What is it about?

The article is devoted to the publication of an inscription found in Tanais, which mentions the erection of a statue of the Bosporan king Sauromates iii (ad 229/230-231/232). The statue was commanded by a person whose name has disappeared and of which only the patronymic (the son of Asandros) is preserved; he was a commander of a “Thracian detachment and a square of hoplites”. A similar connection is mentioned in the funerary oration seg 55, 862 from Panticapaeum which allows me to suggest a chronological vicinity of two inscriptions and confirms the date of the second one at the end of the 2nd or in the first half of the 3rd century ad proposed earlier by G. Bowersock and C. P. Jones (the reign of Sauromates iii rather than Sauromates ii). An analysis of these and other inscriptions mentioning the “Thracian detachment” makes it possible to interpret this detachment as the Roman auxiliary cohors i Thracum. The soldiers of this cohort were probably sent to the Bosporus from the province of Lower Moesia (not from Bythinia–Pontus, as it was suggested earlier) together with those of legio i Italica who participated in the “Bosporan war” mentioned in an inscription from Preslav.

Featured Image

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Roman Troops in the Bosporus. Old Problem in the Light of a New Inscription Found in Tanais, Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia, November 2014, Brill,
DOI: 10.1163/15700577-12341267.
You can read the full text:

Read

Contributors

The following have contributed to this page