domitian concluded a treaty with the Dacians that was heavily criticized at the time 14 This would serve as a precedent to the emperor Trajan s wars of conquest in Dacia 12 Trajan led the Roman legions across the Danube penetrating Dacia and focusing on the important area around the Orăștie Mountains 15 In 102 16 after a series of engagements negotiations led to a peace settlement where Decebalus agreed to demolish his forts while allowing the presence of a Roman garrison at Sarmizegetusa Regia Grădiștea Muncelului Romania to ensure Dacian compliance with the treaty 15 Trajan also ordered his engineer Apollodorus of Damascus 17 to design and build a bridge across the Danube at Drobeta 16 Trajan s second Dacian campaign in 105 106 was very specific in its aim of expansion and conquest 15 The offensive targeted Sarmizegetusa Regia 18 The Romans besieged Decebalus capital which surrendered and was destroyed 16 The Dacian king and a handful of his followers withdrew into the mountains but their resistance was short lived and Decebalus committed suicide 19 Other Dacian nobles however were either captured or chose to surrender 20 One of those who surrendered revealed the location of the Dacian royal treasury which was of enormous value 500 000 pounds 230 000 kilograms of gold and 1 000 000 pounds 450 000 kilograms of silver 20 It is an excellent idea of yours to write about the Dacian war There is no subject which offers such scope and such a wealth of original material no subject so poetic and almost legendary although its facts are true You will describe new rivers set flowing over the land new bridges built across rivers and camps clinging to sheer precipices you will tell of a king driven from his capital and finally to death but courageous to the end you will record a double triumph one the first over a nation hitherto unconquered the other a final victory Pliny the Younger Letters Book VIII Letter 4 To Caninius Rufus 21 Dacia under the Antonine and Severan emperors 106 235 EditSee also List of Roman governors of Dacia Traiana Establishment 106 117 Edit See also Trajan Free Dacians and Carpi people A captive Dacian Capitoline Museums Piazza del Campidoglio Rome Trajan conquered the Dacians under King Decibalus and made Dacia across the Danube in the soil of barbary a province that in circumference had ten times 100 000 paces but it was lost under Imperator Gallienus and after Romans had been transferred from there by Aurelian two Dacias were made in the regions of Moesia and Dardania Festus Breviarium of the Accomplishments of the Roman People VIII 2 22 With the annexation of Decebalus kingdom Dacia was turned into Rome s newest province only the second such acquisition since the death of Augustus nearly a century before 23 Decebalus Sarmatian allies to the north were still present in the area requiring a number of campaigns that did not cease until 107 at the earliest 24 however by the end of 106 the legions began erecting new castra along the frontiers 25 Trajan returned to Rome in the middle of June 107 26 Roman sources list Dacia as an imperial province on 11 August 106 27 It was governed by an imperial legate of consular standing supported by two legati legionis who were in charge of each of the two legions stationed in Dacia The procurator Augusti was responsible for managing the taxation of the province and expenditure by the military 28 The territory conquered by Trajan was portioned between the newly formed province and the existing provinces bordering imperial Dacia Moesia Inferior absorbed what eventually became South Moldavia Muntenia eastern Oltenia 29 and the south eastern edge of the Carpathian Mountains 30 while Dacia Traiana was composed of the western portions of Oltenia Transylvania and Banat 29 The provinces of the Roman Empire in 117 with Dacia highlighted The lower Danube in Roman times map by Gustav Droysen To Roman Dacia s east and south was the province of Moesia which the emperor Domitian had split into two in 86 AD Moesia Superior having its capital at Singidunum modern Belgrade in Serbia and Moesia Inferior with Tomis as its capital modern Constanța Romania 31 Along Roman Dacia s exposed western border and stretching towards the vast Pannonian Plain lived the Iazyges a Sarmatian tribe 32 Northern Moldavia was the home of the Bastarnae 33 Roxolani 34 and Carpi 35 while the northern section of Transylvania was populated by the remaining non Romanized Dacians and another Dacian tribe the Costoboci 36 Transforming Dacia into a province was a very resource intensive process Traditional Roman methods were employed including the creation of urban infrastructure such as Roman baths forums and temples the establishment of Roman roads and the creation of colonies composed of retired soldiers 37 However excluding Trajan s attempts to encourage colonists to move into the new province the imperial government did hardly anything to promote resettlement from existing provinces into Dacia 37 The sanctuaries in the ruined Sarmizegetusa Regia the capital of ancient Dacia An immediate effect of the wars leading to the Roman conquest was a decrease in the population in the province 38 Crito wrote that approximately 500 000 Dacians were enslaved and deported a portion of which were transported to Rome to participate in the gladiatorial games or lusiones as part of the celebrations to mark the emperor s triumph 24 To compensate for the depletion of the population the Romans carried out a program of official colonisation establishing urban centres made up of both Roman citizens and non citizens from across the empire 39 Nevertheless native Dacians remained at the periphery of the province and in rural settings while local power elites were encouraged to support the provincial administration as per traditional Roman colonial practice 40 Trajan established the Dacian capital Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa some 40 kilometers 25 miles west of the ruined Sarmizegetusa Regia 41 Initially serving as a base for the Legio IV Flavia Felix 42 it soon was settled by the retired veterans who had served in the Dacian Wars principally the Fifth Macedonia Ninth Claudia and Fourteenth Gemina legions 43 It is generally assumed that Trajan s reign saw the creation of the Roman road network within imperial Dacia with any pre existing natural communication lines quickly converted into paved Roman roads 44 which were soon extended into a more extensive road network 44 However only two roads have been attested to have been created at Trajan s explicit command one was an arterial road that linked the military camps at Napoca and Potaissa modern Cluj Napoca and Turda Romania 44 Epigraphic evidence on the milliarium of Aiton indicates that this stretch of road was finished sometime during 109 110 AD 45 The second road was a major arterial road that passed through Apulum modern Alba Iulia Romania and stretched from the Black Sea in the east all the way to Pannonia Inferior in the west and presumably beyond 44 Legati Augusti pro praetore under Trajan 46 Name From ToJulius Sabinus 105 107 109Decimus Terentius Scaurianus 109 110 111Gaius Avidius Nigrinus 112 113Quintus Baebius Macer 114 114Gaius Julius Quadratus Bassus 117First re organizations 117 138 Edit See also Hadrian Emperor Hadrian 117 138 as depicted in the Antalya Museum Bronze coin of the emperor Hadrian commemorating his visit to Dacia Hadrian was at Antioch in Syria when word came through of the death of Trajan 47 He could not return to Rome as he was advised that Quadratus Bassus ordered by Trajan to protect the new Dacian territories north of the Danube had died there while on campaign 48 As a result of taking several legions and numerous auxiliary regiments with him to Parthia Trajan had left Dacia and the remaining Danubian provinces below strength 49 50 The Roxolani allied themselves with the Iazyges to revolt against Rome as they were angry over a Roman decision to cease payments to which Trajan had agreed 51 Therefore Hadrian dispatched the armies from the east ahead of him and departed Syria as soon as he was able 50 By this time Hadrian had grown so frustrated with the continual problems in the territories north of the Danube that he contemplated withdrawing from Dacia 52 As an emergency measure Hadrian dismantled Apollodorus bridge across the Danube concerned about the threat posed by barbarian incursions across the Olt River and a southward push between a number of Trajan s colonia and the castrum at Bersobis 50 Map of Roman Dacia By 118 Hadrian himself had taken to the field against the Roxolani and the Iazyges and although he defeated them he agreed to reinstate the subsidies to the Roxolani 51 53 Hadrian then decided to abandon certain portions of Trajan s Dacian conquests The territories annexed to Moesia Inferior Southern Moldavia the south eastern edge of the Carpathian Mountains and the plains of Muntenia and Oltenia were returned to the Roxolani 30 53 As a result Moesia Inferior reverted once again to the original boundaries it possessed prior to the acquisition of Dacia 29 The portions of Moesia Inferior to the north of the Danube were split off and refashioned into a new province called Dacia Inferior 29 Trajan s original province of Dacia was relabelled Dacia Superior 29 It was at this time that Hadrian moved the Legio IV Flavia Felix from its base at Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa and ordered it stationed in Moesia Superior 54 By 124 an additional province