Potaissa was a legionary fortress and later a city in the Roman province of Dacia, located in today's Turda, Romania.[4]
Potaissa | |
---|---|
Alternative name(s) | Patavissa, Patabissa, Patauissa, Patruissa, Patrouissa, Patreuissa[1][2] |
Known also as | Castra of Turda |
Founded during the reign of | Marcus Aurelius |
Founded | 168 |
Abandoned | c. 4th-5th century |
Attested by | Tabula Peutingeriana |
Place in the Roman world | |
Province | Dacia |
Administrative unit | Dacia Apulensis |
Administrative unit | Dacia Superior |
Directly connected to | Napoca, (Colțești), (Războieni-Cetate), (Sânpaul) |
Structure | |
— Stone structure — | |
Size and area | 573 m × 408 1 m (23.4 ha) |
— Wood and earth structure — | |
Stationed military units | |
— Legions — | |
V Macedonica [3] | |
Location | |
Altitude | c. 369 m |
Place name | Fortress' Hill |
Town | Turda |
County | Cluj |
Country | Romania |
Reference | |
RO-LMI | CJ-I-s-A-07208 |
RO-RAN | 52268.01 |
Site notes | |
Recognition | National Historical Monument |
Condition | Ruined |
Excavation dates | 1950 |
It appears on the Tabula Peutingeriana (Segmentum VIII) as Patavissa between Salinae and Napoca.
History
editThe Potaissa salt mines were worked in the area since prehistoric times.
The Dacians established a town that Ptolemy in his Geography calls Patreuissa, which is probably a corruption of Patavissa or Potaissa, the latter being more common.
It was conquered by the Romans between AD 101 and 106 in Trajan's Dacian Wars, together with parts of Decebal's Dacia.[5] The Romans kept the name Potaissa.
The city became a municipium, then a colonia.
The start of the Marcomannic Wars and murder of the governor Calpurnius Proculus led Rome to send the Legio V Macedonica from Troesmis to Potaissa around 168 AD to strengthen the north-western defenses of Roman Dacia. They built their legionary fortress nearby on the "Cetate" Hill as their base
It was used until 274 after which the legion was moved by Aurelian to Oescus on his withdrawal from Dacia.
The site
editThe fortress occupies an area of 23.4 ha, belonging to the group of the medium-size legionary fortresses. The fort wall had a perimeter of almost 2 km and its construction needed circa 25000 m3 of stone from the quarry at Sanduleşti. In the four corners of the fortress were trapezoidal-shaped bastions, and along each side was a gate. Via principalis, which provides access to the porta principalis dextra and porta principalis sinistra, was about 10 m wide. The whole fortress area was judiciously used (the cereal warehouses/horrea, the soldier's barracks of cohorts quingenaria and milliaria, the access roads etc.) so as to ensure all the supplies for over 5000 soldiers of the legion. The most important building examined archaeologically is that of the headquarters (principia).
The thermal baths, with an area of over 2,000 m2, are the biggest military thermae known in Dacia.
Aqueducts
editThe spring supplying the fort with water is at "The Spring of the Romans" southwest of Copăceni village, on the right side of the Turda - Petreștii de Jos road.[6] From here the water was led through an aqueduct about 5 km long to the fortress. A second aqueduct, starting from the same source, supplied water to the city of Potaissa also at a distance of about 5 km.
Milestone
editThe name Potaissa is recorded on the Milliarium of Aiton milestone dating from 108 AD[7] shortly after the Roman conquest of Dacia, and showing the construction of the road built by Cohors I Hispanorum miliaria from Potaissa to Napoca, by demand of the Emperor Trajan.[8] It indicates the distance of 10,000 feet (3,000 m) to Potaissa.
The complete inscription is: "Imp(erator)/ Caesar Nerva/ Traianus Aug(ustus)/ Germ(anicus) Dacicus/ pontif(ex) maxim(us)/ (sic) pot(estate) XII co(n)s(ul) V/ imp(erator) VI p(ater) p(atriae) fecit/ per coh(ortem) I Fl(aviam) Vlp(iam)/ Hisp(anam) mil(liariam) c(ivium) R(omanorum) eq(uitatam)/ a Potaissa Napo/cam / m(ilia) p(assuum) X".[9]
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Thermal baths
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baths
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ Schütte, Gudmund (1917). "Ptolemy's maps of northern Europe, a reconstruction of the prototypes". The Royal Danish Geographical Society. Retrieved 2013-05-04.
- ^ Dana, Dan; Nemeti, Sorin (2014-01-09). "Ptolémée et la toponymie de la Dacie (II-V)". Classica et Christiana. p. 18. Retrieved 2014-03-30.
- ^ Constantin C. Petolescu: Dacia - Un mileniu de istorie, Ed. Academiei Române, 2010, ISBN 978-973-27-1999-2
- ^ Turda–Potaissa http://legionaryfortresses.info/turda.htm
- ^ (in Romanian) "Epoca dacică" at the Turda City Hall site; accessed March 21, 2013
- ^ The aqueducts of Potaissa https://www-romanaqueducts-info.translate.goog/aquasite/potaissa/index.html?_x_tr_sch=http&_x_tr_sl=auto&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en-GB
- ^ Lazarovici et al. 1997, pp. 202–3 (6.2 Cluj in the Old and Ancient Epochs)
- ^ ARCHAEOLOGICAL REPERTORY OF ROMANIA. Archive Of The Vasile Parvan Institute Of Archaeology – Site Location Index [1] Archived 2014-12-31 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, vol. III, the 1627, Berlin, 1863.
External links
edit- Roman castra from Romania - Google Maps / Earth Archived 2012-12-05 at archive.today