Literature DB >> 25775558

Early Roman military fortifications and the origin of Trieste, Italy.

Federico Bernardini1, Giacomo Vinci2, Jana Horvat3, Angelo De Min4, Emanuele Forte4, Stefano Furlani4, Davide Lenaz4, Michele Pipan4, Wenke Zhao4, Alessandro Sgambati5, Michele Potleca6, Roberto Micheli7, Andrea Fragiacomo8, Claudio Tuniz9.   

Abstract

An interdisciplinary study of the archaeological landscape of the Trieste area (northeastern Italy), mainly based on airborne light detection and ranging (LiDAR), ground penetrating radar (GPR), and archaeological surveys, has led to the discovery of an early Roman fortification system, composed of a big central camp (San Rocco) flanked by two minor forts. The most ancient archaeological findings, including a Greco-Italic amphora rim produced in Latium or Campania, provide a relative chronology for the first installation of the structures between the end of the third century B.C. and the first decades of the second century B.C. whereas other materials, such as Lamboglia 2 amphorae and a military footwear hobnail (type D of Alesia), indicate that they maintained a strategic role at least up to the mid first century B.C. According to archaeological data and literary sources, the sites were probably established in connection with the Roman conquest of the Istria peninsula in 178-177 B.C. They were in use, perhaps not continuously, at least until the foundation of Tergeste, the ancestor of Trieste, in the mid first century B.C. The San Rocco site, with its exceptional size and imposing fortifications, is the main known Roman evidence of the Trieste area during this phase and could correspond to the location of the first settlement of Tergeste preceding the colony foundation. This hypothesis would also be supported by literary sources that describe it as a phrourion (Strabo, V, 1, 9, C 215), a term used by ancient writers to designate the fortifications of the Roman army.

Keywords:  Trieste (Italy) origin; airborne light detection and ranging; archaeological surveys; early Roman military fortifications; ground penetrating radar

Year:  2015        PMID: 25775558      PMCID: PMC4386398          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1419175112

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  2 in total

1.  Discovery of ancient Roman "highway" reveals geomorphic changes in karst environments during historic times.

Authors:  Federico Bernardini; Giacomo Vinci; Emanuele Forte; Stefano Furlani; Michele Pipan; Sara Biolchi; Angelo De Min; Andrea Fragiacomo; Roberto Micheli; Paola Ventura; Claudio Tuniz
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-03-23       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  LiDAR-guided Archaeological Survey of a Mediterranean Landscape: Lessons from the Ancient Greek Polis of Kolophon (Ionia, Western Anatolia).

Authors:  Benedikt Grammer; Erich Draganits; Martin Gretscher; Ulrike Muss
Journal:  Archaeol Prospect       Date:  2017-04-25       Impact factor: 2.569

  2 in total

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