called Dacia Porolissensis was created in the northern portion of Dacia Superior 55 roughly located in north western Transylvania 29 Since it had become tradition since the time of Augustus that former consuls could only govern provinces as imperial legates where more than one legion was present Dacia Superior was administered by a senator of praetorian rank 55 This meant that the imperial legate of Dacia Superior only had one legion under his command stationed at Apulum 28 Dacia Inferior and Dacia Porolissensis were under the command of praesidial procurators of ducenary rank 28 Hadrian vigorously exploited the opportunities for mining in the new province 56 The emperors monopolized the revenue generated from mining by leasing the operations of the mines to members of the Equestrian order who employed a large number of individuals to manage the operations 57 In 124 the emperor visited Napoca and made the city a municipium 58 Consolidation 138 161 Edit See also Antoninus Pius Emperor Antoninus Pius 138 161 The accession of Antoninus Pius saw the arrival of an emperor who took a cautious approach to the defense of the provinces 59 The large amount of milestones dated to his reign demonstrates that he was particularly concerned with ensuring that the roads were in a constant state of repair 60 Stamped tiles show that the amphitheater at Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa which had been built during the earliest years of the colonia was repaired under his rule 61 In addition given the exposed position of the larger of the Roman fortifications at Porolissum near Moigrad Romania the camp was reconstructed using stone and given sturdier walls for defensive purposes 62 Following a revolt around 158 Antoninus Pius undertook another reorganization of the Dacian provinces 62 Dacia Porolissensis in what is now northern Transylvania with Porolissum as its capital remained as it was Dacia Superior was renamed Dacia Apulensis in Banat and southern Transylvania with Apulum as its capital 62 while Dacia Inferior was transformed into Dacia Malvensis situated at Oltenia Romula was its capital modern Reșca Dobrosloveni Romania 63 As per Hadrian s earlier reorganization each zone was governed by equestrian procurators and all were responsible to the senatorial governor in Apulensis 62 Marcomannic Wars and their effects 161 193 Edit Main article Marcomannic Wars See also Marcus Aurelius Commodus and Pertinax Statue of Emperor Marcus Aurelius 161 180 on Piazza del Campidoglio Rome Soon after the accession of Marcus Aurelius in 161 AD it was clear that trouble was brewing along Rome s northern frontiers as local tribes began to be pressured by migrating tribes to their north 64 65 By 166 AD Marcus had reorganized Dacia once again merging the three Dacian provinces into one called Tres Daciae Three Dacias 66 a move that was geared to consolidate an exposed province inhabited by numerous tribes in the face of increasing threats along the Danubian frontier 67 As the province now contained two legions Legio XIII Gemina at Apulum was joined by Legio V Macedonica stationed at Potaissa the imperial legate had to be of consular rank with Marcus apparently assigning Sextus Calpurnius Agricola 66 The reorganization saw the existing praesidial procurators of Dacia Porolissensis and Dacia Malvensis continue in office and added to their ranks was a third procurator for Dacia Apulensis all operating under the direct supervision of the consular legate 68 who was stationed at the new provincial capital at Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa 69 Dacia with its northern eastern and western frontiers exposed to attacks could not easily be defended When barbarian incursions resumed during the reign of Marcus Aurelius the defences in Dacia were hard pressed to halt all of the raids leaving exposed the provinces of Upper and Lower Moesia 70 Throughout 166 and 167 AD barbarian tribes the Quadi and Marcomanni 71 began to pour across the Danube into Pannonia Noricum Raetia and drove through Dacia before bursting into Moesia 72 A conflict would spark in northern Dacia after 167 73 when the Iazyges having been thrust out of Pannonia focused their energies on Dacia and took the gold mines at Alburnus Maior modern Roșia Montană Romania 74 The last date found on the wax tablets discovered in the mineshafts there which had been hidden when an enemy attack seemed imminent is 29 May 167 73 The suburban villas at Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa were burned and the camp at Slăveni was destroyed by the Marcomanni 53 By the time Marcus Aurelius reached Aquileia in 168 AD the Iazyges had taken over 100 000 Roman captives and destroyed several Roman castra including the fort at Tibiscum modern Jupa in Romania 75 76 Emperor Pertinax 193 Statue found at Apulum On display at the National Museum of the Union Alba Iulia Romania Fighting continued in Dacia over the next two years and by 169 the governor of the province Sextus Calpurnius Agricola was forced to give up his command it is suspected that he either contracted the plague or died in battle 77 The emperor decided to temporarily split the province once again between the three sub provinces with the imperial legate of Moesia Superior Marcus Claudius Fronto taking on the governorship of the central sub province of Dacia Apulensis 77 Dacia Malvensis was possibly assigned to its procurator Macrinius Avitus who defeated the Langobardi and Obii The future emperor Pertinax was also a procurator in Dacia during this time although his exact role is not known Very unpopular in Dacia Pertinax was eventually dismissed 77 By 170 Marcus Aurelius appointed Marcus Claudius Fronto as the governor of the entire Dacian province 77 Later that year Fronto s command was extended to include the governorship of Moesia Superior once again 78 He did not keep it for long by the end of 170 Fronto was defeated and killed in battle against the Iazyges 78 79 His replacement as governor of Dacia was Sextus Cornelius Clemens 78 That same year 170 the Costoboci whose lands were to the north or northeast of Dacia 80 swept through Dacia on their way south 81 The now weakened empire could not prevent the movement of tribespeople into an exposed Dacia during 171 82 and Marcus Aurelius was forced to enter into diplomatic negotiations in an attempt to break up some of the barbarian alliances 82 In 171 the Astingi invaded Dacia after initially defeating the Costoboci they continued their attacks on the province 83 The Romans negotiated a settlement with the Astingi whereby they agreed to leave Dacia and settle in the lands of the Costoboci 83 In the meantime plots of land were distributed to some 12 000 dispossessed and wandering tribespeople in an attempt to prevent them from becoming a threat to the province if they continued to roam at the edges of Dacia 84 The Astingi led by their chieftains Raus and Raptus came into Dacia with their entire households hoping to secure both money and land in return for their alliance But failing of their purpose they left their wives and children under the protection of Clemens until they should acquire the land of the Costoboci by their arms but upon conquering that people they proceeded to injure Dacia no less than before The Lacringi fearing that Clemens in his dread of them might lead these newcomers into the land which they themselves were inhabiting attacked them while off their guard and won a decisive victory As a result the Astingi committed no further acts of hostility against the Romans but in response to urgent supplications addressed to Marcus they received from him both money and the privilege of asking for land in case they should inflict some injury upon those who were then fighting against him Cassius Dio Roman History Epitome of Book LXXII 85 86 Throughout this period the tribes bordering Dacia to the east such as the Roxolani did not participate in the mass invasions of the empire 79 Traditionally seen as a vindication of Trajan s decision to create the province of Dacia as a wedge between the western and eastern Danubian tribes 79 87 Dacia s exposed position meant that the Romans had a greater reliance on the use of client states to ensure its protection from invasion 87 While this worked in the case of the Roxolani the use of the Roman client relationships that allowed the Romans to pit one supported tribe against another facilitated the conditions that created the larger tribal federations that emerged with the Quadi and the Marcomanni 88 By 173 AD the Marcomanni had been defeated 89 however the war with the Iazyges and Quadi continued as Roman strongholds along the Tisza and Danube rivers were attacked by the Iazyges followed by a battle in Pannonia in which the Iazyges were defeated 90 Consequently Marcus Aurelius turned his full attention against the Iazyges and Quadi He crushed the Quadi in 174 AD defeating them in battle on the frozen Danube river after which they sued for peace 91 The emperor then turned his attention to the Iazyges after defeating them and throwing them out of Dacia the Senate awarded him the title of Samarticus Maximus in 175 AD 79 Conscious of the need to create a permanent solution to the problems on the empire s northern frontiers 79 Marcus Aurelius relaxed some of his restrictions on the Marcomanni and the Iazyges In particular he allowed the Iazyges to travel through imperial Dacia to trade with the Roxolani so long as they had the governor s approval 92 At the same time he