Monument in Roman Civitas Tropaensium commemorating Emperor Trajan's victory over the Dacians
1977 reconstruction of the Tropaeum TraianiMetope XVII: Roman equipped with a helmet with broad neckguard, brow guard, cheekpiece and bowl reinforced; short-sleeved scale shirt with double rows of pteryges and a manica on his right arm, encased in scale armour; curved rectangular shield with raised border, gamma corner symbols and a central boss. The bearded standing enemy wears a Phrygian cap and baggy garments, and wields a two-handed falx.
It was part of a monumental complex comprising the trophy monument, the tumulus grave behind it and the commemorative altar, raised in 102 AD for soldiers fallen in the battles of this region. The complex forms a triangular plan, the base being marked by the monument and the funerary tumulus while the upper point is the altar.
Trophy monument
The trophy monument was built, according to the inscription, between 106 and 109 AD probably by Apollodorus of Damascus, Trajan's favoured architect and engineer. It was inspired by the Augustus mausoleum, and was dedicated to Mars Ultor. It is a cylindrical building, with steps at the base, of diameter 40 m. Around the side were 54 metopes, showing Romans fighting Decebalus's allies, of which 48 are in the local museum and 1 is in Istanbul. The reliefs were framed by friezes and separated by decorative pilasters. The upper part was festooned with 27 battlements, each one showing prisoners. The cone-shaped roof was made of stone slabs and the trophy itself was placed on top of two superposed prisms, framed by two sitting women and a standing man with his hands held behind.
The monument was perhaps a warning to the tribes outside this newly conquered province.[2]
Compared to Trajan's Column in Rome, erected to celebrate the same victories and a "product of Roman metropolitan art", the sculpted metopes have been described as in "barbarian provincial taste", carved by "sculptors of provincial training, reveal[ing] a lack of experience in figurative representation, in organic structure and a naive idiom that remains detached from the classical current".[3]
By the 20th century, the monument was reduced to a mound of stone and mortar, with a large number of the original bas-reliefs scattered around. The present edifice is a reconstruction dating from 1977. The nearby museum contains many archaeological objects, including parts of the original Roman monument.
Cross-section of the reconstruction
Three hypothetical reconstructions
1896 picture
Furtwangler picture
The monument was dedicated with a large inscription to Mars Ultor (the avenger). The inscription has been preserved fragmentarily from two sides of the trophy hexagon, and has been reconstructed as follows:
MARTI ULTOR[I]
IM[P(erator)CAES]AR DIVI
NERVA[E] F(ILIUS) N[E]RVA
TRA]IANUS [AUG(USTUS) GERM(ANICUS)]
DAC]I[CU]S PONT(IFEX) MAX(IMUS)
TRIB(UNICIA) POTEST(ATE) XIII
IMP(ERATOR) VI CO(N)S(UL) V P(ater) P(atriae)
?VICTO EXERC]ITU D[ACORUM]
?---- ET SARMATA]RUM
The altar was raised in 102 to honour the soldiers who died "fighting for the Republic" perhaps at the Battle of Adamclisi nearby in the winter of 101–102. The altar had a rectangular shape, 12 m long and 6 m high. In the vicinity fragments of 1.3 x 0.9 m slabs covered with inscriptions were discovered with a dedication, but the name of the emperor was not preserved the names of about 4,000 soldiers were written on it.[5]
Several hypotheses for the soldiers and general commemorated have been put forward, including the soldiers of Oppius Sabinus, defeated somewhere nearby.[6] The mention of the cohort II Batavorum and probably of the Legio XV Apollinaris, as well as the formula missici (instead of veterans) usual for the first century BC indicates that the war must be dated to the era of Domitian and probably in the year 86, the campaign led by M. Cornelius Nigrinus.[7]
The General's grave
Roman General's TombRoman General's Tomb
The tumulus grave was also built in 102 shortly after the altar and contained the grave of a Roman officer killed in the battle in Adamclisi, possibly Oppius Sabinus.
Archaeology
In 1837, four Prussian officers, hired by the Ottoman Empire to study the Dobruja strategic situation, performed the first excavations.[8]
The monument was researched between 1882–1895,[9] George Murnu in 1909, Vasile Parvan in 1911, Paul Nicorescu studied the site between 1935–1945, Gheorghe Stefan and Ioan Barnea in 1945. From 1968 the site was researched under Romanian Academy supervision.
Metopes
On the monument was a frieze comprising 54 metopes. 48 metopes are hosted in the Adamclisi museum nearby, and one metope is hosted by Istanbul Archaeology Museum, the rest having been lost (There is a reference from Giurescu that two of them fell into the Danube during the transport to Bucharest).[10]
Metope II
VI: Trajan’s equestrian statue crushing the enemy under the legs of the horse (Gramatopol)
IV The Suicide of Decebalus-Tiberius Claudius Maximus (according to M.P Spiedel)
VII: the bodies of the Dacians thrown off the cliffs (Gramatopol)
tabula ansata on the right side of the boss on a soldier shield, metope XXIV from Tropaeum Traiani
Adamclisi, imperial metope X: Trajan between two adjutants (according to M. Gramatopol)
Metope XXXV: A Roman Legionary with a mail manica and spear with Dacian falxman
This metope was later reused as part of a fountain, then recovered and placed in the museum
XXIV: the bodies of the Dacians thrown off the cliffs
XLIV(Gramatopol) changed as Metope XXXIX: Marching "offduty" soldiers
XXXI: pursuing the Dacian archers hiding in the trees (Gramatopol)
XX: Legionary with manica laminata and body defences of 'pteruges' and a corselet of scale, armed with sword, and a Dacian falxman; A Germanic warrior (Bastarnae?) sporting a Suebian knot lies injured on the ground
^R. Syme, Danubian Papers, Bucuresti, 1971, 73-83; the same dating seems certain also to K. Strobel, Anhang IV în Untersuchungen zu den Dakerkriegen Trajans, Bonn, 1984, 237 sqq
^G. Alföldy, H. Halfmann, în Chiron, III, 1973, 331 sqq – M. Cornelius Nigrinus a fost în anii 85-89 guvernatorul Moesiei, iar apoi al Moesiei Inferior
^ abcdVasile Barbu, Cristian Schuster Grigore G. Tocilescu si "Cestiunea Adamclisi" Pagini din Istoria Arheologiei Romanesti ISBN7-379-25580-0
Florea Bobu Florescu, Das Siegesdenkmal von Adamklissi. Tropaeum Traiani. Akademieverlag, Bukarest 1965.
Wilhelm Jänecke, Die ursprüngliche Gestalt des Tropaion von Adamklissi. Winter, Heidelberg 1919.
Adrian V. Rădulescu, Das Siegesdenkmal von Adamklissi. Konstanza 1972 und öfter.
Ian A. Richmond: Adamklissi, en Papers of the British School at Rome 35, 1967, pp. 29–39.
Lino Rossi, A Synoptic Outlook of Adamklissi Metopes and Trajan’s Column Frieze. Factual and Fanciful Topics Revisited, en Athenaeum 85, 1997, pp. 471–486.
Luca Bianchi, Il trofeo di Adamclisi nel quadro dell'arte di stato romana, in Rivista dell'Istituto Nazionale d Archeologia e Storia dell'Arte 61, 2011, pp. 9-61 Ahttp://arche-o.nolblog.hu/page/2/