was determined to implement a plan to annex the territories of the Marcomanni and the Iazyges as new provinces only to be derailed by the revolt of Avidius Cassius 79 93 Emperor Commodus 180 193 as depicted in a museum in Ephesos Turkey With the emperor urgently needed elsewhere Rome once again re established its system of alliances with the bordering tribes along the empire s northern frontier 94 95 However pressure was soon exerted again with the advent of Germanic peoples who started to settle on Dacia s northern borders leading to the resumption of the northern war 94 96 In 178 Marcus Aurelius probably appointed Pertinax as governor of Dacia 97 and by 179 AD the emperor was once again north of the Danube campaigning against the Quadi and the Buri Victorious the emperor was on the verge of converting a large territory to the north west of Dacia into Roman provinces when he died in 180 98 99 Marcus was succeeded by his son Commodus who had accompanied him The young man quickly concluded a peace with the warring tribes before returning to Rome 94 Commodus granted peace to the Buri when they sent envoys Previously he had declined to do so in spite of their frequent requests because they were strong and because it was not peace that they wanted but the securing of a respite to enable them to make further preparations but now that they were exhausted he made peace with them receiving hostages and getting back many captives from the Buri themselves as well as 15 000 from the others and he compelled the others to take an oath that they would never dwell in nor use for pasturage a 5 mile strip of their territory next to Dacia The same Sabinianus also when twelve thousand of the neighboring Dacians had been driven out of their own country and were on the point of aiding the others dissuaded them from their purpose promising them that some land in our Dacia should be given them Cassius Dio Roman History Epitome of Book LXXIII 100 101 Conflict continued in Dacia during the reign of Commodus The notoriously unreliable Historia Augusta mentions a limited insurrection that erupted in Dacia approximately 185 AD 94 The same source also wrote of a defeat of the Dacian tribes who lived outside the province 94 Commodus legates devastated a territory some 8 km 5 0 mi deep along the north of the castrum at modern day Gilău to establish a buffer in the hope of preventing further barbarian incursions 102 The Moors and the Dacians were conquered during his reign and peace was established in the Pannonias but all by his legates since such was the manner of his life The provincials in Britain Dacia and Germany attempted to cast off his yoke but all these attempts were put down by his generals Historia Augusta The Life of Commodus 103 Revival under the Severans 193 235 Edit See also Septimius Severus Caracalla Alexander Severus and Constitutio Antoniniana Emperor Septimius Severus 193 211 Marble bust from the Glyptothek in Munich The reign of Septimius Severus saw a measure of peace descend upon the province with no foreign attacks recorded Damage inflicted on the military camps during the extensive period of warfare of the preceding reigns was repaired 104 Severus extended the province s eastern frontier some 14 km 8 7 mi east of the Olt River and completed the Limes Transalutanus The work included the construction of 14 fortified camps spread over a distance of approximately 225 km 140 mi stretching from the castra of Poiana situated near the Danube River in modern Flămanda Romania in the south to Cumidava modern day Brețcu in Romania 105 His reign saw an increase in the number of Roman municipia across the province 106 while Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa and Apulum acquired the ius Italicum 107 As part of his military reforms Severus allowed Roman soldiers to live away from the fortified camps within the accompanying canabae where they were allowed to tend nearby plots of land 108 He also permitted the soldiers to marry local women consequently if the soldier was a Roman citizen his children inherited his citizenship For those soldiers who were not Roman citizens both he and his children were granted citizenship upon his discharge from the army 108 Bust of Emperor Caracalla 211 217 Cast in the Pushkin Museum Moscow after original in Naples The next emperor Caracalla in order to increase tax revenue and boost his popularity at least according to the historian Cassius Dio extended the citizenship to all males throughout the empire with the exception of slaves 109 In 213 on his way to the east to begin his Parthian campaign Caracalla passed through Dacia While there he undertook diplomatic maneuvers to disturb the alliances between a number of tribes in particular the Marcomanni and the Quadi 110 111 At Porolissum he had Gaiobomarus the king of the Quadi killed under the pretext of conducting peace negotiations 112 There may have been military conflict with one or more of the Danubian tribes 110 111 Although there are inscriptions that indicate that during Caracalla s visit there was some repair or reconstruction work undertaken at Porolissum 113 and that the military unit stationed there Cohors V Lingonum erected an equestrian statue of the emperor 114 certain modern authors such as Philip Parker and Ion Grumeza claim that Caracalla continued to extend the Limes Transalutanus as well as add further territory to Dacia by pushing the border around 50 km 31 mi east of the Olt River 115 116 though it is unclear what evidence they are using to support these statements and the timeframes associated with Caracalla s movements do not support any extensive reorganization in the province note 1 117 In 218 Caracalla s successor Macrinus returned a number of non Romanized Dacian hostages whom Caracalla had taken possibly as a result of some unrest caused by the tribes after Caracalla s assassination 118 And the Dacians after ravaging portions of Dacia and showing an eagerness for further war now desisted when they got back the hostages that Caracallus under the name of an alliance had taken from them Cassius Dio Roman History Epitome of Book LXXIX 119 120 There are few epigraphs extant in Dacia dating from the reign of Alexander Severus the final Severan emperor 104 Under his reign the Council of Three Dacias met at Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa and the gates towers and praetorium of Ad Mediam Mehadia Romania camp were restored 121 Life in Roman Dacia EditNative Dacians Edit See also Dacians and Daco Romans Cast of a captive Dacian in the early 2nd century presented at the Pushkin Museum Evidence concerning the continued existence of a native Dacian population within Roman Dacia is not as apparent as that of Germans Celts Thracians or Illyrians in other provinces 122 There is relatively poor documentation surrounding the existence of native or indigenous Dacians in the Roman towns that were established after Dacia s incorporation into the empire 123 Although Eutropius 124 supported by minor references in the works of Cassius Dio 125 and Julian the Apostate 126 127 describes the widespread depopulation of the province after the siege of Sarmizegetusa Regia and the suicide of king Decebalus 29 there are issues with this interpretation The remaining manuscripts of Eutropius Breviarium ab urbe condita which is the principal source for the depopulation of Roman Dacia after the conquest are not consistent Some versions describe the depletion of men after the war other variants describe the depletion of things or possibly resources after Trajan s conquest 40 There are such interpretations of archaeological evidence which shows the continuation of traditional Dacian burial practices ceramic manufacturing continued throughout the Roman period in both the province as well as the periphery where Roman control was non existent 40 Differing interpretations can be made from the final scene on Trajan s Column which either depicts a Dacian emigration accelerating the depopulation of Dacia 128 or Dacians going back to their settlements after yielding to Roman authority 129 While it is certain that colonists in large numbers were imported from all over the empire to settle in Roman Dacia 40 this appears to be true for the newly created Roman towns only The lack of epigraphic evidence for native Dacian names in the towns suggests an urban rural split between Roman multi ethnic urban centres and the native Dacian rural population 40 On at least two occasions the Dacians rebelled against Roman authority first in 117 AD which caused the return of Trajan from the east 130 and in 158 AD when they were put down by Marcus Statius Priscus 131 The archaeological evidence from various types of settlements especially in the Oraștie Mountains demonstrates the deliberate destruction of hill forts during the annexation of Dacia but this does not rule out a continuity of occupation once the traumas of the initial conquest had passed 132 Hamlets containing traditional Dacian architecture such as Obreja and Noșlac have been dated to the 2nd century AD implying that they arose at the same time as the Roman urban centres 132 Some settlements do show a clear continuity of occupation from pre Roman times into the provincial period such as Cetea and Cicău 133 Archaeological evidence taken from pottery show a continued occupation of native Dacians in these and other areas Architectural forms native to pre Roman Dacia such as the traditional sunken houses and storage pits remained during Roman times Such housing continued to be erected well into the Roman period even in settlements which clearly show an establishment after the Roman annexation such as Obreja 134 Altogether approximately 46 sites have been noted as existing on a spot in both the La Tene and Roman periods 134 Where archaeology attests to a continuing Dacian presence it also shows a simultaneous process of Romanization 129 Traditional Dacian pottery has been uncovered in Dacian settlements together with Roman manufactured pottery incorporating local designs 129 The increasing Romanization of Dacia meant that only a small number of earlier Dacian pottery styles were retained unchanged such as pots and the low thick walled drinking mug that has been termed the Dacian cup These artifacts were usually handmade the use of the pottery wheel was rare 135 In the case of homes the use of old Dacian techniques persisted as did the sorts of ornaments and tools used prior to the establishment of Roman Dacia 129 Archaeological evidence from burial sites has demonstrated that the native population of Dacia was far too large to have been driven away or wiped out in any meaningful sense 129 It was beyond the resources of the Romans to have eliminated the great majority of the rural population in an area measuring some 300 000 km2 120 000 sq mi 40 Silver jewellery uncovered in graves show that some of the burial sites are not necessarily native Dacian in origin but are equally likely to have belonged to the Carpi or Free Dacians who are thought to have moved into Dacia sometime before 200 AD 136 Some scholars have used the lack of civitates peregrinae in Roman Dacia where indigenous peoples were organised into native townships as evidence for the Roman depopulation of Dacia 137 Prior to its incorporation into the empire Dacia was a kingdom ruled by one king and did not possess a regional tribal structure that could easily be turned into the Roman civitas system as used successfully in other provinces of the empire 138 Dacian tribes mentioned in Ptolemy s Geography may represent indigenous administrative structures similar to those from Moesia Pannonia Dalmatia or Noricum 139 Few local Dacians were interested in the use of epigraphs which were a central part of Roman cultural expression In Dacia this causes a problem because the survival of epigraphs into modern times is one of the ways scholars develop an understanding of the cultural and social situation within a Roman province 140 141 Apart from members of the Dacian elite and those who wished to attain improved social and economic positions who largely adopted Roman names and manners the majority of native Dacians retained their names and their cultural distinctiveness even with the increasing embrace of Roman cultural norms which followed their incorporation into the Roman Empire 142 143 144 As per usual Roman practice Dacian males were recruited into auxiliary units 145 and dispatched across the empire from the eastern provinces to Britannia 38 The Vexillation Dacorum Parthica accompanied the emperor Septimius Severus during his Parthian expedition 146 while the cohort I Ulpia Dacorum was posted to Cappadocia 147 Others included the II Aurelia Dacorum in Pannonia Superior the cohort I Aelia Dacorum in Roman Britain and the II Augusta Dacorum milliaria in Moesia Inferior 147 There are a number of preserved relics originating from cohort I Aelia Dacorum with one inscription describing the sica a distinctive Dacian weapon 148 In inscriptions the Dacian soldiers are described as natione Dacus These could refer to individuals who were native Dacians Romanized Dacians colonists who had moved to Dacia or their descendants 149 Numerous Roman military diplomas issued for Dacian soldiers discovered after 1990 indicate that veterans preferred to return to their place of origin 150 per usual Roman practice these veterans were given Roman citizenship upon their discharge 151 Colonists Edit See also Roman colonies and Roman citizenship There were varying degrees of Romanization throughout Roman Dacia The most Romanized segment was the region along the Danube which was predominately under imperial administration albeit in a form that was partially barbarized The population beyond this zone having lived with the Roman legions before their withdrawal was substantially Romanized The final zone consisting of the northern portions of Maramureș Crișana and Moldavia stood at the edges of Roman Dacia Although its people did not have Roman legions stationed among them they were still nominally under the control of Rome politically socially and economically These were the areas in which resided the Carpi often referred to as Free Dacians 152 In an attempt to fill the cities cultivate the fields and mine the ore a large scale attempt at colonization took place with colonists coming in from all over the Roman world 153 The colonists were a heterogeneous mix 39 of the some 3 000 names preserved in inscriptions found by the 1990s 74 c 2 200 were Latin 14 c 420 were Greek 4 c 120 were Illyrian 2 3 c 70 were Celtic 2 c 60 were Thraco Dacian and another 2 c 60 were Semites from Syria 154 Regardless of their place of origin the settlers and colonists were a physical manifestation of Roman civilisation and imperial culture bringing with them the most effective Romanizing mechanism the use of Latin as the new lingua franca 39 The first settlement at Sarmizegetusa was made up of Roman citizens who had retired from their legions 155 Based upon the location of names scattered throughout the province it has been argued that although places of origin are hardly ever noted in epigraphs a large percentage of colonists originated from Noricum and western Pannonia 156 Specialist miners the Pirusti tribesmen 157 were brought in from Dalmatia 57 These Dalmatian miners were kept in sheltered communities Vicus Pirustarum and were under the jurisdiction of their own tribal leadership with individual leaders referred to as princeps 157 Roman army in Dacia Edit Roman walls in Dacia A sestertius minted to commemorate the province of Dacia and its legions Main article Roman army in Dacia See also Military of ancient Rome Roman army and Roman legion An estimated number of 50 000 troops were stationed in Dacia at its height 158 54 At the close of Trajan s first campaign in Dacia in 102 he stationed one legion at Sarmizegetusa Regia 54 With the conclusion of Trajan s conquest of Dacia he stationed at least two legions in the new province the Legio IV Flavia Felix positioned at Berzobis modern Berzovia Romania and the Legio XIII Gemina stationed at Apulum 54 It has been conjectured that there was a third legion stationed in Dacia at the same time the Legio I Adiutrix However there is no evidence to indicate when or where it was stationed and it is unclear whether the legion was fully present or whether it was only the vexillationes who were stationed in the province 54 Hadrian the subsequent emperor shifted the fourth legion Legio IV Flavia Felix from Berzobis to Singidunum in Moesia Superior suggesting that Hadrian believed the presence of one legion in Dacia would be sufficient to ensure the security of the province 54 The Marcomannic Wars that erupted north of the Danube forced Marcus Aurelius to reverse this policy permanently transferring the Legio V Macedonica from Troesmis modern Turcoaia in Romania 159 in Moesia Inferior to Potaissa in Dacia 54 Epigraphic evidence attests to large numbers of auxiliary units stationed throughout the Dacian provinces during the Roman period this has given the impression that Roman Dacia was a strongly militarized province 54 Yet it seems to have been no more highly militarized than any of the other frontier provinces like the Moesias the Pannonias and Syria and the number of legions stationed in Moesia and Pannonia were not diminished after the creation of Dacia 160 161 However once Dacia was incorporated into the empire and the frontier was extended northward the central portion of the Danube frontier between Novae near modern Svishtov Bulgaria and Durostorum modern Silistra Bulgaria was able to release much needed troops to bolster Dacia s defences 162 Military documents report at least 58 auxiliary units most transferred into Dacia from the flanking Moesian and Pannonian provinces with a wide variety of forms and functions including numeri cohortes milliariae quingenariae and alae 54 This does not imply that all were positioned in Dacia at the same time nor that they were in place throughout the existence of Roman Dacia 54 Settlements Edit See also Colonia Roman municipium vicus and Roman villa When considering provincial settlement patterns the Romanized parts of Dacia were composed of urban satus settlements made up of coloniae municipia and rural settlements principally villas with their associated latifundia and villages vici 163 The two principal towns of Roman Dacia Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa and Apulum are on par with similar towns across the Western Roman Empire in terms of socio economic and architectural maturity 164 The amphitheatre at Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa The province had about 10 Roman towns 165 166 all originating from the military camps that Trajan constructed during his campaigns 167 There were two sorts of urban settlements Of principal importance were the coloniae whose free born inhabitants were almost exclusively Roman citizens Of secondary importance were the municipia which were allowed a measure of judicial and administrative independence 168 Dacia SuperiorUlpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa was established by Trajan was first to be given colonia status and was the province s only colonia deducta 169 Its pre eminence was guaranteed by its foundation charter and by its role as the administrative centre of the province as well as its being granted Ius Italicum 170 Ulpianum Singidava Germisara Argidava Bersovia Alburnus major Apulum predecessor of Alba Iulia began as one of Trajan s legionary bases 169 Almost immediately the associated canabae legionis was established nearby while at some point during the Trajanic period a civilian settlement sprang into existence along the Mureș River approximately 4 km 2 5 mi from the military encampment 170 The town evolved rapidly transforming from a vicus of Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa into a municipium during Marcus Aurelius reign with the emperor Commodus elevating it to a colonia 171 Transformed into the capital of Dacia Apulensis region within Dacia Superior its importance lay in being the location of the military high command for the tripartite province 63 It began to rival Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa during the reign of Septimius Severus who allocated a part of Apulum s canabae with municipal status 171 Napoca was the possible location of the military high command in Dacia Porolissensis 172 It was made a municipium by Hadrian and Commodus transformed it into a colonia 159 Potaissa was the camp of the Legio V Macedonica during the Marcomannic Wars 172 Potaissa saw a canabae established at the gates of the camp 159 Granted municipium status by Septimius Severus it became a colonia under Caracalla 159 The reconstructed gateway of the castrum in Porolissum Porolissum was situated between two camps and laid alongside a walled frontier defending the main passageway through the Carpathian Mountains It was transformed into a municipium during Septimius Severus reign 173 Within Dacia Superior Porolissum was a center of Dacia Prolissensis as Apulum for Dacia Apulensis Dierna Tierna modern Orșova Romania Tibiscum Jupa Romania Ampelum Zlatna Romania were important Roman towns 174 Although the biggest mining town in the region Ampelum s legal status is unknown 175 Dierna was a customs station which was granted municipium status by Septimus Severus 176 Sucidava modern Corabia Romania was a town located at the site of an earthwork camp Erected by Trajan Sucidava was neither large enough nor important enough to be granted municipium or colonia status The town remained a pagus or perhaps a vicus 176 Dacia InferiorDrobeta was the most important town of Dacia Inferior Springing up in the vicinity of a stone camp housing 500 soldiers and established by Trajan to guard the northern approaches to Trajan s Bridge across Ister The Danube the town was elevated by the emperor Hadrian to a municipium holding the same rights as an Italian town 177 During the middle 190s Septimius Severus transformed the town into a full fledged colonia 178 Romula was possibly the capital of Dacia Malvensis It held the rank of municipium possibly under the reign of Hadrian before being elevated to colonia status by Septimius Severus 179 It is often problematic to identify the dividing line between Romanized villages and those sites that can be defined as small towns 180 Therefore categorizing sites as small towns has largely focused on identifying sites that had some evidence of industry and trade and not simply a basic agricultural economic unit that would almost exclusively produce goods for its own existence 181 Additional settlements along the principal route within Roman Dacia are mentioned in the Tabula Peutingeriana These include Brucla Blandiana Germisara Petris and Aquae 182 Both Germisara and Aquae were sites where natural thermal springs were accessible and each are still functioning today 183 The locations of Brucla Blandiana and Petris are not known for certain 183 In the case of Petris however there is good reason to suppose it was located at Uroi in Romania If this were the case it would have been a crucial site for trade as well as being a vital component in facilitating communication from one part of the province to another 184 It is assumed that Roman Dacia possessed a large number of military vici settlements with connections to the entrenched military camps 184 This hypothesis has not been tested as few such sites have been surveyed in any detail However in the mid Mureș valley associated civilian communities have been uncovered next to the auxiliary camps at Orăștioara de Sus Cigmău Salinae modern Ocna Mureș and Micia 184 with a small amphitheatre being discovered at the latter one 61 During the period of Roman occupation the pattern of settlement in the Mureș valley demonstrates a continual shift towards nucleated settlements when compared to the pre Roman Iron Age settlement pattern 185 In central Dacia somewhere between 10 and 28 villages have been identified as aggregated settlements whose primary function was agricultural 186 The settlement layouts broadly fall between two principal types 186 The first are those constructed in a traditional fashion such as Rădești Vințu de Jos and Obreja These show generally sunken houses in the Dacian manner with some dwellings having evolved to becoming surface timber buildings The second settlement layout followed Roman settlement patterns 186 The identification of villa sites within central Dacia is incomplete as it is for the majority of the province 187 There are about 30 sites identified throughout the province which appear on published heritage lists but this is felt to be a gross underestimation 187 Economy Edit With the Roman army ensuring the maintenance of the Pax Romana Roman Dacia prospered until the Crisis of the Third Century Dacia evolved from a simple rural society and economy to one of material advancement comparable to other Roman provinces 158 There were more coins in circulation in Roman Dacia than in the adjacent provinces 188 The region s natural resources generated considerable wealth for the empire becoming one of the major producers of grain particularly wheat 129 Linking into Rome s monetary economy bronze Roman coinage was eventually produced in Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa 165 by about 250 AD previously Dacia seems to have been supplied with coins from central mints 188 The establishment of Roman roads throughout the province facilitated economic growth 165 Local gold mines provided another incentive for Dacia s incorporation into the empire 105 Dalmatian miners were brought in to operate the gold mines in the Bihor Mountains adding to the imperial coffers 129 At Alburnus Maior the gold mines flourished between 131 and 167 AD but over time they began to see diminishing returns as the local gold reserves were exploited 57 Evidence points to the closure of the gold mines around the year 215 AD 176 Dacia also possessed salt iron silver and copper mines dating back to the period of the Dacian kings 129 The region also held large quantities of building stone materials including schist sandstone andesite limestone and marble 57 Towns became key centres of manufacturing 189 Bronze casting foundries existed at Porolissum Romula and Dierna there was a brooch workshop located in Napoca while weapon smithies have been identified in Apulum 189 Glass manufacturing factories have been uncovered in Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa and Tibiscum 189 Villages and rural settlements continued to specialise in craftwork including pottery and sites such as Micăsasa could possess 26 kilns and hundreds of moulds for the manufacture of local terra sigillata 189 Religion Edit See also Religion in ancient Rome Imperial cult of ancient Rome and interpretatio romana Inscriptions and sculpture in Dacia reveal a wide variety in matters of religion Deities of the official state religion of Rome appear alongside those originating in Greece Asia Minor and Western Europe 190 of these 43 5 have Latin names 39 The major gods of the Roman pantheon are all represented in Dacia 190 Jupiter Juno Minerva Venus Apollo Liber Libera and others 191 The Roman god Silvanus was of unusual importance second only to Jupiter 192 He was frequently referred to in Dacia with the titles silvester and domesticus which were also used in Pannonia 193 About 20 of Dacian inscriptions refer to Eastern cults such as that of Cybele and Attis along with more than 274 dedications to Mithras who was the most popular among soldiers 194 The cult of the Thracian Rider was imported from Thrace and Moesia 194 The Gallic horse goddess Epona is attested in Dacia as are the Matronae 194 While the Dacians worshiped local divinities 138 there is no evidence of any Dacian deity entering the Roman pantheon of gods 138 and there is no evidence of any Dacian deity worshiped under a Roman name 195 It is conjectured that the Dacians lacked an anthropomorphic conception of deity 190 and that the Thraco Dacian religion and their art was characterized by aniconism 196 Dacian citadels dated to the reigns of Burebista and Decebalus have yielded no statues in their sanctuaries 190 With the destruction of the main Dacian sacred site during Trajan s wars of conquest no other site took its place However there were other cult sites of local spiritual significance such as Germisara which continued to be used during the Roman period although religious practices at these sites were somewhat altered by Romanization including the application of Roman names to the local spirits 138 Highly Romanized urban centres brought with them Roman funerary practices which differed significantly from those pre dating the Roman conquest 197 Archaeological excavations have uncovered funerary art principally attached to the urban centres Such excavations have shown that stelae were the favoured style of funerary memorial However other more sophisticated memorials have also been uncovered including aediculae tumuli and mausoleums The majority were highly decorated with sculptured lions medallions and columns adorning the structures 198 This appears to be an urban feature only the minority of cemeteries excavated in rural areas display burial sites that have been identified as Dacian and some have been conjectured to be attached to villa settlements such as Deva Sălașu de Sus and Cincis 197 Traditional Dacian funerary rites survived the Roman period and continued into the post Roman era 40 during which time the first evidence of Christianity begins to appear 190 Last decades of Dacia Traiana 235 271 275 EditSee also Maximinus Thrax Philip the Arab Gallienus Aurelian and Dacia Aureliana The 230s marked the end of the final peaceful period experienced in Roman Dacia 199 The discovery of a large stockpile of Roman coins around 8 000 at Romula issued during the reigns of Commodus and Elagabalus who was killed in 222 AD has been taken as evidence that the province was experiencing problems before the mid 3rd century 200 Traditionally the accession of Maximinus Thrax 235 238 marks the start of a 50 year period of disorder in the Roman Empire during which the militarization of the government inaugurated by Septimius Severus continued apace and the debasement of the currency brought the empire to bankruptcy 201 As the 3rd century progressed it saw the continued migration of the Goths whose movements had already been a cause of the Marcomannic Wars 202 and whose travels south towards the Danubian frontier continued to put pressure on the tribes who were already occupying this territory 203 Between 236 and 238 Maximinus Thrax campaigned in Dacia against the Carpi 204 only to rush back to Italy to deal with a civil war 205 While Gordian III eventually emerged as Roman Emperor the confusion in the heart of the empire allowed the Goths in alliance with the Carpi to take Histria in 238 AD 206 before sacking the economically important commercial centres along the Danube Delta 207 Emperor Philip the Arab 244 249 Unable to deal militarily with this incursion the empire was forced to buy peace in Moesia paying an annual tribute to the Goths this infuriated the Carpi who also demanded a payment subsidy 206 Emperor Philip the Arab 244 249 ceased payment in 245 AD 208 and the Carpi invaded Dacia the following year attacking the town of Romula in the process 200 The Carpi probably burned the castra of Răcari between 243 and 247 105 Evidence suggests the defensive line of the Limes Transalutanus was probably abandoned during Philip the Arab s reign as a result of the incursion of the Carpi into Dacia 105 Ongoing raids forced the emperor to leave Rome and take charge of the situation 209 The mother of the future emperor Galerius fled Dacia Malvensis at around this time before settling in Moesia Inferior 210 But the other Maximian Galerius chosen by Diocletian for his son in law was worse not only than those two princes whom our own times have experienced but worse than all the bad princes of former days In this wild beast there dwelt a native barbarity and a savageness foreign to Roman blood and no wonder for his mother was born beyond the Danube and it was an inroad of the Carpi that obliged her to cross over and take refuge in New Dacia Lactantius Of the Manner in which the Persecutors Died Chapter IX 211 At the end of 247 the Carpi were decisively beaten in open battle and sued for peace 212 Philip the Arab took the title of Carpicus Maximus 213 Regardless of these victories Dacian towns began to take defensive measures In Sucidava the townspeople hurriedly erected a trapezoidal stone wall and defensive ditch most likely the result of a raid by the barbarian tribes around 246 or 247 AD In 248 AD Romula enhanced the wall surrounding the settlement again most likely as an additional defensive barrier against the Carpi 200 An epigraph uncovered in Apulum salutes the emperor Decius reigned 249 251 AD as restitutor Daciarum the restorer of Dacia 214 On 1 July 251 Decius and his army were killed by the Goths during their defeat in the Battle of Abrittus modern Razgard Bulgaria 215 Firmly entrenched in the territories along the lower Danube and the Black Sea s western shore their presence affected both the non Romanized Dacians who fell into the Goth s sphere of influence 216 and Imperial Dacia as the client system that surrounded the province and supported its existence began to break apart 217 Decius appeared in the world an accursed wild beast to afflict the Church and who but a bad man would persecute religion It seems as if he had been raised to sovereign eminence at once to rage against God and at once to fall for having undertaken an expedition against the Carpi who had then possessed themselves of Dacia and Moesia he was suddenly surrounded by the barbarians and slain together with great part of his army nor could he be honored with the rites of sepulture but stripped and naked he lay to be devoured by wild beasts and birds a fit end for the enemy of God Lactantius Of the Manner in which the Persecutors Died Chapter IV 218 Emperor Gallienus 260 268 Continuing pressures during the reign of the emperor Gallienus 253 268 AD and the fracturing of the western half of the empire between himself and Postumus in Gaul after 260 meant that Gallienus attention was principally focused on the Danubian frontier 219 Repeated victories over the Carpi and associated Dacian tribes enabled him to claim the title Dacicus Maximus 220 However literary sources from antiquity Eutropius 221 222 Aurelius Victor 223 and Festus 22 write that Dacia was lost under his reign 224 He transferred from Dacia to Pannonia a large percentage of the cohorts from the fifth Macedonica and thirteenth Gemina legions 203 The latest coins at Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa and Porolissum bear his effigy 225 and the raising of inscribed monuments in the province virtually ceased in 260 AD 226 the year that marked the temporary breakup of the empire 227 Even the territories across the Danube which Trajan had secured were lost Aurelius Victor De Caesaribus 223 228 Emperor Aurelian 270 275 Coins were minted during the restoration of the empire c 270 under Aurelian which bear the inscription DACIA FELIX Fertile Happy Dacia 229 The pressing need to deal with the Palmyrene Empire meant Aurelian needed to settle the situation along the Danube frontier 230 Reluctantly and possibly only as a temporary measure he decided to abandon the province 230 The traditional date for Dacia s official abandonment is 271 231 another view is that Aurelian evacuated his troops and civilian administration during 272 273 232 possibly as late as 275 233 The province of Dacia which Trajan had formed beyond the Danube he gave up despairing after all Illyricum and Moesia had been depopulated of being able to retain it The Roman citizens removed from the town and lands of Dacia he settled in the interior of Moesia calling that Dacia which now divides the two Moesiae and which is on the right hand of the Danube as it runs to the sea whereas Dacia was previously on the left Eutropius Abridgement of Roman History 221 222 The end result was that Aurelian established a new province of Dacia 232 called Dacia Aureliana with its capital at Serdica previously belonging to Lower Moesia 234 235 A portion of the Romanized population settled in the new province south of the Danube 236 After the Roman withdrawal EditMain articles Romania in the Early Middle Ages and origin of the Romanians See also Diocletian and Constantine I Settlement of the Tervingi Edit Emperor Diocletian 284 305 The emperor Galerius once declared a complaint which the Romans were aware of the Danube was the most challenging of all the empire s frontiers 237 Aside from its enormous length great portions of it did not suit the style of fighting which the Roman legions preferred 238 To protect the provinces south of the Danube the Romans retained military forts on the northern bank of the Danube long after the withdrawal from Dacia Traiana 121 Aurelian kept a foothold at Drobeta while a segment of the Thirteenth Legion Legio XIII Gemina was posted in Desa until at least 305 AD 121 Coins bearing the image of emperor Gratian reign 375 383 AD have been uncovered at Dierna possibly indicating that the town continued to function after the Roman withdrawal 239 In the years immediately after the withdrawal Roman towns survived albeit on a reduced level 240 The previous tribes which had settled north of the Danube such as the Sarmatians Bastarnae Carpi and Quadi were increasingly pressured by the arrival of the Vandals in the north while the Gepids and the Goths pressured them from the east and the northeast 238 This forced the older tribes to push into Roman territory weakening the empire s already stretched defences further To gain entry into the empire the tribes alternated between beseeching the Roman authorities to allow them in and intimidating them with the threat of invasion if their requests were denied 238 Ultimately the Bastarnae were permitted to settle in Thrace while the Carpi which survived were permitted to settle in the new province of Pannonia Valeria west of their homeland 237 However the Carpi were neither destroyed by other barbarian tribes nor fully integrated into the Roman Empire Those who survived on the borders of the empire were apparently called Carpodacae Carps from Dacia 241 By 291 AD the Goths had recovered from their defeat at the hands of Aurelian and began to move into what had been Roman Dacia 242 When the ancestors of the Tervingi migrated into north eastern Dacia they were opposed by the Carpi and the non Romanized Dacians Defeating these tribes they came into conflict with the Romans who still attempted to maintain control along the Danube Some of the semi Romanized population remained and managed to co exist with the Goths 152 By 295 AD the Goths had managed to defeat the Carpi and establish themselves in Dacia now called Gothia 243 the Romans recognised the Tervingi as a foederatus 244 They occupied what was the eastern portion of the old province and beyond from Bessarabia on the Dniester in the east to Oltenia in the west 245 Until the 320s the Goths kept the terms of the treaty and proceeded to settle down in the former province of Dacia and the Danube had a measure of peace for nearly a generation 244 Around 295 AD the emperor Diocletian reorganized the defences along the Danube and established fortified camps on the far side of the river from Sirmium modern Serbia to Ratiaria near modern Archar Bulgaria and Durostorum 246 These camps were meant to provide protection of the principal crossing points across the river to permit the movement of troops across the river and to function as observation points and bases for waterborne patrols 247 Late Roman incursions Edit Emperor Constantine I 306 337 During the reign of Constantine I the Tervingi took advantage of the civil war between him and Licinius to attack the empire in 323 AD from their settlements in Dacia 248 They supported Licinius until his defeat in 324 he was fleeing to their lands in Dacia when he was apprehended 248 As a result Constantine focused on aggressively pre empting any barbarian activity on the frontier north of the Danube 249 By 328 AD he had constructed at Sucidava a new bridge across the Danube 250 and repaired the road from Sucidava to Romula 251 He also erected a military fort at Daphne modern Spanțov Romania 252 In early 336 Constantine personally led his armies across the Danube and crushed the Gothic tribes which had settled there in the process recreating a Roman province north of the Danube 253 In honor of this achievement the Senate granted him the title of Dacicus Maximus and celebrated it along with the 30th anniversary of his accession as Roman Emperor in mid 336 253 The granting of this title has been seen by scholars such as Timothy Barnes as implying some level of reconquest of Roman Dacia 254 However the bridge at Sucidava lasted less than 40 years as the emperor Valens discovered when he attempted to use it to cross the Danube during his campaign against the Goths in 367 AD 250 Nevertheless the castra at Sucidava remained in use until its destruction at the hands of Attila the Hun in 447 AD 250 Driven off their lands in Oltenia the Tervingi moved towards Transylvania and came into conflict with the Sarmatians 255 In 334 the Sarmatians asked Constantine for military help after which he allowed the majority of them to settle peacefully south of the Danube 256 The Roman armies inflicted a crushing defeat on the Tervingi 255 The Tervingi signed a treaty with the Romans giving a measure of peace until 367 257 The last major Roman incursion into the former province of Dacia occurred in 367 AD when the emperor Valens used a diplomatic incident to launch a major campaign against the Goths 258 Hoping to regain the trans Danubian beachhead which Constantine had successfully established at Sucidava 259 Valens launched a raid into Gothic territory after crossing the Danube near Daphne around 30 May they continued until September without any serious engagements 260 He tried again in 368 AD setting up his base camp at Carsium but was hampered by a flood on the Danube 261 He therefore spent his time rebuilding Roman forts along the Danube In 369 Valens crossed the river into Gothia and this time managed to engage the Tervingi defeating them and granting them peace on Roman terms 262 This was the final attempt by the Romans to maintain a presence in the former province Soon after the westward push by the Huns put increased pressure on the Tervingi who were forced to abandon the old Dacian province and seek refuge within the Roman Empire 263 Mismanagement of this request resulted in the death of Valens and the bulk of the eastern Roman army at the Battle of Adrianople in 378 AD 264 Controversy over the fate of the Daco Romans Edit Linguistic map of the Balkans 4th 7th century Pink areas indicate territories in which a Romance language is spoken shaded pink areas represent the possible distribution of the Proto Romanian language Based on the written accounts of ancient authors such as Eutropius it had been assumed by Enlightenment historians such as Edward Gibbon that the population of Dacia Traiana was moved south when Aurelian abandoned the province 265 266 However the fate of the Romanized Dacians and the subsequent origin of the Romanians became mired in controversy stemming from political considerations originating during the 18th and 19th centuries between Romanian nationalists and the Austro Hungarian Empire 267 40 One theory states that the process which formed the Romanian people began with the Romanization of Dacia and the existence of a Daco Roman populace which did not completely abandon the province after the Roman withdrawal in 275 AD 268 Archaeological evidence obtained from burial sites and settlements supports the contention that a portion of the native population continued to inhabit what was Roman Dacia 269 Pottery remains dated to the years after 271 AD in Potaissa 159 and Roman coinage of Marcus Claudius Tacitus and Crispus son of Constantine I uncovered in Napoca demonstrate the continued survival of these towns 270 In Porolissum Roman coinage began to circulate again under Valentinian I 364 375 meanwhile local Daco Romans continued to inhabit Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa fortifying the amphitheatre against barbarian raids 225 According to this theory the Romanian people continued to develop under the influence of the Roman Empire until the beginning of the 6th century and as long as the empire held territory on the southern bank of the Danube and in Dobruja it influenced the region to the river s north 268 This process was facilitated by the trading of goods and the movement of peoples across the river 268 Roman towns endured in Dacia s middle and southern regions albeit reduced in size and wealth 240 The competing theory states that the transfer of Dacia s diminished population overlapped with the requirement to repopulate the depleted Balkans 271 Although it is possible that some Daco Romans remained behind these were few in number 272 Toponymic changes tend to support a complete withdrawal from Roman Dacia as the names for Roman towns forts and settlements fell completely out of use 273 Repeated archaeological investigations from the 19th century onwards have failed to uncover definitive proof that a large proportion of the Daco Romans remained in Dacia after the evacuation 274 for example traffic in Roman coins in the former province after 271 show similarities to modern Slovakia and the steppe in what is today Ukraine 275 On the other hand linguistic data and place names 276 attest to the beginnings of the Romanian language in Lower Moesia or other provinces south of the Danube of the Roman Empire 277 Toponymic analysis of place names in the former Roman Dacia north of the Danube suggests that on top of names which have a Thracian Scytho Iranian Celtic Roman and Slavonic origin there are some un Romanized Dacian place names which were adopted by the Slavs possibly via the Hungarians and transmitted to the Romanians in the same way that some Latin place names were transmitted to the Romanians via the Slavs such as Olt 278 According to those who posit the continued existence of a Romanized Dacian population after the Roman withdrawal Aurelian s decision to abandon the province was solely a military decision with respect to moving the legions and auxiliary units to protect the Danubian frontier 279 The civilian population of Roman Dacia did not treat this as a prelude to a coming disaster there was no mass emigration from the province no evidence of a sudden withdrawal of the civilian population and no widespread damage to property in the aftermath of the military withdrawal 279 See also EditDacia Mediterranea Dacia Ripensis History of Romania List of ancient cities in Thrace and Dacia List of Roman governors of Dacia Traiana Roman provincesNotes Edit Caracalla s activities in Dacia need to be placed within the verified dates in his progress to the east On 11 August 213 Caracalla crossed the frontier at Raetia into Barbaricum while in 8 October 213 his victories over the Germanic tribes were announced at Rome and sometime between 17 December 213 and 17 January 214 he was at Nicomedia see Opreanu 2015 pp 18 19References Edit a b c d e f Oltean 2007 p 50 Pop 1999 p 14 a b Georgescu 1991 p 4 Mocsy 1974 pp 17 18 Oltean 2007 p 43 Burns 2003 p 195 Oltean 2007 p 48 Schmitz 2005 p 10 Bunson 2002 p 165 Parvan 1928 pp 157 158 a b c Oltean 2007 p 52 a b Burns 2003 p 183 Jones 1992 p 138 Jones 1992 p 192 a b c Oltean 2007 p 54 a b c Pop 1999 p 16 MacKendrick 2000 p 74 Bennett 1997 p 102 Pop 1999 p 17 a b Bennett 1997 p 103 Pliny the Younger amp 109 AD Book VIII Letter 4 a b Festus amp 379 AD VIII 2 Gibbon 1816 p 6 a b Bennett 1997 p 104 Bennett 1997 p 98 Bennett 1997 p 105 Georgescu 1991 p 5 a b c Oltean 2007 p 57 a b c d e f g Oltean 2007 p 55 a b Bennett 1997 p 167 Bury 1893 pp 409 410 Waldman amp Mason 2006 p 400 Waldman amp Mason 2006 p 61 Waldman amp Mason 2006 p 657 Waldman amp Mason 2006 p 129 Waldman amp Mason 2006 p 184 a b Burns 2003 p 103 a b Kopeczi 1994 p 102 a b c d Georgescu 1991 p 6 a b c d e f g h Ellis 1998 pp 220 237 Parker 2010 p 266 Wilkes 2000 p 591 Kopeczi 1994 p 92 a b c d Bennett 1997 p 169 Kopeczi 1994 p 63 Petolescu 2010 p 170 Bury 1893 p 490 Opper 2008 pp 55 67 Webster 1998 p 65 a b c Opper 2008 p 67 a b Bury 1893 p 499 Bury 1893 p 493 a b c MacKendrick 2000 p 139 a b c d e f g h i j Oltean 2007 p 56 a b Kopeczi 1994 p 68 Bury 1893 p 500 a b c d MacKendrick 2000 p 206 MacKendrick 2000 p 127 Bunson 2002 p 24 MacKendrick 2000 p 152 a b MacKendrick 2000 p 112 a b c d Grant 1996 p 20 a b MacKendrick 2000 p 114 Birley 2000 p 132 Bury 1893 pp 542 543 a b Birley 2000 p 145 McLynn 2011 p 324 Potter 1998 p 274 Chapot 1997 p 275 Kopeczi 1994 p 87 Grant 1996 p 35 Bury 1893 p 543 a b Kopeczi 1994 p 86 Oliva 1962 p 275 Bury 1893 p 544 Nemeth 2005 pp 52 54 a b c d Birley 2000 p 161 a b c Birley 2000 p 164 a b c d e f Bury 1893 p 545 Birley 2000 p 165 Birley 2000 p 168 a b Birley 2000 p 169 a b Birley 2000 p 170 Grant 1996 p 65 Cassius Dio amp 200 AD LXXII Cary amp Cassius Dio 1927 p 17 a b Birley 2000 p 21 McLynn 2011 pp 331 332 Birley 2000 p 175 McLynn 2011 p 360 Birley 2000 p 177 Thompson 2002 p 13 Birley 2000 p 183 a b c d e Kopeczi 1994 p 89 Mommsen 1999 p 275 Birley 2000 pp 206 207 Birley 2000 p 206 Birley 2000 pp 208 209 Bury 1893 pp 548 549 Cassius Dio amp 200 AD LXXIII Cary amp Cassius Dio 1927 p 77 MacKendrick 2000 p 135 Historia Augusta amp 395 AD Commodus 13 5 a b Kopeczi 1994 p 91 a b c d MacKendrick 2000 p 142 Oltean 2007 p 222 Oltean 2007 p 221 a b MacKendrick 2000 p 153 Bunson 2002 p 95 a b Campbell 2005 p 18 a b Scott 2008 p 26 Mocsy 1974 p 199 Opreanu 2015 p 17 Opreanu 2015 p 18 Parker 2010 p 223 Grumeza 2009 pp 210 211 Opreanu 2015 pp 18 19 Scott 2008 pp 114 115 Cassius Dio amp 200 AD LXXIX Cary amp Cassius Dio 1927 p 405 a b c MacKendrick 2000 p 133 Opreanu 2006 p 74 Opreanu 2006 p 78 Eutropius amp 364 AD VIII 6 2 Cassius Dio amp 200 AD LXVIII 14 4 Julian amp 362 AD XXVIII 327 Vekony 2000 pp 103 104 Vekony 2000 p 106 a b c d e f g h Georgescu 1991 p 7 Pop 1999 p 22 Parker 1958 pp 12 19 a b Oltean 2007 pp 211 212 Oltean 2007 p 212 a b Oltean 2007 p 213 Kopeczi 1994 p 113 Kopeczi 1994 p 112 Vekony 2000 p 110 a b c d Oltean 2007 p 227 Nemeti 2006 pp 93 95 Oltean 2009 p 95 Dana amp Matei Popescu 2009 p 244 Bunson 2002 p 167 Stoicescu 1983 pp 108 109 Giurescu 1971 p 25 Goldsworthy 2003 p 76 Vekony 2000 p 109 a b Găzdac 2010 p 59 Vekony 2000 p 108 Andea 2006 p 74 Dana amp Matei Popescu 2009 pp 234 235 Erdkamp 2010 p 442 a b Burns 1991 pp 110 111 Pop 1999 p 23 Kopeczi 1994 p 106 Kopeczi 1994 p 103 Kopeczi 1994 p 104 a b Kopeczi 1994 p 79 a b MacKendrick 2000 p 107 a b c d e MacKendrick 2000 p 126 Katsari 2011 p 69 Bury 1893 p 429 Parker 2010 p 238 Oltean 2007 p 119 Oltean 2007 p 174 a b c Georgescu 1991 p 8 Găzdac 2010 p 30 MacKendrick 2000 p 108 Pop 1999 p 25 a b Oltean 2007 p 165 a b Oltean 2007 p 164 a b Oltean 2007 p 170 a b Oltean 2007 p 58 MacKendrick 2000 p 130 MacKendrick 2000 pp 131 132 Kopeczi 1994 p 94 a b c MacKendrick 2000 p 132 MacKendrick 2000 p 116 MacKendrick 2000 p 245 MacKendrick 2000 p 121 Oltean 2007 p 150 Oltean 2007 p 151 Oltean 2007 p 152 a b Oltean 2007 p 153 a b c Oltean 2007 p 155 Oltean 2007 p 71 a b c Oltean 2007 p 144 a b Oltean 2007 p 122 a b Opreanu 2006 p 85 a b c d Opreanu 2006 p 84 a b c d e MacKendrick 2000 p 187 Pop 1999 p 26 Dorcey 1992 p 1 Dorcey 1992 p 78 a b c MacKendrick 2000 p 190 Kopeczi 1994 p 115 Parvan 1928 pp 140 142 a b Oltean 2007 p 193 Oltean 2007 p 190 Kopeczi 1994 p 116 a b c MacKendrick 2000 p 122 Parker 1958 p 141 Mocsy 1974 p 185 a b Mocsy 1974 p 209 Southern amp Dixon 1996 p 11 Le Bohec 2000 p 196 a b Heather 2010 p 127 Kopeczi 1994 p 44 Burns 1991 p 26 Odahl 2004 p 19 Vekony 2000 p 120 Lactantius amp 320 AD Chapter IX Oțetea 1970 p 116 Wilkes 2005 p 224 Kopeczi 1994 p 118 Southern 2001 p 75 Musat amp Ardeleanu 1985 p 59 Burns 1991 p 29 Lactantius amp 320 AD Chapter IV de Blois 1976 pp 33 34 Mocsy 1974 p 205 a b Eutropius amp 364 AD IX 15 a b Watson 1853 p 521 a b Aurelius Victor amp 361 AD 33 3 Vekony 2000 p 121 a b MacKendrick 2000 p 115 Kopeczi 1994 p 119 Southern 2001 p 6 Bird 1994 p 33 Webb 1927 p 253 a b Southern 2001 pp 225 226 MacKendrick 2000 p 117 a b Southern 2001 pp 120 121 Watson 2004 p 156 Wilkes 2005 p 239 Watson 2004 p 157 Watson 2004 pp 156 157 a b Williams 2000 p 77 a b c Williams 2000 p 51 Moisil 2002 pp 79 120 a b Burns 1991 p 111 Nixon amp Saylor Rodgers 1994 p 116 Wolfram amp Dunlap 1990 p 57 Lenski 2002 p 122 a b Wolfram amp Dunlap 1990 p 59 Lenski 2002 p 120 Williams 2000 pp 72 77 Williams 2000 pp 76 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Dacians The Indigenous Districts Studia Universitatis Babeș Bolyai Historia Cluj Napoca Babeș Bolyai University 51 1 ISSN 1220 0492 Nixon C E V Saylor Rodgers Barbara 1994 In Praise of Later Roman Emperors The Panegyrici Latini Transformation of the Classical Heritage Vol 21 Berkeley California University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 08326 4 Odahl Charles Matson 2004 Constantine and the Christian Empire Roman imperial biographies New York and Oxfordshire Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 17485 5 Oliva Pavel 1962 Pannonia and the onset of crisis in the Roman Empire London and New York Nakl Ceskoslovenske akademie ved OCLC 2673975 Oltean Ioana Adina 2007 Dacia landscape colonisation and romanization Routledge monographs in classical studies London and New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 41252 0 Oltean Ioana Adina 2009 Hanson W S ed Dacian ethnic identity and the Roman Army Journal of Roman Archaeology Portsmouth Rhode Island 74 The army and frontiers of Rome ISBN 978 1 887829 74 8 ISSN 1047 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Threat 101 106 AD Enemies of Rome Monograph Series Armidale New South Wales Caeros Pty Limited ISBN 978 0 9758445 0 2 Scott Andrew G 2008 Change and discontinuity within the Severan dynasty The case of Macrinus ISBN 978 0 549 89041 6 Southern Pat 2001 The Roman Empire from Severus to Constantine London and New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 23943 1 Southern Pat Dixon Karen R 1996 The late Roman army Routledge ISBN 978 0 7134 7047 5 Stoicescu Nicolae 1983 The Continuity of the Romanian People Volume 2 Editura Științifică și Enciclopedică Thompson E A 2002 Romans and barbarians the decline of the Western Empire University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 0 299 08704 3 Treptow Kurt W Bolovan Ioan 1996 Treptow Kurt W Bolovan Ioan eds A History of Romania East European Monographs ISBN 978 0 88033 345 0 Vekony Gabor 2000 Dacians Romans Romanians Toronto and Buffalo Matthias Corvinus Publishing ISBN 978 1 882785 13 1 Waldman Carl Mason Catherine 2006 Encyclopedia of European peoples Volume 1 Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 0 8160 4964 6 Watson Alaric 2004 Aurelian and the Third Century London and New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 30187 9 Watson John Selby Justin Cornelius Nepos Eutropius 1853 Justin Cornelius Nepos and Eutropius literally translated with notes and a general index Bohn s Classical Library trans Rev John Selby Watson London Henry G Bohn Webb Percy Henry 1927 Mattingly Harold Sydenham Edward Allen eds The Roman Imperial Coinage Valerian Florian The Roman Imperial Coinage Vol 5 Part 1 Spink amp Son Webster Graham 1998 The Roman Imperial Army of the first and second centuries A D University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 3000 2 Wilkes John 2000 The Danube Provinces In Bowman Alan K Garnsey Peter Rathbone Dominic eds The Cambridge ancient history The High Empire A D 70 192 The Cambridge ancient history Vol 11 Cambridge University Press pp 577 603 ISBN 978 0 521 26335 1 Wilkes John 2005 Provinces and Frontiers In Bowman Alan K Garnsey Peter Cameron Averil eds The Cambridge ancient history The crisis of empire A D 193 337 The Cambridge ancient history Vol 12 Cambridge University Press pp 212 268 ISBN 978 0 521 30199 2 Williams Stephen 2000 Diocletian and the Roman Recovery London and New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 91827 5 Wolfram Herwig Dunlap Thomas J 1990 History of the Goths University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 06983 1 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Roman Dacia Preceded byDacia History of Romania Succeeded byEarly Middle Ages Coordinates 45 42 00 N 26 30 00 E 45 7000 N 26 5000 E 45 7000 26 5000 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Dacia amp oldid 1114737199, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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